A Different Kind of King
“This happened so that what had been spoken through the prophet might be fulfilled: Say to daughter Zion, ‘Behold, your king comes to you, meek and riding on an ass, and on a colt, the foal of a beast of burden.’” (Matthew 21:4-5).
Dear Parishioners:
Jesus is greeted as the King of Israel as He entered His own city of Jerusalem on what we now call Palm Sunday. Rightfully so, as He is the King, truly. However, this week proves Him to be a different kind of king. I recall the line introducing the Seventh Station in Clarence Enzler’s Everyone’s Way of the Cross, which as Jesus speaking the words,
Behold…the poorest king who ever lived.
Christ is a king who is betrayed, denied, beaten, scourged, dressed in a royal-colored cloak, and then, as the Passion from the Gospel of Matthew that we hear this Cycle-A Palm Sunday, tells us, He was treated as a king out of mockery,
Weaving a crown out of thorns, they placed it on his head, and a reed in his right hand. And kneeling before him, they mocked him, saying, "Hail, King of the Jews!"
Jesus is the king whose throne is an instrument of torture, the cross. Where,
they placed over his head the written charge against him: This is Jesus, the King of the Jews.
He is a king, not honored, but mocked, derided, and ridiculed,
He saved others; he cannot save himself. So he is the king of Israel! Let him come down from the cross now, and we will believe in him.
His royal tomb was borrowed from a friend.
Though proclaimed a king in mockery, He truly was, indeed, a king; all that was done to Him did not make Him less of a king, but more of one—just not a king as we expect. As unexpected is that He would come into the fullness of His kingship on the third day. As, The Way of the Cross: puts it, His death was so that,
[The Father] might restore all to [Him] a hundred-fold in the glorious resurrection
—but more on that next in our celebrations a week from today.
I invite you all to enter into this Holy Week by attending the various services. Enter into Jesus’ passion and death so that you can know a hundred-fold the glorious resurrection in your own life.
Sincerely,
Rev. Charles F. Strebler
Pastor

