Worship Guide for March 29, 2026

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Contested Storylines

The Reverend Mark Sutherland

Jesus entering Jerusalem

Sermon Audio: The sermon has been streamlined for oral delivery and may differ from the written text below, but the content remains the same.

Sermon Text:

Yesterday, many of us stood together, lost in the throng of the No-Kings Rally that had wound its way through central Providence from the State House before returning to gather for the rally on the State House lawn. There is something mysterious about crowds. Perhaps you took part in other No-Kings Rallies across the State. Rallies took place in every city and region across the country. It has been estimated that over 3,000 rallies were scheduled, but at the time of writing, the overall turnout estimate is still too early to tell.

Those unable to attend any of the rallies, nevertheless, drew encouragement in the knowledge that across our state and nation, our fellow citizens were rallying in nonviolent protest against the current Administration’s perilous direction of travel at home and now abroad.

To be part of a crowd can feel exhilarating—a release from the burdens of isolation and helplessness that so often define our individual lives. In a crowd, we taste a heady solidarity. As participants and even as observers from a distance, we feel ourselves caught up in something larger than ourselves. The energy of shared purpose lifts us to find a collective voice.

At their best, crowds become living expressions of our deepest longings—for justice, for belonging, for change—and they can generate bonds that endure long after we return to the routines of daily life.

And yet, there is something deeply unsettling about crowds. For the same energy that unites can also overwhelm. The line between common purpose and collective manipulation is thinner than we like to admit. History—and our own very current experience reminds us how easily a skillful voice can harness a crowd’s energy, amplifying fear, awakening buried grievances, and directing them toward destructive ends.

Crowds are not simply gatherings of people. They are carriers of contended storylines

What matters is not only that we gather, but which storyline we see ourselves standing in. For crowds give voice to shared cultural memories and contested narratives shaping how we see the world. And those narratives are not neutral in their effect. They can enlarge us—or diminish us. They can open possibilities—or close them down. In that sense, crowds are profoundly fickle because the multiple stories that move through them are in constant contention.

In truth, all we have are the storylines we tell—about the world, about one another, and about ourselves. As narrative creatures, we make meaning through story. We discover purpose through the narratives we inhabit. And we now know—what earlier generations intuited—that stories do not simply describe reality; they create and shape it. They influence what we believe, how we feel, and ultimately how we act.

Which means the real question is never whether we are part of a storyline. But which storyline is claiming us? Because once we give ourselves to a storyline, it begins to shape our perception, command our loyalty, and direct our actions.

In a world saturated with competing narratives—some expansive and life-giving, others narrow and corrosive—the challenge is to discern between good and bad storylines. Storylines are akin to Jesus proverbial tree parable. You judge them by the quality of the fruit they bear.

This feels like a distinctly modern problem. The proliferation of information, misinformation, and competing versions of reality amplified in the echo chambers of the Internet makes the question of which story we can trust feel complicated but no less urgent.

But this is not a new problem. It is, in fact, the problem exposed at the heart of our commemoration of the events of Palm Sunday. Because on that day, the streets and alleys of Jerusalem rang out with the shout of the Passover crowds pouring into the city, tripling the city’s normal population, transforming the city into a cauldron of bubbling religious, political, and populist passions. Passover was not a quiet festival. As the commemoration of national liberation from bondage, Passover, for a nation under the heel of occupation, was a volatile and dangerous.

At this Passover, three conflicting storylines are in play.

Pontius Pilate’s entry into Jerusalem represents the first storyline of Empire. Travelling from his administrative base on the coast at Cesaria Maritima, the Roman Procurator (the equivalent of a District Commissioner), entered from the west, carrying the full power of the empire. His procession is a display of dominance—the unmistakable message that peace will be maintained by force if necessary. Rome tells a very clear story: order comes through control; peace comes through domination. Violence is the coinage of government.

Simultaneously, another procession enters the city from the east – inspiring in the crowds the second storyline of populist longing. No war horse. No military escort. Just a borrowed colt. No display of force—only a fragile, almost absurd vulnerability. Cloaks are thrown on the road. Branches are waved – a powerful expression of Jewish collective memory. Voices cry out, “Hosanna!” “Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord!” In the collective mind of the crowd, Jesus has become caught up in their messianic expectations in the storyline of liberation.

Two storylines: one of empire and the demonstration of power, the other a story of popular longing for liberation and the restoration of past glory. It is the story of a people who remember Egypt, who remember exile, who remember a promise delayed. And in Jesus, they glimpse the possibility that this story is reaching its fulfillment.

But here is where it becomes unsettling. Because the crowd is actually inhabiting the wrong storyline. All too late, they will realize this, and their hope will turn to frustrated rage.

Like Jerusalem’s crowds, it’s a rude awakening to find ourselves inhabiting the wrong storyline.

Crowds are fickle, susceptible to being carried along by whatever story is most compelling in the moment.

Like the Passover crowds, when Jesus refuses to align with the storyline we are inhabiting, our mood darkens. The same voices that cry “Hosanna” will, in a matter of days, be replaced by voices crying “Crucify him.” How easily we too reject the Jesus of the gospels with a Jesus reconfigured in our own violent and rageful image.

Like the crowds praising Jesus as he entered the Holy City, we enthusiastically hail our next political savior until that is, – he or she no longer is.

