A sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
Palm Sunday, 2nd April 2023
Matthew 21.1-17
A couple of weeks ago, in her sermon on the wise and foolish
bridesmaids,
Dawn made
reference to the song by Curtis Mayfield, ‘People Get Ready’,
and she asked the question of whether we were ready for the
long fight for justice,
whether our
oil was sufficient to keep the light of hope and justice burning
through the
long night of darkness ahead.
The song, ‘People get ready’ was a kind of unofficial anthem
of the Civil Rights struggle in the 1960s,
with Martin Luther King Jr. often using the song to get people
marching.
Well, today is Palm Sunday,
and today the
gospel moves the story from waiting to marching.
Today is the day for marching on Jerusalem, for entering the
Temple,
for turning
the tables on those who hold power
over others
to exploit and exclude.
And so today let’s begin by remembering the story of Martin
Luther King Jr.’s
March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
It’s August 28th, 1963, and about a quarter of a
million people
are
marching into Washington DC
to advocate for the civil and economic rights of African
Americans.
Martin Luther King is about to delivery his historic ‘I Have
a Dream’ speech
in front of
the Lincoln Memorial.
After centuries of oppression,
and despite
various attempts at widening representation,
America in the 1960s was still a deeply divided society,
with the
Southern States passing constitutions and laws
that
disenfranchised most black people and many poor white people,
excluding
them from the political system:
they were
kept out because of who they were.
Interracial marriage was prohibited in 21 states,
and the Jim
Crow laws enforced continued segregation in public spaces,
with many
black people the victim of regular violence.
Billie Holiday’s well known performances of the song ‘Strange
Fruit’,
which
describes the lynching of black men being hung from trees,
is a truly heart-breaking evocation of that time in American
history.
It was against this backdrop of oppression
that a
group of people who had all become associated
with the
Highlander Folk School in Tennessee
decided to use the techniques of community organising that
they had been learning,
to organise
what became one of the largest political rallies for human rights
in United
States history.
Interestingly, the work of the Highlander Folk School
can be
directly traced to the current work of London Citizens
that many
of us here at Bloomsbury have become involved with.
And so A. Philip Randolph, and Bayard Rustin,
and others
including Martin Luther King Jr,
gathered an alliance of churches and other organisations
to march
under the banner of ‘Jobs and Freedom’,
as a
decisive act of nonviolent direct action.
They were careful to position the march as a peaceful
demonstration,
and not an
act of revolution or revolt.
and it is credited with propelling the US government into
action,
such that within
a couple years the Civil Rights Act
and the
Voting Rights Act were passed.
Sometimes, marching for freedom
is the only
way to end the long years of waiting.
And I’m sure you can see where I’m going with this,
when I
invite you now to step back, not sixty years, but two millennia,
to Jesus’
march on Jerusalem.
The situation of first century Palestine
was also a
world of exclusion, violence, and oppression.
The Romans were oppressing the Jews,
as they
oppressed all the nations they conquered.
And the Jewish population harboured their hopes of
nationalism and freedom,
with their
religiously inspired hopes for a messiah
who would
usher in a new golden age of self-determination.
But the Jews, or at least their religious and political
elite,
were also
themselves enacting exclusion on others:
their temple, the dwelling place of God on earth,
the place
where humans could go to encounter the presence of the divine,
was off limits to women, to foreigners,
and to any others
who were marked out as unclean
because of
their identity or behaviour.
And it is in this context of oppression and exclusion
that Jesus
and his disciples march on Jerusalem.
In contrast to the hundreds of thousands who marched on
Washington,
the march
to Jerusalem was enacted by only a handful of people.
But we shouldn’t diminish it for this:
the
symbolic significance of the moment
is spelled
out in the text for us all to see. [1]
Jesus and the disciples draw near to Jerusalem,
pausing a
short walk away on the Mount of Olives,
just the
other side of the valley.
Even today this is where you get the best views of the city,
and it was
the place Jesus chose as the staging area
for what
would be the final enactment of his march on the city.
In ancient times, particularly in the Roman and Greek
cultures,
a returning
King or successful warrior
would be
welcomed to their home city with what was known as a ‘Triumph’
-
a triumphal entry into the city,
where
everyone turned out to welcome the conquering hero.
You can imagine it: the flags, the waving, the cheering;
probably
bunting and street parties…
well… maybe
not the last two, but you get the idea.
And Jesus marches on Jerusalem
in what
become known as his ‘Triumphal Entry’,
but which is in fact a parody
of what
people had come to expect.
In place of a war horse, he rides an ass;
in place of
band of heroes,
he
is accompanied by a motley crew of fishermen and nobodies;
in place of
a sword he holds aloft his empty hands.
Jesus’ Triumphal Entry is not a Roman ‘Triumph’
- it’s
something else entirely.
And because we don’t know our Hebrew Bible as well as we perhaps
should,
we need
Matthew to spell it all out for us.
