Palm Sunday And The King Who Refuses Violence
29 March 2026

Palm Sunday And The King Who Refuses Violence

United Methodist Church Westlake Village

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A triumphal entry is supposed to end with a coronation, but this one fades out. We follow Jesus into Jerusalem and slow down long enough to notice the strange choices: a donkey instead of a stallion, palm branches instead of fine fabric, a crowd hungry for change but unsure what kind of king they are actually welcoming. That tension is the doorway into a bigger question: what happens when our faith is built on outcomes, proof, and quick fixes, and life refuses to cooperate?

We connect Palm Sunday to Lent and the Exodus journey of faith: being carried by forces we do not control, hearing God’s call, receiving provision, and still discovering that structure and rules do not make us “done.” Faith is not a straight line. It cycles through deep trust, drifting separation, and the vulnerable moments where we finally admit we cannot do it on our own. Along the way, the sermon names the real triggers that push people from praise to cynicism: injustice that overwhelms us, anxiety that will not quiet down, and even hard Bible passages that make us ask, “What do we do with this, God?”

Richard Rohr offers language that turns this from abstract spirituality into a practice for real life: our brokenness becomes the raw material of God’s restoration. We talk about how unprocessed suffering can make us bitter and blaming, and how “transforming pain” keeps us from transmitting it to everyone around us. Holy Week then becomes more than a calendar. It becomes an invitation to bring separation, hurt, and doubt into God’s presence, so Easter new life is not only a story from 2,000 years ago, but something we can begin to taste now.

If this resonated, subscribe so you do not miss what comes next, share the episode with someone walking through a hard season, and leave a review. What part of the faith cycle are you in right now?

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