Dear Sisters, dear brethren, for many years this solemnity of Christ the King has been regarded by many people as something of an embarrassment. Isn’t it rather old-fashioned to be thinking of Christ as a King? Surely we have outgrown that kind of thing. What is a king, after all? He is a ruler, one with authority to govern and to command respect and obedience. He is not elected and does not have to give an account of himself to anyone living. This kind of ruler was all very well in the ancient world, with such figures as the Pharaohs of Egypt, or Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, or Darius the Great of Persia. And even in the time of our Lord, the ruler of the whole Roman Empire was not a king, but an Imperator, the Latin word for ‘commander’ which really means the ruler of the army – even though the word Imperator gives us the word ‘Emperor’, which might seem to be more than a king, because from Imperator comes the word Empire.
And of course, in the Middle Ages all the nations of Europe were ruled by kings. Curiously enough, the first country to get rid of a king as its ruler was England, when Oliver Cromwell brought about the execution of King Charles I and made himself ‘Protector of the Realm’, most definitely not king. Even after Cromwell’s death, when Charles II returned from exile to take up the throne as king, his sovereign power, his ability to rule as he wished, was somewhat limited by Parliament, and so, over the course of three centuries, we come to King Charles III, whose role is defined not by election but by descent from his mother, the late Queen Elizabeth. The name of the country in which we live is the United Kingdom; it is not a republic. But of course, the king is not the absolute ruler of this kingdom. He is the Head of State, but not the Head of Government. He is what we call a ‘constitutional monarch’. So his kingship, his authority, is very much less even than that of the Prime Minister who heads the government. And the Prime Minister does not enjoy uncontrolled authority either. He (or she) must submit to the process of public election every four or five years. He or she can be dis-elected, so to speak. A king, however, cannot be deselected, because he was not elected in the first place. He inherited his throne, his crown, his kingly status.
But just because we do have a king doesn’t make this feast of Christ the King any easier to understand. I think it is at least as difficult for us to understand what it means to call Christ a king, indeed our king, as it is for, say, the Americans, whose republic was founded on the principle of rejecting royal power and privilege. Americans think that kingship is something from their past, from the time when they were colonials, subjects of the King of Great Britain. This makes the idea of Christ the King difficult for them to understand in yet another way from us.
Now Christ is altogether a different kind of king from this. In the Gospel we have heard, Pontius Pilate asks Jesus if He is a king? Why? Because this is an accusation that has been brought against Jesus. It is not a title of dignity in the thought of the Jewish people and the chief priests. For them, Christ is an upstart who has falsely claimed to be king. And, furthermore, as our Lord says, if He were a king in the usual sense of the word, would not He have soldiers under His command who would defend Him against His enemies? Yet here Christ is, standing before the Roman Governor, a representative of the Roman Emperor, about to be condemned to death. What kind of king is He really? Listen as He tells us precisely what kind of King he is: ‘Yes, I am a king. I was born for this. I came into the world for this: to bear witness to the truth.’ This is indeed not like any other kingship. Where others have rule over kingdoms and command armies and raise tribute to fund their lifestyles, Jesus is utterly different. He has come to bear witness to the truth.
We need to ponder this idea of kingship in order to understand it. What is truth? This is, in fact, they very question that Pilate goes on to ask immediately after the end of this passage. Was he serious? Did he not know what truth is? I think Pilate was a good example of a man who had got where he was by lots of compromises. He wasn’t born with a silver spoon in his mouth. He had had to please the right people, marry the right wife, get himself seen and promoted by those who had influence and who had the ear of the Emperor. If you are going to get on, then you have to cut corners where truth is concerned. You can’t be too highly principled. You can’t be too picky about how people are treated.
This is where truth is so demanding. Truth is the absolute ruler of conscience. It is not elected, it is not chosen. It is given. Truth comes not from us but from Him who made us. There is no my truth opposed to your truth, This is what Jesus our King embodies. It is what He lived for and what He died for. But His death was not the end. As the Second reading from the Apocalypse put it: Jesus is the ‘first born from the dead, the Ruler of the kings of the earth.’ So He, who was put to death by Pilate at the insistence of the Jewish people and chief priests, has been raised to life, to a life that can never end. Although His kingdom is not of this world, it will come upon the world one day with complete, undeniable, authority. But it cannot be an oppressive authority. It cannot be authoritarian. It is the authority which was foretold in the first reading by the great prophet Daniel, who foresaw ‘one like a son of man…He came into the presence of the one of great age, (that is, God the Father). On Him was conferred sovereignty, glory and kingship.’ These are the qualities of kingship. Of that sovereignty Daniel goes on to speak further, saying: ‘His sovereignty is an eternal sovereignty, which shall never pass away.’ Christ has kingship conferred upon Him, not by election, but by appointment. It is God’s doing. But we must understand that this sovereignty is not oppression. His rule is not to subject us to tyranny, but to set us free. In His rule is the true freedom of those who are His subjects by choice, that is by faith.
We are subject in this life to many forms of tyranny, mostly of our own making; the tyranny of sin and temptation which we find so difficult to escape from; the tyranny of rule by lies and untruth – such as that which is perpetuated by the media which misrepresents the truth about God and about our relation to Him and to each other. The lie that is summed up in the culture of death, which sees the power to kill children In the womb and suicide as the highest forms of freedom, when they are really slavery and despair. Christ, on the other hand, has made us free by His death, so that we can be liberated from sin and untruth of all kinds. It is truth that sets us free, not lies. Truth shows us the real value of death and its relation to life, not just this life, but eternal life. If we acknowledge Christ as our King, then we will be made into a kingdom of priests to serve our God and Father. If we are on the side of truth, then we will listen to Christ’s voice. We will know how to reject the subtlety of lies and half-truths.
Then we will be among those who see Him coming on the last day in glory, along with all those who pierced Him and killed Him. For ‘His sovereignty is an eternal sovereignty which shall never pass away; nor will His empire be destroyed.’
This is the meaning of Christ’s eternal kingship. He already has it, but it will only be fully revealed when He comes again in glory to judge the living and the dead. The difference is this: that those who have lived this life in denial of Him and of the Truth will see Him coming and will wail and howl at the sight. But those who have lived by faith in Him and have been prepared to face persecution and rejection on account of witnessing to the Truth, will welcome His coming with unbounded joy. Because when He comes as King, to those who love Him now He is now oppressor but a liberator. We ourselves will become not slaves and subjects, but kings, for to serve Him is not only to be free, but it is to reign. That is what heaven will be for those who wait longingly for Christ to reveal His Kingship in all its glory and majesty.