The Road to
the Cross
Palm
Sunday
© 1997 by Mark
Beaird
Leave a Comment or Question
>>
Go to Sermon Archive >>
Submit
your Sermon >>
Text:
John 12:9-19
It was one
of the most inspiring sights of World War II. Four chaplains were standing
on the deck of the USS Dorchester, hand-in-hand, singing the old hymn
"Nearer My God To Thee." But then, these were inspiring men. And this was a
scene the men of the USS Dorchester would never forget. George Fox was the
oldest of the chaplains. A veteran of WW I and a recipient of the Silver
Star for bravery. He had become a public accountant after the war and then
a minister. When WW II began he told his wife he would have to go. "I know
from experience what our boys are about to face," he said, "They need me."
Alexander D. Goode was the only Rabbi in the group. A father of four and a
medical doctor, he was patriotic to the core. Johnny P. Washington came
from a poor Irish immigrant family. He grew up in the slums of Newark, New
Jersey, but went on to become a Catholic priest. He was known for his
laughter and his love of music. Clark V. Poling, the youngest of the four
chaplains, was a minister from the Dutch Reformed church. Clark was the
seventh generation in an unbroken line of ministers.
However, he
wanted to be a fighting soldier instead of a chaplain. He didn't want
people to think he was "hiding behind the church." But when he found out
that the mortality rate of the chaplains was the highest of all he felt he
would be doing his full part as a chaplain. It was a stirring sight to see
these four men united, hand-in-hand, on the deck of that ship. But they
weren't conducting a service for the men as you might think -- they were
preparing to die. It was in the early morning hours of February 3, 1943.
The ship was bound for Greenland with 906 men on board. Suddenly a torpedo
from a Nazi U-boat ripped through the hull and the ship began to sink in
the icy waters of the North Atlantic. Fear gave way to panic among the
soldiers. Rushing to the deck, many left their lifejackets below. The
chaplains helped calm the panic by helping the men escape the sinking ship.
Then, with
the lifeboats full, they gave their own lifejackets to soldiers who had
none. The ship completely sank in only twenty-seven minutes. As the men who
had escaped looked back at their doomed ship they saw the four chaplains
standing on board the sinking ship hand-in-hand and listened as the men
lifted their voices to God. It was a sight that would forever be etched in
their memories. Had the sovereign hand of God directed each of them down
the same road or had they chosen it for themselves? What we know for sure
is that they chose to give their lives for others. Jesus said, "Greater
love has no one than this, than to lay down one's life for his friends."
(John 15:13) Jesus was traveling this road into Jerusalem to do just that
-- lay down His life for His friends. This "triumphal entry" was actually a
road of sorrow He chose for himself. It too was an inspiring sight for
those who can see it for what it was.
In his
song, Ride On To Die, Michael Card writes of Christ's journey to the cross:
Sense the sorrow untold As you look down the road At the clamoring crowd
drawing near. Feel the heat of the day, As you look down the way, Hear the
shouts of Hosanna the King. Oh, daughter of Zion, Your time's drawing near;
Don't forsake Him. Oh, don't pass it by. On the foal of a donkey As the
prophets had said, Passing by you, He rides on to die. Soon the
thorn-cursed ground Will bring forth a crown, And this Jesus will seem to
be beaten. But He'll conquer alone, Both the shroud and the stone, And the
prophecies will be completed. Oh, daughter of Zion, Your time's drawing
near; Don't forsake Him. Oh, don't pass it by. On the foal of a donkey As
the prophets had said, Passing by you, He rides on to die. (Card, 141-2)
I.
THE ROAD TO THE CROSS WAS A ROAD OF DESTINY (vv. 12-13).
A. Jesus
had come to save the world and now was His time.
In v. 13,
the word "Hosanna" is "an Aramaic expression meaning 'Save now!' used
either literally as a petition for deliverance or as a technical term
ascribing praise to God." (Michaels, 222) The people were ready for
deliverance—but from what? Jesus had come to save them from their sins,
not from their political situation. B. The people perceived Christ as the
One who would “come” from God. At this time He was the people's choice
for Messiah. He had given the blind their sight, made the lame to walk,
and raised the dead. Surely He was sent from God.
The
prophet Zechariah had prophesied, "Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion!
Shout, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your King is coming to you; He is
just and having salvation, lowly and riding on a donkey, a colt, the foal
of a donkey." (Zechariah 9:9)
II. THE
ROAD TO THE CROSS WAS A ROAD OF DEVOTION (vv. 14-15).
A. His
entrance into Jerusalem announced His commitment to the task ahead. But
do not forget that His journey did not begin there on that dusty road nor
was He there by accident.
In his
book And the Angels were Silent, Max Lucado writes, "Forget any
suggestion that Jesus was trapped. Erase any theory that Jesus made a
miscalculation. Ignore any speculation that the cross was a last-ditch
attempt to salvage a dying mission. For if these words tell us anything,
they tell us that Jesus died...on purpose. No surprise. No hesitation. No
faltering. No, the journey to Jerusalem didn't begin in Jericho. It
didn't begin in Galilee. It didn't even begin in Bethlehem. The journey
to the cross began long before. As the echo of the crunching of the fruit
was still sounding in the garden, Jesus was leaving for Calvary." (Lucado,
15)
B. His
humble arrival was evidence of His submission to God. The people wanted a
king so badly that they would have gladly taken Him, by force if
necessary, and made Him king. They dreamed not of the Kingdom of God but
of deliverance from Roman rule—not of doing God's will but of winning a
great military victory. But for the man the people hoped would be king,
the donkey He rode was His only throne.
