Most of you are aware that
Margaret works in the toy and gift industry.
She was recently in a conversation with one of our daughters who was
searching for Needoh products. It is
something that has been on the market for a long time however, someone made a
TikTok video of it and now you cannot find it anywhere. It is the newest fad among young kids and
parents are frantically searching high and low to find one. Unfortunately, because of its newly found
popularity, for late-comers, finding one of them is currently an exercise in
futility.
Back in the day, you might
have gone searching for a cabbage patch doll and if you were too late to the
party, it was an exercise in futility.
More recently, it was Talking Elmo.
Hopefully you did not miss out on that craze as well. If you were one of the unfortunate ones who
spent hours searching store after store, you might remember the futility you
felt in that moment. It is exasperating
trying to find something that seems to be hidden from view or in short supply. During COVID, you might remember that feeling
when there was the run on toilet paper at COSTCO.
The gospels mention a
crowd of people that built up and followed Jesus wherever he went in Galilee
and Jerusalem. We know that some of
these people were seeking his help – some wanted to be healed, others were
looking for more food, while a contingent sought a renewed sense of hope for
deliverance. We also know that the
crowds were not part of Jesus’ inner circle which meant that they were more
than likely a fickle crowd. They liked
Jesus for what he could do for them in the moment. However, when the miracles ceased and Jesus’
attention shifted, the crowd split.
As Jesus entered Jerusalem
on Palm Sunday some of the crowds gathered and sang songs. They threw their robes on the ground in front
of him and waved palm branches. Maybe
they assumed that the blessed one was coming in the name of God and in doing
so, would meet their expectations. Some
interpreters believe they will be the same crowds that will demand that Jesus
be crucified; of that we cannot be 100% certain. What the story does tell us is that there
were crowds of people at these moments including the crucifixion. Some of them joined in on the taunting of
Jesus. They remembered his predictions
of his own death, but they also remembered that he said, “destroy this temple
and I will raise it again on the third day.”
Evidently, they thought it nonsense and joined in with the chief
priests, scribes, elders, and soldiers verbally abusing our dying Savior. Another faction of the crowds plays a part in
this story. After the death of Jesus,
this crowd leaves the scene of the crucifixion “beating their breasts.” This is a sign of their agony and
despair. Their hopes and dreams just
died with Jesus’ last breath. Their
deliverer did not deliver himself. Their
friend’s life had ended in tragedy and humiliation. They might have felt like all the things that
Jesus said and did were for nothing – his life and ministry were an exercise in
futility. Maybe their six-word memoir
might read something like this, “Watched it all; beat our breasts.”
What the crowds did not
realize was that the cross did not have the final word. Jesus’ ministry to the hurting, outcast,
possessed, and dead did not end with his last breath and the sealed tomb. There would come a moment when his words of
prediction would be reality – they would welcome the resurrection.
I invite you to take time
and read each of the scriptures above followed by reflection on the questions
below. Consider the nature of the crowds
and how you would have reacted to Jesus.
Lastly, I pray that God bless the reading of God’s Word and the
meditations of your heart.