{"id":1253,"date":"2011-04-06T14:49:37","date_gmt":"2011-04-06T14:49:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/?p=709"},"modified":"2011-04-06T14:49:37","modified_gmt":"2011-04-06T14:49:37","slug":"christina-reimer-april-3-2011","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/?p=1253","title":{"rendered":"#Hosanna &#8211; Michele Rizoli &#8211; April 17 2011"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight: normal; line-height: normal\" class=\"Apple-style-span\"><a href=\"index.php?option=com_content&#038;view=category&#038;id=10&#038;Itemid=42\"><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#993300\">View Archived Sermons \u00a0\u00a0<\/font><\/a><\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"line-height: normal\" class=\"Apple-style-span\"><strong><u><font face=\"verdana, geneva\" class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#FF0000\"><a href=\"http:\/\/media.tumc.ca\/T046_20110417.mp3\" target=\"_blank\"><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#FF0000\"><strong>New! Listen to this Sermon\u00a0<\/strong><\/font><\/a><br \/><\/font><\/u><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center\"><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u00a0#Hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center\"><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u00a0Palm Sunday \u2013 Matthew 21:1-11, Philippians 2:6-11<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">As I prepared for this sermon, I realized that I\u2019ve preached on Palm Sunday at TUMC before. I thought it was \u201cjust the other day\u201d but when I looked it up it turns out it was in 1997! Anyway, I was tempted to just repeat what I said, but I\u2019m sure many of you still remember that sermon, so I couldn\u2019t do that! \ud83d\ude42<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">[Oh, just a minute, I have something coming in on Twitter (checking device).\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@simonpeter Meet @ Eastern gate Jesus of Naz riding into Jerusalem #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@lazarusrisen RT Meet @ Eastern gate Jesus of Naz riding into Jer #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@johannatalent carry palm branches to ID others #hosanna\u00a0<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Sorry, I don\u2019t know Twitter very well yet (my son Lucas is teaching me), it\u2019s just something I\u2019m following this morning under hashtag Hosanna, and it seems important]<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Anyway, as I was saying\u2026 My sermon in 1997 did set out a couple of assumptions that I bring to my reading of this gospel event. The main one being that I have a phobia of crowds and a subsequent dislike of parades and large gatherings of people that are going to be moving around. It has to do with a childhood experience of being separated from my parents in a crowd and a deep fear of mob mentality in situations where, for instance, soccer fans can trample each other to death, or do things like looting and lynching or demanding crucifixions. \u00a0Of course, those eventualities aren\u2019t the whole event, they\u2019re just what makes it to the news but feeds my fear of large crowds.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">So, you see, before I get into this story I felt I needed to let you know that I regard crowds with a certain amount of suspicion. Which means that I work hard to get my head around the significance of this event in our scripture passage today, it doesn\u2019t automatically draw me in.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">[Ooh, another tweet, hold on \u2026<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@simonpeter BTW It\u2019s not a horse, look for a donkey and a colt #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@simonpeter I think this is it! We\u2019re heading to the temple. Blessed be son of David ! #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@benadam carry palm branches. RT We\u2019re heading to the temple #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@johannatalent RT (oh, that\u2019s retweet) Blessed be the son of David! #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Hum\u2026]<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">What about you? As that crowd was gathering around Jesus, would you have joined? Would you have checked it out? Would you have avoided it? Would you have spread the word and called others?<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Someone has reflected on the fact that this movement of Jesus and his followers into Jerusalem \u2013 often referred to as Jesus\u2019 Triumphal Entry \u2013 is part parade, part protest march and part funeral procession. He reminds us that with this story we \u201cget celebration and joy, a social conscience and a heavy heart. If we are going to be the presence of Christ in a broken world, we must embrace all three.\u201d \u00a0(Actually that someone is Dr. Robert F Browning, from Smoke Rises Baptist Church, in Georgia \u2013 Isn\u2019t that a great name for a church?<sup>1<\/sup>)<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Given what is about to happen to Jesus in the story \u2013 his capture, trial, torture and execution on a cross \u2013 we can, from our vantage point, indeed read this story as a funeral procession. We know what is going to happen next, and after that, and for the next 2000 years. We can\u2019t help but read it with this story with the undercurrent of what happens next.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Liturgically, we are entering Passion Week, where we relive Jesus\u2019 trajectory leading up to these culminating events of our religion. In fact, the writer of Matthew\u2019s gospel also knew what would happen. It is even possible that this gospel of Matthew was written with the benefit of hindsight, after the First Jewish Revolt that ended in the invasion of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple. That gives significance even to the narrative as we have it here. Funeral procession is a deeper and valid reading of this text in context.