Insights: Easter. William Barclay

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Insights: Easter - William Barclay

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Lo, your king comes to you; triumphant and victorious is he, humble and riding on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey.’ The whole impact is that the King was coming in peace. In Palestine the donkey was not a despised animal, but a noble one. When a king went to war he rode on a horse, when he came in peace he rode on a donkey.

      Nowadays the donkey is an animal of amused contempt, but in the time of Jesus it was the animal used to bear kings. But we must note what kind of a king Jesus was claiming to be. He came meek and lowly. He came in peace and for peace. They greeted him as the Son of David, but they did not understand.

      It was just at this time that the Hebrew poems, The Psalms of Solomon, were written. They represent the kind of Son of David whom people expected. Here is their description of him:

       Behold, O Lord, and raise up unto them their king, the son of David,

       At the time, in which thou seest, O God, that he may reign over Israel, thy servant.

       And gird him with strength that he may shatter unrighteous rulers,

       And that he may purge Jerusalem from nations that trample her down to destruction.

       Wisely, righteously he shall thrust out sinners from the inheritance,

       He shall destroy the pride of sinners as a potter’s vessel.

       With a rod of iron he shall break in pieces all their substance.

       He shall destroy the godless nations with the word of his mouth.

       At his rebuke nations shall flee before him,

       And he shall reprove sinners for the thoughts of their hearts.

      . . .

       All nations shall be in fear before him,

       For he will smite the earth with the word of his mouth forever.

      (Psalms of Solomon 17:21–5, 39)

      That was the kind of poem on which the people nourished their hearts. They were looking for a king who would shatter and smash and break. Jesus knew it – and he came meek and lowly, riding upon a donkey.

      When Jesus rode into Jerusalem that day, he claimed to be king, but he claimed to be King of peace. His action was a contradiction of everything that was hoped for and expected.

       The last meal together

       Luke 22:7–23

       There came the day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, on which the Passover had to be sacrificed. Jesus despatched Peter and John. ‘Go,’ he said, ‘and make ready the Passover for us that we may eat it.’ They said to him, ‘Where do you want us to make it ready?’ ‘Look you,’ he said to them, ‘when you have gone into the city, a man will meet you, carrying a jar of water. Follow him to the house into which he enters; and you will say to the master of the house, “The Teacher says to you, ‘Where is the guest room that I may eat the Passover with my disciples?’” And he will show you a big upper room, ready furnished. There, get things ready.’ So they went away and found everything just as he had told them; and they made ready the Passover.

       When the hour came he took his place at table, and so did his disciples. ‘I have desired with all my heart’, he said to them, ‘to eat this Passover with you before I suffer, for I tell you that I will not eat it until it is fulfilled in the kingdom of God.’ He received the cup, and gave thanks, and said, ‘Take this and divide it among yourselves. For I tell you that from now on I will not drink of the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God has come.’ And he took the bread, and gave thanks, and broke it, and gave it to them, saying, ‘This is my body which is being given for you. Do this so that you will remember me.’ In the same way, after the meal, he took the cup saying, ‘This cup is the new covenant made at the price of my blood, which is shed for you. But – look you – the hand of him who betrays me is on the table with me, for the Son of Man goes as it has been determined. But woe to that man by whom he has been betrayed’; and they began to question one another which of them it could be who was going to do this.

      ONCE again Jesus did not leave things until the last moment; his plans were already made. The better-class houses had two rooms. The one room was on the top of the other; and the house looked exactly like a small box placed on top of a large one. The upper room was reached by an outside stair. During the Passover time all lodging in Jerusalem was free. The only pay a host might receive for letting lodgings to the pilgrims was the skin of the lamb which was eaten at the feast. A very usual use of an upper room was that it was the place where a Rabbi met with his favourite disciples to talk things over with them and to open his heart to them. Jesus had taken steps to procure such a room. He sent Peter and John into the city to look for a man bearing a jar of water. To carry water was a woman’s task. A man carrying a jar of water would have been very easy to pick out. This was a prearranged signal between Jesus and a friend.

      So the feast went on; and Jesus used the ancient symbols and gave them a new meaning.

      (1) He said of the bread, ‘This is my body.’ Herein is exactly what we mean by a sacrament. A sacrament is something, usually a very ordinary thing, which has acquired a meaning far beyond itself for those who have eyes to see and hearts to understand. There is nothing specially theological or mysterious about this.

      In the house of every one of us there is a drawer full of things which can only be called junk, and yet we will not throw them out, because when we touch and handle and look at them, they bring back this or that person, or this or that occasion. They are common things but they have a meaning far beyond themselves. That is a sacrament.

      When the mother of the writer J. M. Barrie died and her belongings were being cleared, it was discovered that she had kept all the envelopes in which her famous son had posted her the cheques he so faithfully and lovingly sent. They were only old envelopes but they meant much to her. That is a sacrament.

      When Nelson was buried in St Paul’s Cathedral a party of his sailors bore his coffin to the tomb. One who saw the scene wrote, ‘With reverence and with efficiency they lowered the body of the world’s greatest admiral into its tomb. Then, as though answering to a sharp order from the quarterdeck, they all seized the Union Jack with which the coffin had been covered and tore it to fragments, and each took his souvenir of the illustrious dead.’ All their lives that little bit of coloured cloth would speak to them of the admiral they had loved. That is a sacrament.

      The bread which we eat at the sacrament is common bread, but, for anyone who has a heart to feel and understand, it is the very body of Christ.

      (2) He said of the cup, ‘This cup is the new covenant made at the price of my blood.’ In the biblical sense, a covenant is a relationship between human beings and God. God graciously approached his people; and the people promised to obey and to keep his law. The whole matter is set out in Exodus 24:1–8. The continuance of that covenant depends on keeping that pledge and obeying this law; we could not and cannot do that; human sin interrupts our relationship with God. All the Jewish sacrificial system was designed to restore that relationship by the offering of sacrifice to God to atone for sin. What Jesus said was this –

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