Jamaica Gleaner

What is Palm Sunday, and how is it celebrated worldwide?

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PALM SUNDAY commemorat­es the Christian belief in the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, when he was greeted by cheering crowds waving palm branches that they set out on the ground along his path, according to the Bible.

This year, Palm Sunday was on March 24. Also known as Passion Sunday, it marks the start of Holy Week. The most sacred week of the Christian year includes the Good Friday re-enactment of Jesus’ crucifixio­n story and death, and their belief in his resurrecti­on on Easter.

Here is a quick look at Palm Sunday’s significan­ce.

IS THERE A DONKEY IN THIS STORY?

Yes.

The procession of Jesus into Jerusalem is described by the four Gospel writers in the Bible.

The Gospels differ, but based on one expert they agree on this: Jesus rode into Jerusalem on a donkey — or a colt. So, which one is it?

Colt is defined as “a young male horse that is usually not castrated.” But in the Bible, the word meaning ‘colt’ is used almost exclusivel­y for young donkeys, not horses, writes Joanne M. Pierce, professor emerita of religious studies at the College of the Holy Cross.

Pierce writes that this brings to mind a reference from the Book of Zechariah in Jewish scriptures, where the prophet describes a victorious king who enters Jerusalem riding on a donkey.

In Judaism, she says, the passage from Zechariah refers to the Messiah, a spiritual king who would peacefully redeem Israel, and the donkey is interprete­d as a sign of humility.

“In Christiani­ty, this animal becomes almost a symbol of Christ himself, given how it patiently suffers and bears others’ burdens,” Pierce writes in a piece published by The Conversati­on. “Horses, on the other hand, tend to be associated with royalty, power and war.”

WHAT ABOUT THE PALMS?

In the biblical Palm Sunday story, a cheering crowd greeted Jesus along the road. Some spread their garments on the ground; others threw down leafy branches they had cut from the fields. In the Gospel of John, they are branches from palms, a tree that symbolised victory and triumph.

In the Gospel of Matthew, people began to shout: “Hosanna to the son of David! Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord! Hosanna in the highest heaven!” The word ‘Hosanna’ was a plea for salvation and an exclamatio­n of adoration.

After the procession, the Bible says Jesus entered Jerusalem and went into the temple.

HOW IS PALM SUNDAY CELEBRATED?

The ritual or liturgy typically starts with a blessing of the palms by clergy. It’s followed by a reading of the Passion of Christ, meaning an account of the final events of Jesus’ life.

Some ceremonies in Germanspea­king countries used to include a figure of Jesus riding a donkey, Encycloped­ia Britannica says. The figure is called a Palmesel, or German for ‘palm donkey’, according to New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art, which on its site recounts how worshipper­s would lay palms on the ground before the Palmesel during lively procession­s.

Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land mark Palm Sunday by holding Masses and procession­s retracing Jesus’ triumphal entry. Worshipper­s carry palm fronds and olive branches and march from the top of the neighbouri­ng Mount of Olives to Jerusalem’s historic Old City, home to holy sites of the three Abrahamic monotheist­ic faiths.

In churches around the world, the palms are often taken home by congregant­s, and some will become ashes.

Ashes can be purchased, but some churches make their own by burning the palms from prior years.

They’re used to make the ashes for Ash Wednesday, the solemn day of fasting and reflection that signals the start of Christiani­ty’s most penitent season.

 ?? AP ?? The faithful hold palm branches prior to the start of the Palm Sunday Mass in St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Sunday, March 24.
AP The faithful hold palm branches prior to the start of the Palm Sunday Mass in St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Sunday, March 24.

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