Exploring The Holy Scriptures with Rev Dr David Wright

A King comes gently!

David Season 1 Episode 22

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0:00 | 14:00

Matthew tells us that Jesus sends two disciples ahead to find a donkey and a colt. This is no accident, no improvisation. Jesus is intentionally fulfilling the prophecy of Zechariah:

“See, your king comes to you, gentle and riding on a donkey.”

In the ancient world, kings rode warhorses when they came for battle. They rode donkeys when they came in peace. Jesus chooses the donkey. He comes gently.

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SPEAKER_00

Welcome, sisters and brothers, and peace be with you. May the words of my mouth and the meditations in our hearts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord our strength and our redeemer. Amen. A few years ago a well known public figure was scheduled to visit a city after a crisis. The streets were lined with police vehicles. Security teams arrived in advance. Motorcades rehearsed their routes. When the day came black cars with tinted windows swept through the streets. People caught only a glimpse. The visit was impressive, powerful, controlled. That same week a local volunteer quietly showed up at emergency shelter. She carried groceries in the trunk of her small dented car. No sirens, no security detail, no flashing lights. She carried bags inside, sat at tables, listened to stories, and prayed with those who were frightened and displaced. Both visits were responses to a crisis, but only one felt personal. Only one felt close. When we turn to Matthew's Gospel chapter twenty one verses one to eleven, we see another arrival into a city, a city tense with expectation. It is Passover in Jerusalem, the population has swelled, the Roman authorities are on edge. The people are restless, longing for deliverance, and into that charged atmosphere comes Jesus. Matthew tells us that Jesus sends two disciples ahead to find a donkey and a colt. This is no accident, no improvisation. Jesus is intentionally fulfilling the prophecy of Zechariah. See, your king comes to you gentle and riding on a donkey. In the ancient world, kings rode on war horses when they came for battle. They rode donkeys when they came in peace. Jesus chooses the donkey. He comes gently. And yet Matthew calls him king. This is the paradox of Palm Sunday. This is a message for our world today power wrapped in humility authority clothed in gentleness. The crowds spread their cloaks on the ground. They cut branches from the trees. They cry out Hosanna to the Son of David. Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest. Hosanna means save us now. They're right to praise him. They are right to see something royal in him. They are right to sense that God is doing something decisive. But what kind of salvation are they expecting? Many hoped for a political revolution, a Messiah who would throw Rome out of their land, a king who would restore national glory, a leader who would crush enemies. They wanted the wars. But Jesus came on a donkey. This is the paradox of Palm Sunday. This is a message for our world today power wrapped in humility authority clothed in gentleness. Matthew says When Jesus entered Jerusalem the whole city was stirred and they asked Who is this? That question echoes across history. Who is this? The crowd answer This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth in Galilee. A prophet? Yes. But more than that. Matthew has been telling us from the beginning this is Emanuel, God with us. This is the son of David. This is the king. The city is stirred, but not everyone understands. Perhaps this is still true today. We can be stirred by Jesus, moved by his teaching, touched by his compassion, and yet still misunderstand who he truly is. This is the paradox of Palm Sunday. This is a message for our world today power wrapped in humility authority clothed in gentleness. Let's come back to that contemporary contrast that I mentioned at the start of this message The motorcade king, loud, distant, powerful, untouchable. We often want a God who will crush our problems instantly, a Messiah who will fix our circumstances without troubling our hearts. But Jesus does not conquer Rome. He comes to conquer sin. Jesus does not come to seize a throne, he comes to embrace a cross. Within days, the same city that shouts Hosanna today will cry crucify him. Why? Perhaps because Jesus refuses to be the king they demand. He will not lead an armed uprising. He will not meet violence with violence. He will not save them in the way that they expect. Instead he saves them through surrender. This is the paradox of Palm Sunday. This is a message for our world today power wrapped in humility authority clothed in gentleness. Make no mistake Jesus is a king. Gentleness is not weakness, it is strength under control. The same Jesus who rides the donkey will cleanse the temple. The same Jesus who weeps over Jerusalem will stand silent before Pilate. The same Jesus who is crowned with thorns will be raised in glory. His kingship is real, but it is unlike any other. So what about us? The question for us is this What kind of king do we welcome? It is easy to wave the palm branches in a crowd. It is harder to follow a king to the cross. We like the celebration. We struggle with the surrender. We want Jesus to fix our world. He wants to change our hearts. We like the transformation. We struggle with the surrender. We want deliverance from discomfort. He offers deliverance from sin. Ah we like the smoothness. We struggle with the surrender. We want visible triumph. He walks the path of sacrificial love. We like the winning We struggle with the surrender. Let me close by saying that when Jesus truly enters a life, he does so gently. But his presence changes everything. He enters not on a war horse of domination, but on a donkey of humility. He knocks. He does not batter down the door. He invites. He does not compel. But when we open the gates, the king truly arrives. The motorcades of this world impress us. They display power at a distance. But our king comes close. Jesus rides into Jerusalem not to display might, but to offer mercy. Jesus comes not to take life but to give his own. Jesus comes not to sit on a golden throne but to hang on a wooden cross. This is Jesus. This is the King who comes gently. This is the Saviour who comes in the name of the Lord. And today, as surely as on that first palm Sunday, Jesus comes to us, not with sirens and spectacles, but with humility, peace, and saving love.