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">But at face value this entrance into Jerusalem also clearly has a tone of celebration and parade.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">[Ah, one more.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@stevenbenjobs Free upgrade to iAbacus 1000, made in China. #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Sheesh. Maybe I should turn this thing off.]<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Where was I? Celebration. Palm branches waving, acclamation, lots of people in a Passover festival mood, children running around.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">We miss a few references when we hear this story, but the writer of Matthew is very deliberate about how things are being told. In fact, there are many references to the Old Testament in this narrative.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">There\u2019s the literal quotation of Zechariah 9:9, which is actually a mash up with Isaiah 62:11: \u201cTell the daughter of Zion, Look, your king is coming to you, humble, and mounted on a donkey, and on a colt, the foal of a donkey.\u201d (Matt 21:5)\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">(Incidentally, you would not believe how much theological real estate is devoted to figuring out why Matthew mentions that Jesus is riding both a donkey and a colt.) I\u2019m OK with: he rode in on some sort of animal that was not a horse. He didn\u2019t usually do that, he usually walked, so there might be some significance to his choice of transportation. We\u2019ll come back to this later. <sup>2<\/sup>, <sup>3<\/sup>\u00a0\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">So there\u2019s a parade aspect, people are shouting: \u201cHosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lo<br \/>\nrd, Save us, we beseech you, Lord\u201d \u2013 it\u2019s straight out of Psalm 118. \u00a0Jesus is being greeted as a king, that\u2019s what \u201cSon of David\u201d means, it\u2019s not a comment on Jesus\u2019 genealogy, it\u2019s an acclamation sort of like \u201clong live the king!\u201d \u00a0 The gospel\u2019s description of cloaks being strewn before Jesus is another literary allusion to another impromptu king, King Jehu, back in 2 Kings 9. <em>Jehu was unexpectedly anointed king and people didn\u2019t know what to do so they took off their cloaks and spread them out in front of him.<\/em><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">The writer of Matthew has been setting things up all the way through this gospel, showing how prophecy is being fulfilled in Jesus, how he is the expected Messiah, the king that would free the Jewish people. \u00a0It is clear that this is an event with socio-political dimensions.<sup>4<\/sup><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">[Well, I guess I forgot to turn it off, last one.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@simonpeter We\u2019re on our way. Our oppression is ending. Son of David, save us! Hosanna. #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@zealotvoice Remain at temple.#hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@benadam Hosanna, hosanna! #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@johannatalent RT Hosanna, hosanna! Save us. #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">@lazarusrisen RT Hosanna, hosanna! Save us. #hosanna<\/font><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u00a0Off<em> (turning it off)<\/em>]<\/font><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000\" class=\"Apple-style-span\">I guess it\u2019s time to tell you what\u2019s behind this Twitter<sup>5<\/sup> \u00a0thing I\u2019ve got going this morning.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">As I read the passage for today, in the context of the last several months \u2013 the G8 and G20, the protests and political turmoil in Iran, Bahrain, Egypt, Lybia, Cote d\u2019Ivoire, China, Haiti, etc \u2013 the election in Canada \u2013 I kept on hearing the Matthew passage mostly as political protest. From that to Twitter it was an easy step. If this were happening in our day, it would be on these social networks.5<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">How did the word spread back then in the cramped alleyways of Jerusalem? I imagine the excitement of the disciples commandeering an animal, just like for a real king? \u201cThe Lord wants it.\u201d Was Jesus finally going to show his true colours as a political leader? They even started arguing about who was going to be at his right hand and at his left hand. They were sure this was going to be big. \u00a0I imagine the crowds who were already in Jerusalem getting ready for the festival, going back and forth making their preparations and their sacrifices in the temple and the buzz in the air as this wonky procession, led by a donkey, came closer to the city gates.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">What\u2019s going on?\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">What\u2019s with those palms waving over there and all that yelling?<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Who is it?<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">It\u2019s that prophet Jesus from Nazareth in Galillee.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">What\u2019s he doing on a donkey?\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">The story says that \u201cthe whole city was in a turmoil asking, who is this?\u201d (One might say correctly that they were atwitter. :)) The other time the gospel writer uses that way of saying things is at Jesus\u2019 birth when the Magi come asking Herod about a new king that was born and the whole city is shaken up.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">There are a couple more things from the story\u2019s immediate biblical context that also help us read this event as political protest. What comes immediately before and what comes after.