Summary: A Palm Sunday Sermon on John 12: 12-29

John 12: 12-19 A Royal Welcome

Not long before this story in scripture began,

Jesus had called to his very dead friend Lazarus,

And Lazarus breathed in the breath of life,

Shook off the stink of death,

And walked right out of his tomb.

And then, the crowds

Went wild

For Jesus.

Imagine --

If Jesus could

Fill up the bellies of the hungry

AND win a victory of life over death,

IF He could raise up the dead,

Just imagine ---

What He could

For Them!!

Such possibilities!

Expectations were high

And getting higher!

So, when Jesus headed out

To take the two mile trip

From Bethany to Jerusalem,

Entering the city

For the 4th time

A whole slew of people

Were there

to meet him,

And greet him --

Big time.

It was a, “pull out all the stops,

Pull down the palm branches,

Wave them high,

And start the shouting (!)”

Kind of greeting.

It was, a greeting

Fit for

A King.

For sure, that’s what

they intended it to be:

A royal welcome,

For someone they thought

Would be THE RULER

Who would restore the “nation”

To its “god-given” destiny,

Its rightful place

of power and glory.

And palm branches in hand,

Clearly, they were expecting

A victory.

And, among their praise that Sunday long ago

Was this ancient cry from scripture:

“Hosanna!

Blessed is he who comes

In the name of the LORD,”

The King of Israel.

Most of those words are straight from Psalm 118,

But the part about,

“the KING of ISRAEL,”

Which they also shouted (?)

THAT part -- they added

On their own.

Clearly, the crowd

was ready

To give Jesus

A royal crown.

Step aside. Herod.

Pilate.

Caesar.

The crowd is ready

To Make

Jesus

A KING.

Interestingly enough, in the story,

While the crowd is still singing their song of praise to the King,

While they’re still waving their palm branches and

giving Jesus a royal welcome,

While they’re ready to see him

sitting on some

Glorious, royal

throne,

Jesus,

Suddenly,

Sits himself

Down -

On a

Donkey.

As places to sit go,

A donkey’s back

Wouldn’t exactly

Be as comfy as a cushy throne!

But, in the middle of their songs of praise,

that’s where Jesus sat.

On a donkey.

He was sending the crowd

A message.

A message as old as the prophet Zechariah,

Who promised the people:

“Your king is coming,

[A good king who makes all things right,]

A humble king riding on a donkey …”

That part of the promise was quoted by the gospel of John,

But Zechariah’s promise goes even further:

Here’s what the King will do:

“I've had it with war—no more chariots …

no more war horses in Jerusalem,

no more swords and spears, bows and arrows.

He will offer peace to the nations,

a peaceful rule worldwide,

from the four winds to the seven seas.”

On that Sunday when he entered Jerusalem,

Riding on a donkey,

Jesus was acting

Both to fulfill this ancient promise

And to inform the crowd

The terms of his rule:

He would be a king alright,

But not necessarily the kind of king

They wanted.

He’d be a king who was

humble, meek, and lowly.

He’d be a king who would bring

An end to war horses and chariots,

And Swords and spears.

He’d be the King who’d bring

Peace.

Peace.

Peace.

Of course, Not long after Jesus entered the city,

Jesus, the KING,

Would take up a towel,

And a bowl of water

Kneel before his disciples,

And washed their tired, dirty feet.

Turned out the man they proclaimed King

was more than willing to do the work

of a “no account” slave,

Right in front of them.

Right down their on the floor.

Talk about humble! Meek! Lowly!

And that same night Jesus would command his disciples

To “Love One Another.”

Imagine that!

Jesus the King --

Whose only law, it turns out, is love!!

On that same night

That he took up the towel and water,

Jesus would also stand among the disciples,

And tell them straight out:

“Peace I leave you.

My peace I give you.”

And what Jesus was giving that night,

The peace that he was talking about

was no worldly peace,

The kind you get when you

Overpower someone else

by sheer brute force,

Beat the snot out of them

Till they can’t fight no more,

So you quit fighting.