We long to do the courageous thing – until that is, the moment when we don’t.

Palm Sunday is not simply a scene from the past. It is a mirror for our present. Because we, too, are always standing within competing storylines.

We, too, are drawn toward narratives that promise security, identity, and protection. Unfulfilled expectations render us vulnerable to storylines that stir our fears – eclipsing those that awaken our hopes.

And so, the question that confronts us this morning is not whether we would have joined the crowd. Of course, we would have. The question is: which storyline would we have identified with in the crowd’s cry? This question forces us to examine the storyline that is claiming us now.

Because Jesus does not simply enter Jerusalem. He enters the human story—and offers a radically different way of telling it that is not always to our liking.

In the week leading up to Passover, we see, with hindsight, the lethal intersection of competing storylines – of imperial domination and political violence, and of populist resistance and longing for national liberation. – both confronted by a radically new storyline of God’s love and vision for the world.  This clash of storylines results in a chain of events taking an unexpected turn – rapidly spiraling out of everyone’s control.

Today, on Palm Sunday, we stand at the threshold of the most sacred week of the Christian year. From the waving of palms to the stark silence of the cross, we are invited not simply to remember, but to enter—fully and intentionally—into the final days of Jesus’ life.

This will be my last Easter as Rector at St Martin’s, and a final opportunity to remind us that as Episcopalians, we are a liturgical people. We do not stand at a distance from these events as observers. Through the vehicle of liturgy, we participate in a holy drama—a sacred reenactment that carries us, step by step, through the unfolding story of Holy Week, whose liturgies are not merely symbolic; they are formative. They shape us as disciples by drawing us into the heart of the mystery.

Holy Week begins with the paradox of Palm Sunday: celebration and foreboding held together. But it is in the days that follow that the drama deepens.

On Maundy Thursday, we gather in the upper room. We witness Jesus at table, offering bread and wine, kneeling to wash the feet of his disciples, and commanding them to love one another. From there, we move with him into the shadows of Gethsemane—into the loneliness, the watching, and the waiting.

And then comes Good Friday—a day unlike any other. A day of stark honesty about suffering, betrayal, and the cost of love.

These liturgies ask something of us. They ask for our presence – not simply attendance. They demand our participation. To walk the way. To keep the Watch. To allow this story to shape our own. For it is only by walking through this story that we come to the great turning-point of Easter Day—with its promise of new life for a world thirsting for redemption.

Like the crowds praising Jesus as he entered the Holy City, we enthusiastically hail our next political savior until that is, – he or she no longer is.

We long to do the courageous thing – until that is, the moment when we don’t.

History does not exactly repeat itself, but it certainly rhymes.

Good Friday Offering with Presiding Bishop’s Message

Prayers of the People

Palm Sunday

29 March 2026

The response to the bidding, “God of promise,” is “Hear us.

Lord, in time and space, on this Palm Sunday, make us sensitive to storylines that compete with, and distract us from, our primary allegiance to the storyline of salvation made known to us through your son, Jesus Christ. Give us a spirit of true repentance so as to have the courage and persistence to hold fast to the hope that is within us in a world increasingly deaf to the values and expectations of your kingdom. 

God of promise, Hear us.

We pray for the perilous state of the Republic. Lord, you know our concerns long before we ask. In this time of national crisis, we have so many concerns for our nation that it is impossible to mention them all. In silence or aloud, we bring before you our most pressing concerns: —-

May we have the courage to embrace non-violent resistance to face down the evils of this time. 

God of Promise, Hear us.

We pray for the Church and her life: for Sarah, Archbishop of Canterbury; for Sean, Presiding Bishop, and for Nicholas, our bishop; for the brave witness of Hosam, Archbishop of Jerusalem. We give thanks for Pope Leo’s courageous and inspiring leadership, and we pray for him along with Bartholomew, Ecumenical Patriarch. We continue to pray for a witness and commitment to service and nonviolent resistance by all Christian leaders.   

God of Promise, Hear us.

In a world of pressing needs too numerous to count, we are silent before you, imploring you to hear us as we stand in prayerful solidarity with people in places where lives and livelihoods are being destroyed by war, ethnic cleansing, and organized crime.

[Pause for the count of 10] 

Give us courage to hold fast to hope, and work tirelessly for peace; not just any peace, but peace with justice. 

God of Promise, Hear us.

We remember the Earth and the threat of climate change, praying for the strengthening of emergency services and necessary infrastructure to meet the challenge of climate instability. 

God of Promise, Hear us.

We pray for all in need and in trouble: for those whose strength is failing through ill health; whose spirits are flagging through depression; whose determination is being sapped through addiction; that they might know God’s comforting presence and healing. 

God of Promise, Hear us.

We remember with love those who have asked for our solidarity in prayer: Bill, Brad, Sam, Carol, Arline, James, David, Tina, and those we name

We pray for our own needs, together with those nearest and dearest to us, remembering those celebrating birthdays this week: Sarosh Fenn, Lisa Ballou, Linna Kite, Cathy Bodner, and Patrick Hawkins.

God of Promise, Hear us.

Rejoicing in the fellowship of so great a cloud of witnesses, we pray for those we love but see no longer, especially those we name [pause]. We pray for all who grieve. 

God of Promise, Hear us.

 Celebrant adds a concluding prayer.