Behold your King! : Yes it is

I have recognised a few celebrities, mainly because there has been a degree of show about their passing – a large car, expensive clothes, an accompanying entourage – all to heighten their image and draw attention so that people will indeed recognise them and know they are there. In Britain, kings and queens used to make a ‘royal progress’ around the land with much pomp and ceremony so as to see and be seen. There still is such spectacle on official occasions but when Queen Elizabeth goes on a visit, it is with much less display. However, it is still easy to know that she is coming by the motor-cycle outriders and the maroon-coloured car. If she goes on a ‘walkabout’, people will recognise her by her face and, perhaps, by those around her.
But would she be as recognisable if she was in ordinary clothes walking along the street? The face might seem familiar but there could be that moment of hesitant recognition - ‘Is it her? Can it be? Am I mistaken? Yes, it is!’
It was a bit like that on the first Palm Sunday as Jesus joined the crowds of pilgrims flocking into Jerusalem. There were some, people from His home area of Galilee or who had seen Him in Jericho a few days earlier, who recognised His face. They could tell the others, ‘This is Jesus of Nazareth.’
But then came another recognition, an identification of what He was as well as who He was. Like the Queen’s arrival in her special limousine, it probably came first from the method of transport chosen by Jesus, a donkey. Perhaps, also, because He seemed to be surrounded by a security guard as His disciples kept close to Him.
The initial hesitancy of the people heading to Jerusalem - ‘Is it? Can it be? Am I mistaken?’ - in their recognition of Jesus as the coming King, the longed-for Messiah, became a definite ‘It is!’ as the words of the prophet Zechariah (Zech.9.9) came quickly to the minds of those religious pilgrims :
‘Behold, your King is coming to you, lowly, and sitting on a donkey’ (Matt.21.5[NKJV]).
No wonder they began to wave palm branches and shout, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the King of Israel!’ (John 12.13[NIV]).
This procession of pilgrims had turned into something of a royal ‘progress.’ A prophecy from the past was fulfilled in this visual affirmation by Jesus, as He rode into Jerusalem on a donkey, a prophecy of what He was as well as who He was. Palm Sunday still declares ‘Behold, your King!’








