13 April 2025
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Palm Sunday / Sunday of the Passion Vienna, VA
“The Triumphal Entry? The
Triumphal Exit!”
Text: Luke
19:28-40; Deuteronomy 32:36-39;
Philippians 2:5-11; Luke
22-23
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem on this day we now call
Palm Sunday is sometimes also called His triumphal entry. And rightly
so. Jesus seems to be at the peak of His popularity. The whole multitude
of His disciples are praising Him and blessing Him. All Glory, Laud,
and Honor (LSB
#442) is given
Him. Three years of teaching and healing has led to this day.
Jesus enters Jerusalem as a triumphant king would
- on a donkey. If the king and the nation were at war, He would enter on a war
horse. If the king and the nation were at war, weapons would be brandished, not
palm branches. If the king and the nation were at war, there would be war
cries, not proclamations of peace. This is a triumphal entry.The equivalent today might be the parades given
sports teams after winning the championship.
Except . . . except you don’t hold the parade before
the victory is won! Imagine this past February, the Eagles holding their
victory parade the Sunday before the Super Bowl. That wouldn’t make
sense, and would, in fact, rile up their opponent, the Chiefs, to fight even
harder and make sure they get the due reward for such arrogance. That they go
down in humiliation and utter defeat.
And that’s what happens to Jesus. Kind of . . .
For His opponents, the chief priests, Pharisees,
scribes, and elders are riled up at this demonstration. They tell Jesus to rebuke
His disciples. You haven’t won anything! And now they are more
determined than ever to make sure it is so. They will win, not Him! They
will win, whatever it takes. And we’re about to hear that part of the story in
a moment.
That while Jesus might have entered Jerusalem in a
triumphant way, but He will leave it quite differently. He will leave as a
convicted criminal of both the State and the Jews. He will leave either under
His own cross, or after it, when He becomes too weak to carry it
Himself. He leaves now with cries of mourning and lamentation. And then
when He is hoisted up on the cross, the last thing ringing in His ears will not
be cries of praise and blessing, but mocking and taunting. Enjoy your moment in
the sun now, Jesus! It’s not going to last . . .
Except . . . except it does. For what they will do to
Him, we could say, will be Jesus’ triumphal exit. And you’ll sing that
after hearing the next part of the story, in an ancient hymn, from the 6th
century (LSB
#454)! In that
hymn, you’ll call the cross, this instrument of death, not rebellious but faithful,
not defeat but the true sign of triumph, not humiliation but the
noblest tree. For it is. Because of the weight that hung on thee.
Which is not just the weight of an adult male, but the weight of all the sin of
all the world that was placed upon that man. That His death atone for it all,
pay the price for it all, and set us free from it all.
So Jesus enters Jerusalem like this precisely
because He knows this is what He will accomplish, that it will end like this - in
triumph. That through His death will be the victory of His resurrection.
For this is how faith works. Jesus enters Jerusalem triumphally, because faith
lives as if the future has already happened. Because we know that it will.
Because when God makes a promise, it is more sure and certain than anything
else in this world. It will be. You can count on it. You can stake your
life on it.
What else in this world can you say that about?
What else in this world can you trust that will not let you down? And anything
else in this world that you trust in, that you think will give you what you
want and need, that you think will make you happy and successful and fulfilled,
you know what Scripture calls them? False gods. Because in the end, when
you’re dying, when you’re no longer useful, when this world has moved on and
left you behind, where are they? What have they done for you? Why aren’t they saving
you? But in Jesus, you have the one who truly stands by you. Who does for you
what no one else will, or can. Who is with you for both this life AND the next.
And who did so by what we hear today and all this week: by making Himself
nothing.
Now, if there’s one thing that just doesn’t compute
in our world today, that’s it! In this world where we’re all trying to make
ourselves something. Climb the ladder, do something significant, go
viral, be above the law, be known for something great, or as someone great.
Because if this life is all you have, then accomplish something or be
forgotten. Do something so that at least your name can live on.
Otherwise . . .
But Jesus’ name lives on . . . why? Because, as we
heard in the readings from Philippians today, He made Himself nothing.
Even when He was praised on earth, as someone great, what is that compared to
what He had in heaven? He came down and humbled Himself. He came down from
everything to nothing, and then to cross and death and grave. Sealed in a tomb
where, the chief priests and Pharisees and scribes and elders hoped: Out of
sight, out of mind.
Except . . . except God exalted Him. He who
would not exalt Himself but made Himself nothing, was raised to life again and
to the right hand of the Father. FOR YOU. That the same be true for you.
That you who are humbled now, who are nothing now, who are maybe mocked and
taunted and mistreated now, by virtue of your baptism into Jesus and His
death and resurrection, that you be raised and exalted with Him. And not
because of anything you have managed to do or accomplish, but because of what
Jesus has done FOR YOU. Because of His death and resurrection, because of His triumphal
exit, from Jerusalem and from the grave, your name will live
on because you will live on in a life that has no end, and in a future
not of your own making, but far better! Of His making.
That’s what this day and this week are all about.
From nothing to everything. From death to life. Because of Jesus’ triumphal entry,
His triumphal exit, His triumph FOR YOU.
Now, have this mind among yourselves,
Paul said. This mind of Christ. We prayed earlier for that, too. That it be so.
That we have a mind that acts as if the future promises of God have already
happened, because we know that they will. A mind that is not afraid to make
yourself nothing, because in Jesus, we can never be nothing. And a mind that
glories in the cross, because of the weight that hung on thee. The
weight of our freedom. The weight of God’s love.
Love that also has set a table here for us, to feed
and strengthen our minds and hearts, our bodies and souls, to feed us Christ,
to instill in us this mind of Christ. All Glory, Laud, and Honor, to You,
Redeemer, King! Hosanna! Save us! We know that You have. We know that You
will. Let us hear now the story, of our Saviour, of the
Lamb who goes uncomplaining forth (LSB #438).
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.