Palm Sunday
Palm
Sunday commemorates the triumphal entrance of Christ into Jerusalem (Matthew
21:1-9), when palm branches were placed in His path, before His arrest on Holy
Thursday and His Crucifixion on Good Friday. It thus marks the beginning of
Holy Week, the final week of Lent, and the week in which Christians celebrate
the mystery of their salvation through Christ's Death and His Resurrection on
Easter Sunday.
Beginning
in the fourth century in Jerusalem, Palm Sunday was marked by a procession of
the faithful carrying palm branches, representing the Jews who celebrated
Christ's entrance into Jerusalem. In the early centuries, the procession began
on the Mount of the Ascension and proceeded to the Church of the Holy Cross.
As
the practice spread throughout the Christian world by the ninth century, the
procession would begin in each church with the blessing of palms, proceed
outside the church, and then return to the church for the reading of the
Passion according to the Gospel of Matthew. The faithful would continue to hold
the palms during the reading of the Passion. In this way, they would recall
that many of the same people who greeted Christ with shouts of joy on Palm
Sunday would call for His Death on Good Friday-a powerful reminder of our own
weakness and the sinfulness that causes us to reject Christ.
In
different parts of the Christian world, particularly where palms were
historically hard to obtain, branches of other bushes and trees were used,
including olive, box elder, spruce, and various willows. Perhaps best known is
the Slavic custom of using pussy willows, which are among the earliest of
plants to bud out in the spring.
The
faithful have traditionally decorated their houses with the palms from Palm
Sunday, and, in many countries, a custom developed of weaving the palms into
crosses that were placed on home altars or other places of prayer. Since the
palms have been blessed, they should not simply be discarded; rather, the
faithful return them to their local parish in the weeks before Lent, to be
burned and used as the ashes for Ash Wednesday.
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