Sermon delivered at the Logan Square Ecumenical Alliance Combined Worship Service At Humboldt Park United Methodist Church by Rev. Bruce Ray
March 24, 2024
Good morning! Hosanna! Hosanna!
I have a confession to make. When I agreed to preach on this Palm Sunday, I didn’t realize that the gospel text would be from Mark’s gospel. Now, I love the Gospel of Mark, but his version of the Triumphal Entry isn’t my favorite. First, it’s the shortest version. And yet Mark spends 7 verses on getting a colt for Jesus, but only 2 verses on the procession into Jerusalem. Yes, it has the shouts of Hosanna and the cloaks and branches, but it feels anti-climactic. And it just ends too quietly with Jesus slipping away to enjoy an evening in Bethany.
I much prefer Luke’s longer version. So that’s all I’m going to say about Mark. Luke’s version especially resonated for me this year, given our efforts over the past five weeks of Lent to pass the Bring Chicago Home referendum.
Isaac Newton’s Third Law of Motion states, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.” That’s the only thing I remember from high school science. But what I’ve learned is that what’s true in physics is also true in social and spiritual situation. Every action for good and for God is met with an equal and opposite reaction in opposition to it.
Every time Jesus pushed forward his message of the Kingdom of Heaven and his mission, he got push-back. When Jesus healed people on the sabbath he was accused of being a law-breaker. When Jesus set demonized people free, he was accused of being in league with Satan. When he included people on the margins, he was called names. He was called “a friend of tax collectors and sinners” and a “Samaritan.” Trust me, those were not compliments.
From the beginning of his ministry, those with power saw him as a dangerous threat to the social order and they were determined to stop him. We see this play out in Luke’s version of Palm Sunday. When Jesus entered Jerusalem amid the shouts and chants, he was immediately confronted by a group of Pharisees demanding that he shut it down. “Turn down the volume!” But Jesus refused to back down, telling his critics that silencing his followers wouldn’t stop the movement. Even the rocks would take up the chants. Then, Jesus entered the temple where he disrupted the marketplace, driving out the merchants, and upsetting the authorities. Luke ends the story with the Chief Priests, the teachers of the Law and the leaders of the people plotting to kill Jesus to shut down the movement once and for all. Every action for God and justice meets resistance and hostile opposition.
But did all the push-back and opposition stop Jesus? Did the character assassination and the accusations and threats to his life silence him? No. He pressed forward, continuing the mission and spreading the message that God’s vision for the world was arriving. And though he knew that going to Jerusalem was full of risk—including the cross – he didn’t back down or turn around.
Throughout Lent, we pushed forward with God’s vision of the world—a vision of decent, affordable, safe housing for everyone. Many of us supported and worked for the passage of the Bring Chicago Home referendum to reduce homelessness in Chicago. But there was push-back. Those with a vested interest in keeping things the way they are fought the change. Realtors. Developers. Landlords. And they pushed back—HARD. They distorted the message. They resorted to lies. They used lawsuits. They used threats of higher rents and property taxes. Unfortunately, they succeeded. The referendum failed. I was disappointed. I was deflated. I was defeated. I know many of you felt the same way—maybe you still feel that way.
But here is the question before us today. Will we back down? Will we let the defeat of the referendum end the movement for housing for all? Jesus’s story didn’t end on Palm Sunday or even Good Friday, and our story didn’t end on election day, March 19, 2024. In fact, while we were going to the polls that day, God was downtown, breaking down a door that had been locked shut for over 15 years.
For years, the Chicago Housing Authority had promised to renovate Lathrop Homes as part of their plan for transformation. The renovation was completed on the buildings north of Diversey, and then it stopped. The buildings on the south side of Lathrop Homes were abandoned and neglected. On December 10, 2022, we took Las Posadas back to Lathrop Homes. We followed Mary and Joseph through the decaying and abandoned apartment buildings seeking shelter for holy families. We marched to tell CHA to keep their promise, renovate the buildings and open housing for hundreds of low and moderate-income families. And after we marched and chanted, nothing happened. Nothing changed. Nothing. Until… March 19, 2024.
That day, the Board of the Chicago Housing Authority met and approved the plans and financing for the next phase of the redevelopment of Lathrop Homes. In 2025, 300 units of housing will open on the south side of Diversey. And 100 units will be reserved for families who qualify for public housing. What moved the CHA to take action after so many years and so much silence? No one knows for sure. No one can explain it. It was a miracle. And from where I stand, that means God had everything to do with it. God moved CHA. Praise God!
You see? We are Jesus people. We are kingdom-vision people. We are resurrection people! Will we back down? I ask you again: Will we back down? Will we be silent? Will we give up or give in? We will not! In the words of the Apostle Paul, “we will be strong and immovable always abounding in the Lord’s work, because we know… we KNOW… say it with me: “WE KNOW” our work is not in vain. And we pray and we believe that God’s kingdom WILL come, and God’s will WILL BE DONE on earth as it is in heaven. Amen? Amen! So…
[SING]
Ain’t gonna let nobody turn me around, turn me around, turn me around.
Ain’t gonna let nobody turn me around! I’m gonna keep on a-walkin, keep on a-talkin,
Marchin’ on to Freedom Land.
Amen.