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Before they climbed the hills towards Jerusalem, Jesus and the disciples already had a crowd following them. At Jericho they had met up with a couple of loud and insistent blind guys, the first protesters, the way I\u2019m imagining it. These guys had placed themselves strategically beside the road and were yelling: \u201cLord have mercy on us, Son of David!\u201d Folks were telling them to quiet down. Shush!\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cLord have mercy on us, Son of David!\u201d They weren\u2019t holding up a plaque \u2013 no paper, no markers, remember? \u2013 but they were sure making their point. Maybe they were waving palm branches. \u201cLord have mercy on us, Son of David!\u201d And Jesus, moved by compassion at this two-man sit-in protest, stopped and asked them what they wanted. \u201cLord, let our eyes be opened.\u201d And they were\u2014immediately. I\u2019m thinking, these newly seeing guys led the way over the hills to Jerusalem with their cries of \u201cSon of David, save us! Save us!\u201d They were the rally organizers.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">The other reason I\u2019m reading this as a protest is that the very next thing Jesus does after entering Jerusalem on a donkey (in this gospel account) is go to the Temple and flip out at the establishment. He speaks the truth to power. It\u2019s the so-called Cleansing of the Temple. Jesus claims jurisdiction, chases away moneychangers, street vendors and hawkers. He\u2019s on a roll, he\u2019s got the crowd backing him, he\u2019s stirring things up, he is being provocative and defiant.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">The religious leaders weren\u2019t expecting this. This could be trouble. He even lets the blind and the lame come up to him in the Temple, of all places, and he cures them right there. Matthew tells us they saw amazing things.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Meanwhile, the children have picked up on the chant and they\u2019re running around chanting, \u201cHosanna to the Son of David.\u201d Matthew has Jesus quote Psalm 8:2: \u201cOut of the mouths of infants and nursing babies you have prepared praise for yourself.\u201d\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">They don\u2019t know what they were saying, but the religious leaders do and they are mad! Time to get the authorities involved. Let\u2019s call in reinforcements. If we explain to the Romans that he\u2019s posing as a king, well, they\u2019ll take notice then. The powers are threatened. The people in black and hiding behind ski masks are infiltrated to whisper \u2013 crucify! And things unravel from there.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">What was Jesus up to? He knew that he was headed for martyrdom; in fact he had predicted it many times, yet he kept on going. He was acting out a living parable \u2013 like many other prophets before him \u2013 and he was coming to Jerusalem as a prophet. Jerusalem a city that notoriously kills her prophets (Matthew 23:37). \u00a0As one author puts it: \u201cJesus appears as a \u2018dead man walking,\u2019 not because God wanted him to be killed \u2018for us,\u2019 but because his \u2018triumphal entry\u2019 into Jerusalem was a parody of the Romans\u2019 triumphal entry into Jerusalem. It was an anti-war demonstration, a challenge to imperial injustice, a proclamation of God\u2019s justice \u2018on earth as in heaven\u2019!\u201d<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">This same author, with reference to our second scripture reading this morning, notes:<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cPaul\u2019s hymn praising Jesus\u2019 faithfulness has been perverted by those who think they have found in it God\u2019s will and desire that Jesus die. But what would Jesus\u2019 dying prove or accomplish unless it showed his faithfulness to serving God\u2019s solidarity with the l<br \/>\neast, who also suffer?\u201d<sup>6<\/sup><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">By riding in on a humble donkey, still able to look people at eye level, Jesus was acting out a meek power, a servant approach. The underestimated (the least) are the ones who really know what is going on in God\u2019s world. He himself had said that it is the meek who would inherit the earth (Matt 5:5). But it\u2019s even more complicated than that, this submission that Jesus is showing sets the Romans up to temporarily miss what\u2019s really going on. It\u2019s kinda subversive, kinda tricky. Those acclaiming Jesus were living under very real political oppression. There was no freedom of expression back then. They were being kinda sneaky too. With this entrance, \u201cJesus stirs up hopes that lived deep in the Jewish people.\u201d<sup>7<\/sup><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">What intrigued me most this time is what the crowd was chanting. Hosanna. It is a shout of royal acclamation and worship, yes. But it also means save us! Save us!\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">I guess my own reaction to the recent protests in the media, with the attempts at repression, the violence \u2013 even in downtown Toronto \u2013 (plus my suspicion of crowds) made me realize how quickly things can go wrong. And I too have often prayed when I see these reports: Save us, save them.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Years ago I remember meeting a Coptic Egyptian woman at the New Life Centre. She told me she had been part of a peaceful protest in Cairo, where the Christians were marching and chanting<em> Kyrie Eleison<\/em>. I was so moved that such a profound protest would chant, Lord have mercy, the Jesus Prayer. Wow.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">But it turns out she didn\u2019t know what it meant, she just knew that it was part of her liturgy and that it was what folks were chanting, so she chanted too. I\u2019ve since read an article about a different violent clash between Coptic Christians and Muslims where they were each respectively chanting <em>Kyrie Eleison<\/em> and <em>Allah Akbar<\/em> (Lord have mercy, God is the greatest) while attacking each other.