The Procession with Palms: Mark 11:1-10 or John 12:12-16
Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem, while doubtless the major theme of this Sunday in popular estimation, is
both historically and liturgically merely a subsidiary theme, serving only as a prelude to the passion. Any
homily dealing with the entry into Jerusalem should make this clear.
As usual in the exegesis of the Gospels, we have to distinguish between three levels of meaning in this
pericope: the historical level, that is, what actually happened in the life of the earthly Jesus and
what he intended by it; the tradition, or the way the episode was shaped and interpreted in the early
communities; and the redaction, or the use to which the evangelists put the tradition.
1. The historical level. Jesus went up to Jerusalem to deliver his final eschatological challenge to
Israel at the very heart of its corporate and religious life. His entry into Jerusalem to cleanse the temple was
a symbolic expression of this eschatological challenge.
The final salvation and judgment of God were breaking through. Israel must decide. If it accepts its salvation,
all well and good; if not, then (as the cleansing of the temple indicates) the present order of things will be
replaced by God’s new, eschatological order.
As Jesus approaches Jerusalem, he expresses this challenge by riding on a colt (a horse or an ass?
Linguistically, “horse” would be possible and more expressive of the challenge, but asses were—and
are—more common in Palestine).
Two features suggest that the entry may have taken place at the feast of Tabernacles (or at the Dedication)
rather than at Passover: the palms and the singing of Psalm 118:25. “Blessed is he who comes” in that case would not originally have
had a messianic significance but was merely a welcome to the pilgrims indiscriminately.
2. The level of tradition. Jesus’ triumphal entry was messianically “overexposed”
(Bornkamm). His work undoubtedly evoked messianic hopes and fears, and therefore he may even have been greeted
at the entry as the prospective Messiah in a politically Davidic sense. But it is hardly likely that he intended
to create this impression overtly.
The Church, however, reinterprets the story in the light of Easter faith. It makes Jesus act as sovereign
“Lord” (Mk 11:3), directing the
whole proceeding. The miraculous discovery of the ass suggests to the earliest Palestinian community the
supernatural foresight of the prophet-man of God, and in the Hellenistic Church that of the “divine
man.”
It is probable that the community further added to the original Hallel psalm the words of verse 10a as an
expression of its faith. The term “our father David” would be unusual in Judaism, and the whole
phrase looks like a liturgical acclamation of the early community.
At the level of tradition, then, the entry is an overt expression of Jesus’ messiahship conceived in terms
of the Davidic Messiah, the eschatological prophet, the Kyrios (Lord), and the divine man.
3. The redaction. Mark in turn attaches the story to his passion narrative. The effect is to say that
the messianic images (son of David, eschatological prophet and man of God, Lord and divine man) are predicable
of Jesus only because, and precisely because, he is the crucified One.
Moreover, the divine-man motif—namely, miraculous foresight displayed in the discovery of the ass—now serves to
bring home to the reader that Jesus, as the Son of man who is to suffer, knows beforehand the whole saving plan
of God and sets the whole plan in motion by his own initiative.
We take John’s version of the story to be, not a fuller redactional modification of Mark or of the other
Synoptists, but an independent version derived ultimately from the same tradition used by Mark, though at a very
early stage of its development. It lacks the miraculous discovery of the ass, showing that this motif had come
into the pre-Marcan tradition somewhat later.
In John, furthermore, Jesus finds the ass after the acclamation of the crowd. It is difficult to decide
whether this is the earliest tradition (which would make Jesus’ decision to ride on an animal a response
to the crowd’s acclamation) or a later theological reinterpretation (Jesus wishing to correct expectation
of the Davidic Messiah with a suffering-servant concept).
John has the crowd come out of the city to meet Jesus. Only John mentions that the branches were of palm. If the
entry occurred at the feast of Tabernacles or the Dedication, this could be historical. The second half of the
crowd’s acclamation (“even the King of Israel”) is worded differently, supporting our view
that this second part is a later expansion.