Jesus may be mimicking a Roman Imperial Triumph,
but he’s
doing it to evoke some very specific parts
of the
Jewish prophetic tradition.
So Matthew gives us a quote from the prophet Zechariah (9.9),
quoting
from a section celebrating God’s defeat of Israel’s enemies
and the
establishment of God’s reign on the earth.
Jesus may be subverting the Roman ideal of a Military
Triumph,
but he’s
still entering as a reigning King:
he is the
King of heaven on his way to victory.
And the crowds certainly greet him as a king
- spreading
their cloaks on the road
and cutting
branches from the trees to prepare his way;
and as they do so Matthew has them shouting
words of
praise drawn from Psalm 118:
‘Hosanna to the Son of
David!
Blessed is the one who comes in the name of
the Lord!
Hosanna in the highest
heaven!”
The crowds, in fact the whole city responds to his arrival
- some with
joy and others with confusion or consternation.
The fact that people are hailing him as ‘Son of David’
tells us
what they think is going on
- this is King David’s rightful heir,
coming to
re-establish his kingdom by overthrowing the Romans
and
restoring Israel’s independence and status.
Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem
is a
deeply, unmistakeably political act.
He has come to be acknowledged as King,
and he is
hailed as the son of David, the one long-expected,
who is
coming to free Jerusalem from foreign domination.
Yet things are not quite what they seem.
Remember,
there’s no sword, no war horse, no band of warriors.
This king is going to triumph not through violent revolt,
but by
non-violently turning the tables
and
raising up the downtrodden and the broken,
by drawing
into God’s presence those who have been excluded.
There’s a revolution here, but it’s not a violent one.
And so Jesus’s entry into Jerusalem
is
celebrated by those who are not in power,
and feared
by those who are.
There’s a change coming,
and the
powerful are going to have to give up some of their privilege
if the poor
are to be raised up.
And the thing the disciples are about to discover
is
something we know well
- which is that the powerful don’t like
to see the
empowerment of the disempowered,
and they don’t give up power without a fight.
And so Jesus enters Jerusalem and goes straight to the
temple
- the building that defines the city:
it’s
religious and political centre.
These days, western society tends to espouse a mantra
of the
separation of religion and politics,
although the fact that our new monarch
will be
crowned by the Archbishop rather belies this somewhat,
as does the presence of Anglican Bishops in the House of
Lords.
But setting these anomalies aside for a moment,
I think
that on the whole most people are of the opinion
that there
is a dividing line between the church and the state.
The church might still have some influence,
but it
doesn’t actually get to write the laws of the land.
As an aside, did you see the story a few months ago
where an MP
suggested that bishops
shouldn’t
be “using their pulpits to preach from”?
It turns out Jonathan Gullis MP was upset that senior
members of the clergy
had
published a letter critical of the UK government’s policy
of moving
the processing of asylum seekers “offshore” to Rwanda . [2]
I do very much think that there is a role for people of
faith
to have a
voice in national life,
and am glad for the opportunity to do so myself on
occasions.
The calling for the people of God to speak truth to power
is an
important prophetic duty,
and it’s one the prophets of the Hebrew Bible took
seriously.
But by the time of Jesus,
the
politics and power dynamics of the Roman occupation
and the ruling elite of Israel
meant that
the role of religion in Jewish society
had become more about keeping the
people subservient,
than about
challenging the powers of oppression.
And at the heart of this project was the great Temple,
rebuilt
only a few decades previously by Herod the Great
as a symbol
of the power of religion to dominate and control the population.
Herod was an ally of Rome, a puppet-king of Israel,
and he had
constructed his Temple and its associated hierarchies
to protect
his power.
And so Jesus marched on Jerusalem and went to the temple.
This is all political, it’s all about power.
And the
reference Matthew gives us to the prophet Zechariah
tells us that Jesus is not going to
allow Rome to determine
what counts or does not count for
politics.
No first century equivalent of an angry MP
is going to
tell Jesus that Messiah’s should stick to theology.
Politics and faith, for Jesus, are about power.
But the power that Jesus exercises
is power
which is life-giving,
drawing as it does on the very source of life itself.
And so Jesus enters the temple,
driving out
those who were selling and buying.
He overturns the tables and seats of those profaning the temple
by making
it just another place of commerce.
Symbolically and in reality,
Jesus
assumes the mantle of the prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah,
by condemning those who buy and sell,
telling
them that the temple is to be a house of prayer.
The politics that Jesus has come to proclaim
is a
politics grounded in prayer, in worship,
in a recognition that above all earthly power, above all human
rulers,
there is a
God whose desire is for people to be released from captivity,
set free
from oppression,
and freed to worship in spirit and
in truth.
And so Jesus proclaims that the temple is to be a house of
prayer,
not just
for the righteous, not just for the men,
not just for the ritually clean, but
for all people.
