We are all beneficiaries of the sacrifice of others. But then, we know this. We have certainly heard it enough. It’s built right into the calendar to make sure we do hear it. Take Memorial Day for instance. Or Holy Week for that matter. These occasions exist in large part in order that we hear that we are the beneficiaries of the sacrifice of others.
This was even the case way back in David’s day. We heard about it in our Old Testament Lesson. David at the time was not yet king. His predecessor Saul was king. Or at least Saul had been king. Saul had just been killed -- he along with his three sons -- on the field of battle. And as war is grizzly, so was Saul’s demise. His sons died first, and he was left alone badly wounded with his enemies descending upon him. So rather than allow his enemies to get their hands on him in his exigency and vulnerability, Saul fell on his sword. It was a kind death compared to what his enemies would have done to him.
When David got word of it, he wrote a lament. We don’t think of David as a great literary figure. This is because the language in which he wrote, Hebrew, is very difficult to translate into English. But a great literary figure he was. And that’s an understatement. He is comparable to Shakespeare. Quote any psalm, and I’ll bet David wrote it. The Lord is my Shepard? That’s David. So David wrote a lament to be intoned by the people year by year. How the might have fallen. Your glory, O Israel lies slain upon your high places. How the mighty have fallen. David was founding an occasion whereby the people would hear that they were the beneficiaries of the sacrifice of others. Yes, we know that we are the beneficiaries of the sacrifice of others, because we’ve heard it, and it’s been known and heard down the centuries.
But have we really heard it? Have we heard it the way that we’re meant to hear it? So that it is written indelibly on our hearts? So that it changes us, makes us better people, makes us more grateful and humble and selfless and aware. So that day by day we try to live up to their sacrifice?
I love miniseries. I have loved them since Brideshead Revisited came out in 1981. That’s the year I graduated from college, 40 years ago. I have been on the lookout for good ones since then. I recently googled the best miniseries of all time, and the answer was Band of Brothers. I’ve been watching it these last weeks. I highly recommend it if you haven’t seen it. It tells the true story of a corps of paratroopers who entered WWII on D Day. It follows them to the end of the war. Many things struck me about it, but what struck me most was that that particular sacrifice of which we are beneficiaries was made largely by very young men. Teenagers who were the age of my girls.
And the reality they confronted beggars all expression. They were never comfortable. They were never safe. They were never without fear. They were under continuous fire or bombardment. If they weren’t hit themselves, they saw their comrades hit. They dragged those comrades with their limbs torn off from the battle field. They held them as they died in shrieking agony. And not just one time. This was day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year. Band of Brothers made me hear that we are the beneficiaries of the sacrifices of others like we’re meant to hear it.
But probably more often than not, we don’t hear it like we’re meant to hear it. It goes in one ear and out the other, like all the other rote phrases we are meant to internalize. Jesus knew this would be the case. This is why he was always calling out, Let anyone with the ears to hear, Listen! He wanted the people hear it as they were meant to hear it. But in his case, it did him no good. Even his disciples failed him.
It was immediately prior to Palm Sunday. Jesus took his disciples aside. He wanted them to hear that he was about to make a sacrifice of which they and they would be the beneficiaries. He wanted them to hear it like they were meant to hear it. See, he told them, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and scribes, and they will condemn him to death; then they will hand him over to the Gentiles to be mocked and flogged and crucified...” But they didn’t hear it like they were meant to hear it. Just the opposite, they turned a deaf ear.
Palm Sunday arrived, and Jesus entered Jerusalem on the back of a donkey, the same kind of animal that David rode. Crowds lined the streets, the disciples front and center. How they cheered! How they waved palm branches! And why? It was because they took him for a latter-day David who would throw off the Roman yoke and make the remnant of Israel into a great and mighty nation. The disciples, despite Jesus express warning, had no inkling that Jesus had come to Jerusalem to make a sacrifice of which they would be the beneficiaries. That’s why when he made that sacrifice they acquitted themselves so horribly, with the denials and betrayals and abandonment and panic.
It is Palm Sunday. We are on the cusp of Holy Week, the most sacred week of the year. Not much is expected of us, relatively speaking. We are not the young men of World War II. We are not Jesus of Nazareth going to his cross.
All that is expected of us is that we hear the way we are meant to hear that we are the beneficiaries of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. We are to hear as we are meant to hear all that he suffered from that sacrifice -- his tears at Gethsemane where he begged his Father to find another way, his abandonment by his disciples after his arrest, his farce of a trial by his own people, his betrayal by his best friend, his flogging by the Romans, his crucifixion, his cry of dereliction when he could bear his agony no longer. And we are to hear as we were meant to hear all that we received from that.sacrifice – mercy, forgiveness, courage, meaning, purpose, hope, new life, eternal life with him.
So hear this. Really hear this. We are the beneficiaries of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Amen.
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