Sermon
And Jesus entered into Jerusalem, and into the temple.
Mark 11:11
We accept the story of the triumphal entry as essentially historical, and we also believe
that it is profoundly symbolic--that it is an image of something that can happen in our
own inner lives. In this latter regard, it occurred to me for the first time this year to
wonder what Jesus was doing outside Jerusalem and the temple. Isn't the Lord always
present to us inwardly, whether we accept that presence or not? In what way does that same
Lord come to us from the outside?
These questions open into a whole realm of thought about ourselves, our lives, our
relationships with each other, and the God who is the object of our worship. To start with
the last of these, we might well remind ourselves that, to put it bluntly, we are not
called by our doctrines to worship Jesus of Nazareth. The faith we have just acknowledged,
the familiar Adoramus of our First Order of Worship, is very carefully subtitled, "Our
Faith in the Glorified Lord," and our theology insists time and again that the Jesus who
entered Jerusalem on that first Palm Sunday was not yet glorified. The process was nearing
its climax and its completion, but this is still the finite human we see. In
correspondential terms, the purely divine presence is still in the Holy of Holies in the
temple, and the outer courts of that temple have not yet been purified.
We can take this as a very direct and quite simple image of our own situations. We are
sustained in life and even in being by the Lord's life flowing into us at our very center.
Our teachings speak of an "inmost," sometimes called the soul, which is beyond our reach
and which we therefore can never harm. In both Divine Love and Wisdom and Divine
Providence, Swedenborg takes pains to make it clear that love and wisdom emanate from the
Divine as one. By the time they have filtered down to the level of our everyday
consciousness, though, they have been separated, obscured, and in many respects distorted
by all that is amiss in our own inner natures. Our profound need for the intimacy of
marriage can be felt as lust, our need for freedom as rebelliousness, our need for
rationality as cynicism.
All these wrongs are, so to speak, in the outer court of our temple, in that area of our
consciousness where we are tangled up in concerns for our self-image, concerned with the
profit and loss of our egos. This is where the tables of the money changers are. This is
where we are looking for brownie points for good behavior and trying to charge the outside
world for our faults.
On thing the Palm Sunday story is telling us, in a way, is that this situation is not
going to be remedied from the inside out. There is not going to be a scene like the one at
the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark, where the ark of the covenant is opened and an
immense, purging, fiery wind roars forth. No, the cleansing of the outer court happens by
very ordinary means. Someone has to come in and physically overturn the tables. If we sit
back and wait for a miracle, we will wait forever.
Who is it, though, who comes in from the outside and does this? What is this still human,
"not yet glorified" form the Divine takes in our own lives? It could quite well be the
figure we read of in the Gospels. After all, all the information we have about God we have
gained "from the outside"--from parents, from teachers, from reading. It has come through
us through human means. Scripture itself, we are told, is "accommodated" to our
understanding and to our states of life. In another image, the literal level of Scripture
is compared to the "clouds of heaven" that veil the "glory" of the coming Christ. The
Jesus of Nazareth of the Gospels is the equivalent of those "clouds."
It speaking of all that we can learn only from the outside, we should not forget that the
love that is doing the learning is still and always coming from the inside. To follow that
thought, though, would take us far afield. It is important enough to focus on the fact
that, in doctrinal terms, our minds do not grasp pure divine truths. Anything that we can
comprehend has to have been adapted to our comprehension. The Divine as it is in itself is
infinite and unknowable, and the figure of Christ is, in a way, a concession to our very
limited abilities.
But back to the Palm Sunday story. At this point, we may note particularly that most of
the Lord's public ministry took place in Galilee--"Galilee of the Gentiles," in the
northern third of the Holy Land, separated from Judea and Jerusalem by Samaria.
Correspondentially, Galilee is an image of our outward lives, of our "behavior" as opposed
to our thinking and our feeling.
This is where our own faith takes one of its distinctive turns. At one point, Wilson Van
Dusen was saying that Swedenborg never wrote a "how to" book about regeneration. He does
not outline a particular discipline such as we find in Eastern religions or for that
matter in many Christian monastic orders. Later, though, Van Dusen viewed the matter
differently and wrote his pamphlet on "Uses" as a discipline for spiritual growth. It is
quite true that our theology has very little to say about our "prayer life" or about
"meditation." It says instead that if we look at our own daily lives as informed by the
Lord's providence, we will find ourselves meeting those issues we need to deal with. Our
inner natures will be changed not simply by insights gained in meditation or by courage
found in prayer--though these may make vital contributions--but by decisions made when the
chips are down. When we are trying to understand and do what the Lord would have us do,
when we are trying to follow the Lord's example in our dealings with those around us, then
the Lord is at work in our Galilee.
