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Let me know what you think. The church Email is: slumc@direcway.com, Phone: 480.895.8766
April
4, 2004
Sermon: "Palm Branches and Red Carpet"
Scripture: Luke 19:28-40
Reverend Larry Gerber
In Jerusalem Jesus was greeted by massive crowds and Oscarlike enthusiasm. But
it remained to be seen whether this celebrity Christ would be praised
or picked apart.
1. Glitter. Glamour. Gossip.
The Three G's of the Hollywood red carpet treatment.
If you tuned in February 29th to the 76th Annual Academy Awards®, you got
your fill of these "three G's" as celebrities walked the Red Carpet
on their way into the Kodak Theatre to be entertained by emcee Billy Crystal.
The E! Network began its coverage of the Oscars at noon, offering six hours
of buildup to the arrival of the stars for the awards ceremony. Thousands of
fans, for whom following the lives of others is important, sat in specially
constructed stands to catch all the action. Thus, gawking and gossiping in the
presence of glitter and glamour has now become an all-day event.
Those watching on television stayed glued to the tube for a glimpse of Nicole
Kidman, Colin Farrell, Kate Hudson, Elijah Wood, Reese Witherspoon and others.
Flashbulbs popped and the paparazzi shot pics for the covers of People, Us and
The National Enquirer. Interviewers stuck microphones into celebrity faces and
asked stupid questions, to which they received mostly stupid answers. Some members
of the media got downright nasty if not perceptive as Joan Rivers
did when she called one rock star's wife an "idiot."
People actually enjoy this stuff?
Fact is, tons of fans get a thrill from watching their favorite stars on the
Red Carpet, and the Academy Awards show has become the most-watched television
event in the world, drawing nearly a billion viewers. A billion. About one in
every six members of the human race is glued to the TV on Oscar night.
Glitter, glamour, gossip. Seems we just can't get enough.
Not that this is anything new. Think of today, Palm Sunday, as a sort of pre-show
for Holy Week. A superstar was coming to town, so the people of Jerusalem spread
their cloaks on the road (Luke 19:36). The crowds waved branches of palm trees
(John 12:13). A major event was under way, a Passover Festival that drew about
2.5 million pilgrims to Jerusalem; you could say without too much exaggeration
that the city was electrified with Oscar-night enthusiasm.
Jesus was aware of this, and knew exactly what he was getting into. He expected
a hero's welcome on Palm Sunday, but he also knew how this was all going to
turn out. He had been alluding to it for weeks, to the dismay of his disciples.
What they say about Hollywood was probably true in Jerusalem as well: "People
in Hollywood are always touching you not because they like you, but because
they want to see how soft you are before they eat you alive."
Tough town.
The gospel of Luke also tells us that Jesus and his disciples did all their
own advance work. He sent two disciples ahead of him to acquire a colt, and
said to them, "If anyone asks you, Why are you untying it?' just
say this, The Lord needs it'" (19:31). Just as Jesus predicted, the
owners of the colt asked that very question, but they were silenced when the
disciples explained, "The Lord needs it."
The point of Palm Sunday is that the Celebrity Christ is given the celebrity
treatment as he enters Jerusalem. All the expected elements are in place: He
makes a royal entrance, in a procession associated with powerful kings and conquering
generals. He is escorted by the citizens of Jerusalem and "the whole multitude
of the disciples" (v. 37). They wave palm branches, praise him for his
deeds of power, and sing hymns of acclamation, crying out, "Blessed is
the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven, and glory in the
highest heaven" (v. 38). He rides on a colt, on the foal of a donkey, just
as King Solomon did before his coronation although Jesus' choice of a
donkey could also mean that he is a bringer of peace. If Jesus wanted a fight,
he would have charged in on a stallion, a war horse, the first-century equivalent
of a Hummer H2.
So Jesus is a superstar, complete with the "three G's" of glitter,
glamour and gossip. He's got the glitter of a royal entrance, the glamour of
waving palm branches and even the gossip associated with his disciples and the
borrowed colt. There is a lot of buzz about this celebrity superstar as he enters
the Holy City to pick up his prize.
But here's the twist: His prize is a cross and he knew it.
Like modern celebrities, Jesus is not only idolized, he is also picked apart.
He's feelin' the love on Sunday; feelin' the disappointment on Monday and the
rage on Friday. The machinery that kills him on Friday begins to operate on
Sunday. As the disciples sing praises, the Pharisees begin to shout, "Teacher,
order your disciples to stop." But Jesus refuses to do this, replying,
"I tell you, if these were silent, the stones would shout out" (vv.
39-40).
>From this point on, the chatter about Jesus becomes increasingly negative.
People sense that he is not interested in driving out the oppressive Romans.
They notice that he travels with a band of unarmed disciples, not a cell of
terrorist operatives, as did Barabbas, for example. They hear him speak of coming
wars and persecutions, not of glorious victories and times of prosperity. The
chief priests, scribes and leaders of the people start to look for a way to
kill Jesus (19:47), and by the end of the week the people themselves are shouting,
"Crucify, crucify him!" (23:21). Luke tells us that the Roman governor
can find no ground for the sentence of death, but the crowd keeps demanding
that Jesus should be crucified. In the end, the governor grants them their wish
(23:22-25).
Jesus is killed on Friday because he fails to live up to human fantasies. He
gets picked apart like Costner on a good day; savaged like a starlet in a swan
suit.
And let's face it: We tend to complain as well. We live in a "What-Have-You-Done-For-Me-Lately?"
sort of ethos. We expect that even the slightest display of Christian religiosity
gets us a pass to Easy Street. This is not the Jesus of the gospels who calls
us to embrace our own cross, as he did his, and follow him.
Let's let Jesus be Jesus not the superstar we want him to be. The message
of this day of Palm Branches and Red Carpets is that Jesus Christ is Lord, not
a La-La Land celebrity.
If you're ready to let Jesus step off the Red Carpet and simply be himself,
be prepared for a life-changing lesson. Jesus is not interested in glitter,
glamour and gossip, but he is interested in grace, giving and goodness.
Let's give Jesus the palm branch treatment, but let's not make this a one Sunday
wonder. His grace, his giving and his goodness compel us to change our behavior,
not just pat him on the back, or complain behind his back.
Let me know what you think. The church Email is: slumc@direcway.com, Phone: 480.895.8766