Palm
Sunday and Politics
by Isaac M. Morehouse
by
Isaac M. Morehouse
When He
approached Jerusalem, He saw the city and wept over it, saying,
"If you had known in this day, even you, the things which make for
peace! But now they have been hidden from your eyes." Luke
19:4142 (NASV)
As Jesus entered
Jerusalem on Palm Sunday to shouts of, "Hosanna" and cloaks
and palm branches thrown on the road before him, it seems it must
have been a joyful experience. But instead of taking joy in the
cheers of the people, Jesus wept over the city.
I’m no Biblical
scholar or Jewish historian, but what little I’ve studied of the
Bible and the history of the time suggests that the kind of savior
the people expected was not the kind Jesus came to be. And
for their misplaced hopes, he felt pain.
When Jesus
came into the city that day the people gathered to see him and many
began to think he may be the Messiah that had been promised the
Jews for hundreds of years. They were under the control of the Roman
Empire and its various local puppet governments. Understandably,
when the Jews learned the promises of a savior and King in the line
of their great king David, they expected a Messiah who would free
them from Roman rule.
When Jesus
entered the city they waved Palm Branches and shouted, "Hosanna."
History suggests these were significant, even dangerous political
gestures. Hosanna was a Hebrew word that meant, "Save, now!"
and had a very physical connotation. It was not at that time a cry
of spiritual or abstract salvation, but a very real shout for physical
salvation, which had specific meaning to a people under Roman rule.
The Palm branch was a nationalistic symbol for the Jews, a symbol
that had appeared on the last coins made when Israel was free. That
is perhaps why the Pharisees told Jesus to "rebuke" his
disciples – because to openly praise one they thought came to defy
their rulers was politically dangerous.
As the crowd
of people saw Jesus entering the city, they saw a political savior;
one who might at last rise up and free them from the Romans, and
they cheered His arrival. But He wept. He wept because they did
not know, "The things which make for peace." He had not
come to free them from physical bondage.
Jesus did not
intend to be a political figure. He seemed to largely ignore the
Romans, and even saved His criticisms and rebukes not for the political
leaders, but for the leaders of His own people; their spiritual
leaders. When He taught righteousness it was never backed by force.
When He told the rich man to give all he had to the poor the man
walked away; Jesus did not force him to obey, but instead
let him go. He refused to use earthly law to punish a prostitute
by stoning; instead he told her, "Go and sin no more,"
and left her free to decide. He did not come to spread his Kingdom
with the tools of earthly kingdoms – force and coercion. He did
not come to offer political freedom. He came to offer freedom from
something much deeper.
To conflate
the work of Christ with the work of worldly politics is to miss
the meaning of His life, death, and resurrection. To claim that
a Christian must vote for a specific policy or politician,
that Christians must use government to enforce our morals to prohibit
bad behavior or to force good behavior – is to reduce the work of
Christ to the work of a politician. He is not too weak or insignificant
for political battles; political battles are too weak and insignificant
for Him. The kind of freedom and righteousness He offers is far
too great, too personal, to be advanced by physical force (which
all politics boils down to); politics is beneath the spiritual life,
not above it.
There is a
place for politics. Physical freedom is a worthy goal. Defending
oneself from violence and oppression is not immoral. Involvement
in the political process to these ends is not wrong. But as a Christian,
to use government as more than a defense for physical freedom, to
enforce the morality you believe in through law backed up by the
agents of the state is to contradict Christ Himself.
It is that
desire to look to Christ as a way to accomplish our political goals
that made Him weep as He entered Jerusalem. They looked for peace
through a political savior; He knew the peace He brought was much
deeper and could be had regardless of the physical conditions around
them. Politics is force. Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem that day
had been prophesied by Zechariah, who described Him as, "Gentle."
Let us emulate
Him when we enter the realm of politics. Let us never forget that
the freedom He brings transcends this world, and His peace cannot
be attained or spread by force.
A version
of this article originally appeared as a blog entry at theprometheusinstitute.org.
March
5, 2009
Isaac
M. Morehouse [send him mail]
is the director of campus leadership for the Mackinac Center for
Public Policy. He lives in Vicksburg, Michigan, and blogs at www.mighigansfe.org
and www.theprometheusinstitute.org.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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