Because of all he had done, the simple people believed in the Lord
not only with a silent faith, but with a faith that proclaimed his
divinity both by word and by deed.
After raising Lazarus, who had been dead four days, the Lord found
the young donkey his disciples had brought for him, as the
evangelist Matthew relates.
Seated on it he entered Jerusalem, in fulfillment of the prophecy
of Zechariah: “Fear not, daughter of Zion; behold your king
comes to you, the just one, the savior. He is gentle, and rides on
a beast of burden, on the colt of a donkey.”
By these words the Prophet shows that Christ was the king he was
foretelling, the only true king of Zion. He is saying:
“Your king will not frighten those who look upon
him; he is not an overbearing kind of person, or an evildoer.
He does not come with a bodyguard, an armed escort, at the head of
hosts of cavalry and foot soldiers.
Nor does he live by extortion, demanding taxes and the payment of
tribute and ignoble services, hurtful to those who perform
them.
No, he is recognized by his lowliness, poverty, and frugality, for
he enters the city riding on a donkey, and with no crowd of
attendants.
Therefore, this king alone is just, and injustice he saves. He is
also meek, meekness is his own special characteristic.
In fact, the Lord’s own words regarding himself were:
“Learn from me, for I am meek and lowly in heart.”
He who raised Lazarus from the dead enters Jerusalem today as
king, seated on a donkey. Almost at once all the people, children
and grown-ups, young and old alike, spread their garments on the
road; and taking palm branches, symbols of victory, they went to
meet him as the giver of life and conqueror of death.
They worshipped him, and formed an escort. Within the temple
precincts as well as without they sang with one voice,
“Hosanna to the Son of David! Hosanna in the highest!”
This hosanna is a hymn of praise addressed to God.
It means, “Lord, save us.” The other words, “in
the highest,” show that God is praised not only on earth by
human beings, but also on high by the angels of heaven.
(Homily XV: PG 151, 184-185 )
Gregory Palamas (1296-1359) was born at
Constantinople, and prepared by the piety of his parents for a
monastic vocation. At the age of about 20 he became a monk of
Mount Athos. In 1347 he was made bishop of Thessalonica.
Gregory stressed the biblical teaching that the human body and
soul form a single united whole. On this basis he defended the
physical exercises used by the Hesychasts in prayer, although he
saw these only as a means to an end for those who found them
helpful.
He followed Saint Basil the Great and Saint Gregory of Nyssa in
teaching that although no created intelligence can ever comprehend
God in his essence, he can be directly experienced through his
uncreated “energies,” through which he manifests
himself to and is present in the world.
God’s substance and his energies are distinct from one
another, but they are also inseparable. One of these energies is
the uncreated divine light, which was seen by the apostles on
Mount Tabor. At times this is an inward illumination; at other
times it is outwardly manifested.
“Jesus’ hour had not yet come”—not
the hour when he would be forced to die, but the hour when he
would choose to be put to death. He knew the appointed hour for
him to die; he had pondered all the prophecies concerning himself
and was waiting until everything had taken place that the prophets
said would occur before his passion began. When all was
accomplished the passion would then follow, in the due ordering of
events and not at the compulsion of fate.
Listen to these prophecies, and see if they are true. Among the
other things that were foretold of Christ, it is written:
“They mingled gall with my food, and in my thirst they gave
me vinegar to drink.” How this came about we know from the
gospel.
First they gave Jesus gall; he took it, tasted it, and rejected
it. Then, to fulfill the Scriptures as he hung on the cross, he
said: “I am thirsty.” They took a sponge soaked in
vinegar, tied it to a reed, and lifted it up to him where he
hung.
When he had taken it he said: “It is finished.” What
did he mean by that? It is as though he said: “All the
prophecies foretelling what would happen before my passion have
been fulfilled. What then is left for me to do?” So, after
saying “It is finished, he bowed his head and gave up his
spirit.”
Did the thieves crucified beside him choose when to die? They were
imprisoned in the flesh with no power over its limitations. But it
was when he himself chose to do so that the Lord took flesh in a
virgin’s womb. He chose the moment of his coming among us
and the duration of his life on earth.
He also chose the hour when he would depart this earthly life. It
was in his power to do all this; he was under no compulsion. So in
waiting for the hour of his choice, not the hour decreed by fate,
he made sure that everything that had to be fulfilled before he
suffered was duly accomplished.
How could Christ be subject to the decree of fate, when elsewhere
he had said: “I have power to lay down my life, and I have
power to take it up again. No one can take it from me; I lay it
down of my own accord, and I will take it up again?”
He showed that power when the Jewish authorities came in search of
him. “Who are you looking for?” he asked them.
“Jesus of Nazareth,” they answered, and he in turn
replied: “I am he.” At these words they recoiled and
fell to the ground.
Someone is sure to ask: If he had such power, why did he not
demonstrate it when his enemies were taunting him and saying:
“If he is the son of God, let him come down from the
cross?” He was showing us how to endure; that was why he
deferred the exercise of his power.
If he were to come down because he was stung by their words, they
would think he had succumbed to their mockery. He chose not to
come down. He chose to stay where he was, refusing to die until
the moment of his choice.
If Jesus had the power to rise from the tomb, could he have found
it so very difficult to come down from the cross? We, then, for
whom all these things were done, should understand that the power
of our Lord Jesus Christ, which was then hidden, will be revealed
at the Last Judgment.
“Our God will come openly,” we are
told. “He will no longer keep silence.” What does this
mean? It means that previously when he was being judged he had
been silent, in order to fulfill the prophecy: “He was led
away like a sheep to be sacrificed; and like a lamb, dumb before
the shearer, he did not open his mouth.”
Thus, unless he had been willing he would not have suffered, his
blood would not have been shed; and if that blood had not been
shed, the world would not have been redeemed. So let us pour out
our thanks to him, both for the power of his divinity and for the
compassion of his suffering humanity..
(Homilies on the Gospel of John
37, 9-10: CCL 36, 336-338)
Augustine (354-430) was born at Thagaste in
Africa and received a Christian education, although he was not
baptized until 387. In 391 he was ordained priest and in 395 he
became coadjutor bishop to Valerius of Hippo, whom he succeeded in
396.
Augustine’s theology was formulated in the course of his
struggle with three heresies: Manichaeism, Donatism, and
Pelagianism. His writings are voluminous and his influence on
subsequent theology immense. He molded the thought of the Middle
Ages down to the thirteenth century. Yet he was above all a pastor
and a great spiritual writer.
Edith Barnecut, OSB. was a consultant for the International
Committee for English in the Liturgy, Sr. Edith was responsible for
the final version of many of the readings in the Liturgy of the
Hours.
Copyright © 1994, New City Press.
All Rights Reserved.
Journey with the Fathers
Commentaries on the Sunday Gospels
- Year B, pp. 50-54.
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