Palm Sunday Sermon
2012
St. Barnabas
Episcopal Church
Rev. Valerie Ann Hart
Philippians 2:5-11
Mark 15:1-39
I have found that when we are
going through difficult times in our lives we want to talk to someone whose
been through that themselves. When my husband was in a bad motorcycle accident
he wanted to talk someone else who had been in a body cast and broken a leg and
gone through that. When I found out I was going to have brain surgery I wanted
to find someone who had experienced that. I didn’t want to listen to anyone
else.
When we are going through
difficult times like when we are grieving the death of someone we love we get
comfort from those who have experienced it already. Or when we are trying to
lose weight we want to have the person who is helping us show us a picture of
when they were grossly overweight. We don’t want some slim thing that has never
known what it means to count calories. We want someone who understands, and
that is one of the beauties and powers of the alcoholic anonymous program, the
12 step programs, because they realize that when you are struggling with something
the best person to help is someone who has been through that themselves. That’s
who we want to talk to. That is who we want to get support from.
Today we are reminded that Jesus
has been through all of it. He knows all of human experience. At the beginning
of the service we celebrate him coming into Jerusalem like a super star. People
were cheering and throwing things on the path in front of him. What a glorious
thing. How many of us fantasize sometime in our lives being in a position like
that?
We also know that when Lazarus
died Jesus wept. He knew what it meant to grieve.
And in his passion we see all of
human experience in one day. What it is like to be betrayed by a friend. To
have those you rely upon disappear and not be there to help you. To find that
the religion and the community that you supported and cared about and cared for
you your whole life turns on you, condemns you. To have false accusations made
about you. To have people spit on you. To be tortured, abused, mocked, nailed
naked to a cross to die. And at the end Jesus says, “My God, my God why have
abandoned me?” Jesus even knew what it was like to feel abandoned by God.
He knew fear, he knew hurt, he
knew pain. He knows it all. And that’s what Paul is alluding to as he tries to
describe the nature of this Christ, this Jesus, where he writes, “Christ Jesus,
who though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as
something to be exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being
born into human likeness.” Here he is alluding to and trying to describe the
great mystery of the Christian faith, that somehow God Almighty, God the
creator of the universe, the source and ground of all being, that in which
everything else exists, that somehow, some way that God came into human form to
experience all of what it meant to be a human being, birth, childhood,
adolescence, teaching, struggle, friendship, pain, abandonment. All of it.
In John’s gospel it says, “He was
with God, and he was God.” In the creeds we say that he was of one being with
the father. Those are all trying to use human language to describe something
that is beyond what we can quite comprehend. This great mystery that somehow
God came into human form to experience all that human beings experience.
Because now we can go to Christ, we can speak to God of our pain, and our
fears, and our abandonment, because Christ understands, experienced it, knows
what it was like. We are not communicating with a being that has no idea of
what we have been through, but to one who has walked there, who has suffered,
and even knows what it feels like to be abandoned. To be totally alone.
We have that kind of a friend who
has walked there before us and therefore can help us through whatever it is,
whether it be grief, or physical pain, or emotional lose or questioning even
the presence of God, because he knows, he knows.
And in addition to that, the
reason we want to talk to someone who has walked through the journey we are on
is because we want to see that there is something ahead, that there is
something beyond the struggle right now, that there is hope, that what we are
going through at this moment is not the final word. And that is what we are
offered through Christ, because even though his last words on the cross were
“My God, my God why have you forsaken me.” That last word was his resurrection.
And the final word is always, always God’s abounding love.
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