Sunday, December 7, 2025

Prepárense ahora para lo que vendrá después de Navidad.

 Homily: 2nd Sunday of Advent – Cycle A

Aunque nunca he organizado una boda, me doy cuenta de que requiere muchísima preparación. Una vez que se elige la fecha y se confirma, de repente aparecen todo tipo de plazos: reservar el salón para la recepción, contratar un fotógrafo, encargar las flores, elegir el servicio de catering, comprar los vestidos y los trajes, etc. Planificar una boda implica mucho trabajo y estoy seguro de que hay que hacer muchos sacrificios para que todo salga bien (incluidos todos los estereotipos de las novias que se someten a dietas y ejercicios intensos para poder lucir ese vestido perfecto que encontraron, ¿verdad?). Los días y meses previos a la boda se convierten en una especie de "temporada de preparativos", en la que la ansiedad (y el estrés) por la celebración aumentan, pero en la que la celebración en sí nunca llega a comenzar. ///

El Adviento es un tiempo de preparación. Al igual que la Cuaresma, que nos prepara para la celebración de la Pascua, el Adviento es el tiempo en que nos preparamos para la celebración de la primera venida de Cristo entre nosotros, cuando nació en Belén. Es un tiempo para planificar con anticipación, organizando todo para que nuestra celebración de la Navidad sea lo más alegre y memorable posible. Al igual que la preparación para una boda, es un tiempo en el que crece la ansiedad (y, a veces, el estrés) por la celebración, pero en el que la celebración aún no ha comenzado.

Bueno, además de todas las razones prácticas y concretas por las que esto es necesario (por ejemplo, ¡sería carísimo intentar celebrar la boda durante las cuatro semanas previas al gran día!), existen muchas otras razones espirituales que hacen que este tiempo de preparación sea importante para nosotros. Como sabemos, el hombre y la mujer que deciden casarse deben prepararse no solo para el día de la boda, sino para todo lo que viene después: es decir, para su vida juntos, que comienza en ese gran día de celebración. Después de la boda, sus vidas serán radicalmente diferentes, y si no están preparados para aceptar esos cambios, la alegría de la boda se desvanecerá rápidamente; e incluso podrían llegar a preguntarse si toda la preparación valió la pena.

Nosotros, como cristianos, también debemos considerar estos tiempos de preparación, como el Adviento, no solo como momentos para prepararnos para la celebración de las fiestas más importantes de Nuestro Señor, como la Navidad, sino también como momentos para prepararnos para todo lo que vendrá después del día de la celebración. Esto se debe a que nuestra celebración de la Navidad, si se vive plenamente, debería transformarnos de alguna manera; y aunque nuestras vidas quizás no cambien radicalmente después de la Navidad, sí deberían ser diferentes. En esta primera parte del Adviento, reflexionamos sobre el cumplimiento de la primera venida de Cristo y recordamos nuestra necesidad de estar preparados para su segunda venida al final de los tiempos. Esto concuerda perfectamente con la idea de prepararnos para lo que sucederá después del día de Navidad, y esto es precisamente lo que las Escrituras nos invitan a considerar hoy.

En la lectura del Evangelio de hoy, Juan el Bautista llama a todos al arrepentimiento para prepararse para la venida del Mesías. Su llamado fue mucho más que la trillada frase de "¡Jesús viene, pónganse a trabajar!". Más bien, fue un llamado al verdadero arrepentimiento, porque cuando el Mesías aparezca, todo será diferente. Por eso, dirigió palabras duras a los fariseos y saduceos que se acercaban a él. Les advertía que el arrepentimiento debía ser sincero, de corazón, y no solo una mera apariencia, porque el tiempo del Mesías será un tiempo en que las obras de todos quedarán al descubierto. Por lo tanto, no bastará con decir: "Soy hijo de Abraham" (pues Dios, como señaló Juan, ¡puede sacar hijos de Abraham de las piedras!). Más bien, cada uno debe demostrar su arrepentimiento con buenas obras. Así vemos que su llamado al arrepentimiento no era solo una preparación para celebrar el día de la venida del Mesías, sino un llamado a prepararse para vivir en un mundo radicalmente transformado por su llegada. Quienes no lo hagan se encontrarán en conflicto con el Señor: quizás incluso serán "cortados de raíz", como un árbol que no da fruto.

