“Being intimate with the Passion of the Lord and experiencing His tremendous Love as we enter, with Faith and Hope, into the ‘Holy Week’”
(Based on the Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord)
It was a cold morning on February 5, 1597.
On a windswept hill overlooking Nagasaki, 26 Christians – Franciscan missionaries, Japanese catechists, and even children – stood bound to wooden crosses.
They had marched through the streets in humiliation, mocked, beaten, and bleeding… while crowds watched.
Among them was Louis Ibaraki, just twelve years old.
When soldiers came to nail his hands to the crossbeam, he looked at them with peace and said:
“It is an honour to die for my Lord.”
The crowd grew silent.
As the final nails were driven and the crosses raised, the martyrs began to sing – hymns to Christ the King.
(And in that moment – as tradition tells us – a strange and still silence fell over Nagasaki.
Heaven responded to their offering…
… a cloud, shaped like a Cross, appeared in the sky)
[This event is historically documented and recorded in sources like ‘The Twenty-Six Martyrs of Japan’ by Fr. Cieslik, S.J., and the Vatican archives following their canonization in 1862.”]
Today, we shout “Hosanna” to the King of kings…
… as we wave our palms.
But we also realise this has ‘the tone of a funeral procession in slow motion…
… leading to the blood-soaked wood of Calvary.
Today we are entering into one of the most important weeks of the Liturgical year – The Holy Week!
And we commemorate the start of this Holy Week, with the Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord
On this Sunday, we recollect the entry of the Lord into the town, riding on a donkey (Cf. Mk 11:7)
The donkey has a specific symbolism…
In the olden days, military officers engaged in war and battles would ride on the most efficient animals: the fast and furious warhorses.
But after the victory in the war, the victorious officers would parade into the city riding on… yes, a donkey.
That was the reason why the people shouted out when they saw Jesus riding into Jerusalem on a donkey.
In the First book of the Kings 1: 38-4, we read of how Prince Solomon used the royal donkey of his father David, for the ceremonial procession on the day of his coronation.
The new Solomon, Jesus, the True Prince of Peace and the King of Kings today enters His city, Jerusalem on a donkey as well!
A new reign of peace was being signalled.
A new kingdom of love was being ushered.
Are we ready to welcome the King of Kings and the Prince of Peace into our lives?
He is not the glorious King of might and wealth…
But He is the Spectacular King who will reign on His throne of the Cross.
He is not the proud Emperor who parades much show and pomp…
But He is the Wonderful Lord who displays His compassion and love by His wounds!
Are we ready to welcome this King into…
Our lives?
Our homes?
Our hearts?
The Passion of the Lord is about to begin…
Are we going to be part of the people who crucify Him?
… or are we going to be people who repent of sins and seek to live a life worthy of the King?
Many of us would have read the following, with a picture of Jesus Christ crucified…
“I asked Jesus, how much do you love me?”
And Jesus answered, “This much”
And He extended His arms on the cross…
But there’s probably a sequel to this, which perhaps is not known much, but is worth reflecting on…
Jesus then asked me, “How much do you love me”
I picked up the hammer and the nails….
saying, “This is how much I love You!”
… and began to crucify Him!
The Passion of the Lord is a result of our sins…
The Crucifixion of the Lord is a consequence of our disobedience…
As Isaiah would say, “It was our infirmities that He bore and it was our sufferings that He endured” (Is 53:4)
He died for love of us.
He suffered to save each of us.
Are we going to remain stubborn and adamant and continue to be a people who shout, “Crucify Him”…
… Or shall we repent, fall on our knees, seek a transformation, and, with palm branches in our hands
… truly exclaim and acclaim Jesus as the Lord, shouting, “Hosanna to the King of Kings! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!”
Many of us are just happy to be part of the “city crowd”…
… remain there and once in a way, shout Hosanna, and be happy!
But the Lord says: Leave the city and climb Calvary
“He who wishes to follow me, must deny, take up the cross daily and follow!” (Mt 16:24)
We must realise that Christianity without the Cross is impossible…
No Cross, no crown!
No wounds, No blessings!
No offering, no happiness!
We have the palms with us now – they are fresh and green.
But in a few days, they will turn dry.
Singing and shouting Hosanna is easy, when everything is fresh and green.
But can we keep the same spirit, even when things dry up…
… or will we end up saying, “Crucify Him!”
Let us truly make this week, a “holy week”…
… by making a confession of our sins, and making suitable amendments
… be deciding to read the Bible every day, without fail
… by spending time with Jesus, in personal prayer, every day
… by repairing some ‘toxic’ relationships – asking the “gift of forgiveness and healing of these relationships” from the Lord
The Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord is not just about nostalgia.
It’s about ‘making a decision.’
Holy Week is not to be reduced to a theatre of memories…
… but it is an invitation to intimacy with the Passion.
It is Christ saying:
“Will you walk with Me… all the way to Golgotha?”
So this week…
Don’t just wave palms.
Pick up your cross.
Don’t just sing “Hosanna”.
Whisper “I’m Yours” in the silence.
Don’t just remember what Jesus did.
Allow Him do it in you.
Because Holy Week without surrender is just “history
But when you allow the Lord to work on your life, it begins “HIStory!”
Wish you a Blessed Palm Sunday…
… and a Glorious Holy Week!
Let us be intimate with the Passion of the Lord and experience His tremendous love…
… so that we too may worthily and honestly shout, on Easter Sunday, “Alleluia! He is risen!”
God Bless! Live Jesus!
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Ten Commandments – The Fourth Commandment – The Family in God’s Plan
The family is the community in which, from childhood, one can learn moral values, begin to honour God, and make good use of freedom.
Family life is an initiation into life in society. (CCC # 2207)