Holy Week

Credit: Giovanni Laudicina, Getty Images

In the gospel of Luke, Jesus entered Jerusalem and “the whole crowd of disciples began joyfully to praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen: ‘Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the Lord!’”


I envy Black churches for the way joy moves through their gatherings. Joy has been their protest for generations. Joy says, “You can bind my hands. You can bind my feet. But, you cannot bind my heart.” When the world diminishes your worth and shackles your agency, joy rises up as power.


Heather Cox Richardson, political historian from Harvard, emphasizes that authoritarians need despair, fear, and anger to rise. Joy is a form of resistance. Strong communities with people acting with joy undermine the foundation of authoritarianism.


The Pharisees are threatened by the joyful noise of the crowds. Off to the side are the soldiers with their sharp swords and their rounded shields, representing the full weight of the Roman army. Behind that army lay the power of the emperor. The emperor could do whatever he wanted to whomever he wanted, including crucifying rebels, murdering all the two year olds in Bethlehem, and burning entire cities down. The crowd’s chant, “Jesus is King”, challenged the sovereign authority of the emperor. Jesus also challenged the authority, status, privilege, and superiority of the religious leaders. They had reason to feel threatened.

Fear is the awareness of something in the present moment that is threatening. Anger attempts to neutralize the threat by pushing back. Scared and angry, the leaders tell Jesus to silence the crowd. Jesus refuses to silence them. He tells the Pharisees that if he silenced their joy, the stones of the city would cry out.

Meanwhile, Jesus had his own emotions. This passage ends with Jesus weeping. As he looked over the city, he saw the joy of the crowds, he saw the whispering of the Pharisees. He saw the Roman soldiers getting restless in the corner. He sensed what would unfold. He would be put to death. His death wouldn’t silence the violence. The people would rise up. The Roman empire would descend. The city will be burnt, the people slaughtered.

“Oh Jerusalem. If only you knew what would bring you real peace.” There is a certain pain that comes from watching a person, or a nation, on a path that will lead to destruction. It is like watching a train wreck in slow motion.

This gospel reading contains a lot of emotion—Joy, fear, anger, grief. None of it silenced. All that emotion is allowed to take up space. Religious
spaces can often be unsafe places for emotions. Some churches teach that emotions are suspect; they lead us astray and undermine our commitment to truth. Yet, Holy Week is not a journey we make with our head, but with our heart.

Deep peace,

Anne

Rev. Anne Baxter Smith
Pastor, Southpoint Church


**If you would like to read the article I referenced in my sermon regarding the perceived danger in empathy (and women in leadership), here it is The Sin of Empathy.

Worship Calendar

Location & Zoom. We meet on Sundays at 10:00 am, at 15639 24 Avenue, Surrey. Zoom is offered if you cannot attend in person. Zoom link. Meeting ID: 831 1690 9977 password: 753319

Listen to Sermons
Follow “Meditations from Southpoint Church” on Spotify and Apple.

Blogs
Catch up on Anne’s recent blogs under “News” on our website, southpoint.ca

Sun May 11
John 10:22-30
Anne Baxter Smith

Sun May 18
John 13: 31-35
Anne Baxter Smith

Sun May 25 ALL OUT Wild Church service led by Rev Janice Young
John 13: 23-51
At Semiahmoo Fish and Game Club Hatchery, 1284 184 Street, Surrey

Sun Jun 1
John 17:20-26
Madison Friesen

New to Southpoint?

At Southpoint, it all begins with God’s love. Just as a plant grows, it receives sunshine, so we grow as we receive God’s love. At Southpoint, we are growing in our capacity to love God, ourselves, one another, and Creation.

We seek to be a community of grace that is intentional yet organic, spacious yet authentic, grace-filled yet accountable. * We are fully welcoming. *

We encourage relationships rather than run programs, yet we recognize the importance of intentionality and structure as we nurture life together.

As a community, we seek to put our love in action. We value helping out on Sunday mornings, sharing food, and showing up in hard times. We keep our church life simple so folk have time to build relationships with family, friends, and neighbours. We encourage folk to serve in tangible ways within the wider community. We rent space rather than own a building, allowing us to do more with less, supporting missions at home and abroad.

Curious to know more?

These six slides express what motivates our ministry (best viewed on a monitor). Here’s the bio of our Pastor, Rev. Anne Baxter Smith.

If you’d like to really peek inside, sign up for our weekly Southpoint News (scroll to brown footer at bottom of page). The Southpoint News is a MailChimp distributed email—you can unsubscribe anytime and will not be added to our contacts list. Email us at office@southpoint.ca. Website: southpoint.ca.

Progress Pride Flag by Daniel Quasar (link)

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