San Pablo, que conoció la primera venida de Cristo, esperaba con anhelo su regreso y por eso continuó enseñando a los primeros cristianos: “¡No vuelvan a sus viejas costumbres! Ese mundo ha terminado, el nuevo ya está aquí y sigue llegando. Por lo tanto, deben vivir ahora como si ya estuvieran en su plenitud. Se han estado preparando durante mucho tiempo. Ahora, todo ha cambiado y por eso deben vivir de manera diferente, como si el mundo de paz y armonía sobre el que profetizó Isaías ya se hubiera hecho realidad entre nosotros. De hecho”, parece decir, “su comunidad debería ser un lugar de encuentro con esta plenitud”.

Así, San Pablo ora para que Dios les conceda la gracia de “vivir en perfecta armonía unos con otros” para que “con un solo corazón y una sola voz alaben a Dios, Padre de nuestro Señor Jesucristo”. Entonces… solo entonces serán como “bandera de los pueblos” que “buscarán todas las naciones”, como profetizó Isaías, y la salvación de Dios se extenderá a todos los pueblos.

Recordamos estas lecturas hoy porque nuestra tarea sigue siendo la misma que la de los cristianos del primer siglo. Si realmente anhelamos el mundo sobre el que profetizó Isaías, entonces debemos vivir como San Pablo enseñó a los cristianos de Roma. Para ello, necesitamos apartarnos del pecado, como nos exhorta San Juan Bautista. Sobre todo, necesitamos hacer sacrificios (como el ayuno y la oración) durante este tiempo de preparación para estar listos no solo para celebrar el aniversario del nacimiento de Cristo en Navidad, sino también para vivir como cristianos renovados que siguen anhelando su venida en los días posteriores.

Esto, por supuesto, es difícil en una cultura que se apresura a celebrar la Navidad. Se necesita disciplina y un espíritu de penitencia para resistir la tentación de celebrar antes del día de la celebración. Sin embargo, esta es una época del año santa y llena de gracia, por lo que mi oración para todos ustedes es que puedan resistir esta tentación y, de esta manera, permitir que su expectación crezca; para que los fortalezca y los prepare para vivir, con renovada alegría, la próxima celebración.

Que la venida del Señor a nosotros, que experimentamos aquí en esta Sagrada Eucaristía, nos ayude a emprender esta buena obra de preparación para que el cumplimiento de lo que anhelamos–es decir, la verdadera armonía entre toda la creación–se haga realidad ahora, en nuestro tiempo.

Dado el la parroquia de San José: Rochester, IN – 7 de diciembre 2025


Prepare now for what comes after Christmas

 Homily: 2nd Sunday of Advent – Cycle A

Although I’ve never actually planned a wedding, I can tell that there is a lot of preparation work that goes into it.  Once you choose a day and set it in stone, all sorts of deadlines suddenly appear before you: reserve a hall for the reception, reserve a photographer, order flowers, choose a caterer, shop for dresses and tuxedos, etc.  There is a lot of planning that goes into celebrating a wedding and I’m sure a lot of sacrifices have to be made in order to plan it well (including all the stereotypes of brides taking on intense diets and exercise so as to fit into that perfect dress that they found, right?).  The days and months leading up to the wedding become a “season of preparation” of sorts, in which the anxiety (and the stress) for the celebration grows, but in which the celebration never actually begins. ///

Advent is a time of preparation.  Like Lent, which prepares us for the celebration of Easter, Advent is the time when we prepare for our celebration of Christ’s first coming among us when he was born in Bethlehem.  It is a time to plan ahead, putting the things in place so that our celebration of Christmas is as joy-filled and memorable as it could be.  Like preparing for a wedding, it is intended to be a time in which the anxiety (and, sometimes, the stress) for the celebration grows, but in which the celebration doesn’t yet begin.

