Sunday
In a day of presence, voice, and handwriting (no printing let alone radio, no film let alone internet), what strikes me about Palm Sunday this morning is that enough people had heard of Jesus that the pre-festival inflow of pilgrims to the capital turned into an impromptu parade. A community organized by word-of-mouth managed, person to person, to simply tell the stories in a way that kindled hope. Jesus' followers tried to be media consultants, urging him to sound more anti-Roman, more revolutionary, more like a winner. Instead he chooses a donkey foal, and the hard call to forgive and serve, refusing to promise any platform on which to build nationalism. He never shied away from principles for living together in peace and justice, he told the billionaire to sell everything and give to the poor, he scattered the cheating money tables. But he refused to be put in the position of enforcing laws. He chose to appeal to his listeners' hearts and leave the possibility of refusal open.
No podcast, no substack, no blog, no call-in show, no appearances on the talk-show circuit, no book or movie contracts or awards, no tik-tok, no tweets/whatever X is called now. The one time the disciples got a glimpse of the outside-of-this-world-and-time glory on a mountaintop chatting with Moses and Elijah, they wanted to build circus tents and sell tickets. Instead as soon as the bright cloud dissipated he went back to his usual theme of upcoming suffering. Shortly later, he chooses the donkey colt to connect his journey to Zechariah 9. The same verse that contains the phrase we hear now, from the river to the ends of the earth, does so with a picture that excludes the war horse and the battle bow, that speaks of Jesus' gentle rule.
Such a reversal, conquering by allowing the worst to proceed, by riding peacefully into the trap that has been set, comes with a cost. The crowds who cheer at the novelty and promise of anti-Roman power will jeer when their storyline is crushed. Fame fizzles at the first disappoinment.
Monday
Jesus walked in and out of the city, staying with friends in the suburb of Bethany, but also intentionally and faithfully entering the center of communal life, telling stories and healing undesirables and sparring with the intellectual crowd . . . as the shadow of death loomed darker day by day. 19 years ago this week my Dad let go of life day by day too, as ALS finally sapped his breath on Easter night. For us in 2025, this week marks the beginning of a 6-week phase of daily radiation therapy. Some parallels: staying with friends in a suburb, daily trips in to treatment, removing clothes, strapped to a device, marked and targeted. Separated from the people and life we have cared about until now. A turn towards powerless inaction. Coming face to face with the evil of a fatal disease.
Scott is not Jesus, but Jesus offers for those He loves to follow in the small imprints of some of his steps. This week we pray to trust that the radiation which kills cells will extend life. That enduring will reap good.
I am finding some resonance with the trees that bud before producing leaves. This reversal narrative radiates flowers out of starkly empty branches. To do so, sap must have been stored from better times, and the energy expenditure on blossoms looks like a risky extravagance of faith, a gamble prioritizing the next generation of fruit and seed without a sure extension of this season's life. That seems about right.
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