Sun, 5 April 2026
Philippians 4:4-9; John 12:1-18 Palm Sunday reveals both our love for Christ and our temptation to abandon Him when He does not meet our expectations. This homily invites us to see ourselves in the Gospel, to embrace the deeper work of transformation, and to follow the King who leads us not to comfort, but to life through the Cross. --- Palm Sunday Homily 2026 For the Jews two thousand years ago, today was the culmination of their long waiting: the Messiah had come to save them. “Hosanna in the Highest! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord—the King of Israel!” It is a great day for us as well—the end of Great Lent, the celebration of Christ’s triumphal entry into Jerusalem. We take up the first fruits of spring—palm leaves and pussy willows—not just as decoration, but as a sign of renewal. The winter of waiting is over. Christ has come among His people. As the Church sings in the Triodion: “Today the grace of the Holy Spirit has gathered us together, And more than that: He has come into our lives. This feast is not only about what happened in Jerusalem long ago. It is about the moment when Christ entered into our own story—when we first recognized Him as Lord, when we opened our hearts to Him, when we felt the relief of His presence. For many of us, that moment was marked by healing: the easing of despair, the forgiveness of sins, the restoration of hope. And so we cried out: “Hosanna in the Highest—the King has come to save!” Not just Israel. Me. But here is where the Gospel becomes dangerous for us. Because the people who cried “Hosanna” were not wrong to rejoice. They were wrong about what that joy meant. They loved Christ because He met their expectations. Of course they loved Him. And we do the same. We love Christ when He meets our expectations: We love the Church for the same reason: We cry “Hosanna” when Christ—and His Body, the Church—fit into the life we already want. But then something happens. And here the Church gives us words that both celebrate and correct us. In the hymns of this feast, we sing: “Seated in heaven upon Thy throne He comes as King—but not the kind of king we expect. He comes not to confirm our plans—but to restore Adam. And this is why Lent has prepared us. All through the season, in the Great Canon of St. Andrew of Crete, we have been taught how to read Scripture: “I alone have sinned against Thee.” We are not spectators in the Gospel. So when the crowd turns from “Hosanna” to rejection— We say: We are the ones who welcome Christ when He fits our expectations And this is not just about Christ in abstraction. We love the Church when it gives us what we expect: But when the Church calls us to something harder— —we can become disappointed. Even resistant. But that later moment—the moment of disappointment— Because that is the moment when Christ is no longer fitting into our life— And this transformation is not accidental. As Maximus the Confessor teaches, the spiritual life is the purification and reordering of our desires. We begin by loving God for what He gives us—but we are called to love Him for Himself. What begins as expectation must be healed into communion. We see this even in the Liturgy. But then a turn is made; the stairs up the amvon to the altar And the hymns of this Great Feast prepare us even for this. “Today the Master of creation The One we welcomed in joy— This is the truth the crowd did not expect. Christ does not come simply to solve our problems. Not to meet our expectations— Not to give us the life we imagined— So today we are given a choice. But when He overturns them—when He exceeds them—when He leads us through the Cross— Some saw this day as the end—the fulfillment of everything they had hoped for. So do not make your heart a place that welcomes Christ only on your terms. Receive Him not only in triumph—but in sacrifice. Because He will not remain what we expect. He will become something far greater. “Let us also, like the children, bear the symbols of victory, |
