LAST SUNDAY-
IN ORDINARY TIME –A
OUR LORD
JESUS CHRIST, UNIVERSAL KING
SOLEMNITY
CHRIST THE
KING
I
Reading: Ezekiel 34:11-12.15-17: As for
you, my sheep, I will judge between sheep and sheep.
II
Reading: Corinthians 15:20-26.28: He will hand over the kingdom to God the Father, so that God
may be all in all.
Gospel:
Matthew 25:31-45: He will take his seat
on the throne of glory, and he will separate men one from another.
Today we
celebrate Christ the universal king. He did not claim to be only the king of
the Jews. His kingdom was not to be an exclusive one. He is the king of all who
are on the side of truth and listen to his voice. As a good king and faithful
shepherd lays down his life for his sheep and protects his believers from all
dangers and saved his people dying on the cross a great king of the universe.
Christ, our
king, belongs to our human family: King David, a symbol
of Christ the King. The prophet Daniel tells us that “he saw one like a son of
man coming on the clouds of heaven.” (Dan 7:13)
Christ is
king of the universe: St Paul writes to the Christians
of Colossae:
a) Christ is king of
the universe, “in him were created all things in heaven and on earth,
everything visible and everything invisible” (Col 1:16). Through him all things
were made; not one thing had its being but from him (Col 1:3). Christ holds all
things in unity (Col 1:17).
b) Christ is our king
because he redeemed us: “God sent his Son into the world not to condemn the
world, but so that through him the world might be saved.” (Jn 3:17; Col
1:13-14, 20)
The kind of
king that Jesus is: Luke shows Jesus on the cross
surrounded by various people; by the Jewish leaders, soldiers, two thieves and
Jesus’ mother, disciple and friends.
a) On the cross, Jesus
shows himself as a king who distributes his gifts most generously (Lk 23:34,
43; Jn 19:26).
b) On the cross, Jesus
shows himself as a king who saves.
We must
accept the gifts of pardon and salvation which Jesus, our king, so generously
offers: Jesus wants to reign through love,
not by force. (Lk 23:41-43; 19:14).
Christ is a
powerful king; his power will last forever: In the book of
Revelation, Jesus is given the titles, and (Ruler of the kings of the earth”
(Revelation 1:5), “King of the kings and Lord of Lords.” (Rev 19:16).
Jesus told the
apostles: “All power has been given to me in heaven and on earth” (Mt 28:18).
It will never end is the quality of Jesus’ power. The angel announced to Mary
that she had been chosen to be the mother of the redeemer, he said her Son to
be: “His kingdom will have no end” (Lk 1:33). The angel confirmed the prophecy
of Daniel which was to be fulfilled in Jesus: “His sovereignty is an eternal
sovereignty which shall never pass away, nor will his empire ever be destroyed”
(Dan 7:14).
The Book of Revelation
says the same thing and puts on Jesus’ lips the following words: “I am the
Alpha and the Omega, the one who is, who was and who is to come” (Rev 1:8).
“Everything starts from me and ends up in me, I was before anything existed and
I will continue to be after everything ends.”
Christ our
king loves us: he died for us and shares with us
whatever he possesses: on the night of his passion, Jesus said to his apostles:
“A man can have no greater love than to lay down his life for his friends” (Jn
15:13). The Book of Revelation reminds us “Christ loved us and has washed away
our sins with his blood” (Rev 1:5).
No king was
ever as generous as Jesus:
a. He shares his life
with us.
b. He shares his own
body and blood in the Eucharist.
c. He shares his own
priesthood. The Book of Revelation tells: Jesus made us priests to serve his
God and Father (Rev 1:6). Since we are priests, our whole life can and should
be “a holy sacrifice truly pleasing to God (Rom 12:1)
d. Jesus shares his own
joy: “My own peace I give you” (Jn 14:27). “I want those you have given me to
be with me where I am, so that they may always see the glory you have given me”
(Jn 17:24).
Hence Jesus is our true
king and the king of the universe.
Jesus’
kingdom is described as:
·
A kingdom of truth and of life,
·
A kingdom of holiness and grace,
·
A kingdom of justice, of love and
of peace.
Jesus was right when he
told Pilate that his was not like the kingdoms of this world:
·
Where falsehood reigns and lives
are destroyed,
·
Where sin abounds,
·
Where injustice and hatred bring in
wars without number.
We must praise our
king, Jesus and be grateful to him:
·
For having brought us into his
kingdom and made us members of his own royal family,
·
For having loved us through his own
suffering and sacrifice of life for our salvation,
·
For having given us his love,
peace, joy on earth and glory in heaven.
We have good reasons to
rejoice on this feast of Christ the king of the universe and we shall rejoice
in heaven at seeing him as he is, so great, so powerful and so loving.
Thought:
Christ’s loving rule leads to true freedom. No earthly king was ever so
magnanimous as Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Baptism introduced us into
Christ’s kingdom; living with Christ, suffering with Christ, dying with Christ
and rising with Christ.
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