(Homily of the Palm Sunday of the Lord’s Passion, Year A)
Today marks the beginning of the Holy Week or the “Great Week”, which will be crowned
with the Pasqual Triduum, the culminating point of the whole liturgical year.
In this WEEK, the Church celebrates in her Liturgy the
great mysteries of her redemption (Passion, Death and Resurrection of the
Lord). In the Holy Week God gives us an
appointment of an existential and salvific REALITY-SHOW of the Man on the Cross.
The Cross, therefore, is at the center of this week, but not just as an
ordinary instrument, but because of the Man on it, who made it a sublime and
salvific image. As such, we are called
to ‘re-live’ with faith and love these events of our Salvation. In our
Eucharistic celebration, we read the passion of the Lord, but prior to that, we
celebrated his entrance into Jerusalem (His Triumphant entry), in the midst of
acclamations by the people, the shouts of Hosanna that decorously accompanied
Jesus, and the road that was decorated with palm fronts. In his triumphant entry we could imagine
the presence of people of different calibers, the young and the old, the rich
and the poor, all full of expectations, and yet they were not too sure of what
was happening, they were pushing and
pulling all around him, singing and dancing, shouting and ululating: “Hossana!
Glory to God, hail the King, Son of God, Son of David, Alleluia”. On the other
hand, there were also the scribes, friends and opponents who understood better
than others where all this would lead to. Jesus took the path of suffering, he knew the road to
suffering and he walked by it. As
orchestrated in his Passion journey, it was a road of physical violence and
torture, a road of rejection and betrayal, a road of physical and spiritual
abandonment. But he knew how to journey on that road by means of humility,
obedience and resilience.
The disciples and the crowd proclaimed
Jesus King and he was accompanied majestically, they hailed him as King who
comes in the name of the Lord. They hailed Him with Hosanna, because in Jesus’
public ministry, he healed their sick, fed the hungry and performed so many
miracles. These wonders he wrought in their midst aroused in them the desire to
crown Him King, but afterwards the whole
game changed from shouts of acclamation to shouts of elimination. Who would
have imagined that the crowd which welcomed Jesus with such excitement and
enthusiasm during his entrance into Jerusalem would turn against him with such
hostility, as to demand for his elimination and death, from the ululation of
Hossana to the demand of his crucifixion. It
is now obvious that those shouts and ululations of Hossana were superficial.
The readings of today unify two events: the commemoration of the
triumphant entry of Jesus to Jerusalem and the “reality-show” of the Passion of
Christ. The first event was remembered with the rite of entrance through the procession
with palm fronts and the proclamation of the Gospel about the entrance of Jesus
in the Holy City. And the second event that auspicates the reality of Jesus’
Passion. The essence of our reflection
and of the events we are celebrating today is not as a result of the desire to
remember just the past, but rather to render present and re-live today the
Event of Christ through and in the liturgical celebration and in our lives.
Hence, we are called to enter with Jesus into the drama of his Passion.
In the first reading (Is. 50:4-7)
here we see what could be termed the
prophecy of Jesus’ Passion: “For my part, I made no resistance, neither did
I turn away. I offered my back to those who struck me, my cheeks to those who
tore at my beard; I did not cover my face. Against insult and spite” (Is. 50:5-6). Therein, we are called to reflect on the third song
of the Servant of Yahweh, which serves as a prefiguration of the sufferings of
the future Messiah. Even the psalm prefigures the Passion of Jesus in the
following words, “All who see me deride me. They curl their lips, they toss their
heads” (Ps. 22:7).
The second reading (Phil. 2:6-11)
presents the hymn of St. Paul in his letter to the Philipians, which in no small way illustrates the
mystery of Christ’s self-emptying in his death and supreme exaltation. Already
in the Incarnation, Jesus began the self-emptying process known as kenosis.
And St. Paul speaks of the kenosis
of Christ, “who, being in the form of God, did not count equality with God
something to be grasped. But he emptied himself, taking the form of a slave,
becoming as human beings are; and being in every way like a human being” (Phil. 2:7). But then St. Paul points to
his glorification thus: “And for this God raised him high, and gave him the
name which is above all other names” (Phil.
2:9). In this Christological presentation, the identity of Christ was
revealed: Jesus is the Son of God, who in order to save man, became man,
through an itinerary of suffering, humiliation and death. Indeed, the liturgy of the Palm / Passion Sunday
presents to us a complete chart of the mystery of our salvation. Let us not
forget, that we are at the center of the whole event, because it was for the
sake of man and his salvation that the Son of God passed through this heroic
adventure. As such, St. Paul sets out to propose a model we all have to
imitate, if man is at the center of
Jesus’s passion, he cannot remain only as a passive spectator. Little
wonder, the apostle invites: “make your own the mind of Christ Jesus” (Phil. 2:5). We are invited therefore,
to follow with faith and love the passion of the Lord.
This year we are called to reflect on the Passion of Christ according to
the Gospel narrative of St. Mathew (Mt.
