Sunday, November 25, 2018

On this last Sunday of the church year, our crucified king hangs in our midst with arms outstretched in loving mercy and welcome.




FEAST OF Christ the King  2018

Today’s feast always creates problems.  One word is at the root of the problem:  king.  What does it mean?  How is it applied to Jesus?

Given the Gospel reflections on the ministry of Jesus, “kingly” would be the last adjective anyone would use to describe the ministry of Jesus.

In fact in today’s Gospel, Jesus in so many words tells us not to celebrate today’s feast. 

Jesus kept company with tax-collectors, sinners and prostitutes, so much so that the authorities described Jesus as “a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax-collectors and sinners.”  You would expect kings to receive important people and dignitaries but Jesus received the lowly and rejected people of his time. A king might expect to receive a gift but Jesus gave gifts, he restored health to those who were sick. Jesus was not the kingly type according to our understanding of king; he is a powerless king! Kings wear a crown. What sort of crown did Jesus wear? It was a crown of thorns. What throne do we see Jesus sitting on in the Gospel today?  It is the cross.

In today’s passage, Jesus is basically saying, “If you insist on calling me a king, you have to give a brand-new definition to that title.  I’m here to tell people about truths only God can reveal to them; not the kind of work in which kings normally engage.

For Pilate, a king can only be understood in political terms. Yet, Jesus assures Pilate, “My kingdom does not belong to this world.’

Who is welcome in the spiritual kingdom of Christ the King??

Who, if not the condemned Savior, can fully understand the pain of those unjustly condemned?

Who, if the not the king scorned and humiliated, can meet the expectations of the countless men and women who live without hope and dignity?

Who, if not the crucified Son of God, can know the sorrow and loneliness of so many lives shattered and without a future? 

On this the last Sunday of the liturgical year our crucified king hangs in our midst with arms outstretched in loving mercy and welcome.
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May we have the courage to ask him to remember us in his kingdom, the grace to imitate him in our own earthly kingdoms, and the wisdom to welcome his when he stands knocking at the doors of our lives and hearts.

In our parish community, could there be anyone who is not welcome in our parish community.  In witnessing to the kingdom of Jesus, all are welcome.  There is no one who is excluded from the unconditional love of Jesus, the king our hearts and our lives.

Jesus does wish to be the King of our Hearts.  He will usher in the Kingdom through love, by appealing to the hearts of people. 

Jesus as the King of our hearts opts to be the suffering servant.  And that is why, as the Gospels describe, he ends us as a king who hangs on the cross.

It is interesting to note that the dialogue between the two criminals who were Jesus’ companions in his last moments.  These two criminals  raise this conflict once again – the conflict between what the people thought Jesus’ kingship was and what Jesus himself had chosen to be.  The so called “bad thief” becomes the spokesman for the people: “If you are the Christ save yourself and us as well.”

The “good thief”, on the other hand, understands the role of Jesus in this world more clearly.  Jesus does not save us from human limitations of suffering and even death itself. Rather, Jesus gives us hope, He provides meaning to our human lives.  Therefore the criminal surrenders his heart to Jesus. He makes a choice to be part of the real Kingdom of God.  And Jesus assures him: “Indeed, I promise you, today you will be with me in paradise.” 

This is what the feast of today invites us to: to surrender ourselves to the loving reign of God, to make a choice to be part of the Kingdom of God, to be free from the tyranny of power, possession and pleasure.

This feast is an invitation to all those who have power or authority of any kind to compare their use of power or authority with Jesus. Are they using their power to serve others or to manipulate? Are they using their power for the building up of a more just society or to feather their own nest? Are they using their power in any way that might cause pain to others or in a way that could help to alleviate pain? In the prayer Jesus taught us, we pray, “thy kingdom come.” Jesus has shown how to bring about that kingdom. Let us pray that nations and individuals will be humble enough to look at how Jesus used power and bring about the kingdom of God.

Even as we are confronted with the clergy sex abuse scandal, perhaps a root cause of this crisis is a clerical desire to give a royal, kingly definition to the Church – something which Jesus clearly rejects in the Gospel.  If we don’t define kingdom in the life of the Church in the same way that Jesus does – a church of humble service and love.  We run the danger of cover-op and the abuse of power.

This last Sunday of the Church year challenges us to decide – who is our king?  What are the goals and dreams that we should really be working and sacrificing for?  May we pray for each other that we are all centered in our faith that Jesus is the Lord and King of our lives.  This day Christ the King isn’t just the conclusion of the Church year.  It’s a sign of our hope.  We are one prayer from being immersed in the mercy of Jesus.  “Jesus remember me when you come into your kingdom.”

Have a Blessed Day.

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