More precisely, Jesus of Nazareth is at work, for the example we are following is still
our own learned, limited version. But as the divine nature was within the human in the
incarnation, so the divine works through our human notions, our limited understandings,
our learned images.
It might help to digress a little at this point and say a little about the Gospel record
in general. One of the major themes in the history of the Christian church is the effort
to find in the Gospels definitive answers to questions about the nature of Jesus, somehow
both human and divine. On the literal level, though, the Gospels clearly record not so
much an answer or set of answers as a debate. Some think that Jesus is the Messiah, some
that he is a prophet, some that he is the (or a) son of God, some that he is deluded. He
himself seems to have a tendency that amounts to a policy of speaking in parables. We are
offered material to work with to make up our own minds. Our minds are not made up for us.
As Luther noted, though, there are some simple, obvious messages that are awfully hard to
evade if we come to the Gospels with an honest desire to amend our lives. There are images
of generosity of heart and hand, of forgiveness and peace of mind, of accountability and
integrity, for example, that strike as deeply into our minds and hearts as we will let
them. The picture of Jesus preaching and teaching and healing in "Galilee of the Gentiles"
is a marvelous image of our allowing these images to work on our behavior. Am I being
generous? Am I being forgiving? Am I being accountable? These are questions that we need
to face on a daily basis simply in terms of the way we are behaving.
Someone with a real appreciation of the down-to-earth--I have long since forgotten
who--once claimed that if you let him look through the last ten or so years of someone's
check stubs, he could tell you where that person's values were. We have this idiom about
"putting your money where your mouth is" which says very much the same thing. There is a
very real "faith" that we express in our choices, that we can identify if we look away
from what we think and what we profess, away from our ideals, so to speak, and look at
what we have actually chosen to do.
We should not be surprised of there is a gap between that faith and our ideals. That is
what ideals are for--to call us beyond where we are. That, again, is the figure of Jesus
moving around in Galilee, comforting one person, reproving another, healing another,
standing out with a kind of enigmatic clarity as one with a message of transformation.
The first step is to listen to the message of the Gospels on this behavioral level, to do
our best to live up to the ideals we find embodied in the figure of Jesus as we see it.
If we make this honest effort, the read leads from Galilee to Jerusalem. If we open our
lives to that presence, then sooner or later, in this world or the next, we may find
ourselves called to open our hearts.
The last of the letters to the seven church in the book of Revelation is to the
Laodiceans. It is the most negative of the seven. The church in Laodicea is portrayed as
lukewarm and self-satisfied, as claiming to be rich when in fact it is inwardly "wretched
and miserable and poor and blind and naked." But each church is offered a promise, and the
promise to this church is the most striking of all. Let us put it in the second person.
"Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If you hear my voice and open the door, I will
come in and will eat supper with you, and you with me."
When in the Gospels the figure of Jesus moves from Galilee to Judea, we can see the divine
message probing beneath the surface. The way has been prepared by faithful living. Now our
problems can be faced at their roots, now we can deal with causes and not only with
symptoms. No wonder there is rejoicing. It feels like an and to all inner division and
struggle, like the doorway to the highest heaven itself.
It can be such a doorway, but only if our gift of self is complete. The Lord literally
laid down his life in the most painful way imaginable, and there was a time when the
overwhelming joy of Palm Sunday was turned into bottomless depths of despair.
We do not all follow the path all the way, and we are not condemned for this. Our
teachings describe a "natural heaven" full of honest-to-goodness angels who simply love
leading constructive lives. They are not particularly interested in understanding why.
Then there is a "spiritual heaven" of people who are interested in understanding why, in
working through the complexities of our inner natures and of our relationships with each
other. and finally, there is a "celestial heaven" of people whose inner temple has been
cleansed, people who have been brought through the complexities to the profound simplicity
that Swedenborg calls "the innocence of wisdom."
We need not be "ambitious" for higher grades or envious of others or resentful of our own
lot. Whatever our gifts, whatever our calling, we have every reason for humility and
gratitude--humility when we realize how slight are our responsibilities in the whole sweep
of human history, and gratitude when we look at how much we have that is not of our
making. The one crucial thing is that we recognize that whatever our circumstances or our
state, Palm Sunday is for us. The Lord is trying to come to us through our circumstances,
offering to come a little further into our lives. This means, of course, that we are part
of the "circumstances" of those around us, and that the Lord is trying to bless them
through us. That, ultimately, is why we are here on this earth--to learn the giving and
receiving that constitute true community and true peace, the doing of the Lord's will on
earth, as it is in heaven.
Amen.