Senior Reporter
sascha.wilson@guardian.co.tt
Amid ongoing global conflicts, Archbishop Jason Gordon says the same choice between war and peace witnessed in the Passion of Jesus Christ continues to confront people today, with voices calling for peace overshadowed by violence in the Middle East and other regions.
Delivering his Palm Sunday sermon at the Pro-Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in San Fernando yesterday, ahead of the Holy Week, he said he usually asked worshippers to focus on one biblical character from the events leading to Jesus’ crucifixion and journey with him or her for the week.
He asked worshippers to turn their attention to Barabbas.
“I want us to think about Barabbas for a little bit because when we look at him, Pilate is saying to the crowd on this day. ‘I will release a prisoner who you want me to release? This man Jesus called the Christ or Barrabas and the crowd shouted out, free Barabbas. ‘From then until now the crowd has led us astray.’”
He noted that Jesus could have called out to God to send legions of angels, but he didn’t because he knew the scripture had to be fulfilled.
“When we read the passion of Christ, we have to read it in the light of the Old Testament because this is fulfilling a prophecy of the Old Testament, so Barabbas is set free, and Jesus is condemned. The man of war is set free. The man of peace is condemned.”
Reflecting on what was happening in the region with Cuba and Haiti and in the Middle East, the Archbishop said, “When we see what is happening around our world, the man of war seems to be the dominant cry of our time and civilisation, and the call for peace seems to be voice that is not being listened or heard anymore and this too is at the very heart of the Passion of Jesus Christ. But in his case, he was clear, how else is the scripture to be fulfilled that he undertook the passion because it fulfilled the scripture, and even when the Jews would say his blood be on me, on us and on our children, they were the first one to take the blood on to themselves.”
However, he said while “we plead on the blood constantly,” he questioned whether people were choosing the way of peace or the way of war.
Before the mass, Archbishop Gordon blessed the palms which were distributed to worshippers who followed in a procession from the compound into the church.
