Sermon Notes Lent 5B John 12:20-33 Jesus was staying with his friends in Bethany, the little town just on the other side of the Mount of Olives from Jerusalem. It was a risky place to stay if Jesus was trying to stay off the radar with the crowds and the leaders in Jerusalem. Bethany was the home of Lazarus, and it had been just a short time since Lazarus had died and Jesus had brought him back to life. That’s the kind of miracle that draws a crowd. But apparently Jesus and the disciples had slipped into town unnoticed, and John tells us they had all got together for dinner with friends, including Lazarus. How word got out that Jesus was in town we don’t know but the next morning the crowds had begun to gather. Everyone came hoping to see more miracles, to have some proof, to know for certain that Jesus was the one who was going to turn everything around. As the crowds grew, things became more and more volatile. We’re not really told what Jesus wanted to have happen that day, but as it began to unfold, it seems that things began to get out of control. As Jesus began to walk up the hill toward Jerusalem, some in the group grabbed branches of palm trees and started waving them around in the air. This looks to us like a great celebration and something Jesus would appreciate. While it is true that we look at the palm branch as a symbol of peace, the odds are that was not the message the palm wavers were wanting to communicate and was absolutely not the message that was heard by the people watching from the Temple. In Jewish history, there had been at least two major Jewish revolts against the authorities that every school boy would know all about: the Bar Kochba Revolt and the first Jewish War. What is important to know is that those revolts used the same symbol to represent the dream of Jewish independence. It was such a well-known symbol it was actually printed on the shekel, one of the common coins of the day. That symbol was the palm branch. As the group grew and came to the top of the hill where they could easily be seen by the Temple authorities and the Roman soldiers, they were yelling and waving the banner of independence, the symbol of revolution against the government and the Temple. Adding to the confusion, some in the crowd began shouting and singing the words from Psalm 118, the words to be spoken as a new king entered the city, to drive out the enemies of the faith and to reclaim the temple and the land. Was all of this part of Jesus’ plan? Did he actually intend after three years of preaching and teaching that the kingdom of heaven was more important than any earthly kingdom, did he actually intend to end his ministry with a mass protest? This is where our passage of scripture begins this morning. In the middle of all that was happening on that hillside near Bethany, Philip, one of the disciples, was approached by a couple of Greeks who asked to speak with Jesus. These may have been Greek-speaking Jews who had come to town for the Passover, or they may have been non-Jewish Greeks who had heard about Jesus and wanted to speak with him. We just don’t know. We do know that, as in the past, the disciples were still struggling. Philip didn’t know what to do, so he went and found Andrew. Finally, at some point they told Jesus about the Greeks wanting to speak with him.