Not Just a Story: Living Holy Week from the Inside Out

Anyone who has known me for me than a year has certainly heard me say that this day, Palm Sunday, is my favourite liturgy of the entire Christian year.  If you’ve known me 2 years, you’ve certainly heard me say it twice… poor Kristina has known me 23 years, and has certainly heard it 23 times!

This is my favourite liturgy of the entire year for one reason: the drama.

It’s a service with a few extra parts, all of which go back to the earliest centuries of the undivided Christian church.  And, even when we go back and study those earliest Palm Sundays and Holy Weeks that we have recorded back in the 3rd and 4th century, it’s all dripping with drama – it’s full of emotion.  And this day in particular is supposed to hit you like a giant mood swing, like the irrational tantrum thrown by a toddler:  just a few minutes ago, you and I, part of the crowd, were joyfully singing “Hosanna!” which means “Save us!”.  We’re joyfully welcoming Jesus as Lord, shouting ‘you’re the Christ!  You’re the anointed Lord sent by God!  Save us and help us, we need you!”  It’s happy music, it’s the waving of palms and branches, it’s a victory parade down the aisle.

Hosanna!  Blessed is he!  Those were the words on your lips.

But then, moments later, what do you find yourself saying? 

You see, that’s the harsh, dramatic reality of this day.  It’s no accident that it’s you, and it’s me, it’s us, the same ones who proclaimed Him as Lord, now find ourselves shouting “crucify”.

This service, this holy week is dramatic.  But it’s not just a play for us to watch.

The drama is on purpose… and it’s for a purpose.

And it’s all about remembrance

But see, this is where we run into a problem, English-speakers in particular.  Because we don’t have enough words to accurately translate that Christian idea of remembrance.

You and I, we hear “remembrance” and we think of history, something long ago and far away that shouldn’t be forgotten.  We thing of happy things gone by, memories of something that used to be.

But that really isn’t an accurate translation of the idea of remembrance we find in scripture, the idea of re-membrance that Christ commands us to do “in re-membrance of me”, the idea where Paul instructs the church to re-member Christ’s sacrifice, proclaiming the Lord’s death until He comes again.

We’re not talking what we would normally call “remembrance”.  We’re talking about re-membrance.

Re-member. To become a member once more.
Re-member. To join ourselves back together, like the limbs, the members of a body. 
Re-member. To enter into the action, bringing it forth into our own day.

You see, the Christian observance of Holy Week should never be an exercise in learning history.  When we hear – when we enter into – the scriptures and recount the events of Christ’s passion, we’re not just “remembering” or “recalling” something done long ago by some Jewish leaders or the Roman governor.

No, it’s that older Christian, and even older Jewish idea of re-membrance that goes back to the Passover, where God instructs and commands us to enter into the action, these life-changing, universe-changing, cosmic-level once-and-for-all events, that sure, on our time scale, happened “long ago and far away”, but were nonetheless done for us as they were done for all humanity, in every time and in every place, for every language, people, and nation, to be passed on and entered-into and made present once more every year, in every place, taught to each new generation, as we enter into and proclaim the live-giving, soul-saving, absolutely earth-shaking reality that Christ died as a sacrifice to save you.  Yes, you, the same one who, moments ago, with all humanity, flipped from shouts of praise to shouts of “crucify”, the same one who, is just as much a sinner in need of grace as any person in that crowd or the soldier driving the nails.

As Isaiah prophesied, yes, all we – yes, we – like sheep have gone astray.  We have turned – every one – to his own way. 

Yes, this day is dramatic. But the reality of the brokenness of the entire universe is nothing short of the ultimate divine drama.

Why we need this drama.

We enter into these events as we are led deeper and deeper into the reality of our participation in the death of God’s own son – yes, it was me, and it was you – who participated in the events of this week, and why?  Because it’s me and it’s you who, even all these years later, still need that once-and-for-all sacrifice to pay the wages of sin: death. 

We, like all humanity, have sinned and have fallen short of the glory of God.  We all die, and like the thief on the cross was able to admit, it’s harsh, but it’s right.  It’s just the way it has to be for fallen humanity.  We can’t offer a price for our own lives, because our lives are bound to death and sin and pride and greed… in fact, apart from Christ, left to our own devices, we’re totally enslaved to it, and the quicker we acknowledge that, the better.

