Philippians 2:1-11 (Matthew 21:1-11)
Be Like Jesus
James Sledge April
9, 2017
When
I was a young boy, my grandmother would sometimes sew matching Easter sport
coats for me and my younger brother. There are pictures of the two of us in our
pastel shorts, plaid jackets, and bow ties. Some years the Easter baskets made
the picture as well.
I’m
talking about Easter a week early because when I was a kid, Palm Sunday and
Easter pretty much ran into one another. Palm Sunday was when you started the
pre-Easter celebration. The new sport coats and ties and Easter dresses would
have to wait another week, but on Palm Sunday we got to wave our palm branches
and parade around, pre-game festivities before the big event.
I’m
sure I learned about the Last Supper, Jesus’ arrest, and the cross. They must have come up in Sunday school. Plus the Lord’s
Suppers that happened four times a year were mostly focused on Jesus’
sacrifice. But for me, Holy Week started with a parade, and then, next stop,
Easter baskets and candy and new clothes and an overflowing church singing and
celebrating. From one celebration to the next.
If
only there were not a cross between this Sunday and next. That would make this
whole Easter business so much easier. Christianity without a cross would be so much
more fun. The crowds in Jerusalem who shout, “Hosanna to the Son of David! could
just keep shouting. They could join me in exchanging their palms for Easter
baskets and new sport coats.
But
it turns out there is a cross, and the crowds don’t much care for it. Jesus was
supposed to rescue them, throw out the Romans, make their lives better, put the
Democrats or the Republicans in power, depending on how you read your scriptures.
But Jesus gets himself arrested and by Friday the crowd is shouting, “Let
him be crucified!”
We
have an advantage over the crowds. We’ve seen how this movie ends so we can
just stay away on Thursday and Friday if we want. We can skip the cross and
exchange our palms for Easter baskets and new Easter outfits.
But
not if Paul has anything to say about it. What a spoilsport. Just because
following Jesus has gotten him beaten, run out of town, and imprisoned more
times than he can count, he seems to think that all Jesus’ followers need to
embrace the cross.
Of
course Jesus says the same thing, says that no one can be his follower without
taking up their cross. He’s pretty insistent on that point, but his own disciples
run when Jesus gets arrested. They didn’t yell, “Let him be crucified!” like
the crowds, but like the crowds, they hoped to exchange palms for Easter
baskets and new sport coats.