Sunday, November 26, 2006

BCP - Proper 29 B - 26 Nov 2006 - Christ the King

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Brother Scott Wesley Borden, OHC
BCP – Proper 29 B - Sunday 26 November 2006
Christ the King

Daniel 7:9-14
Revelation 1:1-8
John 18:33-37

I bid you a joyful feast of Christ the King... though to be honest, I have never been too keen on this feast. Christ as King is not the image of Jesus I relate to.

That’s where I start. I also want to confess that I thought perhaps I’d coast a bit this Sunday. I thought maybe I could just “borrow” a bit from someone who is more comfortable with the feast... So I Googled up some examples of how other people approach this day...

One reflection caught my eye. The writer, I’ll call him “the other guy”, noted that while Americans may place a very high value on democracy, God does not. God has no need of democracy. Christ is King... period... end of story.

The other guy goes on that in God’s kingdom - the place where Christ the King is king - we will need to know everything about obedience and nothing about thinking. Moreover, the other guy concludes that the time to start getting ready for the kingdom is now... stop thinking and start obeying!

I can’t say that the other guy’s reflection really opens up this particular feast for me... But it does help me focus my discomfort.

And as I look at Jesus interaction with Pilate reported in this morning’s Gospel, I can’t help but think Jesus is also a bit uncomfortable with the assumptions we make about kingship and power.

“So you are king?” Pilate asks. “You say that I am king” Jesus answers. I hear Jesus saying: “That’s your language... That’s your projection...”

Jesus has already told us his Kingdom is not from this world - not an earthly kingdom. The rules of our world don’t apply. All our wonderful metaphors based on crowns and diadems, thrones, orbs, and scepters, all our glorious pomp and circumstance are not going to tell us much about the Kingdom of where Christ is King.

And yet we try to understand by amplifying our world. Jesus, and by extension God, is the most extreme... We might have powerful leaders here on earth - but Christ the King is mighty in the extreme. We might have loving parents here on earth, but God is the most extremely loving father. We might have great riches here on earth, but heaven is extremely rich, rich beyond imagining - its very streets are paved with gold. But why do we think heaven’s streets need to be paved at all? Or that gold makes better pavement than concrete or asphalt. Or that heaven even has anything that resembles streets?

Sigmund Freud said “God is the human father, writ large, and projected against the sky.” Of course Dr. Freud is not telling us anything about God, but he is telling us a great deal about the way we think about God. We take our human ideals, blow them out of proportion and look to find them in the heavens.

This is where my discomfort with the Feast of Christ the King has its toes. This Sunday, at its worst, gives us permission to project away. Whatever we know or imagine about earthly kings, we can blow it up really big and project it against the sky. When God starts to resemble a very big, very powerful version of us, we are in trouble.

Curiously - I don’t think this is a problem. Not for me, not for you, not even for the other guy who wants Christ the King to be the most absolute dictator that could ever possibly be.

Its not a problem if I’m self aware enough to understand that I (and everyone) always have and always will project my stuff on God. It is a problem when I kid myself into believing that I don’t project my stuff on God - or that someone else has a vision of God free of their own projections.

As long as I can hold in mind that my image of God always contains a substantial dose of my own projection, that image can help me grow in knowledge of God and self. But I have to be ready to encounter my own projections and face them.

All this projection on God is also not a problem in that God is truly not affected by my projections, or, for that matter, by the other guy’s projections. God is God. There is a Buddhist saying that it doesn’t matter what we think about Nirvana, because Nirvana will be what Nirvana is. Likewise, God will be what God is - whether I choose to think about Christ the most glorious kingly figure, or the most meekly suffering servant.

Its not that what I think doesn’t matter - it matters a great deal in how I live my life. But God will be what God is, regardless of my thoughts. That gives me cause to be very humble, and, as the other guy demands, obedient.

I think the other guy is on to something when he says that in the kingdom where Christ is King, democracy has no place. But I think he needs to go further. In the kingdom where Christ is King, earthly monarchs are also out of place.

The other guy is right that obedience will be of great importance in the kingdom where Christ is King, but I think he is stuck with an earthly notion of obedience as the mindless carrying out of orders with relentless precision. Jesus leads the way in terms of obedience, and it is not mindless, not thoughtless.

Where I agree fully with the other guy is in the idea that now is when we start getting ready for the kingdom where Christ is King. We start by looking to the life of Jesus.

Based on the way Jesus lived his life on this earth, we can be certain that economic injustice, for example, has no place in the kingdom. Getting ready for the kingdom where Christ is King means coming to terms with our tolerance of economic injustice - our society celebrates the extremely rich while paying little mind to the extremely poor.

Based on the way Jesus lived his life on this earth, we can know that in the kingdom where Christ is King the homeless mentally ill will be of greater importance than Sam Walton, or Bill Gates, or you, or me... Can we honestly defend our present way of serving our homeless, or mentally ill, or other vulnerable brothers and sisters.

In the kingdom where Christ is King swords are beaten into plow shares and justice flows like a mighty river watering all the earth. What are we doing with our swords? And isn’t our river of justice leaving a few spots high and dry?

In the kingdom where Christ is King the meek inherit everything, the sorrowful are comforted, those who’s spirits are broken are made whole, those who hunger for justice are satisfied, and those who make peace are closest to the King. The Gospels never stop telling us about the kingdom where Christ is King.

On this feast of Christ the King we are invited to journey away from earthly concepts of power and might and open our hearts to the Kingdom of Jesus.

We see glimpses of this kingdom breaking into our world. ...not in the rich and powerful, but in the homeless person we are able to help... in the shut-in we are able to visit... in the child we are able to nurture... in the purring of a cat or the wagging tail of a dog... in the simple joy we will share as we hug each other and exchange the peace just a few moments from now.

I started out highly suspicious of this feast of Christ the King and I find that I have fallen in love...

For we all see the kingdom where Christ is King - not fully in focus... not completely in view... not in vibrant technicolor... but we see it nonetheless.

These glimpses of the Kingdom are a gift and a challenge - a call. What better way to celebrate this feast of Christ the King than by focusing on these glimpses and growing in the direction of the Kingdom.

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