As a child in parochial school, this was the worst week of the year. All of us knew how Jesus had entered Jerusalem on the back of a donkey on Palm Sunday and, by Friday, how He had been crucified.
When you're a small kid, the 'but He rose from the dead and redeemed humanity' part of the Easter week observances sailed past you. Yes, you realized years later, it was the Passion and the Resurrection, much more so than the Virgin Birth, that made you a Christian and a Catholic, but when you're eight, all you're thinking about is the spikes driven through your outstretched palms. And how the same crowd who loved Him on Sunday could hate Him by Friday.
This year's Palm Sunday comes at a point in the calendar where any form of respite is welcome. Maybe it's just me, but probably not; it's been a long and hard winter. Things have been going south for some time now at the personal, professional, medical, and philosophical levels.This might be the week we learn something from the New Testament- whether you are a Child of the Book or not. Not just in our nation, or region, or state, or city, but actually like a pandemic spreading across the globe and around the world, depression and despair are clouding the horizon and changing (and not for the better) the lives of millions and billions of our fellow travelers.
It's so easy to mourn what we've lost or no longer have or will never again possess. It's harder to turn the ball cap inside out and put it back on our head, step back into the batter's box, square our shoulders, and wait on the next pitch, especially since we've been dusted a couple of times so far by this pitcher. And many of us have it good; for the majority of the planet, not as well off as we were, all of the calamity and chaos have made an intolerable situation even more so.
But look around. Maybe not too much farther north than here in Norwich, Connecticut, but the trees have a vague and soft red glow on their branch tips--something's getting ready to happen. Crocuses are coming up, and more birds are about than we've seen in months. The days are getting longer, not just feeling longer.
The sun came up this morning, as it has for no one knows how many years, and will, in all likelihood, come up again tomorrow. The same folks who were lining the streets to welcome the Next Big Thing have gone home, but that doesn't mean we have to leave or content ourselves with what might have been.
-bill kenny
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