"Who do you say that I am?"
What Is Holy Week?
Holy  Week, or Great Week as it is    also called, concludes the preparation  for Easter. The church in her    liturgy does in a particularly  intense  way this week what she does all    year, which is, present the  Gospel  revealed in Matthew, Mark, Luke and  John. The   Gospel readings for  this week follow the Biblical order of  Matthew,   Mark, Luke and  John, a  tie between the events of the Gospel  accounts and   the liturgy that  not even the three year Vatican II  lectionary and its   wannabes could   break.
Palmarum or Palm  Sunday offers the  Passion account of   Matthew. Monday in Holy Week does  not have a Passion  account, but  rather the  passage from John where  Judas'  unbelief, which like so   many after him  was disguised as a  concern  for the poor, is expressed   six days before  Passover, when  Jesus was  in Bethany, where Lazarus had   died and and who was  now at table  with Jesus. Tuesday in Holy Week  offers  the Passion account  of Mark.   Wednesday offers that of Luke,  and is  sometimes called Spy  Wednesday  in reference to Judas'  betrayal. Maundy  Thursday (aka Green   Thursday)  and Good Friday (aka  Lamentation Friday)  both offer the   Passion  account of John, Thursday  for the institution of  the  Eucharist  and  Friday for the Crucifixion.
In  this  way, the  church reads  through all four accounts of Jesus'  suffering  and death, in  New  Testament order, culminating in the  account of St  John, which is  read  over two days, and also commemorates  the events  in the order they happened.  Holy Thursday has the part from  St John  about the Last Seder of  the  old covenant becoming the Divine  Service  of the new covenant, and the   sacrament of Communion in his  body and  blood he instituted that night, but not yet the part about the   crucifixion nor any veneration of the cross.  Good Friday has the part   about the crucifixion and   death in which he gave his body and blood   for us historically, and the veneration of the cross, but not     Communion which he gave for us sacramentally the night before he     suffered as the pledge of the redemption gained in his historical act    the night he suffered.
Thus in Holy Week we have Jesus' entry into  Jerusalem,  the sacramental event of his body and blood, and the  historical event of  his body in blood, in both the readings and the  services in their  order.
Palmarum, or Palm Sunday.
The  events we the church remember  this   Palmarum day ask us who do we  say  Jesus is, because they present  one   answer to this question. We   already know the end of the week's story  --   the man welcomed with   wild cheering by the crowds this day in a few days will be executed as a  criminal among criminals.
But this    day, such an  end is not in  sight -- except to Jesus. Covering a person's    path is a sign of  great esteem, widely practiced in the ancient near    East and still a  part of our mentality, as in "roll out the red  carpet"   from the  custom of royalty. Joshua was given the same  triumphal accord.  Joshua  --  who led the people into the Promised Land as  the Lawgiver   Moses   could not. " Joshua" and "Jesus" are  variant forms of the  same name.  Jesus -- who would lead the people into the  eternal Promised   Land as  the Lawgiver Moses could not. Here, perhaps,  was  the Messiah!   Here,  perhaps, was the triumphal entry into Jerusalem   of the Messiah   predicted  by Zechariah, to whom our Gospel account,   Matthew, refers!
So  how   does the wild joy of seeing  what is or at least may well be the  Messiah come  turn to a criminal's   execution? It is not because Jesus doesn't turn out to be Messiah, but   because Messiah doesn't turn out to be  the Messiah we  want.
Does not   Zechariah speak of the removal  of chariots and  war horses from   Jerusalem, breaking battle bows, with  a reign of peace  from the  Jordan   throughout the Earth?   Yes he  does, but let us not  congratulate  ourselves by saying that thinking of    the Messiah in the political and social  terms of removing the Roman    occupation from  the land was the failing  of the Jews of Jesus' place  and   time,  something that no Jew or Gentile in  more enlightened times,  oh, say    us in our time, would ever do.
It  wasn't just a reaction   to the Romans. The   mainstream of the entire  Prophetic tradition, from  the Prophets   themselves, to the atmosphere in  which the Apostles  were  raised, to our   own time, is that Messiah is a  man, not God, not a  God-Man, who will   usher in a lasting era of  universal peace here in  this world, not a   world to come, in which the  light of the true God  first given to a   nation called out from the  nations will be  extended  to all nations -- nothing   about sin, forgiveness,   justification!
Is  that not the Messiah   we all want  -- Jew and  Gentile alike, then as  now? A Messiah in earthly   terms,  one who will  straighten out the mess  of things here on earth,   with  no reference to  the mess being of our  making, one who allows us to  live   long and prosper  right here, one  who asks not repentance and  conversion but   simply to do  good works  like he did, one who is about giving us a purpose   driven life  rather  than giving us the sacrifice that takes away our sin,   one who is about  about  giving us our best  life now rather than eternal life, one whose  religion is  not  about   what he has done but what we will do to follow  him? And do  we  not,  Jew  and Gentile alike, then as now, turn away  from him when he   turns out to  be not the Messiah we wanted?
