Summary: A sermon based on Revelation 1:4-8, focussing on the reign of Christ our King.

Sermon for Christ the King Sunday Yr B, 26/11/2006

Based on Rev 1:4-8

By Rev. Garth Wehrfritz-Hanson

Pastor of Grace Lutheran Church, &

Chaplain of The Good Samaritan Society’s

South Ridge Village, Medicine Hat, Alberta

“Christ’s Reign”

Sometimes, when writing exams, stressed-out students can come up with humorous answers, like the following: David was a Hebrew king skilled at playing the liar. Solomon, his son, had three hundred wives and five hundred porcupines. The Romans were called Romans because they never stayed in one place very long. Nero was a cruel tyrant who tortured his subjects by playing the fiddle. Then came the Middle Ages, when King Alfred conquered the Dames and the Magna Charta proved that no free person should be hanged twice for the same crime. The government of England was a limited mockery. Henry VIII found walking difficult because he had an abbess on his knees. Queen Elizabeth was the Virgin Queen. When she exposed herself before the troops, they all shouted, ‘Hurray!’ Then her navy went out and defeated the Spanish Armadillo. Queen Victoria was the longest queen. She sat on a thorn for sixty-three years.1

Today is the last Sunday of the Church Year, known as Christ the King Sunday, and Reign of Christ Sunday. In our second lesson today from the last book of the Bible, we learn something of Christ our King and his reign over us. Although some today are rather sceptical of kings and the exercise of their rule—and, unfortunately, the pages of history reveal the evil, corruption and tyranny of many kings to confirm such scepticism—nevertheless, the picture of Christ our King and his reign in our passage from Revelation is different and more full of hope. Unlike all the other kings of this world, Christ did not exercise his authority and power by becoming a tyrant like far too many other kings down through the ages. No, he is a different kind of King, and his reign is in stark contrast to that of all other kings. His power and authority are exercised much differently than other kings.

Some tell us that Jesus’ earthly life was not very important. They say he wrote no books, composed no songs, drew no pictures, carved no statues, amassed no fortune, commanded no army, ruled no nation. And yet…He who never wrote a line has been made the hero of unnumbered volumes. He who never wrote a song has put music into the hearts of nameless multitudes. He who never established an institution is the foundation of the Church that bears his name. He who refused the kingdoms of this world has become the Lord of millions. Yes, He whose shameful death scarcely produced a ripple on the pool of history in his day has become a mighty current in the vast ocean of the centuries since He died.2

This is the irony of Christ our King and his reign. He is, without doubt, the most famous King of all history in spite of the differences with which we measure greatness according to worldly standards; his greatness fills the universe through his self-giving love, while dying on the cross.

John, writing Revelation in exile on the island of Patmos, desires to encourage his audience, the churches in the Roman province of Asia. They lived under persecution, and faced many difficulties. So John wrote Revelation employing a symbolic, code-language. An underground language, which might reach his audience, the persecuted churches, without it being destroyed or censored by the secular authorities. That’s why the language of Revelation seems so strange to us and difficult to understand. There are many direct and indirect references to the Hebrew Bible. The descriptions of Christ are often unusual. Yet, John’s encouraging words emphasise who Jesus is and what he has done. When people of faith suffer and are persecuted by tyrannical kings, they may have the tendency give up on God or to forget that God is still the ultimate Ruler of history. God is in control of history. God is directing the events of history. This point is made in a creative way by John who speaks of God as “him who is and who was and who is to come,” and “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.” In other words, God is the God of the past, present and future. God is the Ruler over all time and history. The alpha and omega of course are the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet, and here they symbolize that God has been God from the beginning of time to the end of time, and beyond that into all of eternity.

Christ, says John, is King and reigns because he is God’s “faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth.” All three of these descriptions of Christ seem to emphasise his death, resurrection and the power and authority of Christ over earthly kings by virtue of his death and resurrection.

John continues to encourage his audience, knowing that they may have felt very weak and vulnerable because of the persecution and suffering they were living under. John encourages them with this message of hope, highlighting their identity as followers of Christ their King as a result of what he has done for us: “To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood, and made us to be a kingdom, priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.” We are loved unconditionally thanks to Jesus our King. We are set free thanks to what he did by conquering the powers of sin, death and evil on the cross. We are subjects of his kingdom, which is an eternal kingdom, and begins now in this life. We are made priests, we are the priesthood of all believers—we have direct access to God at all times, thanks to the saving work of Jesus our King through his crucifixion and resurrection. This, says John, is what it means to discover our identity in and through Christ.

While serving as a missionary in Laos, John Hess-Yoder discovered an illustration of the kingdom of God. Before the colonialists imposed national boundaries, the kings of Laos and Vietnam reached an agreement on taxation in the border areas. Those who ate short-grain rice, built their houses on stilts, and decorated them with Indian-style serpents were considered Laotians. On the other hand, those who ate long-grain rice, built their houses on the ground, and decorated them with Chinese-style dragons were considered Vietnamese. The exact location of a person’s home was not what determined their nationality. Instead, each person belonged to the kingdom whose cultural values he or she exhibited. So it is with us, we live in the world, but as part of God’s kingdom, we are to live according to his kingdom’s standards and values.3

What are those standards and values? Well, as baptized people of Christ our King, we a called to be His Presence in the world—his body, his mouth, hands and feet, and so on. Our calling and vocation as citizens of his realm is to be bearers of unconditional, self-giving, agape-love; turning enemies into friends; reaching out to those who are most difficult to love. Disciples of peace in a world of hostility, conflict and war. Heralds of hope to the hopeless; offering encouragement to one another as well as to friends, neighbours and strangers. Messengers of joy; celebrating Christ’s Presence within and among us; and sharing that joy with sorrowful, depressed and hurting people. Such are the standards and values as subjects of Christ our King.

Today, then, may we take comfort in, be encouraged by, and find hope in Christ our King who is with us always, in every time and place. Amen.

1. Bernard Brunsting, The Ultimate Guide To Good Clean Humor (Uhrichsville, OH: Barbour Publishing, Inc., 2000), pp. 209-211.

2. Citation from Mack Stokes in: James S. Hewett, Editor, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1988), p. 73.

3. John Hess-Yoder, .