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In the Holy Gospel of St. Luke 19:29-35 what does the "COLT" that our Lord has ridden to Jerusalem signify?

In Judea there were a few horses, and those were chiefly used in war. People seldom employed them in common life and in ordinary journeys. To ride on a horse was sometimes an emblem of war; whereas riding on a colt, a mule and an ass, symbolized peace. Kings and princes commonly rode on them in times of peace, and it was a mark of rank and dignity to ride in that manner, (Judg 10:4; 12:14; 1 Sam 25:20). When Solomon was inaugurated as king, he rode on a "mule," (1 Kings 1:33). Riding in this manner, denoted neither poverty nor degradation, but was the appropriate way in which a king should ride, and in which, therefore, the King of Zion should enter into his capital, the city of Jerusalem.

Our Lord uses the lowly animal as a sign of His peaceful and humble entry into Jerusalem as Zechariah prophesied (Zech 9:9).

May the Lord Jesus Christ reign on our lives, and may our hearts become the colt that he needs to ride on in order to enter his city Jerusalem, our lives in this case.
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