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">God is great and Lord have mercy, indeed! Clearly, saying the right words is not enough.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Hosanna (Hoshiana) that folks were chanting in the Matthew passage is a Hebrew word that comes out of a liturgical context as well. Did the people around Jesus know all the layers of what they were saying? Maybe it was a code word in hebrew, so that the Romans wouldn\u2019t catch on. Maybe it\u2019s just what everyone was saying. Maybe it was a genuine cry from the heart, save us, save us. An expression of deep, deep longing. Save us, get us out of this mess, Hosanna. In today\u2019s political climate this longing and this hope still find resonance.\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">As you make ready for what lies ahead this passion week, parades, protests or funerals, the question I leave you with is: How do the<em> hosannas<\/em> and<em> kyries<\/em> speak to your deep longings today? What do you, what do we, cry to our God? What do we long to be saved from?\u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Let us pray.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Hosanna, hosanna.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Save us from apathy<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Save us from despair<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Save us from thinking we never have enough<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Save us from ourselves<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Save us from greed, from selfishness, from violence<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Save us from thinking we have it all figured out.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Hosanna, hosanna. Save us.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\">Amen.<\/font><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>\u00a01<\/sup> You can find his sermon at http:\/\/www.smokerisemedia.org\/Sermons\/Sermon20080316.pdf<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>2<\/sup> Was it a circus trick and he rode both? Did Matthew misunderstand Zechariah\u2019s poetry? Did the colt need to ride along with its mother? Was the colt under the donkey so that Jesus rode both? The most amusingly titled is the article \u201cThe Two Asses Of Zechariah 9:9 In Matthew 21\u201d by David Instone-Brewer Tyndale Bulletin 54.1, 2003).<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>3<\/sup> Just for the fun of it here\u2019s something I came across in my research: Another Sufi tale. Nasrudin had a neighbor like many of us who borrowed but somehow never seemed to remember to bring back that which had been borrowed. One Saturday morning this neighbor shows up at the door wanting to borrow his donkey. Nasrudin exclaimed, &#8220;If only you had asked yesterday I lent my donkey out this morning.&#8221; At that moment the donkey brays from the back yard. &#8220;What is that?&#8221; the neighbor exclaims! Nasrudin replies, &#8220;Who are you going to believe, me or a donkey?&#8221; (http:\/\/www.elca.org\/Growing-In-Faith\/Discipleship\/Stewardship\/Stewardship-Now\/Sermon-Starters.aspx#1<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>4 <\/sup>John Howard Yoder says that if we did seek to reach behind the canonical gospels to \u201cthe real historical Jesus, such an effort would surely increase rather than decrease the socio-political dimensions of our picture of his work.\u201d (The Politics of Jesus).<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>5 <\/sup>They are supposedly \u201cideal for a mass protest movement, very easy for the average citizen to use and very hard for any central authority to control,\u201d much like gossip, really. \u201cSo what exactly makes Twitter the medium of the moment? It&#8217;s free, highly mobile, very personal and very quick. It&#8217;s also built to spread, and fast. Twitterers like to append notes called hashtags \u2014 #theylooklikethis \u2014 to their tweets, so that they can be grouped and searched for by topic; especially interesting or urgent tweets tend to get picked up and retransmitted by other Twitterers, a practice known as retweeting, or just RT. And Twitter is promiscuous by nature: tweets go out over two networks, the Internet and SMS, the network that cell phones use for text messages, and they can be received and read on practically anything with a screen and a network connection.\u201d (Read more: http:\/\/www.time.com\/time\/world\/article\/0,8599,1905125,00.html#ixzz1JXdgrQfC)<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>6<\/sup> \u00a0http:\/\/www.processandfaith.org\/lectionary\/YearA\/2010-2011\/2011-PalmSunday.shtml<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font class=\"Apple-style-span\" color=\"#000000\"><sup>7<\/sup> Richard Swanson, Provoking the Gospel of Matthew. P. 114<\/font><\/p>\n<div><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u00a0 View Archived Sermons \u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0 New! Listen to this Sermon\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0#Hosanna \u00a0Palm Sunday \u2013 Matthew 21:1-11, Philippians 2:6-11 As I prepared for this sermon, I realized that I\u2019ve preached on Palm Sunday at TUMC before. I thought it was \u201cjust the other day\u201d but when I looked it up it turns out it was in 1997! Anyway, I was tempted to just repeat what I said, but I\u2019m sure many of you still remember that sermon, so I&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1253","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons-a-worship-audio"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1253","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/9"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1253"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1253\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1253"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1253"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1253"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}