Palm Sunday: A Maryknoll Reflection

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By Dennis Moorman, M.M.

Palm Sunday
March 29, 2026
Mt 21:1-11 (37) | Is 50:4-7 | Phil 2:6-11 | Mt 26:14- 27:66

“Hosanna to the Son of David; blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord; hosanna in the highest.” —Matthew 21:9

Palm Sunday marks the beginning of Holy Week in the liturgical calendar for Christians around the world! On this day, we commemorate Jesus triumphantly entering into Jerusalem before his torture and death, culminating in his resurrection, which we call the Paschal Mystery, that which expresses the center of our Christian faith.

In the Gospel according to Matthew, when Jesus enters Jerusalem, the crowd of people waves tree branches and shouts: “Hosanna to the Son of David. This is Jesus the prophet, from Nazareth in Galilee.” Later in that same Gospel, the crowd shouts for Pilate to crucify Jesus and release Barabbas, a political revolutionary and insurrectionist, instead. We don’t actually know if this crowd was the same group of people or not, but this contrast certainly reflects the political polarization and dichotomy that is dividing so many families today, not only in our own country, but around the world.

These divisions are exacerbated by people not being willing to enter into authentic dialogue and deeper listening with others. This is made worse by the new realities of artificial intelligence and social media, which are manipulated to produce “fake news,” such that no one really can be sure of what is “true” anymore. Such propaganda feeds people’s anger and fears, which further divide them and can lead to horrific violence and terrible wars, all of which we have so painfully witnessed in the past years. So much of what drives people’s irrational emotional reactions, whether political or otherwise, is an underlying fear of not feeling safe and secure. In my work with healing trauma, we learn that an important factor for healing is coming to find safety and serenity within oneself. How often does a parent comfort a child by saying, “Everything is going to be all right.”

In 2025, when Leo XIV was elected pope, his first greeting was, “Peace be with all of you!” At each Mass, we offer one another this greeting of peace. This is the same greeting that the Risen Jesus gives to his friends when he appears to them in the Upper Room, where they are hiding in fear. In the Gospel of John, Jesus says: “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give it to you.” Jesus promises a deeper and more transformative peace. In his 2026 message for the World Day of Peace, Pope Leo invites us to cultivate an “unarmed and disarming peace,” which is humble and persevering, and a gift that comes from God’s unconditional love. Pope Leo warns that when peace is treated as something remote or abstract, violence spreads in personal, social, and political life.

Furthermore, he says that “we need a disarmament of the soul. External disarmament is impossible without an interior disarmament of the heart, mind, and life.” In this light, Pope Leo speaks of a “revolution of peace.” He calls on us to reject the irrationality of modern warfare and to pursue the “disarming path of diplomacy, mediation and international law.” Just as Jesus told Peter in the garden: “Put your sword back; for all who draw the sword will die by the sword.”

Pope Leo criticizes the global reliance on weapons and deterrence, arguing that true peace is built on trust, justice, and dialogue rather than fear and domination. The pope calls religions to resist the temptation to justify violence or nationalism in God’s name and instead promote solidarity and reconciliation. For Pope Leo, this “disarmament of the soul” insists that peace begins in the human heart and requires a renewal of minds and attitudes.

During this Holy Week, may our hearts, minds, and souls be transformed and renewed in the spirit of Jesus and through the inspiration of the prophetic words of Pope Leo, so that we may truly become heralds of that ancient greeting spoken by our Risen Lord and Savior: “Peace be with you!”

Maryknoll Father Dennis Moorman was ordained in 1998. He lives in Sao Paulo, Brazil, where he minsters to people with depression and anxiety using methods of somatic therapy. This ministry has also taken him to 15 countries to teach workshops on healing from trauma.

Questions for Reflection

What could “disarmament of the soul” mean in your own life? Where do you falsely cling to spiritual weapons rather than cultivating true peace?
What is one practice or habit that helps you find “safety and serenity within”?

Prayer

Today let me live in peace with my God,
my dear neighbor and myself.
Let me bring peace to my patch of Earth.
Let me believe that world peace is possible,
because with God all things are possible.
Let me remember that HOPE is a vital gift I can give
to our world.

Today I will not be part to pessimism — nor join the
indifferent.

I will be full of joy, because God loves us and is with
us. I will share this Joy with those who grieve. I will
laugh with the children, the simple, the spontaneous.
I will remember that joy is always up to me — as an
individual and as a member of the community.

Today I will love my enemies — even those who
perpetrate pain, terror, death — and those who show
inhuman disregard for my brothers and sisters.
I will disarm my own self of rage, extending my
hands and help and forgiveness.

Eternal Mystery: Place your Holy Peace deep within
my inner spirit. Calm feelings of uncertainty,
insecurities. Give me courage to stand with the
Peacemakers of history, and wisdom to know the
true path. In your name, Divine Essence, I breathe a
prayer of peace over the world — to create its future.

Amen.

To read other Scripture Reflections published by the Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, click here.

Featured image: People raise their palm fronds for blessings during a Palm Sunday Mass March 24, 2024, in Managua, Nicaragua. (OSV News/Maynor Valenzuela, Reuters) 

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About the author

Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

The Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, based in Washington, D.C., is a resource for Maryknoll on matters of peace, social justice and integrity of creation, and brings Maryknoll’s mission experience into U.S. policy discussions. Visit www.maryknollogc.org.