Eine gute Freundin von mir, macht ihren Schwerpunktfilm fürs Studium. Sie wäre für jede Unterstützung super dankbar, auch wenn ihr den Link teilen könnten! Danke 🫶 https://t.co/4DndgIsxSU
@scrowder What? I am so impressed by this speech from Jeremy, he was 100% correct and it aged very well...thank you @JeremyDBoreing for being one of the very few christians with a backbone and clear moral compass
“In just a little while, the wicked will be no more; though you look carefully at his place, he will not be there.
For the Lord loves justice. He will not forsake his saints.”
Psalm 37:10 & 28
The deeper message of Palm Sunday is one a lot of people would rather ignore.
It was a moment of massive misunderstanding, and many people today are still missing the point.
Back then, when a king came back from war, the crowds would lay down palm branches to celebrate his victory.
So when the people did that for Jesus, they were treating Him like a conquering hero.
They were expecting a military king. A political savior. Someone to take down Rome and restore the nation.
That’s why they shouted “Hosanna!”
It means “Save us now.”
It comes from the same root as the name Yeshua, Jesus.
They were quoting Psalm 118, “Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord.”
This was a political statement.
They thought He was about to take the throne, crush their enemies, and restore Israel.
They were welcoming a king the way you’d welcome a victorious general.
And in their minds, He fit the bill.
He was fulfilling Zechariah 9:9, “Behold, your king comes to you, righteous and having salvation, humble and mounted on a donkey…”
They weren’t just praising Him.
They were making demands.
"Save us on our terms.
Fix our world.
Give us the kingdom we want."
But Jesus didn’t come to crush their enemies.
He came to deal with their sin.
And when He didn’t meet their expectations, the same crowd that praised Him turned on Him.
Five days later, they were screaming “Crucify Him.”
Here’s something most people miss:
Jesus entered the city on Lamb Selection Day, the day the Passover lambs were chosen.
While everyone was picking out their sacrifice, Jesus was presenting Himself as the Lamb of God.
He knew what He was doing.
He knew He was going to die.
And He still showed up.
That’s what Palm Sunday is really about.
Not just celebration, but confrontation.
It forces you to ask,
Am I worshiping Jesus as He really is, or just using Him to get what I want here and now?
Because most people don’t reject Jesus for being too harsh.
They reject Him for not doing what they expected.
Deuteronomy 31:8 The LORD himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.”