26:14-27:66). In the account of the Passion according to Mathew, there is a latent emphasis on “freedom”,
freedom with which Christ affronts death, he
did not suffer passively or against his will, but he accepted suffering
willingly, knowing that it was the will of the Father: “Oblatus est quia ipse voluit”.
In Mathew’s account we notice a constant reference to the Sacred Scriptures:
“The Son of Man goes as it is written of Him” (26:24); “but then, how would the Scriptures be fulfilled that say
this is the way it must be?” (26:54);
“all this happened to fulfil the prophecies in the Scripture” (26:56). Jesus through and with his
Passion realizes the prophecies and the plan of salvation designed by the
Father.
In Mathew’s narrative, there is a
constant repetition of the innocence of Jesus, and the guilt of man, from
Pilate to the High Priests and the Pharisees, from Judas who betrayed Him, to
Peter that denied Him, to all the disciples that abandoned him. Through the
Gospel pericope of Mathew on the Passion, we are called to enter proper into
the drama that Jesus passed through his physical and spiritual sufferings. As
we enter into his Passion, let us remember those moments we have betrayed Him,
like Judas through our sins. At times we have claimed not to know him like
Peter in our brothers and sisters who suffer hunger and abandonement. The
moments we failed to keep wake with Him, those moments we allowed ourselves to
be carried away by the laziness of sleep, by spiritual inertia, like the apostles
in the Garden of Olive.
We can ask ourselves many questions in the light of Christ’s Passion and
sufferings. Each one of us can read his
own life in the light of the Passion, in order to discover those internal
incongruences, contradictions and ingratitude towards God. Let us have a
flash back to what transpired during his triumphant entry and during the
Passion, here we see once again the
power of the crowd. And the truth has to be said that sometimes we behave
like the crowd that was ululating HOSSANA and afterwards demand for His death.
It is easy to be part of the crowd that attend morning masses and Sunday masses,
to take front seats and places of honour in the church, and when Jesus needs us
most, we are no where to be found, we are like the crowd that turned against
Him and refused to go with Him to the Cross. In all, let us not fail to
recognize and appreciate Him for He died on the Cross for our salvation, and He
is always ready to welcome us in his Mercy. The immensity of his mercy cannot but propel us to cry for our sins of
betrayal, of denial and of abandonement of Him.
In the Passion, Jesus prays to the Father: “If it is possible, remove
this cup”, but “not what I will but what you will” (Mt. 26:29), the prayer of
Jesus takes him closer to the Father, it raised him up, and he ascended from
the desire “to remove the cup” to the desire of “what the Father wills and not
what he wills”. This is what prayer
does in our life too, it transcends us and takes us closer to God. Prayer
helped him to stand his ground before his terrifying Passion and death. Prayer
indeed, transforms our sufferings to avenues for blessing, through His sufferings every suffering of a Christian becomes a
SPIRITUAL THERAPY, for through Him, suffering acquires a sublime meaning
and signification. Even as we are plunged into this deadly and dreadful virus
in the world today, let us unite our
worries, our fears, our questions for meaning, our sufferings, in fact, our
passion to His Passion. Indeed, humanity today is experiencing a passion,
but it is only with the gaze fixed on the event of the Christ, precisely on His
Passion that we will be able to come out of this pandemic. His Passion and
Death give meaning to our life, our suffering and our death, and even our
present passion.
The Passion of Jesus should be for us an opportunity for
repentance (the repentant thief), an occasion to affirm His identity (the Centurion) or just as an incident that arouses hostility and indifference in us. So,
are we like Judas that betrayed him? Like Peter that denied him? Like Pilate
that delivered him to death? Like the stubborn thief that insulted Him? Instead
let’s cue in, in the line of Simon of Cyrene who helped him to carry his (our)
Cross, of the women of Jerusalem that mourn for him, of the Centurion who
strikes his chest and recognizes him as the Son of God, of the good thief that
believed and entrusted himself to Jesus. Does
His Passion still move us today? His Passion should move and touch us
because our sins inflicted those pains and sufferings on him. Let it not be a momentary touch or
feelings, rather His Passion should move us to flee from our sins and abandon
our old ways, for through His wounds we are healed (Is. 53:5; 1Pt. 2:21) and made whole.
In all, may His Passion lead us to the discovery of His real identity,
and here the gesture and proclamation of the Centurion is superb! “Truly this
man was the Son of God” (Mt. 27:54; Mk. 15:39;
Lk. 23:47). The pagan Centurion did
not recognize his Sonship because he saw the tomb empty, not because he saw
shining light, but he discovered this at the heart of the event of Good Friday:
Jesus on the Cross, the reality-show! But all does not end here, we can
only read and understand this event if we start from the end. Indeed, the
Scripture, the Passion of Christ like the Hebrew alphabet is to be read from
the end! We pray that we may learn from the Passion of Christ how to be patient
in adversity and build our hope in the Lord. Lord we unite our human
existential passions to your redeeming Passion. Our hope is in You! Amen!!!
(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
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