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Sunday, March 29, 2026

It’s About His Choice… Homily Reflection Palm Sunday

 Readings 032926

Blessed be God.
Praise be Jesus Christ, forever and ever. Amen.
Come, Holy Spirit—fill us with joy and set our hearts ablaze with Your presence.

It’s all about choices.
Your choices.
My choices.
God’s choices.

And yes—God’s choices are real.
But they are not reactive.

God truly wills, chooses, and acts—
yet His choosing is never a back‑and‑forth deliberation like ours.
Because God is actus purus—pure act—
fully alive, fully knowing, fully loving,
without hesitation, without process, without change.

So when Scripture says God “chooses,”
it is a real divine decision,
expressed in human language so we can understand.

And on Palm Sunday,
Jesus makes a choice.

A deliberate, quiet, unstoppable choice.

He rides into Jerusalem
not on a war horse,
not in a chariot,
not with soldiers or banners or trumpets—
but on a donkey.

A beast of burden.
A creature made to carry weight.

And that’s the point.
Because Jesus came to carry something.
He came to carry us.

Matthew tells us,
“Behold, your king comes to you, meek and riding on an ass.”

He rides the animal that will carry Him toward the Cross,
but in truth—
He is the One carrying the real burden.

He carries the sins of the world into Jerusalem.
He carries them before Caiaphas as false witnesses rise against Him.
He carries them before Pilate as the crowd shouts for His death.
He carries them in the wood of the Cross
all the way to Golgotha.

And the heartbreaking truth is this:
everyone He loved abandoned Him.
They fled.
They denied.
They hid.

And we hear their voices echo in our own:
“Surely not I, Lord!”
But we know better.
We know the places where we hand Him over.

Because in some way, each of us asks the world:
“What will you give me if I hand Him over to you?”

We ask it not with words,
but with choices—
with prejudice, hate, and quiet resentments…
with addictions and secret sins…
with the lies we tell,
the shortcuts we take,
the idols we chase.

Given the choice between Jesus and the world,
too often we answer with the crowd:
“Barabbas.”

And from the Cross,
Jesus looks at us—
not with anger,
not with condemnation,
but with that aching cry:
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

He feels the weight of our distance.
He feels the sting of our choices.
He feels the loneliness of our sin.

Yet He stays.
He does not climb down.
He does not call the angels.
He does not save Himself.
Because He is saving you.

St. Paul tells us,
“He emptied himself… becoming obedient to death, even death on a cross.”

He gave everything—
His body, His blood,
His breath, His life.

He became the true Beast of Burden,
carrying what we could never carry,
lifting what we could never lift,
paying what we could never pay.

And why?
Why choose this road?
Why choose this Cross?
Why choose this death?

Because it was never just about the burden.
It was always about the love.

A love that does not run.
A love that does not quit.
A love that does not wait for us to be worthy.
A love that rides into Jerusalem
knowing exactly what awaits Him—
and still says yes.

Palm Sunday is not simply about palms or processions.
It is about a King who chooses you.
A Savior who carries you.
A God who loves you to the very end.

He has already chosen you.
He has already carried you.
He has already loved you
with a love stronger than death.

As Holy Week begins, listen to Him: Walk with Me.

And that—
that is what His choice is all about.

Be good. Be holy.
And this week—and every week—
choose Jesus Christ,
choose to spread His Good News
by the way we live our life
and love one another.

Praise be to Jesus Christ, forever and ever.

Amen.


Saturday, March 28, 2026

God’s Steady Promise

 

Readings 032826

“My dwelling shall be with them… I will be their God, and they shall be my people.”
That is God’s steady promise—unmoving, unshaken, a home that never shifts.

But the enemy never leaves believers alone.
He never has.
And his first attacks are rarely dramatic.
They come quietly—worry about what others might think,
anxiety about the places that stretch us,
fear about a past we cannot change.
Simple fears… yet they can bend a soul if we let them.

Even in Jesus’ time, when many saw His signs and began to believe, others ran to the Pharisees.
And the leaders asked, “What are we going to do?
If we leave him alone, all will believe in him…”
Fear drove them—fear of losing control, fear of truth breaking in.

But God’s promise remains:
“My dwelling shall be with them.”
Not with the powerful.
Not with the anxious voices.
With them—with us—His people.

So when fear whispers, when worry rises, when anxiety tightens the chest, remember:
The enemy may disturb, but God dwells.
And the One who dwells is always stronger than the one who disrupts.
Stay with Him.
Let Him stay with you.

Prayer

Lord, dwell with me when fear begins to whisper.

Steady my heart when worry tries to rise.

Let Your presence be the home my soul returns to.

Drive out the enemy’s shadows with Your quiet light.

Make me bold in faith, gentle in love, and firm in trust.

Hold Your people close when anxiety presses in.

And keep us always in the shelter of Your promise. Amen