We enter into these events to remind us, to lead us to re-member, to join ourselves once more to Christ, to God’s only Son, the one and only person who, because He was God in the flesh, wasn’t enslaved to sin, and could pay something far above and beyond what was owed, breaking the whole system of bondage, freeing all who trust in Him from the captivity of sin, as He tramples Satan under His feet and offers hope that bursts through the gate of the grave and the chains of death.

But it’s no good – no, in fact, it’s useless – if that’s a story, a faint memory, a tale of something that happened long ago and far away.

Our Place in the Story

Friends, in a few moments we will turn to the confession.  It’s the same one we say week in and week out.
But, like everything else in the liturgy, it’s on purpose, and it’s for a purpose.

We confess our sins each week because it’s central to who we are and what we do.  Each week, this week, last week, and yes, next week too, you and I will fall short of the glory of God. We will sin by thought, word, or deed, by things done or left undone, and we will continue to need a saviour.

But remember: complete, utter, and ongoing reliance on God is not a bug, it’s not a failure.  No, it’s a feature of how humanity was intended to be: completely, utterly, and forever reliant on God.

Like the thief on the cross next to Jesus, it’s time to admit that you need Jesus.  That you need to enter into this Holy Week, because, yes, in fact, you are a part of that crowd, just as I am.

You and I, we need, and it is our privilege, to re-member, to join ourselves up with those disciples who gathered on Thursday night to receive a new commandment, to have our feet washed by our servant King.  We need, and it is a part of our confession, to walk with Christ to the garden of gethsemane overnight on Thursday, where he told us to watch and pray, but we, like the disciples, find our eyelids heavy and our hearts distracted.  We need, and it is for us, that we follow Christ to the cross on Good Friday, that amazing, horrible, terrible, and wonderful cross, the one that you and I caused, and from which you and I eternally benefit, and it’s really only then, that we can truly share in and proclaim that unspeakable joy of Easter.

So my friends, embrace the drama – and block out your calendar – because this Holy Week is God’s gift to you.  It’s God’s invitation for you to enter into those events of long ago and far away, and to join yourself to them, so that you, as a follower of Jesus, can know Christ and make Him known, in every age, in every place… and for His glory, now and forevermore.  Amen.

Save us… from what?

All the events of Palm Sunday are wrapped up in one little word: “Hosanna”.

For ‘church’ people, it’s a familiar word: every time we celebrate communion we join our voices with angels and archangels to proclaim “holy, holy, holy … blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest!”

But as familiar as it is, what does “Hosanna” mean? 

What, exactly, were those crowds singing and shouting on that morning in Jerusalem so long ago?  And, what exactly do we proclaim when we, together with all Christians across time and space, join our voices with theirs?

One Little Word

On the one hand, the answer is simple, though it might change or even challenge how we’ve come to read and picture the Palm Sunday gospel.

First and foremost, “Hosanna” isn’t a shout of praise, or a shout of triumph for a parade through town.

No, “Hosanna” isn’t a shout of praise… it’s a plea.

The Hebrew word הושענא (hosanna), used throughout the Psalms, means “save us”.  “Please save us, we beseech you to save us; be our saviour; be our rescuer; please, please, be the one who saves us.”

As Jesus enters Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives, riding humbly on a donkey in fulfilment of the sign given by the Prophets,[1] the crowd lines the street, coming out of houses and workrooms and marketplaces to shout “Save us, O Son of David”; “Be our saviour – please be the one who comes in the name of the Lord”; “Hosanna in the highest – please be the one to save us from on high”.

Save us.

The Palm Sunday scene in scripture isn’t a triumphant throng singing a victory chant: no, the scene is that of a longing, unfulfilled, anxious crowd trusting – hoping – that this Jesus is the one who will save them.

But as we join our voices in their plea for salvation, we have to ask: save us from what?

Save us from oppression.

The obvious answer for those people gathered to celebrate the Passover in Jerusalem is oppression.  Save us from oppression.

As we know, the entire region was under Roman control, with heavy foreign taxes imposed, foreign soldiers in the streets to keep people in line, and constant political unrest as people and families were divided about the solution to their problems.

It’s this freedom from oppression that was front and centre in the minds of the crowd that day.  That crowd really was no different than ourselves – it’s part of our fallen human nature to focus on our own needs, on our own immediate situation rather than seeing the big picture, or how things will end up when the paths we’re on are stretched out across eternity.

