"The Lord Has Need of It"
Palm Sunday
Sunday of the Passion
April 5, 2009
Mark 11:1-10

We have reached Holy Week. There is no time like Holy Week. It is an
intense observance of our Lord’s Passion and Resurrection. Many of the
images of Holy Week come readily to our mind: Jesus riding into
Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, Him clearing out the temple, the Last
Supper, praying and being arrested in Gethsemane, being crucified,
buried, and of course the Resurrection.

But there a lot of little details. Things we might never think about
unless we took out our magnifying glasses and examined some of the
words used in the Scriptures. The main thing is the cross and the
empty tomb. But there’s a lot that Jesus accomplished in the little
details, that led up to the cross and the empty tomb.

There’s, for example, a donkey. A donkey doesn’t seem like such a big
deal. A donkey doesn’t seem like a major part of the plan of salvation
of God. But a donkey is important to Jesus. He tells the disciples to
go get a specific donkey and that if they encounter questions about
taking it that they should say, “The Lord has need of it.” Not just
any animal would do. It had to be this one. And it was needed by
Jesus.

This from the God who has everything. The God who created the cattle
on a thousand hills and all the animals on land and in the sea. The
God who created the sea and the land and the incomprehensible number
of galaxies that span the universe. This from the God who is going to
take on the sins of the world. He needs a donkey.

But it’s not so different, what Jesus is doing here at the end of His
incarnation in the flesh, living on the earth for thirty years as a
man. God doesn’t need anything, He has created and owns all things.
But He makes use of His creation. When He came out of the womb He
needed a feeding trough so that He could sleep. When He made His way
back home to Nazareth He needed a bed to sleep in and clothes to wear
to go to school. When He began His Ministry He needed water so that He
could be Baptized. When He gave sight to a certain blind man He needed
mud to rub on the man’s eyes. He needed bread and wine to institute
His Holy Supper on the night when He was betrayed.

It’s not that He couldn’t do without these things or couldn’t
accomplish salvation except through them. It’s that He makes use of
His creation. And He often does it through the ordinary things of His
creation. A feeding trough, water, bread, wine, a donkey. He had need
of that donkey, so He sent His disciples to go get it. They would
understand later that He was making use of it in order to accomplish
salvation. Just as He would make use of one of the most excruciating
instruments of torture ever invented, a cross.

The God who doesn’t need anything makes use of the things in our lives
to meet our needs. What we want is often more than what we need. What
we want is often at the expense of what we need. God has everything,
He wants to meet our needs. Whereas He makes use of the things of His
creation, we’re inclined to use the things of His creation to meet our
wants, rather than being content with Him meeting our needs.

You can see this just by the way you often talk about things. Do you
say you really need something when in fact it’s really just what you
want? Do you say that your needs aren’t met when in fact they are met
but you’re not content with that? Do you find yourself longing for all
the wants you have that aren’t met? You’d rather have a nice car
instead of being grateful that you simply have a car. You’re
discontent because you don’t eat fine cuisine when you should give
thanks that you have enough to eat every day. You’re weary of the
strife you endure between your spouse or your children or your
siblings, when you should be at peace knowing that you have the
opportunity to love and cherish them and reconcile when needed.

Jesus didn’t head to Jerusalem thinking about what He wanted. He had
everything. He did go into Jerusalem thinking about what He needed.
And that happened to be a donkey. Because Jesus doesn’t need anything
except to make use of things for us, not for Himself. When we think
about what we need we too often slip into what we want. God in His
grace even gives provision for that, praying for what we want
according to the third petition, “Thy will be done.” Unfortunately,
we’re often so self-absorbed that our petitions meld into “My will be
done.”

Not Jesus. He went into Jerusalem praying, “Thy will be done.” Father,
you want Me riding in humbly and mounted on a donkey?, then that’s
what I want; then that’s what I need to do. Father, You want Me beaten
and mocked and crucified?, Thy will be done.

I guess it would have been cool for Jesus to drive into Jerusalem in a
limo. It would have been awesome for Him to stand on the highest point
in Jerusalem and proclaim to the world that salvation is in Him. God
could easily have arranged for Jesus the infant to be born in a
palace. He didn’t have to use mud to give sight to that blind guy. A
spectacular display would have made a much greater impression.

But Jesus came to save the world of sin. He didn’t come for what He
wanted or needed—He doesn’t want or need anything. What He does is
love everyone. What He does is come for everyone. What He does is die
on the cross for the sin of the world.

He is the all-powerful God of creation who humbles Himself to be part
of His creation. To make use of it so that we who are part of His
creation may be part of His Kingdom of eternal glory. He makes use of
His creation to rescue us from a world that is fallen, that is
deteriorating from the effects of sin. He uses the things of this
world to save us from our sin in which we often use the things of this
world not for His glory but for our own selfish wants.

On Palm Sunday Jesus entered Jerusalem only to find Himself a few days
later standing before the high priest. He had allowed mock witnesses
to make the case against Jesus. But when Jesus declared Himself to be
the Messiah, the high priest victoriously rose up with the cry: “What
further witnesses do we need?” (Mark 14:63 ESV) Notice the contrast
between what Jesus was doing there and what the high priest wanted.
Jesus needed the donkey to get Him into Jerusalem to die for Caiaphas,
the high priest who condemned Him. Caiaphas used whatever means at his
disposal that he could in order to bring Jesus down.

Thank God Jesus submitted to this. The Lord had need of that donkey to
bring Him into the place where He died for the sins of the world. The
same Lord continues to have need of things in our lives to deliver His
salvation to us: the water of our Baptism, the words spoken and
preached of Absolution and proclamation, the bread and wine of His
Holy Supper. The Lord has need of these things to give you Himself.
The Lord has need of these things to bring you into His eternal
Kingdom.

You live in this world. It’s the world your Lord came to in order to
save you. You deal with the things of this world on a daily basis.
What Jesus did on Palm Sunday was very practical. By having need of
that donkey, you have new life. You are in the world but not of it.
You may make use of the things of this world but don’t have to be
slaves to them. The Apostle Paul has this very practical advice for
Christians when it comes to their needs: “Let the thief no longer
steal, but rather let him labor, doing honest work with his own hands,
so that he may have something to share with anyone in need.”
(Ephesians 4:28 ESV) What this means for you is that your life is not
about you and what you want. It is about your needs and what your Lord
has done to meet your needs. He has accomplished salvation for you,
meeting your greatest and eternal needs. He blesses you in this life
with the things of this life, including others who help you. Including
you helping others.

Just when you think that there’s not much to your life in Christ,
think about that donkey. He has need of it, because He had His sights
set on you—saving you, giving you new life, setting you on a new path
to serving Him by serving others. It’s done with the things of this
life, not the pie in the sky notions of your wants. He takes ordinary
things in this life and uses them as the means by which He forgives
you. During this Holy Week, and throughout your life, remember that.
Your needs are met in the cross and the empty tomb. The God who needs
nothing brings His mercy and forgiveness to you by His Word and in His
Holy Supper.

Just when you think there’s not much to those words on the page in
your Bible, remember, the Lord has need of it. Daily devotions,
studying the Word of God, your Lord has need of it to strengthen you.
Just when your Baptism seems not all that relevant in your life,
remember, the Lord has need of that water He washed you with, using it
to wash away your sins. When you approach the altar and receive a
small piece of bread and a small drink of wine, remember, the Lord has
need of it. Just as He made use of a feeding trough, some mud, and a
donkey to bring you Himself, He makes use of bread and wine to do so
today and often. It’s what you need, and that’s why He has need of it.
Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
San Diego, California
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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