The feast of Christ the King, coming as it does at the end of the Church year, has acquired thereby an eschatological significance. Christ’s enthronement at the ascension is the opening act of his final eschatological reign, and his continued heavenly rule between the ascension and his return marks the progressive defeat of the powers of evil.
As we noted last Sunday, the Son of man in Daniel stands for the
people of the Lord, the saints of the Most High. We noted, too, that
a development of this concept took place in Jewish apocalyptic, so
that by the time of the New Testament the Son of man had become an
individual, heavenly figure, the agent of final judgment and
salvation.
It has been argued recently by a number of scholars that the New
Testament, especially the Gospels (for example,
Mk 14:62), finds the fulfillment of this prophecy in the
ascension of our Lord. In other words, the coming is
interpreted as a coming to the Ancient of Days and not
from heaven. We reject this interpretation as far as the
New Testament is concerned.
Christian faith must read the
First Reading
not as a prediction of what had already happened—that would be to
ignore the “not yet” character of the Christ-event and
make this passage more suitable for Ascension Day than for the last
day of the Christian year; rather, we must read it as a proclamation
(in mythological terms) of the final establishment of Christ’s
kingly rule.
For we do not yet see all things subdued under his feet. Not yet do
all peoples, nations, and languages serve him. That they will do so
at the End is an inalienable aspect of Christian hope.
Responsorial Psalm: 93:1, 1-2, 5
Psalm 93 is one of the enthronement psalms. Two points need to be
observed today. (1) The psalm originally spoke of
Yhwh’s kingship, not predicting the kingly rule of
Christ. (2) The kingdom of which it speaks is an eternal reality.
But for Christian interpretation, many texts of the Old Testament
that speak of Yhwh can be applied to Christ. It is through Christ,
from the time of his ascension on, that the Father exercises his
kingdom.
Indeed, following the precedent of Paul’s interpretation of
the Old Testament (that the rock was Christ), we may say that
already in the Old Testament, in the perspective of Christian faith,
God was exercising his kingly rule through Christ, if by Christ we
here mean not Jesus of Nazareth but God going out toward the world
and toward human beings in his revelatory and redemptive work
By starting at verse 5 instead of at the beginning of the sentence, our reading obscures the fact that this passage comes from the epistolary address of the Apocalypse. It is a greeting from Jesus Christ as well as from the Father and the seven spirits, Then a triple doxology follows.
Point 1: Christ loves us—note the present tense: Christ’s love is perpetual and goes beyond the historical event of the redemption (Jerome Biblical Commentary).
Point 2: The historical event of the atonement, couched in a traditional creedal formula.
Point 3: The effect of the redemption is to set up a community that shares Christ’s kingly and priestly functions.
After the doxology there follows a proclamation of the imminent
parousia, which is to be the theme of the whole apocalypse. This
proclamation draws upon a combination of Old Testament
testimonia, used elsewhere in the New Testament, from
Daniel 7:13-14
and
Zechariah 12:10.
The reading ends with a self-proclamation of Yhwh under
three titles: Alpha and Omega (a Hellenized expression of the Old
Testament’s “first and last”); a second title
asserting that God’s being comprises present, past, and future
(a reflection on the meaning of “Yhwh”?); and a
third title, Pantocrator (a Greek rendering of
Sabaoth, “hosts”).
Combined, the three titles look like a meditation on the meaning of
Kyrios ho theos, Yhwh ‘elohe sebaoth.
It is beyond all doubt that Jesus was crucified on the charge of
being a messianic pretender. This is established by the
titulus on the cross, handed down in various forms but
always agreeing on the essential core: “the King of the
Jews” (“King” being the Roman equivalent of
“Messiah”)
It is not certain precisely what attitude Jesus took toward this
charge at the investigation before the Sanhedrin and at his trial
before Pilate. Some traditions present him as preserving a stony
silence (pleading the fifth amendment, as it were), while others
present him as not rejecting the charge but as being at pains to
correct it (the answer “You say that I am a king” would
be equivalent to “It’s your word, not mine”).
In the Johannine version of the trial before Pilate, Jesus
explicitly corrects the charge by offering a reinterpretation of
what kingship means for him. This is done by his answers to three
questions put to him by Pilate.
First, Pilate asks him if he is a king. Jesus—in a reply that may be
traditional, for it is devoid of Johannine theology—asks where
Pilate got his idea. This is to establish the terms of the debate:
are we debating a charge trumped up by the Jewish authorities that I
am a messianic pretender? Pilate indicates that the charge
originated with the Jewish authorities and asks the defendant what
basis there is for his behavior.
Jesus’ second reply is negative. He says what his kingship is
not—it is not political in character (“of this world” is
Johannine; “world” means human society organized on the
basis of its unbelief).
But Jesus insists that in a certain sense, not as yet defined, he is
a king. Pilate therefore repeats the first question, thus giving
Jesus a chance to state his own definition of kingship. He has come
into the world to be the bearer of the divine revelation.
Here, then, we have a complete redefinition of messiahship or
kingship in terms of Johannine theology. “Truth” in
Johannine thought means the reality of God as seen through his
revelatory and redemptive action.