The blind, the lame, the children
- all those
who were normally excluded,
are welcomed into the presence of God by Jesus,
and they
find healing through acceptance and belonging
as they
enter the courts of God’s house (cf. 2 Sam 5.8; Lev 21.17).
The politics of Jesus is a politics of inclusion not
exclusion,
and it is a
politics that originates in God’s love for all people.
Jesus here is enacting the prophecy of Isaiah
- written
initially to those whose task it was to rebuild the temple
after the
time of the Babylonian exile.
Listen to what Isaiah said to them,
and hear it
echoing into Jesus’ actions in the temple:
The foreigners who join themselves to the Lord,
to minister to him, to love the name of the Lord,
and to be his servants…
these I will bring to my holy mountain
and make them joyful in my house of prayer…
Thus says the Lord God,
who gathers the outcasts of Israel:
I will gather others to them
besides those already gathered.
Jesus acts as the prophets have often acted,
making
God’s word present through action.
And there is no mandate here for violent action.
The truth known and lived by Martin Luther King Jr.
and those
who organised the Freedom March on Washington
is also
here in Jesus’ march on Jerusalem.
True, Godly politics, must be nonviolent politics.
Jesus’ cleansing of the temple
was the
overturning not only of the tables of the moneychangers,
but of the
established order of exclusion,
as he invited into God’s presence
those who
had been kept away.
There’s a key theological principle
that lies
behind what Jesus was doing in the temple:
he was enacting the year of Jubilee
- the
resetting and restoring, of human relationships
between people
and before God.
Not only are the blind and the lame welcomed into Jesus’
cleansed temple,
but so are
the poor.
Those who sold doves in the temple precincts
did so
because the book of Leviticus (5.7)
had included a provision for the
poor
to
substitute doves or pigeons for their sacrifice
if they could not afford sheep.
But that provision had become just another way to exploit
the poor
- as these supposedly
‘free’ birds were sold to the poor at extortionate prices.
Jesus was not only cleansing the temple,
he was
starting a revolutionary celebration,
as the people, even the children, who had been excluded from
the temple,
excluded
from worship, excluded from the presence of God,
were suddenly able to sing the words of the Psalmist:
‘Hosanna to the Son of David’.
But this is not simply worship:
these are
political words.
As we have seen, the ‘son of David’ was, within the Jewish
tradition,
the heir to
the throne of David;
and consequently the one who would restore David’s throne
and kingdom.
But if you look through Matthew’s gospel,
you find
that it is only ever those talking about
Jesus
who call him the ‘son of David’.
Whenever he refers to himself and his own ministry,
he calls
himself the ‘son of Man’.
The point is clear:
the kingdom
that Jesus has come to establish is not David’s kingdom,
it is not a nationalistic or
parochial kingdom with borders that exclude.
The people of God is not a closed-set with border to be
patrolled and controlled,
it is not a
holy elite from whose company the unclean must be repelled.
Rather it is a kingdom for all human kind,
for all
those who are sons of Adam and daughters of Eve.
Jesus’ kingdom is marked by a politics
of welcome,
inclusion, healing and peace.
And this is why Bishops must object to inhuman border
policies.
It is why all Christians are called to take their stand
against exclusion,
it is why
we must resist any power that destroys,
and it is
why we must renew our commitment to nonviolence.
This is the kingdom of heaven
that Jesus
marches to Israel to establish.
And it is not fully known yet on the earth,
but we
catch glimpses of it.
It came nearer the day those people marched on Washington in
1963,
and it drew
nearer just this last week
when some of us went to stand
outside a Healthcare trust in Marylebone
with
others from London Citizens,
challenging them to pay a living
wage to their staff.
We are called to the freedom march, in the name of Christ.
Can you
hear the call?
Will you
join the march?
There is a hymn we sing sometimes at Communion.
We’re not singing it today,
but I’d
like to read you the words to conclude this sermon.
It’s written by Chris Ellis, who used to be my minister:
Passover God, we remember your faithfulness,
God of the exodus, friend of the poor;
people bowed down with the burden of powerlessness,
sin in its ruthlessness making them slaves.
Still people shrivel, imprisoned in bitterness,
hemmed in by fear and diminished by hate;
tormented prisoners and perishing hungry ones,
broken humanity calls for your aid.
You summoned Moses to work for the freedom march,
you called the slaves to be people of hope;
set free from Egypt, you led them through desert lands,
loving commands gave them justice and truth.
You gave the travellers bread in the wilderness;
strengthen us now with the bread that we share:
bread for the struggle and wine for rejoicing;
in Christ you free us and teach us to care.
We are your people, still called to a promised land,
called for a purpose with Christ as the way;
grant us commitment to wholeness and liberty,
strength for the journey and grace for each day.
Christopher Ellis (b. 1949)
[1]
What follows draws on Stanley Hauerwas’s commentary on Matthew.
[2]
https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/jonathan-gullis-tory-mp-bishops-using-the-pulpit-to-preach-from_uk_63a0babbe4b03e2cc502d073
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