Troparion
in Tone 1
By raising Lazarus from the dead before Your passion,
You did confirm the universal Resurrection, O Christ God!
Like the children with the palms of victory,
We cry out to You, O Vanquisher of death;
Hosanna in the Highest!
Blessed is He that comes in the Name of the Lord!
Troparion
in Tone 4
When we were buried with You in Baptism, O Christ God,
We were made worthy of eternal life by Your Resurrection!
Now we praise You and sing:
Hosanna in the highest!
Blessed is He that comes in the Name of the Lord!
Kontakion -
Tone 6
Sitting on Your throne in heaven,
Carried on a foal on earth, O Christ God!
Accept the praise of angels and the songs of children who sing:
Blessed is He that comes to recall Adam!
Palm Sunday is the celebration of the
triumphant entrance of Christ into the royal city of Jerusalem. He
rode on a colt for which He Himself had sent, and He permitted the people to
hail Him publicly as a king. A large crowd met Him in a manner befitting
royalty, waving palm branches and placing their garments in His path. They
greeted Him with these words: "Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name
of the Lord, even the King of Israel! (John 12:13).
This day together with the raising of Lazarus are signs pointing beyond
themselves to the mighty !eeds and events which consummate Christ's earthly
ministry. The time of fulfillment was at hand. Christ's raising of Lazarus
points to the destruction of death and the joy of resurrection which will be
accessible to all through His own death and resurrection. His entrance into
Jerusalem is a fulfillment of the messianic prophecies about the king who
will enter his holy city to establish a final kingdom. "Behold, your king is
coming to you, humble, and mounted on an ass, and on a colt, the foal of an
ass" (Zech 9:9).
Finally, the events of these triumphant two days are but the passage to Holy
Week: the "hour" of suffering and death for which Christ came. Thus the
triumph in a earthly sense is extremely short-lived. Jesus enters openly
into the midst of His enemies, publicly saying and doing those things which
most. enrage them. The people themselves will soon reject' Him. They misread
His brief earthly triumph as a sign of something else: His emergence as a
political. messiah who will lead them to the glories of an earthly kingdom.
Our Pledge
The liturgy of the Church is more than meditation or praise concerning past
events. It communicates to us the eternal presence and power of the events
being celebrated and makes us participants in those events. Thus the
services of Lazarus Saturday and Palm Sunday bring us to our own moment of
life and death and entrance into the Kingdom of God: a Kingdom not of this
world, a Kingdom accessible in the Church through repentance and baptism.
On Palm Sunday palm and willow branches are blessed in the Church. We take
them in order to raise them up and greet the King and Ruler of our life:
Jesus Christ. We take them in order to reaffirm our baptismal pledges. As
the One who raised Lazarus and entered Jerusalem to go to His voluntary
Passion stands in our midst, we are faced with the same question addressed
to us at baptism: "Do you accept Christ?" We give our answer by daring to
take the branch and raise it up: "I accept Him as King and God!"
Thus, on the eve of Christ's Passion, in the /celebration of the joyful
cycle of the triumphant days of Lazarus Saturday and Palm Sunday, we reunite
ourselves to Christ, affirm His Lordship lover the totality of our life and
express our :readiness to follow Him to His Kingdom:
... that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his
sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that if possible 1 may attain
the resurrection from the dead (Philippians 3:10-11).
Very Rev. Paul Lazor