Jews  typically  do  not  believe Jesus  is Messiah not because they fail to  see how  Jesus   fulfills the  Messianic prophecy, but because they do  not see  the   Messianic prophecy  as pointing to anything like Jesus.  This was a   persistent problem even  for the Apostles. Gentiles  typically do not believe Jesus   is the Messiah not  because they fail  to see how Jesus fulfills the   Messianic prophecy, in  fact many of  them say he does,  but because they   too find the Messianic  prophecy to  be a matter of a good man showing  us  the way to live as good  people,  to become  better people, and find  in  Jesus such a man. That is  why  Scripture  describes the Gospel as a   stumbling block to the Jews and    foolishness to the Gentiles.
In   the Hellenistic,  which is to  say  Greek based, culture that surrounded   Jesus' time and place, many   religions existed featuring gods who had   miraculous  births, worked   miracles, acted on behalf of man, entered the   city,  died and rose  again,  and whose followers partook of rites of   bathing and eating and   sacrifices, called mysteries, which the Romans    termed sacraments.  The  Greek Dionysus, whom the Romans appropriated as   Bacchus, the  Persian  Mithra and the Egyptian Osiris are the best    examples but  there are many others.
Is  this Jesus  too? Is he simply   another  failed Jewish Messiah, whose  followers,  when what will happen   after  Messiah comes didn't happen after  he  came, simply recast Messiah in the    Hellenistic terms to fit Jesus so  they could continue   to say he was  Messiah after all, thereby   obscuring his true value as a   moral  teacher? Or, is he simply another  Hellenistic mystery cult figure,    perpetuated by those who derived  power  from presiding over the    mysteries, obscuring the real Jesus  and his true  value as a moral    teacher?
Who Do Men Say That I Am?
Think  he didn't see that coming?  That's why, before any of that came, he asked the question "Who do   you say that I am?"  But note, that was not  Jesus' first   question.   The first question was "Who do men say that I am?" And indeed,  who DO   we   say that he is?  Various opinions -- one of the great prophets of Hebrew  Scripture   come   back, one of the great moral teachers in human history  over   whom, as   with other great teachers, has been laid religious fables  by   those who   claim to follow him but in fact falsify the historical   person for a   figure of faith, and in any case, a teacher, a model, an   example, maybe a great social reformer challenging the order of his day with a radical message -- even though the accounts we read this week make it clear he was no such thing, the social order found him no challenge whatsoever and wanted to acquit him of all charges and release him?
Would   we not cover the path of such a  figure with  palms, since  that is the   saviour we want? And would we  not be just as  mistaken as  those who   covered his path thinking here  was deliverance  from the Roman    oppression and the start of the era of peace? And, on  finding out that is not who he    is, would we not  shout as well, Away  with him!
Who Do You Say That I Am?
Those various opinions are still who    men say he is. So then he asks, Who do you say that I  am? Simon answered, Thou art the    Christ, the Son of the living God.   And Jesus told him flesh and blood    had not revealed this to him,  but  his Father who is in heaven. Flesh  and   blood, that is, human  wisdom,  never reveals this unto us because  it is   beyond all human  wisdom and  contradicts all human wisdom.  Therefore it   cannot be  arrived at by  human wisdom nor chosen by human  decision, but   is the  gift of the God  and only the gift of God.
Human   abilities even   with Law and  Prophecy and Writings from God could not  grasp it; human   wisdom apart  from revelation constructs bits and   pieces of it around   mere fable  characters who cannot deliver. Either  way the natural   knowledge of  God written in every human heart  strives  for something it   senses is  there but cannot discern, and  which can  only be given by the   gift of  God.
The  Sanhedrin had it exactly  right. Jesus was not    executed because he  said he was the Messiah. One  can claim that, and    simply be wrong or  right. The Messiah is a great  man, but a man. He was    executed because he said he was God. One cannot  claim that without     blaspheming God -- unless it is true. We'll take a  Messiah who is a     great man and leader and teacher, we'll lay palms to cover his path,   we'll  rejoice that what we   want is at hand, but when it turns out   instead he  must go to Jerusalem   and suffer many things of the elders  and chief  priests and scribes and   be killed to be raised again on  the  third day,  well, it shall not be   like that with the Messiah we  want,  and thus we become an  offence to him, Satan,   savouring the  things of  Man rather than God.
Who  do men say Jesus   is? All kinds of  things, as we have seen. Things for which we will   joyfully lay palms   to  cover his path, or at least accord him a place  in the gallery of  the   great teachers and moral figures to be so   honoured.
And then he  asks each of us, Who do YOU say that I am?
Thou art the    Christ, the Son of the living God!
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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17 March 2016
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