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K. T. Sim

K. T. Sim

Sim Kay Tee serves with the international operations office of Our Daily Bread Ministries based in Singapore, developing new biblical resources to point the reader to God and to the wisdom and promises of His unchanging Word. In this capacity, K.T. writes for the Discovery Series Bible Study guides that are used in many small groups worldwide. He is also a regular contributor to the Insights for Our Daily Bread. K.T. is passionate about God’s Word and about teaching it to His people. He desires to see God’s people reading and being transformed by the Word of God. He has taught the Bible in conferences and churches in various countries. Prior to joining Our Daily Bread Ministries, he was the pastor and commended elder of a Brethren assembly in Singapore (1990–1999). He is the proud parent of three daughters.

Articles by K. T. Sim

A King on a Donkey

It was Sunday—the day we now call Palm Sunday. Without a doubt, this wasn’t Jesus’ first visit to Jerusalem. As a devout Jew, He would’ve gone to the city every year for the three great feasts (Luke 2:41–42; John 2:13; 5:1). In the past three years, Christ had also ministered and taught in Jerusalem. But this Sunday His coming into the city was radically different.

By riding a young donkey into Jerusalem at a time when thousands of worshipers were coming into the city, Jesus was the center of attention (Matthew 21:9–11). Why would He take the place of prominence before thousands of people when for the past three years He’d deliberately kept a low profile? Why would He accept the people’s proclamation that He was King just five days before His death? 

Matthew says that this took place to fulfill a five-hundred-year-old prophecy (Matthew 21:4–5) that God’s chosen king would come into Jerusalem “righteous and victorious, [yet] lowly and riding on a donkey” (Zechariah 9:9; see also Genesis 49:10–11).

This was a truly unusual way for a triumphant king to enter a city. Conquering kings normally rode on mighty stallions. But Jesus wasn’t riding a warhorse. This reveals what kind of King Jesus is. He came in meekness and lowliness. Jesus came not for war, but for peace, establishing peace between God and us (Acts 10:36; Colossians 1:20–21). 

He makes me to lie down in green pastures; He leads me beside the still waters. He restores my soul. —Psalm 23:2-3