To read the texts click on the texts: Ezek 34:11-12,15-17; 1 Cor 15:20-26, 28; Mt 25:31-46
Quas
Primas (Latin for “In the first”) was an
encyclical of Pope Pius XI promulgated on December 11, 1925. It
introduced the Feast of Christ the King. World War I (1914-1918) had ended, and
had not brought real peace, but more hatred, anger and violence. Coming as it
did after the end of the War, the encyclical sought to give the world, as a
whole, a new idea of kingship by asking it to look at Christ the Universal
King, and how he lived out his kingship. Christ is a King who totally
identifies with his subjects, particularly the marginalized – the poorest of
the poor.
This identification is made explicit
not only in the Gospel text for the feast but also in the first reading of
today.
In the first reading, Ezekiel
talks about God as the shepherd of Israel. The kings of Israel were regarded as
God’s visible representatives and were given the divine title of shepherd. But
many of them did not live up to this responsibility. Their leadership style
differed from that of God’s. God’s style was that of giving priority of
attention to the needs of the disadvantaged, especially their need for justice
and empowerment. First God raised up prophets, like Ezekiel, to warn the kings.
When they failed to listen, God decided to get rid of the ungodly kings and
their beneficiaries, and promised that he would shepherd the flock himself. The
defeat of Israel by her enemies, in which the big people, the royalty and the
nobility, were banished into exile, was seen as God’s way of getting rid of the
bad leadership.
The Gospel text which continues
the theme of the first reading is not so much about the kingship of Jesus.
Rather, it is a passage about the “kingdom” of God, about all those who kin to
God, and, therefore, who are kin to each other. We are all kin to one another.
We are all indeed one. The deepest expression of this truth, on this side of
life, is a spirituality in which there
is no split between our devotion and our deed; no split between mystery and
commandment,; no split between piety and ethics and no split between being and
doing. Like mystery and commandment, interwoven as they are, Jesus is one with
the hungry and the thirsty, is one with the stranger and the prisoner, and is
one with the naked and the sick. To care for these is to care for Jesus. To
care for them is to reach back into the very essence of life and to touch the
God who is in and with the hungry, the thirsty…” And then the king will answer
them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these, who
are members of my family, you did it to me.”
The text, thus, is not so much
God’s condemnation of some people, as it is about the universal vision of the
love of God, about the very scope of God’s love in Jesus for the whole world.
Jesus remains the model of unconditional and eternal love. This was shown in
the most powerful of ways by Jesus himself, when in total obedience to the
Father, he dared to spread his arms on the Cross in total surrender of self.
Therefore, God raised him.
This understanding is important
to avoid any kind of misinterpretation that might arise due to a person
thinking that it is his/her deeds that earn merit and reward. The righteous who
reached out to the least of their brothers and sisters, did so because they
understood it was necessity to help, love, serve, visit and feed. They dared to
listen to the promptings of the Spirit and responded to these promptings. They
did not do what they did for reward. They did not earn the kingdom but
inherited it. Inheritance is determined by the giver not the receiver. The
kingdom remains a free gift of God.
Though the unrighteous also
addresses Jesus as Lord, it is not enough. Their address remains at the
theoretical level and is not translated into action. They did not act because
they did not believe that God could hide himself in the poorest of the poor.
They did not realize that our God had been made visible in Jesus, who taught
all who were willing to listen, that God was primarily a God of the poor, and
that though he was king, he came only to serve.
The sufferings borne by the
last of our brothers and sisters continue to summon and challenge us as Church
today. They continue to ask us to dare to be credible and authentic witnesses
of the Gospel. However, what we need is not merely more action, more doing for
the sake of doing. No! What our King demands is a universal unity of love and
togetherness. It is a togetherness that transcends all of our frontiers, the
frontiers of our mind and of our heart, the frontiers of our creeds and
doctrines – all of those externals that keep us apart, that keep us apart that
keep us separated and split.
The challenge for us today is
to forget our own needs and reach out in love to make someone else, who may be
in greater need, happy. For whatever we do to the least needy children of God,
these brothers and sisters of Jesus, we do to him.
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