One of my favourite
spirituals says, “I have decided to follow Jesus/No turning back, no turning
back.” In Luke’s Gospel, there is a point after the Transfiguration when it
says, “When the days drew near for him to be taken up, he set his face to go to
Jerusalem.” (Luke 9:51). As far away as he is from Jerusalem and the
crucifixion, there is nothing that can change what’s about to happen. For
Jesus, there was no turning back.
It is like when we
see footage of some sort of disaster and people are running away, the first
responders are running towards the danger, towards the source. Jesus is running
towards the source of the problem, the only place where healing can start, and
for him and his community that meant Jerusalem.
It was in Jerusalem
where the corruption lived; it was there in that holy city where the greatest
sense of separation and sin lived and flourished. Like the surgeons’ scalpel,
Jesus was to approach the problem directly—no turning back.
His love for
Jerusalem was so deep—his love for the whole world and all that God had made
was so strong— that even death could be risked to
bring the message of salvation.
People gathered in
the streets, perhaps just to witness yet another self-proclaimed messiah enter
the city. They could at least brag to their neighbours, “I was there that day.”
They got caught up in the spectacle and shouted along with the crowd, “Hosanna!
Blessed is he who come in the name of the Lord!” But somehow it was more than
that; it was their hope. They were there that day because of their hope that
maybe this one really was the Messiah, the one sent by God to bring
salvation.
Jesus was not what
they expected. Jesus was not what anyone expected. Sure, we have the luxury to
sift through the Hebrew texts of the Bible and see, as plain as anything, the
Suffering Servant, the deep love God has for God’s creation and the desire of
God to love and care for everyone, even the stranger “within thy gates.”
Palm Sunday is in
some way a celebration of a moment in history when the crowd got it right—they
saw and believed, or at least hoped, that Jesus of Nazareth, that this teacher
and healer, truly was the Messiah. Regardless, for Jesus there simply was no
turning back; his face was set to heal our pain.
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