Jesus said
in Mark 10:45, “For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to
serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.”
III. THE ROAD TO THE CROSS WAS A ROAD OF DISCOVERY (v. 16).
A. The
people would discover that their idea of the Messiah was all wrong.
“They
greeted Him as a king, though ignorant of the nature of His kingship." (Tasker,
147) That is the essence of their problem. They did not understand the
nature of His kingship or kingdom.
B. The
disciples would discover the plan of God. The fact that they did not
understand the significance of His actions until later is not to be held
against them. It was all happening so fast and all the pieces of the
puzzle had not come together. On the contrary, it is to their credit that
they put all the pieces together after Christ was resurrected.
IV. THE ROAD TO THE CROSS WAS A ROAD OF DELIVERANCE (vv. 17-19).
A. The
path Jesus took was the way of salvation for mankind.
“There is
a Russian fable about a master and a servant who went on a journey to a
city. Before the two men could reach the destination they were caught in
a blinding blizzard. They lost their direction and were unable to reach
the city before nightfall. The next morning concerned friends went
searching for the two men. They finally found the master, frozen to
death, face down in the snow. When they lifted him they found the servant
-- cold but alive. He survived and told how the master had voluntarily
placed himself on top of the servant so the servant could live.” (Lucado,
22-3) The road to the cross is certainly no fable; but like the master in
the story, Christ knew that He must die in order for others to live. B.
This was a road to deliverance that satan could not block.
“His
continued popularity with the people as a miracle-worker was creating a
dangerous situation for the authorities, who are forced to admit that
their counter-measures have not yet proved effective. It almost seemed as
if Jesus had the world at His feet!" (Tasker, 147)
CONCLUSION
Someone
wrote, “When we view the cross I think that somehow we must learn to see
our complicity in it. We cannot dismiss this as an act by self-righteous
Jews and brutal Romans. We must so, somehow understand the horrible fact
that Satan sometimes uses religious people to accomplish his means. We
distort things and before long we call evil good and good evil. Every time
we allow sin to seduce us with its distortions, we nail Jesus on the cross
once again.” “There is an old episode of MASH, in which a rather cocky
young pilot comes to the MASH unit because his plane has been shot down,
but he is not seriously injured. He tells everyone in a rather boasting
voice that flying really gives him a high. If I could not fly this war
would really by a drag, he says. He brags that every time he flies a couple
of missions they send him back to Japan for several weeks of R & R. The war
to him was really quite a lark. Then one day a Korean child is brought to
the MASH unit and her arm has been horribly mangled in an air attack. The
young pilot is taken back. Even though it was not his plane who did it, for
the first time he must face his own complicity in the brutality of war. For
the first time he sees things not from the perspective of 10,000 feet, but
in the eyes of a child. There is a danger in romanticizing the cross. I
love the old hymns just as much as anyone. But the cross is not meant to
lull us, it is meant to jolt us.” --www.SermonIllustrations.com, April 2000
Alternate ending: The decision had been made. The troops had been deployed
and the battleships were on their way. Nearly three million soldiers were
preparing to slam against Hitler's motion. Responsibility for the invasion
fell squarely on the four-starred shoulders of General Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
The general
spent the night before the attack with the men of the 101st Airborne. They
called themselves The Screaming Eagles. As his men prepared their planes
and checked their equipment, Ike went from soldier to soldier offering
words of encouragement. Many of the flyers were young enough to be his
sons. He treated them like they were. A correspondent wrote that as
Eisenhower watched the C-47s take off and disappear into the darkness, his
hands were sunk deeply into his pockets and his eyes were full of tears.
The general then went to his quarters and sat at his desk. He took a pen
and paper and wrote a message—a message which would be delivered to the
White House in the event of a defeat. It was as brief as it was courageous.
"Our landings..have failed...the troops, the Air, and the Navy did all that
bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches
itself to the attempt it was mine alone." It could be argued that the
greatest act of courage that day was not in a cockpit or foxhole, but at a
desk when the one at the top took responsibility for the ones below. When
the one in charge took the blame--even before the blame needed to be taken.
Rare leader, this general. Unusual, this display of courage. He modeled a
quality seldom seen in our society of lawsuits, dismissals, and divorces.
Most of us are willing to take credit for the good we do. Some are willing
to take the rap for the bad we do. But few will assume responsibilities for
the mistakes of others. Still fewer will shoulder the blame for mistakes
yet uncommitted. Eisenhower did. As a result, he became a hero. Jesus did.
As a result, He's our Savior.
Before the
war began, He forgave. Before a mistake could be made, forgiveness was
offered. Before blame could be given, grace was provided. (Lucado, 18-19)
There's not much about the scene of Christ riding on a donkey into
Jerusalem that lends itself to the idea of a “triumphal entry.” It's not an
impressive scene, unless you can see beyond the vision of the human eye. It
was a day of triumph because He was on His way to pay the price for our
sins, committed and uncommitted. Man could not stop Him and satan could not
stop Him. It was for this that He came. He came to travel the road to the
cross!
References
Card, Michael. (1990). Immanuel: reflections on the life of Christ.
Nashville: Nelson. Lucado, Max. (1993). And the angels were silent. New
York: Walker and Co. Michaels, J. Ramsey. (1993). John: New International
Biblical Commentary. Peabody: Hendrickson Pub. Tasker, R. V. G. (1989).
John: Tyndale New Testament commentaries. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing
- Submitter:
Mark Beaird
- Date:
Wednesday March 24, 2004
- Title:
Associate Pastor
- church:
Life Church International
|
|