Tomorrow is Palm Sunday, the day of the Christian calendar where we celebrate the Triumphal Entry, when Jesus rode into Jerusalem on a donkey while the crowd shouted “Hosanna!” That means, “Save!” The choice of donkey versus a horse demonstrates that Jesus is the humble king. But there is another detail of this story that is often missed, and that is the role that children play in the Triumphal Entry according to the Matthew account of the story (Matt 21:1-17). Here is the passage from the NIV:
My wife and I have three children, ages 4, 7, and 13. For years, we have kept a notebook in a cabinet in our dining room that is basically the “from the lips of children” notebook. Any parents out there know what I’m talking about? It’s when your child, usually young and still learning English, says something silly, sweet, deeply profound, or all three at the same time. You need to write it down, otherwise you’ll forget it.
In our Bible passage today, we have the original entry into the “from the lips of children” notebook. And that is the sounds of children praising Jesus in the temple. Jesus confronts the religious leaders who were bothered by the sound of children singing praises in the temple. Jesus sticks up for the children and reminds the religious leaders, who knew their Bibles, that the Bible itself said the Lord would call forth praise from the lips of children. The religious people had somehow forgotten that children can and should worship God in the temple too. May we never forget the importance of welcoming the children in worship as we are doing today. In fact, I would challenge us to think of children as the ones from whom we should be learning how to worship.
You see, this passage shows us that the children continued their Palm Sunday praises all the way from the road to Jerusalem into the temple itself. Look at the passage – the story of Jesus turning over the tables in the temple happens immediately after his Triumphal Entry. He rode the donkey, entered Jerusalem, and then entered the temple. Verse 15 tells us that in the temple, “the chief priests and the teachers of the law saw the wonderful things he did and the children shouting in the temple courts, ‘Hosanna to the Son of David’…” This means that the kids kept praising. They didn’t stop at the end of the Triumphal Entry.
That’s why children should be the role models for us in worship, not the other way around. They keep praising, like the kids in Matthew 21:15. Let us always promote and foster opportunities for children to worship with and among adults in the life of Christian congregations. We are missing out on something if we never worship together with the children.
Continue to lean into intergenerational worship and always look for new and creative ways to have all the generations of God’s people intermingle, pray together, and worship together.