March Madness. Even if you haven’t watched a single college
basketball game this year, even if you aren't planning to watch a single game
of this year’s tournament; if you turn on the television or listen to the radio
or glance at the posters on your way into the restaurant, you have noticed
something is happening in sports arenas across the country.
If you tune in to watch one of these games, there is
one thing you can be sure of: when the buzzer sounds to end the game you will
witness one of the more enthusiastic victory celebrations you will see
anywhere.
All the players know this is a single-elimination
tournament. If they lose, they go home. Their season is over. All they can do
now is watch from the sidelines and dream about next year.
If they win, they have the opportunity to play
again. They meet another opponent. Their hope of a national championship stays alive.
The possibilities are thrilling—especially as they play before bigger and
bigger crowds and the attention grows more and more intense.
Sweet Sixteen. Elite Eight. Final Four. National Champions.
It is hard not to get caught up in the excitement. Even if you’re not a fan—of the
sport or the team—if you watch the last few minutes of any of the games, don’t
be surprised if you find your heart rate accelerates and you’re tempted to join
in the cheering.
We love winners. We always have. As Jesus entered
the city of Jerusalem riding on a colt, the people who had followed him
remembered many of the things they had seen Jesus do: heal the sick, feed the
hungry, teach the crowds, challenge the authorities, welcome the children, raise
the dead. This was their opportunity to praise God for all the deeds of power
they had seen. This was their chance to cheer for their champion. “Blessed is
the king who comes in the name of the Lord!”
Some wanted the shouting to end there; instead, the
shouting changed over the next few days—from praise to scorn, from cheering to
jeering, from acclamation to condemnation. Still Jesus kept “advancing” from
one loss to the next—betrayal, arrest, trial, scourging, crucifixion, death,
burial.
It is a very different path to victory from the one
played out on basketball courts around the country. As we move through these
days as a community of faith, let us remember that it is the one who emptied
himself, humbled himself, and became obedient to the point of death—even death
on a cross, who was highly exalted by God and given a name above every other
name.
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