St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church, Owings Mills MD
November 23, 2025
Year C, Proper 29: The Last Sunday after Pentecost – Christ the King
Jeremiah 23:1-6
Canticle 16
Colossians 1:11-20
Luke 23:33-43
Citizens of Christ’s Kingdom
About a hundred years ago, after the bloody upheaval of the First World War, some Christian leaders grew concerned that many Christians were no longer placing their ultimate trust in Jesus.
Instead, many Christians were putting their faith in human leaders – in the would-be “strongmen” of the time.
Many Christians were placing their faith in human ideologies like communism, fascism, and nationalism.
A big problem.
So, back in 1925, Pope Pius XI tried to remind Christians that it’s Jesus who holds ultimate authority – that it’s Jesus who should receive our ultimate trust.
The pope added a new observance to the Roman Catholic calendar, and soon other Christian denominations, like ours, did the same.
It’s the day that we celebrate today:
The Feast of Christ the King.
Today, on the last Sunday of the Church Year, the last Sunday before we begin Advent, before we prepare for Christmas, before we prepare for the day of judgment, today we are reminded that we are meant to place our ultimate trust, our ultimate faith, not in human leaders or human systems but in Jesus, in Christ the King.
We’ve been celebrating the Feast of Christ the King for a century now, and I think we can all admit that it really hasn’t worked.
Even if our knowledge of history is a little foggy, we all know that the last century has been filled with horrors, horrors that Pope Pius could not have begun to imagine back in 1925, horrors often committed by people who at least claimed to be Christians.
Sadly, tragically, Christians of every political persuasion have fallen for worldly leaders and their tempting promises.
Christians have twisted themselves to justify the unjustifiable, over and over again, right down to today.
So often, we Christians have forgotten, or chosen to forget, the truth that while our worldly allegiances and responsibilities are important, ultimately our true citizenship is in the Kingdom of Christ the King.
And it’s not hard to know why we keep making this mistake, why we keep swapping out Christ the King for someone or something else.
I mean, did you hear the gospel lesson that I just read?
(I’m told that their Thursday evening rehearsal, the choir puzzled over the choice of gospel lesson for this big day. What kind of king is this?)
I mean, it’s not a story about Christ reigning in glory.
It’s not a story about Christ triumphing over his enemies.
It’s not a story about how Christ’s followers will rule the earth.
No, it’s a story about Christ the King seemingly defeated, nailed to a tree like a criminal, dying alongside criminals.
It’s a story about Christ the King unable or unwilling to save himself, submitting to worldly power that mocks him, asking the Father to forgive the people who are tormenting him.
It’s a story about Christ the crucified King, willing to suffer, willing to give away his life to reveal the depth of God’s love for us all.
No shortcut, no easy victory, and no scapegoats, except for Christ the King himself.
Of course, we know the rest of the story, so we know that the way of the cross is the way to new life.
But we also know that this is a hard way, only possible with God’s help. And so, we Christians often choose shortcuts.
We take what look like easy victories.
We often pick on scapegoats, the people we hold responsible for all our troubles.
And yet.
And yet, although we Christians have often lost our way, often forgotten our truest citizenship, there have always been Christians who have remembered, who have called us back to the way, who have given away their lives in faithfulness to Christ the King.
I’m still thinking about our event a couple of weeks ago with Mark Gornik and others who were involved in the founding of New Song a few decades ago in the Sandtown neighborhood of Baltimore.
Those faithful Christians – not perfect people, but faithful Christians – moved into one of the most neglected neighborhoods in town with no real plan or strategy but to get to know and love the people who lived there – to see Christ in them – and to serve Christ by serving them through a health clinic, a school, recreation, housing and creating the opportunity of home ownership - love and forgiveness, success and failure - hope, especially when things seemed hopeless.
Not everything worked out, not everything has lasted, but Mark and the others modeled citizenship in Christ’s Kingdom.
And here at St. Thomas’, too, we know that our amazing outreach efforts – all those sandwiches, welcoming the Afghans, tutoring children at Owings Mills Elementary School, the Thanksgiving bags that threatened to take over the Old School Building last week – all these outreach efforts are not going to save, or even change the world very much.
But that’s not our concern.
This is how, with God’s help, we are required to act as citizens of Christ’s Kingdom.
So, about citizenship.
Like most, but not all, of you, I was born in this country. So, while I’ve certainly been grateful to be an American, my citizenship is something I’ve usually taken for granted – not something I think about very often.
Of course, that’s not true for people who are seeking US citizenship, not true for those naturalized citizens who had to study for a test that most of the rest of us would probably fail, people who had to raise their right hand and make a heartfelt pledge of allegiance.
I’ve never been to a naturalization ceremony, but I’ve seen pictures and videos, and it’s so moving - a beautiful reminder for all of us what American citizenship is supposed to be about.
And I think it’s kind of the same with baptism.
For most of us baptized as infants, we were pretty much born into it, right? We sort of take it all for granted.
But for adults who get baptized, and we’ve had a few in my time here, it’s different, of course.
This is why it’s so important that Baptism takes place right in the middle of our Sunday worship – it’s like witnessing a sacred naturalization ceremony, it’s a reminder for all of us that our truest citizenship is in the Kingdom of Christ the King.
When we witness the “naturalization” of the newest citizen of Christ’s kingdom, as we will with little Caden in just a few minutes, when we renew our baptismal promises, we are reminded of the responsibilities of our Christian citizenship:
To pray and to forgive.
To love and to serve.
A hundred years ago, the Church tried to remind us that our ultimate allegiance is not to worldly leaders or ideologies, but to Christ the King.
Christ the King – a very different king of a very different kingdom.
Our citizenship in Christ’s kingdom is not easy - there are heavy responsibilities, that we fulfill only with God’s help.
But it’s our citizenship in Christ’s kingdom that offers Caden, and all of us, the blessing of new and never-ending life.
Amen.


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