Jesus’ crucifixion was his coronation as Christ the King.

Today is the last Sunday in Ordinary Time. Next Sunday will begin the new liturgical year in the Church calendar as we begin Advent. In today’s Gospel from Luke, Jesus is engaged by two criminals being crucified with him.

The first “reviled” him and demanded Jesus, “save himself and save us!” There was no acknowledgment of his own transgressions. The other criminal acknowledged that they were justly condemned and deserved their fate on the cross. He recognized his sin and crime, and reached out to Jesus with deference, when he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.”

Jesus replied, “Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise” (cf Luke 23:35-43).

This second criminal saw beyond what appeared to many others to be the end of this man, Jesus. Instead, he recognized Jesus as the messiah, the king and that his coronation was happening before his eyes, his crucifixion. Jesus recognized this man’s contrition and welcomed him into his kingdom, for Jesus became the Messiah, the Christ, the King, through his Passion, Death, and Resurrection.

This solemnity is 100 years old this year. It was first instituted by Pope Pius X to counteract the rise of secularism and the atrocities of World War 1. Over and above all philosophies, ideologies, political theories and the like, Jesus is to be our King. Pope St. Paul VI, after Vatican II, thought the solemnity would be more fitting to be placed on the last Sunday of Ordinary Time. This also echoes the intent of Pope Pius. Even though he placed the feast at the end of October to be near the feast of all saints, he wrote in his encyclical, Quas Primas, that the solemnity would  be placed best, “at the end of the liturgical year, and thus the feast of the Kingship of Christ sets the crowning glory upon the mysteries of the life of Christ already commemorated during the year.”

Jesus, the Son of God, came among us to re-orient and to re-align the worldly order. Throughout his public ministry he spoke and acted in the Person of the God of Israel and he did this most profoundly as he allowed himself to be nailed to and lifted up on the cross. Leadership would no longer be about the aggrandizement of the self nor to be lorded over at the expense of others. God was very aware of the suffering of his people. He sent Moses to free his people from slavery from Egypt and he sent his Son to free all humanity from slavery to sin.

Yet this freedom has a cost. Today, we are reminded that we have a choice to make. Who are we to serve? Are we to serve Pharaoh or Moses, Pilate or Jesus, our self or God. If we seek to be free from the shackles of our slavery to sin, the choice is clear. When listen to the voice of the king of the universe, the way, the truth, and the life of Jesus the Christ, the King of the Universe and choose to follow him, we will as did Mary have chosen the better part.

The reign of the kingship of Jesus is about a personal encounter. We serve Christ the King when we are aware of and accompany one another. We are not to be about bringing world peace, ending hunger, providing homes for all in some abstract utopian pursuit. We are to concretely and intimately treat each person we meet with dignity. We are to see Jesus in our midst: “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed me, naked and you clothed me, ill and you cared for me, in prison and you visited me” (Mt 25:35-37). Jesus, our king, commands us to act as he lived, to be aware of, to accompany, and to make a difference, one life at a time.

We may feel overwhelmed with our own struggles, let alone the present state of our country or weight of the world, but we do not have to bear the weight alone, nor are we expected to change the world. We just need to begin each day with a commitment to serve Jesus Christ our King. We do so when we resist the temptation to turn inward upon ourselves and instead adjust our attitude and focus outward. God is guiding us already through the love of the Holy Spirit, we just need to slow down and breathe so that we can feel safe enough and remain still long enough to receive his love, and choose to open our eyes to see, our ears to hear, and be willing to follow his will.

We are invited today, on this feast day of Christ the King, to remember who we are and whose we are. Are we willing to allow Jesus to re-orient, to re-align the order of our lives so that we also participate with St. Dismas, the traditional name given to the penitent thief? If so, we need to acknowledge our failures and sins, repent from the ways in which we have turned away from God and each other, and turn back to him. We will then be better able to serve Jesus our king and follow his command to be forgiving, merciful, loving, and to enter into the chaos of another, one person at a time.

When we are willing to be, as St Mother Teresa said, a pencil in God’s hand in our everyday moments, with each thought we entertain, before each word we speak, and before each action we take, and in every encounter we engage in, we follow God’s will. As we surrender to Jesus our king, follow the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, and accept the will of our Father in every circumstance, then with our last breath, we will know Jesus and hear his words, “Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise” (Lk 25:43).

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Photo: Ending the evening in prayer with my Savior and King, my God and my all.

The Mass readings for Sunday, November 23, 2025