Can you give me a title for this Palm Sunday sermon: Tommy Cooper once told a joke: a man rings the swimming pool and asks, “Is that my local swimming pool?” The receptionist replies, “It depends where you’re phoning from.” It’s a silly line, but it reminds us how easily people see things differently, how quickly we make judgements without knowing the full story, or worse, by inventing the story we want. Palm Sunday is full of that very human tendency. Crowds flock to Jesus as he enters Jerusalem. John’s Gospel places this moment just after the raising of Lazarus, so excitement is at fever pitch. People have heard the stories - this miracle worker, this teacher with authority, this man who can even call the dead back to life. Surely this is the king they’ve been waiting for. Surely this is the one who will free them from Rome and restore Israel’s glory. They had already decided what they wanted Jesus to be. They had shaped him in their own image, created their own expe...
I heard that, back in 2003, a funeral company in Brazil released an advert on local TV with the rather bold motto: “Our clients have never come back to complain.” Well… this morning’s gospel reading (John 11:1–45) gives us the story of someone who very much broke the rule of never coming back! We’ve heard the extraordinary account of Lazarus, the friend of Jesus, who had died and yet lived again. It’s a story that reminds us how quickly life moves on. But in the middle of all that change, this passage gives us one great constant, that is the voice of Jesus saying, “I am the resurrection and the life.” He speaks those words to Martha, Lazarus’ sister. She loved her brother deeply and she believed in Jesus wholeheartedly. And Martha was convinced that if Jesus had only arrived sooner, Lazarus would still be alive. Her faith was strong, but not quite strong enough to imagine what Jesus was about to do next. And who can blame her? She believed Jesus could heal. She believed he could...