YOUR KING COMES WITH AN ATTITUDE.
PHILIPPIANS 2:5-11
In
the name + of Jesus.
We experience bad attitudes because people
don’t like to be told what to do. This
is also a reason that Americans are opposed to having a king. If we don’t like our leaders, we can vote
them out. But kings reign for life. Kings don’t ask permission to make
decrees. King issue laws, and that word
reigns supreme. (If you enjoy irony,
this Sunday hits the same weekend as a bunch of “No Kings” rallies.)
Our Lord is the true King who reigns
supreme. The Lord God is King of heaven
and earth. His word reigns supreme. He has given his laws to define good and
evil, and he did not ask for our opinion on those laws. Sinners, of course, resist this. Everyone has one throne in his heart. Each person wants to rule on it himself. “I want to do what I want to do when I want
to do it. And I don’t want anyone to
challenge, much less condemn, what I choose to do!” But God is eternal; his word is not going to
change. And there is going to be no regime
change. So, anyone who thinks he can
challenge, criticize, or condemn God for his laws will finally discover that
our Lord comes with an attitude—vengeance upon all who do not honor him as
King.
The prophet Zechariah foretold that the
King is coming. The King comes with an
attitude. But Jesus’ attitude is not
something we should fear. Zechariah
prophesied, “Rejoice greatly, Daughter of Zion! Shout, Daughter of Jerusalem! Look!
Your King is coming to you. He is
righteous and brings salvation. He is
humble and is riding on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey” (Zechariah
9:9). Your King comes with an
attitude, but it is an attitude of meekness, gentleness, and humility.
St. Paul noted, “Though he was by
nature God, he did not consider equality with God as a prize to be
displayed, but he emptied himself by taking the nature of a servant”
(Philippians 2:6). Jesus did not
come radiating his divinity. Jesus did
not lose his power, glory, or majesty.
Rather, he kept it hidden under weak, humble flesh. So, when Jesus entered Jerusalem on Palm
Sunday, people did not flee from him in terror.
Rather, they met him with songs of praise. “The crowds who went in front of him and
those who followed kept shouting, Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the
Lord! Hosanna in the highest” (Matthew
21:9)! They welcomed Jesus as their
king. They recognized that he had not
come as an enemy or even as a threat. He
came as a king, but not as a tyrant.
Your King comes with an attitude. He assures you, “I am gentle and humble in
heart” (Matthew 11:29), so you need not fear him. But do not misinterpret Jesus’ gentleness as
timidity. And even though Jesus was
humble, that does not mean he was a push-over.
Jesus stood firm on God’s word.
He preached that word boldly and without apology. Occasionally, those words cut people to the
heart. Some were alarmed by their sins
and the judgment which they deserved. To
those who feared God’s wrath and sought relief from their guilt, Jesus proved
to be gentle and humble in heart. He bestowed
mercy and gave them hope. Others became
angry at Jesus’ preaching. They refused
to let King Jesus possess the throne in their heart. But when they became angry, Jesus did not soften
God’s message. He upheld the truth and
did not budge. If God’s word produced
anger, the fault was not with God’s word.
Nor was the fault with the one who preached God’s word. The fault lay with the sinner who rejected
God’s word.
Your King comes with an attitude. His attitude was seen especially in the week
when he entered Jerusalem. Jesus was resolved
to fight the battle which would deliver us from our sin. There were numerous enemies who fought against
him. Jesus backed down from none of
them. Rabbis and priests came with
cleverly devised “gotcha” questions, hoping to condemn Jesus for blasphemy or for
treason. Jesus did not evade their
questions; he answered them with boldness and faithfulness to God’s word. The devil tempted Jesus to shrink from the
cup of God’s wrath. Jesus responded with
fervent prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane.
The Father strengthened Jesus in his resolve to take up our sins and to
drain the cup of God’s wrath. Even when
Jesus hung in agony from the cross, his enemies taunted him. They challenged Jesus the same way Satan had when
Jesus was in the wilderness. “Save
yourself! If you are the Son of God,
come down from the cross! If he’s the
King of Israel, let him come down now from the cross, and we will believe
in him” (Matthew 27:40,42, emphasis added).
Jesus, however, had no need to prove
himself to the priests, to the rabbis, or to the devil. St. Paul noted, “Though he was by nature
God, he did not consider equality with God as a prize to be displayed, but
he … humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death—even death on a
cross” (Philippians 2:6-8). He was
determined to do the work that saves sinners.
