Behold your King! It Can't Be!

Queen Elizabeth II is well aware of the importance of the position she holds and in which she serves her country so well. She will also be aware of the time in 1649 when her predecessor, Charles I, was beheaded.
No doubt many were pleased by the abolition of the monarchy, just as many were by the death of Jesus on the cross. It took eleven years for the monarchy to be re-established, but only three days for Jesus to return, and in spectacular fashion.
It was a time of utter grief and sorrow for the followers of Jesus when He died on the cross. Not only was He their leader and friend, He was also the one on whom their hopes of a new kingdom depended (see Luke 24.21). Now those hopes were all shattered. The kingdom of which He had spoken was seemingly never to be and they were afraid of what the authorities might do to them.
So the empty tomb of Easter morning, discovered by the women, was a further shock to the system, probably initially deepening their sense of foreboding and distress.
However, it was the appearances of Jesus which staggered them most - to Mary Magdalene, to the two on the road to Emmaus, and to the disciples who had locked themselves in the Upper Room. It was these that changed their understanding.
This was Jesus reminding them to ‘Behold your King,’ and, almost certainly, their first reaction was ‘It can’t be!,’ for nobody came back from the dead, and Jesus certainly had been dead. Nevertheless, the immediacy of His presence, the comfort of His words to them, the familiarity of His actions and the renewing of His fellowship as He ate with them convinced them that He was indeed the Risen and Living Lord.
That fact would become the mainstay of their faith and preaching. No longer would Jesus be just ‘the King’ as the Palm Sunday pilgrims announced, nor even ‘the King of the Jews’ as Pilate had written for the notice on the cross. He would be restored to His rightful place in heaven (Phil.2.9) as the Son of God with the title of ‘King of kings and the Lord of lords’ (Rev.17.14, 19.16).
The ‘royal progress’ from a manger in Bethlehem via the cross and empty tomb is completed in Christ’s resurrection and ascension to glory. It confirms the love which God has for each one of us and the salvation He offers us in Christ.
Easter declares ‘Behold your King!’ Some look at the life of Jesus and say, ‘It can’t be!’ Others are very glad that He is.








