Sunday, 14 April 2019

The King Arrives

As we approach Easter, I plan to post a short reflection each day about the events in Christ's life during the final "holy week" before his crucifixion and subsequent resurrection.

Please read Matthew 21:1–11

Today is Palm Sunday, marking the beginning of Holy Week in the Christian calendar. The Gospels tell us that it was on the equivalent Sunday in about AD 30 that Jesus of Nazareth began the last week of his earthly life and the culmination of the three years of his public ministry as an itinerant rabbi in Palestine. On that day, Jesus rode into Jerusalem, riding on a donkey and receiving the acclaim of a large crowd of thousands of people as the long awaited King of Israel, the Messiah.

As he rode into the holy city, the crowd threw down their cloaks and waved palm branches in praise to God (hence the name Palm Sunday). Children as well as adults sang his praises. For many people this was going to be the beginning of a holy revolution that would throw the occupying Romans out of Palestine and restore the nation of Israel to its former glory. It was the dawning realisation that Jesus wasn't going to be that kind of Messiah that led to the crowds turning against him and demanding his death only five days later.

What Christ's mission involved was far greater than defeating the Roman armies. Christ rode into Jerusalem knowing he was coming to die. And so courageously and resolutely he rode into the jaws of hell to win salvation for sinners. He was a victorious Messiah, but the enemies he defeated were sin, death and the devil. And rescued not just one nation but the whole world. He came as God's king to set up the Kingdom of God, but he came to do that through making peace, not through hatred and war. He was a king utterly unlike any before or since. He is a king who does not create subjects by force or by political guile; his "subjects" are regarded as his friends and their loyalty is won only by the king's love for them and their trust and love for him in return.

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