John, like Matthew (though in a different form, so that John is not using Matthew) but unlike Mark and Luke, has
the citation of Zechariah 9:9, thus
indicating that the proof text came into the tradition later. Compare also John’s explicit statement (Jn 12:16) that the disciples did not realize
the applicability of the text from Zechariah until after the resurrection.
At the level of John’s redaction, the following points suggest themselves.
This was not Jesus’ first visit to Jerusalem. Hence, the crowd comes out to meet him because of his
previous words and works at Jerusalem, especially the raising of Lazarus (Jn 12:18).
The entry in John introduces the episode of the Greeks at the feast (Jn 12:20-22). This makes Jesus the King of
Israel, not in a narrow, nationalistic sense, but in a universalistic sense (see, in John, the title on the
cross in three languages).
It is in this sense that we must understand the revelation of Jesus as the resurrection and the life in the
raising of Lazarus. He is that for all people.
John alone tells us that the true meaning of the entry did not dawn upon the community until after the
resurrection, thus conforming to our contention that there was a development and reinterpretation of the
incident in the post-Easter community.
Finally, we must note that both Mark and John, by placing the story before the passion narrative, emphasize what the liturgy itself emphasizes, namely, that the entry is not an isolated episode but is introductory to, and subordinate to, the passion.
Reading I: Isaiah 50:4-7
This is the third servant song of Second Isaiah. The situation presupposed is that Israel in exile is rejecting
the prophet’s message. The people are “weary” (of his constant predictions of deliverance
despite the continuation of the exile?).
But the prophet is undeterred. God has given him the word and he must deliver it, even at the cost of personal
suffering. And he is confident that God will eventually prove him right.
In exactly the same way, Jesus’ passion was the outcome of his obedient delivery of the message of the
kingdom despite his people’s rejection, and his constant reliance that God would prove him right.
The passion and death of Christ are not isolated events but of a piece with his whole ministry.
The early Church was right in seeing that the servant songs came to rest in the passion and death of its Lord.
Responsorial Psalm: 22:8-9, 17-18, 19-20, 23-24
Psalm 22 is the passion psalm par excellence. It was probably the first Old Testament passage to be
adopted in the “passion apologetic” (the term of B. Lindars) of the early community.
After Easter the early Christians had to reconcile, both for their own faith and for their hoped-for converts
from Judaism, their conviction that Jesus was indeed the expected deliverer with the scandalous events of his
passion. They found their earliest answer in Psalm 22.
This psalm can serve thus because it describes the sufferings of the righteous in language that astoundingly
anticipates the events of the passion, not so much through mechanical prediction as through the psalmist’s
profound insight into the nature of innocent suffering. But more, it goes on to speak of the vindication of the
righteous one (note Ps 22:22-23ab, the
fourth stanza in the arrangement of the psalm as used in today’s liturgy).
[Psalm 22 has especially colored the way
Mark and Matthew tell the passion story (less so Luke). The question inevitably arises whether some of the
details of the narration have been taken from the psalm rather than from historical memory. This may have
happened in some of the peripheral details, for example the division of the garments, but the main facts of the
passion stand because of their scandalous nature. It was this scandalous nature that sent the early Christians
to their Old Testaments, not their reading of the Old Testament that led them to gratuitously invent fresh
scandalous events.]
Reading II: Philippians 2:6-11
Modern New Testament scholars are widely agreed that this a hymn composed prior to Paul’s time. It is often called Carmen Christi, from Pliny’s description of Christian worship. There is much dispute about its proper division into stanzas, but the following reconstruction has much to commend it.
I
Christ Jesus, though he was in the form of God,
did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped,
but emptied himself,
taking the form of a servant,
II
being born in the likeness of men,
and being found in human form he humbled himself
and became obedient unto death
[even death on a cross: added by Paul].
III
Therefore God has highly exalted him
and bestowed on him the name
which is above every name,
IV
that at the name of Jesus
every knee should bow [in heaven and on earth
and under the earth: may be a later
though pre-Pauline, addition]
and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,
[to the glory of God the Father: perhaps
added by Paul].
