Christ the King
Nov. 25, 2018
CollectDan 7: 13-14
Rev 1: 5-8
Nativity, Washington, D.C.
“Almighty
ever-living God, whose will is to restore all things in your beloved Son, the
King of the universe…” (Collect).
When
you studied English literature in high school, or perhaps Brit lit in college,
you came upon a period called the Restoration, featuring poets like Pope and
Dryden, plus Swift and Defoe and other writers.
The period’s name comes not from the authors, however, but from the
restoration of the British monarchy in 1660 after the English civil war, the
execution of King Charles I, and 12 years of Puritan government. The restoration brought back to the British
Isles kings and queens, a period of great literature, music, and architecture, but
it didn’t auger peace with the other great powers of Europe or social justice
at home.
Our
beloved St. John Bosco was born in 1815 as another restoration was beginning,
this one involving all of western and central Europe: the restoration of numerous monarchs, of
national borders, and of the whole social order to the way things had been in
1789, before the French Revolution and the wars of Napoleon had turned
everything upside down and thrown Europe into turmoil, from Spain to the
Russian Empire. But that restoration’s
foundations rested on sand, and it crumbled in just 33 years, leading to more
upheavals, disorders, and wars.
Today
on the feast of Christ the King we pray for a restoration of an entirely
different order, an entirely different nature.
We pray for the restoration of “the whole creation” under the authority
of the Divine Majesty of the “ever-living God” thru the kingship of his beloved
Son, our Lord Jesus. That very title
“Lord” bespeaks royal authority. It
translates Dominus, from which we get
such English words as dominion and domination.
Our
Lord Jesus’ dominion, his manner of domination, however, doesn’t mean
turmoil, disorder, injustice, and other problems for his subjects. His domination is over our sins, over all the
injustices that we human beings commit in our own lusts for power, glory, and
selfish pleasure—those things that Puritans and kings, French revolutionaries
and Napoleon sought, whether for good motives or bad—but could not deliver because they were, in the
end, baseless, i.e., without a solid base, a foundation.
The
only sure foundation is Jesus Christ. The
only “everlasting dominion that shall not be taken away,” the only “kingship
[that] shall not be destroyed” (Dan 7:14), is that of Jesus Christ—because he
has conquered the evil ruler of this world.
His cross, his blood poured out as a sign of his service to us, has
bound him to our humanity forever—a binding that is “the one ring to rule them
all”; all the rings with which Satan tries to bind us to his service have been
shattered by Christ’s royal ring, a ring that tokens his marriage-binding to
his bride, the Church—to us.
To
this great king we, in our turn, bind ourselves. When the rich young man came to Jesus—you know
the story in the gospels—asking what he had to “do to inherit eternal life”
(Mark 10:17), Jesus told him to keep the commandments. When the young man said he was doing so, and asked
what more he needed to do, Jesus told him to give up his wealth, give to the
poor, and follow him (10:20-21). Jesus
tells all of us to practice the Beatitudes—to be poor in spirit, meek, pure of
heart, seekers of justice, peacemakers—if we wish to be part of his kingdom, to
inherit eternal life. Our goal in life
is not to make America great again but to honor the Great King, to serve the
Great King, to follow Jesus.
We
honor, serve, and follow the Lord Jesus so that he may set us free, personally,
individually, from our slavery to sin, our servitude to the powers of darkness;
free us from Voldemort, our death-wish, and deliver us instead to Almighty God,
to proclaim his praise ceaselessly in the kingdom of light, the kingdom of all
things set right in justice, the kingdom of everlasting joy. “To him who loves us and has freed us from
our sins by his blood, who has made us into a kingdom, priests for his God and
Father, to him be glory and power forever and ever. Amen” (Rev 1:5-6).
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