His mission was not to dazzle, but to die; not to slaughter his enemies,
but to be slain for sinners. Your King
comes with an attitude.
Jesus humbled himself to suffer death on a
cross, but he was no helpless victim. He
did not seek to escape arrest, although he did demonstrated that he could
have. When Judas arrived in Gethsemane
to betray Jesus, Jesus asked who they were looking for. They said, “Jesus of Nazareth.” Jesus answered plainly, “I am he.” St. John then adds, “When Jesus told them,
‘I am he,’ they backed away and fell to the ground” (John 19:6). Still, he did not attempt to flee. Your King came with an attitude—a conviction
to suffer and die for sinners.
Jesus is a King whose will was carried out,
not a pawn at the mercy of his enemies.
To further emphasize that Jesus was no helpless victim, we need only to
consider the plans of Jesus’ enemies. They
were trying to orchestrate Jesus’ death according to their own designs. “The chief priests and the elders of the
people assembled in the palace of the high priest, whose name was Caiaphas. They plotted together how to arrest Jesus by
stealth and kill him. But they said, ‘Not
during the Festival, or else there might be a riot among the people’” (Matthew
26:3-5). And yet, Jesus’ death came
during the Passover feast. In truth, the
priests were the pawns. The Lord used
the unbelief and the hatred of the priests and rabbis to achieve his own
purpose. According to Jesus’ timing and
in fulfillment of God’s promises, they unwittingly fulfilled the role of God’s anointed
priests: They sacrificed the Lamb of God.
Jesus is the true Passover Lamb whose body was roasted in God’s wrath
and whose blood now marks you so that death and damnation pass over you.
And since he has done everything the
Father sent him to do, the Father raised up his Son on the third day to live
and reign forever. This man, Jesus, now
possesses all authority in heaven and on earth.
St. Paul wrote, “God … highly exalted him and gave him the name that
is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow, in
heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue will confess that
Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians
2:9-11).
Jesus of Nazareth has been exalted. This man now has and uses all the majesty,
glory, and power of God. Behold! Your King reigns forever and ever. And you have every reason to rejoice over
this, because this King rules for you.
Everything in heaven and on earth and under the earth serves Jesus and is
employed by him for the eternal good of his Church. You may not understand why he does what he
does, but your comfort is not in unraveling how he rules. Your comfort is in knowing that Jesus does
rule, that he is your loving Redeemer, and that whatever you experience does
not change his nature, his love, and his devotion to you.
Your King still comes to you. He comes as God’s people sing the Palm Sunday
song: “Hosanna in the highest!
Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!” We sing this as we are preparing to feast on
Holy Communion. For Lord comes to feed
us with his living body. He comes to
mark us with the blood that causes death and damnation to pass over us. Your King still comes with an
attitude—compassion, mercy, and devotion to you.
Behold!
Your King will come again on the Last Day to judge the living and the
dead. You may be grieved that people
currently mock him, his word, and his people.
They seem to get away with it because our Lord’s judgment is being held
back. But your King will come with an
attitude. He did not regard his divinity
as a prize to be displayed when he came to suffer and die, but his divinity
will be displayed in radiant, undeniable glory when he comes to judge the living
and the dead. St. Paul said, “Every
knee will bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue
will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord” (Philippians 2:10-11). Many will not want to, but they will have no
choice. Jesus lives and reigns over all
things.
Our joy is that we already bend our knees
before him, especially as we come to this altar to feast on his body and
blood. Our joy is that we already
confess that Jesus is Lord. We engage in
the hymns of God’s people from all ages.
We even join in the song of angels and archangels as we sing, “Holy,
holy, holy, Lord God of heavenly hosts.
Heaven and earth are full of your glory!” We sing that because we confess that it is
our King who comes to us to bless us and to save us.
So, “let this attitude be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 2:5). You can be humble; for you know that you are sinners like everyone else on earth. But you need not be timid. You can confess God’s word boldly because it will never fail you or deceive you. Even if you must suffer hatred from Jesus’ enemies, you are still sons and daughters of the King. When he comes again with an attitude, he will avenge you. Better than that, he will exalt you to the heights of heaven and to glory everlasting.
Rejoice! Your King comes with an attitude. He is righteous and has salvation. He is full of compassion and mercy. He is totally committed and devoted to you. That is why you and I are totally committed and devoted to him. He is the King we all need.
In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.



