Holy Tuesday (36), Girard, and Palm Sunday
Jesus’ triumphal entry was not a declaration of physical warfare against the Romans; it was a declaration that his kingdom would be a different kind of kingdom.
On Tuesday of Holy Week, there was a plot that involved money, power, religious leaders, a famous festival, and the devil himself. The religious leaders were looking for some way to get rid of Jesus, for they were afraid of the people. But they needed an insider— someone who knew the game plan of the inner circle; someone who knew the inside jokes, and someone who knew their bank account number. His name was Judas.
Satan enters Judas and attempts to replicate the wilderness temptations, offering Jesus an easy way out of his course to the cross. If only Jesus is arrested, then he will precipitate a war with the Romans and show himself to be the Messiah. If the religious leaders arrest Jesus, perhaps there will be an inevitable war where Jesus will be forced to forego his mission. God will intervene, defeat the Roman powers, and establish a fleshly kingdom. And perhaps Judas will be a powerful leader in this newly established messianic reign.
But Judas’ dream of an earthly kingdom without the cross and the resurrection would not be. In a fascinating turn of events, when Jesus was handed over to the religious leaders–-on Holy Wednesday or Maundy Thursday, depending on harmonization–- what did the disciples want to do? They wanted to take up the sword and begin a war. They even cut off the ear of one of the servants. Is Judas’s dream being fulfilled before his very eyes?
“My plan has worked. Jesus is going to cast himself from the temple, take the bread, break the fast and show his authority.”
Jesus, however, does not follow the script as Judas imagined. He immediately turns the table, heals the man’s right ear, and says, “None of this. This is not the will of my Father.” Almost immediately, Judas’s vision of what he believed would happen after the arrest of Jesus is shattered.
Jesus’ triumphal entry was not a declaration of physical warfare against the Romans; it was a declaration that his kingdom would be a different kind of kingdom. The kingdom of Jesus would never come through the sword, but salvation; not through war but worship.
Come, let us worship and bow down to the One who overcomes the Devil and rejects all satanic bribes.
Prayer: On this holiest day, O Lord, keep us in truth. Do not allow the offers of this world to persuade us to forsake the crucified Lord. We are unworthy as your servants, yet, we pray that you may count us worthy in your kingdom, for there is no earthly gift greater than the gift of being united to you. Amen.
Notations
Ted Gioia is one of the most successful Substackers of our day. He is deeply invested in thought and symphonically self-aware. His latest piece on 12 Things I Learned from Rene Girard is a great example. He notes:
Girard devoted his life to exposing the lies behind fashions and trends. And now, after his death, he is fashionable and trendy. It’s almost like some kind of punishment.
Girard was a fascinating exposer. He saw behind the veil those things that no one could fathom. In this sense, he was a connoisseur of the old, which gave him the lucidity to understand the new.
He offers his 12 lessons in this chart:
My old Professor, Sinclair Ferguson, writes a wonderful foreword to Witherow’s I Will Build My Church, a compilation of essays on Presbyterian polity, baptism, and the Sabbath. Indeed, three of my favorite subjects. Herein, I found a lovely little gem from Witherow:
There is such a thing as being Presbyterian without being a Christian, and it is possible to be a Christian without being a Presbyterian. Depend upon it, it is best to be both (xx).
Noa Tishby’s Israel: A Simple Guide to the Most Misunderstood Country in the World is a tour de force of Jewish DNA. Noa seeks to explain the profound cultural and sociological confusion Westerners have about Israel as a country and a military power. Chapter one is a hilarious biographical sketch with snippets of geo-political data.
Nuntium
We have some great Palm Sunday photos with my sermon attached:
Lenten Blessings,
Uriesou Brito
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