Article
Palm Sunday: A King, A Process, and a Moment That Matters
Palm Sunday is often celebrated as a moment of victory—Jesus entering Jerusalem to the praise of the crowds. But beneath the surface, it is far more than a symbolic parade. It is a prophetic announcement of kingship and a powerful reminder that God’s kingdom unfolds through process, not instant takeover.
The people expected a political revolution. Jesus revealed a spiritual one.
A King Who Comes Through Process
Before this moment, Jesus shares a parable about a nobleman who leaves to receive a kingdom and entrusts responsibilities to his servants (see Gospel of Luke 19). This context matters.
The message is clear:
Authority is preceded by stewardship.
Promotion is preceded by testing.
Palm Sunday is not the culmination—it is the beginning of a decisive process that leads to the cross, the resurrection, and ultimately, the full revelation of Christ’s kingdom.
The Pressing Produces the Oil
In Scripture, oil represents anointing, purpose, and character. But oil doesn’t come without pressure.
There is no oil without pressing.
We often want the outcome without the process, the calling without the crushing—but spiritual maturity cannot be microwaved. It is formed.
Pressure does two things:
- It produces character
- It reveals what’s inside us
If we avoid the pressing, we forfeit the depth God is trying to develop in us.
Surrender Determines the Outcome
Process requires surrender.
What you refuse to surrender in the process, you will forfeit in the outcome.
God is not just trying to get something to you—He is trying to form something in you. Every test is an invitation to trust Him more deeply.
Obedience Unlocks the Impossible
When Jesus instructed His disciples to go and retrieve a colt, it likely didn’t make logical sense. Yet they obeyed—and everything unfolded exactly as He said.
Obedience to God’s Word carries you where strategy cannot.
You don’t need full understanding to move forward—you need trust.
- Don’t renegotiate what God has already spoken
- Don’t delay what God has already revealed
His Word is enough.
What’s in Your Hand Is Enough
God often begins with what we already have.
A colt. A few disciples. A simple act of obedience.
When surrendered, the ordinary becomes powerful.
Stop waiting for more. Start surrendering what’s already in your hands.
Stewardship Leads to Increase
The parable reminds us: what we’ve been given is not meant to be buried—it’s meant to be multiplied.
- Your gifts
- Your time
- Your influence
- Your opportunities
Faithfulness with little leads to authority over much.
But withholding leads to stagnation—and even loss.
Don’t Miss Your Moment
As Jesus enters Jerusalem, the crowds celebrate—but the city itself does not fully recognize Him. And He weeps.
This moment is deeply sobering.
You can be close to what God is doing and still miss it.
Some breakthroughs are tied to recognizing your moment of visitation.
- Discern the season
- Respond with urgency
- Don’t delay obedience
Missed moments can mean missed opportunities.
Pressure Reveals and Refines
Every trial reveals something:
- Deficits that need healing
- Growth that has already taken place
Pressure is not your enemy—it’s your mirror.
And in God’s hands, it becomes your tool for transformation.
When You Don’t Know What to Do
If you find yourself in uncertainty, here’s the anchor:
Go back to the last thing God said.
- Return to Scripture
- Recall His promises
- Stay faithful to what has already been revealed
Breakthrough doesn’t come from constant reinvention—it comes from consistent obedience.
Final Thought
Palm Sunday reminds us that Jesus is King—but not the kind of King the world expected.
He doesn’t bypass process.
He doesn’t avoid pressure.
He doesn’t rush the outcome.
Instead, He invites us into a journey of:
- Surrender
- Stewardship
- Obedience
- Awareness of the moment
And through it all, He forms something far greater than temporary victory—He forms eternal transformation.
If you’re in a season of pressure, uncertainty, or waiting, don’t lose heart.
You’re not being overlooked. You’re being prepared.

