Holy Holy Holy
I stand in the
entrance and look at the empty sanctuary, the images of Jesus and Mary are
draped with purple cloth. Even now, before Palm Sunday and the start of Holy
Week, an atmosphere of reverence has entered the church without notice, because
no invitation is needed.
Although the coming
week will find me in church nearly every day, I long to be there, not to miss a
moment although I have attended these same services for years. The days of this
week will be filled with sorrow, passion, and suffering but with equal measures
of love and gratitude. This week is the reason for our faith, in God, in
Christ, and the basis for our hope in ‘things unseen’.
We know there is a history-changing triumphant
ending only seven days away. We will travel with Jesus, entering Jerusalem hailed
as a king. But what awaits are not banquets fit for royalty, but a humble
Passover dinner in which bread and wine will be consecrated and become the body
and blood of our Savior.
Instead of a crown
of gold and precious gems, our Lord will be crowned with thorns that pierce his
skin. He will be beaten until his body is covered not with royal robes, but
with the outpouring of his love for us.
At the start of the
week crowds line the streets shouting “Hosanna! Hosanna!”. By the end of the week, when given the
opportunity to save Jesus’ life, they will call for his crucifixion. So
unreliable are we, it is a miracle that God would love us in spite of
ourselves.
“Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of
Hosts, heaven and earth are full of your glory. Hosanna in the highest. Blessed
is he who comes in the name of the Lord. Hosanna in the highest.”
From king to
crucifixion these seven days are the holiest days of our liturgical calendar, filled
with sorrow for the suffering that Christ endured. Yet, they are the most
precious seven days. A time when we feel suffused in the significance of our
Christian faith and what it means to be loved by God.
There is a moment, after
the Last Supper is honored on Holy Thursday, when the altar is stripped bare,
when the Holy Sacrament has been taken from its place and moved to another
room, when I have the feeling of what it would be like if Christ had never come
into the world. The desolation is overwhelming. I understand how darkens
pervades the world without the presence of Christ and how apt the name ‘light
of the world’ is for him. Later I will sit with others where the Blessed Sacrament
has been placed and feel as if we are keeping Jesus company as his disciples
were asked to keep vigil during his sorrow in the Garden of Gethsemane.
I stand ready to walk with my savior
to the cross, though I will only be a witness to his suffering and though my
love for him is a pale reflection of his love for me, still my heart aches at
the thought of what he endured on my behalf, on our behalf.
But because of his sacrifice, I can
come into this church and sit in the quiet and be present with him. This week
is about sacrifice, about laying down one's life for another, about a father
who loved his children so much that he sent his only son to die for us. Which
is why this week is about love, God's love for us, and our love given back to
him.
I want to sit alone in this empty
church and soak in God’s love and reflect it back to him. But Jesus has called
me and you and each of us to do more with this powerful gift we have received.
Christ’s death and resurrection was
not the end of his mission. I believe he meant it to be the beginning of a journey
in which we experience and share an active loving relationship with God with
the world. When we listen to someone in
need, we become the ears and heart of Christ. When we speak to a person who
lives in isolation, we become the bearer of Christ’s love. When we take meals
to the hungry, we share Jesus’ miracle of feeding the five thousand. When we
serve in our church and our community, we carry God’s message to people who
might not otherwise receive it.
During Holy Week spend quiet time
with Jesus, reflect on his sacrifice with love and gratitude. And then ask how
we can work with him, to grow in our relationship with him, and share the love
of that relationship with others in our community.
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