No!

What Jesus offered was a whole ’nother

kind of peace.

It was, the peace

Of God.

A peace

Where all is at rest,

Where joy is known,

And a life of well-being is embraced and celebrated.

A peace

That is complete,

Whole,

And holy.

A Peace

With

God.

And one day soon,

Jesus would appear behind locked doors

And give his very frightened disciples

That gift of peace,

As he breathed into them the Holy Spirit,

And their lives would be changed

Forever

Because of it.

Jesus, oh yes,

He was a King, definitely,

But a king whose gospel

was

peace.

A king whose followers

Would know His peace

Within them

And proclaim

That peace

To everyone.

The followers of King Jesus --

Wouldn’t need swords.

But, palm branches?

That’s another story.

Those they can hold

Throughout eternity

As they sing their praise

To Jesus.

Their humble King

Their king of Peace.

OK -- that day Jesus entered Jerusalem,

When Palm branches were waving

And the people were shouting,

the disciples

And the crowd along with them -

Seeing Jesus bouncing up and down

On the back of a donkey, --

They didn’t get it.

As to the prophecy of Zechariah,

They missed it

Entirely.

Didn’t see it.

Not at all. Not at the time.

[Went right over their heads.]

Not till later did they realize

What Jesus was trying to do,

What he was trying to say.

The night Jesus would be arrested,

They’d gladly trade

Palm leaves

For swords.

They really knew nothing of His peace,

Until later.

And some of those

who saw Jesus entering the city

On the back of that donkey,

Not only didn’t know his peace (!)

They wanted

Him

Dead.

A new king

In their nation? In Jerusalem?

Somebody who

Could raise the dead?

Somebody who

Commanded

LOVE?

Or even peace?

That was too

Risky.

Too Uncertain.

Too Uncontrollable.

That was

Too much!

Jesus, they KNEW it,

Jesus

Must die.

They would give

No praise to Jesus.

Not that day. Not Ever.

But today (?)

WE DO.

Today, it’s Palm Sunday,

Once again,

And today, we take our turn

And join the crowd

In Praising

Jesus.

Today it’s our turn -- to put aside our fear,

And tell the world:

Jesus is the King of Kings

The Lord of Lords.

Who gives us life and peace.

A disciple

By the name of Nathaniel,

Was actually the first

To see and to name

Jesus as “King.”

So, it’s only right

That we modern day disciples

Join Nathaniel in recognizing

Just who Jesus was and is.

And so today, we take a palm branch in hand

And give a royal welcome, shouting out our best:

Hosanna, Hosanna in the highest.

Blessed is he who comes in the name of the LORD --

Jesus, Our KING.***

But let us do so

As people who know

Exactly what Kind of King,

King Jesus IS:

Let us praise

Jesus the King,

Who will indeed

Win the victory

Of life over death,

Not only for Lazarus,

But for all of us!

But he’s the King

Who will win that victory,

Not by wearing a crown of gold,

Or a crown of laurel leaves,

But a crown of sharp and terrible thorns.

He’s the King, alright,

But not a king who will wear

A royal robe and wave a scepter of power.

Who will command his royal armies

To march in war.

He’s the King

Whose purple robe will be scornfully, painfully placed

Upon his beaten, bloodied back

Then stripped from him again.

He’s the king

whose only scepter

Will be a reed drawn from the water

Soldiers, who won’t obey him at all,

Mockingly placed in his hand.

He’s the King

Whose throne

Will not be a seat of royal power and authority,

But a cross of suffering and pain.

So, Let us praise Jesus.

Let us praise this day

Because he’s our king,

The humble King

Whose power is love, who commands us to love,

And whose gospel is peace.

Whose peace

Is also ours.

And whose death on the cross

and whose resurrection

Will bring us eternal and abundant life

Let us this day,

This Palm Sunday

And throughout eternity,

Lift up our palm branches,

And shout our praise to KING Jesus,

A king of peace,

Who gave his life

For us.

Let us shout

Hosanna! Hosanna in the Highest!