On Palm Sunday, Jesus Rides into the Perfect Storm
ABC Religion and Ethics | 11 Apr 2014
The crowd went wild as they got nearer. This was
the moment they'd been waiting for. All the old songs came flooding
back, and they were singing, chanting, cheering and laughing. At last,
their dreams were going to come true. But in the middle of it all, their
leader wasn't singing. He was in tears. Yes, their dreams were indeed
coming true. But not in the way they had imagined.
On Palm Sunday, Jesus was riding into the perfect storm. Recall the
story of the famous "perfect storm." It was late October 1991. A New
England fishing boat by the name of Andrea Gail had sailed five
hundred miles out into the Atlantic. But the weather was changing
rapidly. A cold front moving along the American-Canadian border sent a
strong disturbance through New England, while at the same time a large
high-pressure system was building over the Maritime provinces of
south-eastern Canada. This intensified the incoming low-pressure system,
producing what locals called "The Halloween Nor'easter."
These circumstances alone could have created a strong storm, but
then, like throwing petrol on a fire, a hurricane coming in from the
Atlantic brought incalculable tropical energy to the mix. The forces of
nature converged on the helpless Andrea Gail from the west, the
north and the south-east. Ferocious winds and huge waves reduced the
boat to matchwood. Only light debris was ever found.
The first two elements of Jesus's perfect storm are comparatively
easy to describe; the third less so, but all-important if we are to
understand both the original meaning of Palm Sunday and the meanings
that it might have for us as we draw nearer to the cross in this holiest
of weeks.
Rome
To begin with, the storm sweeping in from the west. The new social,
political and (not least) military reality of the day, the new
superpower - Rome. Rome had been steadily increasing in power and
prominence over the previous centuries. Until thirty years before the
birth of Jesus of Nazareth, Rome had been a republic. But with Julius
Caesar all that changed. His ambition, and then his assassination, threw
Rome into a long, bloody civil war, from which Caesar's adopted son,
Octavian, emerged as the winner.
Octavian took the title "Augustus," which meant "majestic" or "worthy
of honour." He declared that his adopted father, Julius, had become
divine - this meant that he, Augustus Octavian Caesar, was now
officially "son of god" or "son of the divine Julius." The word went
round the world which Rome was quickly conquering: Good news! We have an
emperor! The Son of God has become King of the world!
After Augustus's death, he too was divinized, and his successor,
Tiberius, took the same titles. I have on my desk a coin from the reign
of Tiberius (there are plenty of them, readily available). On the front,
around Tiberius's portrait, it says, "Tiberius Caesar, son of the
Divine Augustus." On the back is Tiberius portrayed, and described, as
"chief priest." It was a coin like this that they showed to Jesus of
Nazareth, not long after he had ridden into Jerusalem, when they asked
him whether or not they should pay tribute to Caesar. "Son of God"?
"High priest"? He was in the eye of the storm.
Why was Rome interested in the Middle East? For surprisingly familiar
reasons. Rome needed the Middle East like today's western powers need
it: for raw material. Today it's oil; then it was grain. Rome itself was
grossly over-populated and grain shipments from Egypt were vital. In a
region just as unstable in the first century as it is today, the job of a
Roman governor was to administer justice, collect the taxes, and keep
the peace - and particularly to suppress unrest.
That was the gale: the first element in the perfect storm at whose centre Jesus of Nazareth found himself.
Israel
The second element in Jesus's perfect storm, the overheated
high-pressure system, is the story of Israel as Jesus's contemporaries
perceived it and believed themselves to be living in it. As far back as
we can trace their ancient scriptures, the Jewish people had believed
that their story was going somewhere, that it had an appointed goal.
Despite many setbacks and disappointments, their god would make sure
they reached the goal at last. The stories they told were not simply
stories of small beginnings, sad times at present, and glorious days to
come. They were more specific, more complex, dense with detail and heavy
with hope.
Their theme came to full flower in the story of the Exodus, when
Moses had led the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt, across the Red Sea
and through the desert to their Promised Land. The Jews lived on the
hope that it would happen again. The tyrants would do their worst, and
God would deliver them.
Understand the Exodus and you understand a good deal about Judaism -
and about Jesus. Jesus chose Passover, the great national
Exodus-festival, to make his crucial move. The long story of Israel must
finally confront the long story of Rome. This is no time to be out on
the sea in an open boat. Or riding into Jerusalem on a donkey.
The western wind meets the high-pressure system. But what about the hurricane?
God
The Jewish story always contained one highly unpredictable element -
namely, God himself. God remained free and sovereign. Again and again in
the past, the way that Israel had told its own story was quite
different from the way God was planning things. Jesus believed that was
happening again now.
God had promised to come back, to return to his people in power and
glory, to establish his kingdom on earth as in heaven. The Jewish people
always hoped that this would simply underwrite their national
aspirations - he was, after all, their God. But the prophets, up to and
including John the Baptist, had always warned that God's coming in power
and in person would be entirely on his own terms, with his own purpose -
and that his own people would be as much under judgment as anyone if
their aspirations didn't coincide with God's.