The first stanza will refer to the pre-incarnate existence of the Christ: he was of equal status with the
Father (see the Old Testament speculations about the divine wisdom). This status he voluntarily surrendered and
became subject to human bondage to the powers of evil (“the form of a servant”: some refer this to
the suffering servant, but at this point the hymn refers to what is common between Christ and all human beings,
not to what distinguishes him from them). The last line of the second stanza refers to what is unique: he
“became obedient unto death” (Paul emphasizes that that was the scandal—the death on the cross).
The third stanza marks the turning point of the Redeemer’s way—his exaltation—while the last stanza speaks
of his ultimate triumph over the whole created universe.
The Carmen Christi sets the death of Christ in its total context. It is at once the nadir of the divine
condescension begun in the incarnation and the ground of Christ’s exaltation and final triumph.
Gospel: Mark 14:1—15:47 (long form) or 15:1-39 (short form)
The passion accounts are the only parts of the Gospel material that existed from the first in the form of
continuous narratives. They were probably constructed as Christian Passover haggadahs, or cult narratives for
liturgical recital. Each passion has its particular timbre and theological emphasis.
The suggestion has sometimes been made that Mark’s narrative combines two earlier narratives of the
crucifixion. Recently a similar suggestion has gone further and proposed that the two pre-Marcan crucifixion
stories that the evangelist combined in Mark
15:20b-41 express two different theologies of the passion. It will be helpful for our understanding of
Mark to follow up this suggestion.
The first and earlier narrative, it is suggested, consisted of Mk 15:20b, 22, 24, 27. It would read as follows: “And they led him away to crucify
him. And they brought him to the place called Golgotha. And they crucified him, and divided his garments among
them, casting lots for them, to decide what each should take. And with him they crucified two robbers, one on
his right and one on his left.”
This crucifixion report, it is suggested, is very early. It is impregnated with echoes of Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53 (the parting of the garments and
the numbering with the transgressors). This earlier crucifixion narrative represents the stage at which the
passion story was formulated in apologetic terms. How could the righteous, innocent servant of God have suffered
crucifixion, the type of execution reserved for the worst criminals? Answer: That is precisely the picture of
the righteous servant of God in Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53.
The second and later tradition of the crucifixion has been found in Mark 15:25, 26, 29a, 32b, 33, 34a, 37, 38.
This tradition would read as follows: “And it was the third hour when they crucified him. And the
inscription of the charge against him read, ‘The King of the Jews.’ Those who passed by derided him.
Those who were crucified with him also reviled him. And when the sixth hour had come, there was darkness over
the whole land until the ninth hour. And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice [uttered a loud cry]
and breathed his last. And the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom.”
This narrative interprets Jesus’ death, not as that of an innocent, righteous suffering servant of God,
but as an agonizing conflict between the powers of light and the powers of darkness. This is an apocalyptic
interpretation. The loud cry of Jesus is an announcement of triumph of the power of light (and implicitly
Jesus’ exaltation), and the rending of the temple curtain a symbolical expression of that victory.
We have here an interpretation of the death of Jesus that recalls the hymn in Philippians 2:6-11. Jesus is the divine
Redeemer who has emptied himself of his divine glory, and therefore it is concealed from the powers of darkness,
who are his enemies. They therefore crucify the Lord of glory (1 Cor 2:8). His death leads to his
exaltation and triumph over the powers.
Mark does not deny the validity of either interpretation but combines them, allowing the one to correct the
other. Jesus’ death is not just that of the righteous, innocent suffering servant, for that could be
misunderstood as a mere ethical example (see 1
Pet 2:21-25). His death would then have had no cosmic significance as the triumph over the powers of
darkness.
On the other hand, the triumph over the powers of darkness could be misunderstood as mere mythology unless it
was insisted that this triumph was wrought out in a real, flesh-and-blood history, in an act of obedience (see
Paul’s interpolation of “even death on a cross” in Phil 2:8).
It is this combination of the ethical and the cosmic-eschatological that creates the unique tone of the Marcan
passion