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Ministries & Programs
Palm Sunday 2008 | Print |  E-mail
Written by The Rev, Nancy Lee Jose   
Sunday, March 16, 2008
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Palm Sunday 2008
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It was already pasted on the storm door of the house we passed in the car yesterday.  The Easter Bunny, cutout from pink paper with whiskers.  A child's project brought home from school.  It was a visual reminder of our human inclination to skip Holy Week and Good Friday and go directly to Easter Morning - spring-like and blooming and full of flowers and baby bunnies and Alleluias.

As much as we'd like to leave out the hard part of the story that leads towards the Resurrection -- the parts about denial and suffering and death and grief - our Lenten journey is not quite over, the story of Jesus' life on earth has not quite ended. It is wisely said that: "The happy ending cannot come in the middle of the story."  This morning there are still things to be told.

Mary Oliver, one of my favorite contemporary writers reflects upon Palm Sunday in a poem entitled Donkey:

On the outskirts of Jerusalem the donkey waited.  Not especially brave, or filled with understanding, he stood and waited.

How horses, turned out into the meadows, leap with delight! How doves, released from their cages, clatter away, splashed with sunlight!

But the donkey, tied to a tree as usual, waited.  Then he let himself be led away.  Then he let the stranger mount.

Never had he seen such crowds!  And I wonder if he at all imagined what was to happen.  Still, he was what he had always been:  small, dark, and obedient.

I hope, finally, he felt brave.  I hope, finally, he loved the man who rode so lightly upon him, as he lifted one dusty hoof and stepped, as he had to, forward.

Oliver, a Pulitzer Prize winner, grapples in her new book called Thirst, from which this poem came, with the ways she has experienced the emotions of Holy Week, in response to the loss of her beloved partner of over 40 years. She has learned that death, grief and sorrow are legitimate paths to deepening the spiritual dimension of life.   She hasn't given up on the possibility of joy finally proving stronger than sorrow, but she knows what we confront today, that "the happy ending cannot come in the middle of the story", that together, we must travel the rest of the journey that leads into Holy Week.  The Easter Bunny and the story of the Empty Tomb wait for we still have important spiritual work to do.

As someone who has listened to the stories of people's lives as a vocation, now for some thirty-seven years, it comes as no surprise that surviving the jagged edges of grief can lead us to important truths about what it means to live life with faith in God.  When we're wrestling with the darkest of days, when even the brightest sun light is unable to penetrate the blankets we pull over our hearts, when isolation with our addiction of choice is no longer an option-God can be encountered, made manifest, and embraced.



 
Episcopal Relief & Development Stories from the Field
Read true stories of success and triumph from some of the countries where we work. You will receive new and featured stories from our partners in the field as they are published.
  • A Boat of Her Own

    Elena is a food vendor in the community of Uros-Chulluni, Peru, where the only mode of transportation is by boat. The expense of renting a boat to sell her food limited both her business growth and mobility. Although Elena dreamed of owning her own boat, she had no collateral to secure one.

    Through a micro-finance program supported by Episcopal Relief & Development, the Ecumenical Church Loan Fund and the Anglican Diocese of Peru, Elena and her neighbors formed a community bank. She was then able to obtain a small loan without traditional collateral, enabling her to buy her own boat.

    Now Elena’s business has expanded to include not only the sale of food, but also handicrafts and candy. She’s thankful to Episcopal Relief & Development for showing her how to improve her income, continue her children’s education and strengthen her family.
     

  • Building Access to Clean Water

    Maria, her husband Juan and their five children knew the harmful effects of dirty, contaminated water in their village of Bijagua, Nicaragua. They used to bring the household water for cooking, bathing, drinking and washing in buckets from a stream 10 minutes away from their home — the same stream where cattle roamed.

    The children were constantly sick with diarrhea, and getting the water each day was a real burden. “Our daughter spent so much time carrying water, she was falling behind in her school work. We always worried about her walking alone in the dark of the early mornings and evenings. There are poisonous snakes around here,” said Maria.

    Episcopal Relief & Development partnered with El Porvenir, an organization that works in Nicaraguan communities to develop water, sanitation and re-forestation projects. The program also provided Maria and her community with education and training on properly maintaining the water system, water hygiene and protecting children and families from preventable, water-related diseases. Instances of water-borne illnesses were also tracked by local health monitors.

    Now Bijagua has safe water and residents can stay healthy. “Our daughter is excelling in school now that she doesn’t have to carry buckets of water. And the children don’t have diarrhea anymore,” Maria stated.
     

 

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Project Honduras: Trinidad Conservation Project
Project Honduras: Trinidad Conservation Project
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