Jesus believed that as he came to Jerusalem he was embodying,
incarnating, the return of Israel's God to his people, in power and
glory (see Zechariah 9:9-17). But it was a different kind of power, a
different kind of glory. Recall that moment in Jesus Christ Superstar
- produced when Tim Rice was still writing shrewd, sharp lyrics and
Andrew Lloyd Webber was still writing interesting music - when Jesus is
approaching Jerusalem and Simon the Zealot urges him to mount a proper
revolution. "You'll get the power and the glory," he says, "forever and
ever and ever." But Jesus turns and sings those haunting lines: "Neither
you, Simon, nor the fifty thousand; nor the Romans, nor the Jews; nor
Judas, nor the Twelve, nor the priests, nor the scribes, nor doomed
Jerusalem itself - understand what power is! Understand what glory is! Understand at all."
He then continues with the warning of what was going to happen to
Jerusalem, because, as he says, "You didn't recognise the time of your
visitation by God." This is the moment, and you were looking the other
way. Your dreams of national liberation, leading you into head-on
confrontation with Rome, were not God's dreams. God called Israel so
that through Israel he might redeem the world; but Israel itself needs
redeeming as well. Hence God comes to Israel riding on a donkey, in
fulfilment of Zechariah's prophecy of the coming peaceful kingdom,
announcing judgment on the system and the city that have turned their
vocation in upon themselves, and going off to take the weight of the
world's evil and hostility onto himself, so that by dying under it he
might exhaust its power.
Throughout his public career, Jesus had been embodying the rescuing,
redeeming love of Israel's God, and Israel's own capital city and
leaders couldn't see it. The divine hurricane sweeps in from the ocean,
and to accomplish its purpose it must meet, head on, the cruel western
wind of pagan empire and the high-pressure system of national
aspiration. Jesus seizes the moment, the Passover-moment, the
Exodus-moment, not least because these, too, speak of the sovereign
freedom and presence of God as much over his rebellious and
uncomprehending people as over the tyranny of Egypt.
Weathering our own "perfect storm"
As the events of Holy Week unfold, and as we share in them and make
our own pilgrimage to the foot of the cross, it should be impossible for
us simply look on and register them as an odd quirk of history. This
was the perfect storm. This was where the hurricane of divine love met
the cold might of empire and the overheated aspiration of Israel.
Only when we pause and reflect on that combination do we begin to
understand the meaning of Jesus's death. Only then may we understand how
it is that the true Son of God, the true High Priest, has indeed become
King of the world. And perhaps only then can we begin to make sense of
all the other things that preoccupy us, the things we carry with us as
we make our pilgrimage to the foot of the cross.
"Take up your cross," said Jesus, "and follow me" - and as we do so
we often find ourselves caught up in our own micro-versions of the
perfect storm. We are subject, first, to all the usual pressures of
contemporary culture. If you want to get on in the world, you've got to
play by its rules. We find quite quickly, however, that the price of
"getting on" in the world is our own integrity, as secular pragmatism
continues to sweep old-fashioned moralism out of the way. That is one
element in our own perfect storm.
The second is that each of us has our own aspirations and
expectations. We want to graduate, get a job, earn some money, perhaps
get married. But somehow we have to navigate the choppy and increasingly
stormy waters where all those normal and natural things meet the sharp,
often heartless, wind of contemporary culture. How do we prevent our
own aspirations being merely self-centred and ultimately idolatrous?
As we approach Good Friday, we should be aware of, and we should be
praying for, the third element: where is God in all of this? Woe betide
us if we merely invoke God to back up our own ambitions and aspirations.
Woe betide us doubly if we imagine we can find God simply in the spirit
of the age. These are the two weather-systems with which we live all
the time - but during Holy Week we are called to open ourselves to the
third one.
If we try to follow Jesus in faith and hope and love on his journey
to the cross, we will find that the hurricane of love which we
tremblingly call God will sweep in from a fresh angle, fulfilling our
dreams by first shattering them, bringing something new out of the
dangerous combination of personal hopes and cultural pressures. We
mustn't be surprised if in this process there are moments when it feels
as though we are being sucked down to the depths, five hundred miles
from shore amid hundred-foot waves, weeping for the dream that has had
to die, for the kingdom that isn't coming the way we wanted. That is
what it's like when we are caught up in Jesus's perfect storm.
But be sure, when that happens, when you say with the disciples on
the road to Emmaus, "We had hoped ... but now it's all gone wrong," that
you are on the verge of hearing the fresh word - the word that comes
when the storm is stilled, and in the new great calm we see a way
forward we had never imagined. "Foolish ones," said Jesus, "and slow of
heart to believe all that the prophets had spoken! Was it not necessary
that the Messiah should suffer these things and so enter into his
glory?"
Who knows what might happen if each of us were to approach Holy Week
and Good Friday praying humbly for the powerful fresh wind of God to
blow into that combination of cultural pressure and personal aspiration,
so that we each might share in the sufferings of the Messiah and come
through into the new life he longs to give us.
N.T. Wright is Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity
in the School of Divinity at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. He
is one of the world's most distinguished and influential New Testament
scholars. Among his many books are Jesus and the Victory of God, The Resurrection of the Son of God and, most recently, Paul and the Faithfulness of God.
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