Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
Provoking Faith, 5th April 2020
Mark 11.1-11
Listen to this sermon here: https://soundcloud.com/bloomsbury-1/the-kingdom-is-coming
On Thursday night, at 8pm,people up and down the country
turned out
of their houses and went into the streets.
Keeping the appropriate distance from one another,
they
shouted, applauded, banged saucepans,
and in some cases set off fireworks.
It was, of course the mass demonstration
of public
support for carers and key workers.
On Friday morning, on the Breakfast news,
BBC reporter
Dan Johnson said the following:
‘Someone once said that the NHS
is the
closest we have to our own religion.
If so, this is our new regular act of worship.’
A bit of Googling on my part revealed that he was quoting
Nigel Lawson,
former
Chancellor of the Exchequer for the Conservative party,
who actually said,
‘the NHS is
the closest thing the English people have to a religion’.
And I don’t want to get overly party political,
but I do
observe the irony
in the fact that the current national emergency
has made the
National Health Service an unassailable deity for these days;
demanding such unambiguous and ubiquitous adoration and sacrificial
investment,
that even our
Prime Minister rose from his bed of sickness
to stand
alone on the steps of No.10 applauding the NHS.
Whereas the last ten years of political decisions
about
health spending and privatisation
might have led one to conclude that the NHS had become a
golden calf
in need of breaking
up and melting down for profit.
How times change.
And I wonder, will they change again,
when the current
crisis is past?
Will we end up with future manifestos
moving us
once more towards a privatised and reduced National Health Service?
I hope not.
But people are fickle,
and can
turn from adulation to anathema in a matter of days.
Just ask Jesus,
applauded
and adored as he entered Jerusalem on Palm Sunday,
only to be
hated and scapegoated by the end of the week.
Crowd mentality can turn on a dime,
particularly
when people are scared, hurting, and desperate.
And Jesus’ triumphal entry to Jerusalem
was a
carefully staged exercise in ‘messianic street theatre’ (Ched Myers),
designed to tap into the public desperation
for release
from the tyranny of the Roman Empire
that had
dominated their lives for decades.
The people of Judea were longing for a messiah,
someone who
would save them from the hostile occupation
that was
taking their money, their liberty, and their freedom of worship.
The Jewish scriptures offered a hope for such a figure,
who was
often held to be a so-called ‘son of David’,
a rightful heir to David’s mythologised
kingdom;
someone who
would restore Israel’s political borders,
and bring freedom and dignity
to those currently living in fear,
pain, and desperation.
There had been messianic uprisings before,
most
notably the Maccabean revolt
a Jewish rebellion, lasting from 167
to 160 BC,
led by the
Maccabees family against the Hellenistic empire
that had ruled Israel before the
Romans.
You can read about it in the book of 1 Maccabees,
which is in
the apocrypha section of our church Bibles,
and if you do you’ll discover that one of the key
revolutionaries,
a man
named, rather pleasingly, Simon,
laid siege to Jerusalem, and when he had taken the city for
the rebels,
staged a
triumphal entry into the city.
Here’s the quote:
1Maccabees 13.51-52
On the twenty-third day of the second month,
in the one hundred
seventy-first year,
the Jews entered [Jerusalem] with praise and palm branches,
and with harps and
cymbals and stringed instruments,
and with hymns and songs,
because a great enemy
had been crushed and removed from Israel.
Simon decreed that every year they should celebrate this day with
rejoicing.
It turns out that Simon Maccabaeus knew exactly what he was
doing
when he
staged his triumphal entry,
because he knew the book of Zechariah in the Hebrew
Scriptures
which indicated
that the day of Jerusalem’s messianic liberation
would be signalled by a victorious
leader entering the city in triumph,
like a general returning from battle.
Zechariah 9.9
Rejoice greatly, O daughter Zion!
Shout aloud, O
daughter Jerusalem!
Lo, your king comes to you; triumphant and victorious is he,
humble and riding on a
donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey.
If you were going to be a revolutionary Jewish messiah,
there was,
it seems, a template to follow:
and Jesus followed it to the letter,
carefully combining
elements of both Zechariah and Maccabees.
Then if you throw in a reference to Psalm 118,
you’ve got
the complete package,
and we see this as the crowd welcoming Jesus
quote from
the messianic psalm, shouting:
Save us! [Hosanna]! … Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the
LORD.
(Psalm 118.25-26)
There’s no mistaking it,
this is a triumphal
entry setting up Jesus as the Jewish messiah.
It’s interesting, isn’t it,
that almost
half of the text of Mark’s narrative of the triumphal entry
is given over to the setup,
with the whole ‘find me a donkey’ cameo…
None of this is happening by accident,
it’s a
carefully staged piece of messianic street theatre,
designed to get the crowd cheering their messiah,
who was
entering Jerusalem
in fulfilment
of all their expectations of liberation.
But there’s a twist coming,
because
even as the crowd hail Jesus
as the one who will revive Great
David’s kingdom,
Jesus has
already told his disciples that his revolution, his kingdom,
will not be a political restoration,
and it won’t even be a religious revival.
He’s not coming to fight,
he’s not
coming to re-establish Jewish freedom,
he’s not
coming to cleanse the temple of Roman occupation.
Jesus is marching on the city
to do
battle with the ideologies of nationalism and Zionism
that
perpetuate systems of violence.
He’s going to Jerusalem to defeat the deep forces of evil,
not their
temporary temporal manifestations.
His parody of a military insurgency
is designed
to highlight the problem, not the solution.
And the problem is this:
The people
are addicted to the culture of the quick fix.
They long for someone to ride into their lives in triumph,
and offer
them a way out of their problems.
They will stand in the streets and shout and applaud
anyone who
seems to offer them hope in their darkness.
And Jesus is coming to give them a message that they don’t
want to hear,
which is
that sometimes the path to the new world
involves a
long and difficult journey
through a
time of suffering, death, and isolation.
And, as we will discover over the course of the next week,
the crowd
will not learn this lesson easily.
In fact they will change their allegiance from Jesus to
Barabbas,
continuing
to cheer the violent revolutionary
in place of
the ‘dissident of meekness’ (Martyn Joseph).
And as we consider our response,
as we make
own journeys
through this time of suffering, death, and
isolation,
I wonder, I wonder… what we are applauding today,
that we
will shout crucify at tomorrow?
Can we see through the culture of the quick fix?
Can we find
a way past our national obsession
with technology as the path to salvation?
Can we inhabit a commitment to a better and more sustainable
way of being human,
where we
are kind to each other and our planet.
I wonder…
Can we discover in this time
that Christ
invites us to a deeper journey through life,
where we address the questions of what it means to be
mortal,
and where
we discover grace in the midst of human frailty?
Can we encounter the community of love even as we live in
isolation,
and realise
that what binds us to one other
is far more
than what might divide us?
Can we recognise how easily we scapegoat others,
and learn
to reject narratives of ‘me and mine’,
in favour of a commitment to the love of neighbour,
and of care
for those who are vulnerable?
I wonder, in essence,
whether we
can recognise the Kingdom that Jesus proclaims?
Or will we end up being seduced once again
by the
kingdoms of power and violence,
that feed our addiction to the quick fix,
but starve
us of deep love and communion.
The Kingdom of Christ knows no boundaries,
it loves
all, embraces all,
and invites us to live the love of God into being in our
daily lives,
as we live
lives of sacrifice,
taking up our own crosses, and following Jesus.
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