Palm/Passion Sunday: I remember the first couple of times I heard that term. It refers, of course, to the Sunday prior to Easter Day. It is a kind of expedient. It recognizes that there are a lot of people who will attend church that day and observe The Triumphal Entry. Then they will stay at home and not come to church again until next Sunday, when they will join in the proclamation of Easter. They will skip Holy Week, and Good Friday in particular, and therefore move from celebration to celebration, from joy to joy, without experiencing any of the anguish of the Upper room; Gethsemane; The Betrayal; The Arrest; the various trials before the Sanhedrin, before Herod, or before Pilate; The Flogging; the Via Dolorosa; The Crucifixion; or The Entombment. So many people will refuse to recognize these terrible moments. They move from Palms to Lilies. They ease from Sunday to Sunday without a lot of discomfort at all. I had a dear friend and active church member who said of Holy Week, “I just can’t stand to think of Jesus in a situation like that.”
Showing posts with label Palm Sunday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palm Sunday. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Belated thoughts on Palm/Passion Sunday
As I said, I remember the first couple of times I heard of “Palm/Passion Sunday.” I was horrified. Now you must realize that this was early in my ministry. My idealism was still running at a fairly high level. I have come to understand that there are reasons beyond spiritual laziness why folks might not be in church on Maundy Thursday or Good Friday or for other Holy Week observances. So, while I don’t see it as the best of all possible worlds, I have made my peace with Palm/Passion Sunday.
It starts off with The Liturgy of the Palms in all three years of the Revised Common Lectionary Cycles. It then moves to the Liturgy of The Passion, where in one form or another it rehearses the death of Jesus. Folks use these two elements in varying ways, but at the core is a lifting up of both Triumphal Entry and the Death of Jesus. And, it may be that such a day encompasses the gospel in a way that we don’t see on a garden-variety Sunday. So, ambivalence and all, Happy Palm/Passion Sunday.
Sunday, April 14, 2019
Palm/Passion Sunday
Palm/Passion Sunday: I remember the first couple of times I
heard that term. It refers, of course,
to this day, the Sunday prior to Easter Day. It is a kind of expedient. It recognizes that there are a lot of people
who will attend church today and observe The Triumphal Entry. Then they will stay at home and not come to
church again until next Sunday, when they will join in the proclamation of
Easter. They will skip Holy Week, and Good
Friday in particular, and therefore move from celebration to celebration, from
joy to joy, without experiencing any of the anguish of the Upper room;
Gethsemane; The Betrayal; The Arrest; the various trials before the Sanhedrin, before
Herod, or before Pilate; The Flogging; the Via
Dolorosa; The Crucifixion; or The Entombment. So many people will refuse to recognize these
terrible moments. They move from Palms
to Lilies. They ease from Sunday to
Sunday without a lot of discomfort at all.
I had a dear friend and active church member who said of Holy Week, “I
just can’t stand to think of Jesus in a situation like that.”
As I said, I remember the first couple of times I heard of “Palm/Passion
Sunday.” I was horrified. Now you must realize that this was early in
my ministry. My idealism was still running
at a fairly high level. I have come to
understand that there are reasons beyond spiritual laziness why folks might not
be in church on Maundy Thursday or Good Friday or for other Holy Week
observances. So, while I don’t see it as
the best of all possible worlds, I have made my peace with Palm/Passion
Sunday.
It starts off with The Liturgy of the Palms in all three
years of the Revised Common Lectionary Cycles.
It then moves to the Liturgy of The Passion, where in one form or another
it rehearses the death of Jesus. Folks
use these two elements in varying ways, but at the core is a lifting up of both
Triumphal Entry and the Death of Jesus.
And, it may be that such a day encompasses the gospel in a way that we
don’t see on a garden-variety Sunday.
So, ambivalence and all, Happy Palm/Passion Sunday.
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Belated thoughts on Palm/Passion Sunday
Palm/Passion Sunday: I remember the first couple of times I heard that term. It refers, of course, to the Sunday prior to Easter Day. It ...

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Palm/Passion Sunday: I remember the first couple of times I heard that term. It refers, of course, to the Sunday prior to Easter Day. It ...
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The Revised common Lectionary suggests this Sunday’s Old Testament reading to be 2 Kings 5:1-14. It is the story of Naaman the Syrian. ...
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The liturgical colors that churches employ in the observance of Advent have become a point of contention in recent times. Through the hi...