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Palm Sunday

Gospel, Mk 14:1 – 15;47

The Passion Reading for Palm Sunday is a three-year rotation of Matthew’s, Mark’s and Luke’s Gospel account of the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ. Each of these Gospel accounts describes the Last Supper, the arrest and trial of Jesus, his passion and death, and ends with his burial. The Divine Inspiration that produces these Gospels works through the unique perspective and teaching gifts of each of the Evangelists. Three different accounts speak of the same mystery of Faith that we profess each time we take part in Holy Mass; “We proclaim your Death, O Lord, and profess your Resurrection until you come again.”

This year we hear the account from St. Mark. His account of the Passion, while the shortest, does not short change us on bringing various elements of the mission and ministry of Jesus into the Passion. First, we hear of his visit to the house of Simon the Leper. Simon no doubt had been cured so as to be living back in the community and entertaining people. It was in the midst of this meal that a woman comes in and anoints the feet of Jesus. It’s interesting that the people with Simon would become indignant at Jesus allowing this outcast to anoint him while in the house of Simon who was once an outcast. This scene cuts away to the account of Judas betraying Jesus. We then begin the account of the Last Supper that we are all so familiar with. In all of this Jesus remains focused to his mission of savior of the world. His ministry and the plots and attacks are all based on who Jesus is, and the failure of people to recognize Him.

As we enter Holy Week it might benefit us to connect what we hear on Palm Sunday with what we heard in Matthew’s Gospel on Ash Wednesday, When you give alms…, when you pray…., when you fast… Jesus didn’t suggest or give an invitation to give alms, pray and fast, he speaks under the assumption that we are doing these and gives an instruction on how to do so with sincerity and devotion. How have we been at our Lenten almsgiving, prayer and fasting? In the Passion account Jesus does not merely remind us, he shows us how to sincerely offer ourselves in obedience to the Father.

Jesus gave the ultimate alms when he gave himself completely to death on the cross. He gave all that he had without holding back anything. A very basic question for us is when we give alms do, we merely give from our surplus or is it sacrificial in that it results in giving up doing or buying something that we really had our hearts set on. Jesus prays the ultimate prayer in Gethsemane when he says; “not as I will, but as you will.” The “Thy will be done,” in the Lord’s prayer is not just a nice phrase, it is the way Jesus prayed and lived. We are gifted with a free will and when we freely surrender our will to the will of the Father, we find that we will be both challenged to let go and enriched by a new sense of freedom that comes in trusting God. The last point is fasting. Fasting is very often directly connected to repentance Jesus, himself, has no need to repent for he is without sin. Rather he takes on our sins and accepts the punishment for our sins so that we might truly experience the forgiveness of sins in our lives, and ultimately be happy with him forever in heaven.

Killian Loch, O.S.B.

Image: Da Vinci, The Last Supper, c. 1495-1498