03/30/2026
🔥🙌🏼❤️
What Happened Between Palm Sunday and the Cross Matters More Than You Think
Most people focus on Palm Sunday and then jump straight to the Cross and Resurrection. But what Jesus did in between those moments is just as powerful and deeply revealing. It wasn’t quiet. It wasn’t passive. It was intentional, confrontational, and full of purpose.
After the crowds shouted “Hosanna” and welcomed Him as King, Jesus didn’t settle into popularity. He went straight to deal with sin, compromise, and corruption.
In Matthew 21:12-13, Jesus entered the temple and drove out those buying and selling, overturning tables and declaring, “My house shall be called a house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves.” This wasn’t just about money changers. This was about purity. The very place meant for God’s presence had been filled with distraction, greed, and compromise.
Then He continued confronting the religious system. In Matthew 23, Jesus boldly exposed hypocrisy, calling out those who looked righteous outwardly but were inwardly full of corruption. He wasn’t intimidated by titles or appearances. He addressed the religious spirit head-on.
Why is this significant?
Because before the Cross, there had to be a confrontation.
Jesus didn’t go to the Cross ignoring sin, He exposed it. He didn’t ignore corruption, He challenged it. He didn’t affirm empty religion, He dismantled it. Everything He confronted was what He would ultimately pay for. The Cross wasn’t just an act of love, it was the answer to everything He revealed.
And this speaks directly to us today.
We live in a time where many want the celebration of Palm Sunday and the victory of Resurrection Sunday, but not the confrontation in between. We want comfort without correction. We want grace without repentance. But Jesus showed us that before there is resurrection power, there must be cleansing.
1 Corinthians 3:16-17 reminds us that we are now the temple of the Holy Spirit. That means what Jesus did in the physical temple, He still desires to do in us. He wants to cleanse anything that doesn’t belong. He wants to overturn the tables in our hearts that have been set up by compromise, distraction, or hidden sin.
And just like then, He is still confronting the religious spirit today. The outward appearance without inward transformation. The performance without presence. The form without power. 2 Timothy 3:5 describes it as having “a form of godliness but denying its power.” Jesus never endorsed that then, and He doesn’t now.
Here’s the truth: what Jesus confronts, He intends to redeem.
He doesn’t expose things to shame us, He exposes them to free us. The cleansing of the temple was not rejection, it was restoration. He was reclaiming what belonged to God.
So what does this mean for us right now?
It means we invite Him in fully. Not just as Savior, but as Lord. We allow Him to search our hearts. We don’t resist conviction, we respond to it. Because on the other side of cleansing is power. On the other side of surrender is resurrection life.
This is the pattern:
Confrontation → Cleansing → Cross → Resurrection
If you skip the middle, you miss the transformation.
And in this hour, God is raising up people who are willing to walk through all of it. Not just the celebration, but the surrender. Not just the promise, but the process.
Because when Jesus truly has access to your life, resurrection isn’t just something you believe in. It’s something you live.