The Bungee Cord
Hello,
Some years ago, a group of people in my branch of Christianity, Lutheranism, decided that there needed to be a change in our Lenten (the 40 days before Easter) worship. The decision was to replace Palm Sunday with Palm/Passion Sunday. Palm Sunday, as you may know, commemorates the day that Jesus returned to Jerusalem aboard a donkey. It was a victorious entry, but not one delivered with aggressive power and might that would have brought Jesus into town on a mighty war horse, but one delivered with humble self-giving love. Hence the donkey. The Bible tells us that as Jesus entered Jerusalem on his way to his throne, the cross, the people lined the streets, placed cloaks and palms on the road…rolling out the red carpet…and shouting, “Hosanna (which means, “Lord save us!”). Blessed in the one who comes in the name of the Lord!”
For a multitude of years, on this was what Christians focused their worship on the Sunday before Easter. Shouts of laud and praise. However, as I said, some years ago, actually around when I began my career as a Pastor, someone decided that there needed to be a change to Palm Sunday. The change was propelled by the fact that fewer and fewer Christians were attending the services that were to be held on the Thursday and Friday before Easter, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday. When people came to worship on Maundy Thursday, they heard Jesus’ last words to his disciples that they should love each other as he had loved them, and that they should regularly gather together and share a meal of his presence in bread and wine. Both of the words came on the night on which Judas, one of the disciples who had heard these words, betrayed, gave Jesus over, to the people who were out to kill Jesus. And when people came to worship on Good Friday, they heard the poignant story of Jesus’ abduction, his trial, his being whipped and spat upon, his crucifixion, and his burial in a tomb whose entrance was closed by a boulder.
Because so few people were attending Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, many Christians did not hear the excruciating pathos of God’s love. They did not “walk through the valley of death” with Jesus but only heard the “telling from the mountaintop” that Jesus Christ was alive on Easter. That group of decision makers decided that in order to grasp the wonder of Easter, it was important, if not necessary, to hear the pain and death of Maundy Thursday and Good Friday. So, Palm Sunday was changed. If you attend, and I invite you to do so, a Lutheran church, you will find the worship this Sunday beginning with the faithful accolades of the people of Jerusalem on the lips of the worshippers, but then there will be an abrupt change of tone as the passion story of Jesus, the events of Maundy Thursday and Good Friday fall upon your ears, and the shouts of , “Crucify him!”, cross your lips.
Although I believe that going to worship on Maundy Thursday and Good Friday provide a deeper spiritual experience of Jesus’ passion, and thereby well worth attending, I agree that hearing the Easter trumpets without the cellos of Jesus’ passion can leave us wondering, “What’s the big deal about Easter?” Without hearing the fickleness of our own faith…a faith that sometimes boldly and confidently shouts, “Hosanna!”, but at other times if not by our words, surely by our actions bellows out, “Crucify him!”, we might not grasp how un-fickle God’s love is for us. A love so steadfast that as the Apostle Paul says, “Even while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” (Romans 5)
It is the nature of our society to avoid bad news and to rush to triumphant news. Yet it is also the nature of our lives that bad news has its way of enveloping us in its quicksand. As we make our way into the last week before Easter, we come to see that Jesus is not averse to bad news, as a matter of fact it took hold of him, too. So, I invite you to come and hear the darkness of Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, bringing all the bad news of your life with you, and discover that you are not alone in your bad news. Rather, God, in Jesus, has plummeted into the worst the world can give, and Jesus is going to do put that bad news in its place, forever…….next week!
Have a great week.
God’s grace and peace, (ggap)
Pastor Jerry Nuernberger