Commemoration of the Lord's Entry
into Jerusalem
Theme:
What Is the Name of Your Donkey?
Year A: Matt 21:1-11, Year
B: Mark 11:1-10 or John 12:12-16, Year C: Luke 19:28-40
What
different story would we be telling today if the unnamed owners of the donkey
had refused to give it up? Maybe we would have no story of the triumphal entry,
at least not in the way Jesus wanted it. No matter how unknown a person is, he
or she can still play a crucial role in the unfolding of God's plan. The Lord
needs each one of us as he needed the unnamed owners of the donkey in the
reading. We are not told who these owners of the donkey are but the fact that
they understood that "the Lord" refers to Jesus and voluntarily gave
up the donkey shows that they could be his secret disciples or admirers.
Otherwise one would have expected them to answer, "But who is this Lord
who needs my donkey?"
A
donkey was a very big thing in those day. The donkey was the equivalent of a
car, a truck and a tractor all in one. It was a car because people used it to
move around and do their shopping, a truck because it was used to carry load,
and a tractor because it was used in cultivating the land. Add to this the fact
that the donkey had never been ridden, that means it was brand new and had a
very high market value. You can see that giving up the donkey just because the
Lord needed it was a very big sacrifice. It was a generous and heroic act of
faith.
Now,
compare the faith response of the owners of the donkey to that of many of the
faithful in our churches today.
A
visiting preacher was really getting the congregation moving. Near the end of
his sermon he said, "This church has really got to walk," to which
someone in the back yelled, "Let her walk preacher." The preacher
then said, "If this church is going to go it's got to get up and
run," to which someone again yelled with gusto, "Let her run
preacher." Feeling the surge of the church, the preacher then said with
even louder gusto, "If this church is going to go it's got to really
fly," and once again with ever greater gusto, someone yelled, "Let
her fly preacher, let her fly." The preacher then seized the moment and
stated with even greater gusto, "If this church is really going to fly
it's going to need money." There was silence. Then someone in the back
seat cried, "Let her walk preacher, let her walk."
Max
Lucado reminds us that each of us has got a donkey that the Lord needs. Here is
his reflection on using our donkey for the service of the Lord:
Sometimes
I get the impression that God wants me to give him something and sometimes I
don't give it because I don't know for sure, and then I feel bad because I've
missed my chance. Other times I know he wants something but I don't give it
because I'm too selfish. And other times, too few times, I hear him and I obey
him and feel honored that a gift of mine would be used to carry Jesus to
another place. And still other times I wonder if my little deeds today will
make a difference in the long haul.
Maybe
you have those questions, too. All of us have a donkey. You and I each have
something in our lives, which, if given back to God, could, like the donkey,
move Jesus and his story further down the road. Maybe you can sing or hug or
program a computer or speak Swahili or write a check.
Whichever,
that's your donkey.
Whichever,
your donkey belongs to him. It really does belong to him. Your gifts are his
and the donkey was his. The original wording of the instructions Jesus gave to
his disciples is proof: "If anyone asks you why you are taking the
donkeys, you are to say, 'Its Lord is in need.'" [Max Lucado, And the
Angels were Silent, p. 54]
So,
what is the name of your donkey? The Lord has need of it.
Homily for
Palm Sunday of the Lord's Passion: Commemoration of the Lord's Passion
Theme:
He Died for Us
Isaiah 50:4-7, Philippians 2:6-11, A: Matt 26:14 –
27:66 // B: Mark 14:1 – 15:47 // C: Luke 22:14 – 23:56
In
the old liturgy, before Vatican II, the reading of the Passion was greeted with
total silence. There was no homily. Even the concluding acclamation: “This is
the gospel of the Lord” was omitted. On a day like this, I sometimes feel that
the most eloquent response to the word of God we have proclaimed is silence.
Even the best of homilies could be a distraction from the deep meditation in
which many of us find ourselves at the end of the story of the suffering and
death of our Lord Jesus Christ. But then also, a homily might be useful to
direct and focus our meditation in the right direction. Otherwise we might be
like little Johnny who was failing all his exams in the public school until his
parents decided to send him to a Catholic school. At the end of the year Johnny
came out on top of the class. When his parents asked him what made him change
so dramatically Johnny replied, “You see, the moment I walked into that new
school and saw that guy hanging on the cross, I knew that the people here were
dead serious; so I decided not to take any chances.”
The
crucifix might have helped Johnny to improve his scores but it is easy to see
that Johnny has misread the crucifix. The man on the cross is not there to
scare little boys but to show them how much he loves them. He is not there to
show them what would happen to them if they misbehaved; he is there to show
them that he has already paid the penalty for their sins. He is not dying on
the cross for what he has done but for what you and I have done; because he
loves us. He died for us.
“He
died for us:” Many of us have heard this phrase so many times that it now
carries with it neither the shock of someone dying on account of what we have
done nor the good news of our being delivered from death. For us to hear this
message again today as for the first time, the story of a man who literally
died for the misdeeds of his brother might help.
Two
brothers lived together in the same apartment. The elder brother was an honest,
hard-working and God-fearing man and the younger a dishonest, gun-totting,
substance-abusing rogue. Many a night the younger man would come back into the
apartment late, drunk and with a lot of cash and the elder brother would spend
hours plead ing with him to mend his ways and live a decent life. But the young
man would have none of it. One night the junior brother runs into the house
with a smoking gun and blood-stained clothes. “I killed a man,” he announced.
In a few minutes the house was surrounded by police and the two brothers knew
there was no escape. “I did not mean to kill him,” stammered the young brother,
“I don’t want to die.” By now the police were knocking at the door. The senior brother
had an idea. He exchanged his clothes with the blood-stained clothes of his
killer brother. The police arrested him, tried him and condemned him to death
for murder. He was killed and his junior brother lived. He died for his
brother.
Can
we see that this story of crime and death is basically a story of love?
Similarly the story of the suffering and death of Jesus which we heard in the
Passion is basically a story of love – God’s love for us. How should we respond
to it? Well, how would you expect the junior brother to respond to the death of
the senior brother? We would expect him to respond with GRATITUDE. Gratitude to
his generous brother should make him turn a new leaf and never go back to a
life of crime. He would be a most ungrateful idiot if he should continue living
the sort of life that made his brother die. Gratitude should make him keep the
memory of his brother alive. No day should pass that he should not remember his
brother who died for him. Finally, if the dead brother has got a wife and children
we should expect the saved brother, out of gratitude, to love and care for
them. What God expects from us today is gratitude – gratitude strong enough to
make us hate sin of every shade and colour; strong enough to make us translate
our love of God into love of all of God’s people.
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