Sunday, March 24, 2024

Passion Sunday (B)

(Edited) Reflections (from:) Passion Sunday March 29, 2009, Year B

First reading: Isaiah 50:4-7
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 22
Second reading: Philippians 2:6-11
Gospel reading: Mark 14:1 - 15:47

"Clearly this Man was the Son of God!"

Passion Sunday (traditionally known as Palm Sunday) begins the holiest week of all the liturgical weeks in the Church's calendar. The gospel for Passion Sunday presents a narration of the events leading to the crucifixion of Jesus. The main events of this Passion are as follows:

  • Jesus in the house of Simon with a woman entering and pouring perfume on the head of Jesus
  • Judas Iscariot going to the chief priests to hand Jesus over to them
  • Jesus celebrating the Last Supper together with His apostles
  • Jesus going to the Mount of Olives to pray
  • Judas arriving accompanied by a crowd with swords and clubs
  • Jesus arrested and led off to the high priest
  • Jesus accused of blasphemy; and the abuse done on Him by the members of the Sanhedrin
  • Peter out in the courtyard and denying Jesus three times before breaking down in tears
  • the Sanhedrin sending Jesus to Pilate for interrogation
  • Barabbas released in behalf of Jesus who was sentenced by His own people to be crucified
  • the soldiers abusing Jesus and mocking Him
  • Jesus journeying to Golgotha carrying the cross - with Simon of Cyrene obliged to help Him carry the cross a part of the way
  • Jesus crucified and the soldiers rolling dice to gamble for His garments
  • two thieves sentenced to die with Jesus, one on His left, and the other, on His right
  • Jesus crying out "My God, my God, why have You forsaken Me?
  • Jesus crying out His last breath and the sanctuary's curtain suddenly torn in two - from top to bottom
  • a centurion who stood guard exclaimed, "Clearly this Man was the Son of God!
  • some women and others who came up from Jerusalem, looked at Jesus from a distance
  • Joseph of Arimathea arranging for the proper burial of Jesus

Listening to these events when the gospel is read, or presented as a short dramatization, is a great help in contemplating the great love God has for each one and all He created. The image of Christ crucified on top of any altar - that image of Jesus wounded, suffering, and dying on the cross - is an image that will always have a strong impact on souls. This Crucified image and the events of the Passion will turn many times over in the minds and hearts of those who believe. In the hearts of the faithful is an eternal love that is rooted many centuries ago to a man of God who was born and died on the Cross. And this love knows that the cause of peace on earth will, despite all appearances, be fulfilled. Every Passion Sunday, this nascent truth is sown deep in the hearts of all who attend the Eucharist. It will impress in man's consciousness that there indeed is reason to hope and a reason to live and work for the cause of peace.

Christ's death on the cross is only the beginning of the cause for peace, not the end; it is, after three days, a mark of a glorious beginning. As long as all the faithful never renege on their commitment to Jesus, any death-related situation or event in life will not faze the gift of faith and hope which that commitment inspires. Death will not shock or shake anyone as long as man's context of meaning in life and work is always seen in the context of the Passion of Jesus. For the believer knows that Christ's passion and death is what will lead Him and all who believe in Him to the glory of His resurrection.

This beginning of Holy Week then is a time to pray more and learn how the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus, the Son of God, will continually give meaning to our life and also inspire those who do not yet believe. It is a time to give more time also for the needy. For they are clothed in the appearance of Christ's Passion. It is a time to listen, to keep still, and to let the spirit of the Season sink deeply into each heart and soul. It is a time to reflect and to imagine: if you place yourself in that "hour" with Jesus and His apostles, using your imagination - what would you think and do? Would you run and hide like the apostles? Would you be with the others from Jerusalem who looked at Jesus from the distance? Or would you be one of those who kept all that happened in their minds and hearts, and retold the story to others that they may believe?

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