Palm Sunday / Msgr. Owen F. Campion
The Sunday Readings
This weekend, the Church celebrates Palm Sunday, to use the older term, or the Sunday of the Lord’s Passion.
As the rite of the procession of the palms begins, a selection from Chapter 11 of St. Mark’s Gospel is read.
These reflections examine the readings in the Liturgy of the Word itself.
For the first of these readings, the Church presents a passage from the third part of the Book of Isaiah.
It is one of the four Songs of the Suffering Servant, the four poetic and highly moving compositions that form one of the great glories of Third Isaiah.
Over the centuries, Christians have seen the image of Christ, the innocent Lamb of God, in these Suffering Servant Songs.
Scholars debate the identity of the Suffering Servant. Was he the prophet himself? Was he a collective identity for the people of Israel? Did he represent the devout and faithful among the people? Was he someone else?
In any case, the message is clear. Despite outrages brought against him, the Suffering Servant remains true to God.
The second reading from St. Paul’s Letter to the Philippians is one of the most eloquent sections in the New Testament.
Scholars think that this reading had its origins in an ancient Christian liturgy dating from the times of the Apostles. It is appealing and very instructive in its excited proclamation of faith in Jesus.
For this year’s Palm Sunday liturgy, the Church presents the Passion Narrative of St. Mark’s Gospel.
While all the Gospels go into considerable detail in telling the story of the Lord’s trial and crucifixion, they differ from each other in certain insights and emphases.
Each Gospel is the work of a distinct Evangelist. The imprint of the respective Evangelist’s sense of the meaning of what happened on the first Good Friday is clear.
Without doubt, the death of Jesus occurred as a result of a horrendous process of torture and humiliation. It loses sight of the Gospel’s message, however, to see the awfulness of these tragic events and nothing more.
The story ultimately is about the inevitability of God’s will. In love, God willed that even sinful humanity should have the option of replacing disobedience with obedience. God provided a way for this to happen through the life and sacrificial death of Jesus.
Another important lesson is in the reactions of others in the story—the Jewish officials with their intrigue, the impulsiveness and then the betrayal of Peter, the pragmatism of Pilate, and the uncompromising loyalty of Mary and the women with her. They all present images of human nature, and how human nature differs as it is presented in one life and then in another.
Reflection
This Palm Sunday’s profound reading from the Gospel of St. Mark calls us to the basic fact that—despite all the horror, and regardless of all the chaos and plotting—Jesus was unswerving in fulfilling God’s holy will, and indeed God’s will prevails.
What was God’s will? It was that all people are to be freed of the effects of sin and be able to be at peace with God and in God to possess eternal life.
The first reading, the figure of the Suffering Servant, gives additional focus upon the obedience of Jesus.
A favorite literary technique employed by St. Mark is irony. It is ironic that humanity’s only chance for freedom and eternal life is in Jesus, yet humans schemed and maneuvered to upset the mission of Jesus.
The most pious of the Jews, presumably, even allowed themselves to ally with the pagan Romans, their oppressors, to confound the Lord’s work of salvation.
God’s will for humanity endures today for each of us. Ironically, do we—with our sinfulness and in our blindness—frustrate for ourselves the opportunity given to us in Christ to be with God? †