They were thinking about the here and now.  They faced high taxes and low income.  Businesses were held hostage by high-interest loans from wealthy Romans, and the livelihood you worked a lifetime to build could be crushed by a single decision by a government hundreds of miles away.  Really, times haven’t changed that much, have they?

The crowd called out from freedom from this oppression: Hosanna, save us, Son of David, our earthly king.

But Jesus was more than they bargained for. 

As the anxious, unsettled, oppressed masses gathered in Jerusalem for the Passover – the annual celebration of God’s deliverance of his people, saving them from slavery through the waters of death – the oppression from which Jesus will deliver them on Good Friday goes much deeper than bank accounts, job security, and food on the table.

Yes, without a doubt, all of those matter, but the oppression that Jesus breaks is so much more.

Jesus enters Jerusalem not to fill their bellies or their pockets, not to break the yokes of an oppressive government, but to break the chains of death and hell: to untie, for those willing to let go, the weight, guilt, and shame of sin that weighs down our heads so that all we can see is the decay and squalor of this fallen world.

Jesus hears their plea, he saves them, not by magically wiping away the consequences of the greed and pride of the world around them, but, in the words of the Psalms, by being the one who lifts up our heads, who takes off the blinders, casts off the heavy yoke around our neck, and allows us to look heavenward, to see the big picture as it unfolds, to recognize the blessings of God at work around us, and to praise God for his salvation, as we, too, have been delivered from slavery to sin as we die to self in the waters of baptism.

Save us from oppression, they cry.  And he will.

Save us from false religion.

And, as we join our voices in that plea to save us, Jesus has even more in store.

As you read through your Bible this week from Matthew 21 onwards, you see the first thing Jesus does is walk into the temple and overturn the tables of the moneychangers: what we call the cleansing of the temple.

Again, Jesus gave them more than they bargained for.  He saves us from false religion.

There’s so much we could say here, but the one point I want to make is this: Jesus saves us from the many ways we find to give ourselves cheap and easy hope by trusting in things that cannot last. 

One of the proofs that we are made in God’s Image is that every person alive finds something to worship.  We worship our bank accounts, we worship science, we worship family, we worship our image, we worship relationships, we worship mindfulness and positive thinking.  But, as Jesus overturns the tables of the money-changers; as the holy curtain of the temple is ripped in two as Jesus dies, he shows us that no real and lasting hope is to be found while our heads and eyes remain weighed downward by shame and grief. 

No false idol on our level, no matter how good it makes us feel, can do for us what Jesus does when he is lifted up on that tree, and just as Moses lifted the snake in the wilderness, we must cast off our weight and look up if we’re to see His salvation.  Finding hope, finding something to hang our trust on in the world around us is like finding the most comfortable armchair on a sinking ship.  Lasting hope is found in the one who overcame death and the grave.  True religion isn’t made in our image; it’s found in the One in whose Image we were made.

Save us from Ourselves.

But the biggest surprise for that crowd on that first Palm Sunday was something they never saw coming.

“Save us, O Son of David”.  “Be the one who saves us from on high”.

Save us… from ourselves.

That’s the drama of this day.

The same crowd that cries for salvation is the crowd that cries “Crucify him”.

The Church, and you, and I, every time we gather, every time we share the Eucharist, every time we sing “Hosanna”, need to realize that we are the same crowd that shouts “Crucify”, that we are the ones who call for his death. We are the fickle crowd that is never satisfied, that is weighed down, chained down by our own sin to only see the decay around us.

“Save us”. 

And that’s the glory of this week. 

The King of Glory emptied himself, and took the form of a slave.
He humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death – even death on a cross.

He died to save us from ourselves.

He died that we might take his yoke that is easy and his burden that is light, and lift up our heads and see him on that awful tree, as we cry “Save us”, knowing full well that His love for us held Him there.

Save us from oppression.  Save us from false religion.  Lord Jesus, save us from ourselves.

And seeing him, seeing his love for us as by death he overcame death, as the grave loses its sting, and the gates of hell could not withstand the Lord of Life Himself: then, every knee shall bow, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of the Father.

Hosanna.  Save us.  Amen.


[1] Zechariah said the Messiah would come from the Mount of Olives near Bethphage (Zech. 14:1-11), and riding on a donkey (Zech. 9:9)