Now, aside from all of the concrete practical reasons for which this is necessary (e.g. it would be really expensive to try to celebrate your wedding for four weeks leading up to the wedding day!), there are many other spiritual reasons that make this time of preparation important for us.  As we know, the man and the woman who decide to marry must prepare not only for the wedding day, but for everything that comes after the wedding day: that is, their life together, which begins on that great day of celebration.  After their wedding day, their lives will be radically different, and, if they are not prepared to embrace those differences, then they will find that the joy of their wedding will quickly fade; and they may begin to question whether or not all of the preparation was worth it, after all.

We, too, as Christians, should look at these seasons of preparation, like Advent, not only as times to prepare for the celebration of the greatest feasts of Our Lord, like Christmas, but also as times to prepare for everything that comes after the day of celebration.  This is because our celebration of Christmas, if done well, should change us in some way; and although our lives might not be radically different after Christmas, they should still be different.  In this first part of Advent we consider the fulfillment of Christ’s first coming and remind ourselves of our need to be ready for his second coming at the end of time.  This fits right in with the idea of preparing for what will happen after Christmas Day and this is exactly what our Scriptures ask us to consider today.

In our Gospel reading, John the Baptist is calling all to repent in order to prepare for the coming of the Messiah.  His call was more than the trite “bumper sticker prophesy” of “Jesus is coming: look busy!”  Rather, it was a call to true repentance, because when the Messiah appears everything is going to be different.  This is why he had strong words for the Pharisees and the Sadducees who were coming out to him.  He was warning them that this had to be a repentance from the heart and not just for show, because the time of the Messiah will be a time when the works of all will be laid bare.  Therefore, it will not be enough to say “I am a son of Abraham” (for God, as John pointed out, can raise up sons of Abraham from the rocks!).  Rather, each must prove their repentance by their good works.  So we see, his call to repentance was not just a preparation to celebrate the day of the Messiah’s coming, but rather it was a call to prepare to live in a world that had been radically changed by his coming.  Those who fail to do so will find themselves at odds with the Lord: perhaps even “cut down at the root”, like a tree that produces no fruit.

Saint Paul, who knew of Christ's first coming, anxiously anticipated his return and so continued to teach the first Christians: “Do not turn back to your old ways!  That world is over, the new one is here and is still coming.  Therefore, you must live now as if you are already there in its fullness.  You’ve been preparing for so long.  Now, everything has changed and so you must live differently as if the world of peace and harmony about which Isaiah prophesied has already been realized among us.  In fact,” he seems to say, “your community ought to be a place of encounter with this fulfillment.”

Thus, Saint Paul prays that God will give them the grace to “think in harmony with one another” so that “with one accord [they] may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.”  Then… then they will be the “signal for the nations” that “the Gentiles shall seek out”, as Isaiah prophesied, and God’s salvation will be extended to all people.

We recount these readings here today because our task is still the same as it was for the Christians of the first century.  If we are truly anticipating the world about which Isaiah prophesied, then we must be living as Saint Paul taught the Roman Christians to live.  In order to do so, we need to turn away from our sin, like Saint John the Baptist calls us to do.  Most especially, we need to make sacrifices (such as fasting and praying) during this time of preparation so that we are ready not only to celebrate the anniversary of Christ’s birth on Christmas Day, but also to live as renewed Christians who are still anxious for his coming in the days that follow it.

This, of course, is hard to do in a culture that is quick to jump to the celebration of Christmas.  One must have discipline and a spirit of penitence to resist the temptation to celebrate before the day of celebration.  This is a holy and grace-filled time of year, however, and so my prayer for all of you is that you can resist this temptation, and so let your anticipation grow; so that it might stretch and strengthen you to live–with renewed joy–the coming celebration. ///

May the Lord’s coming to us that we experience here in this Holy Eucharist help us to take up this good work of preparation so that the fulfillment of what we anticipate—that is, true harmony among all creation—might be realized now, in our time.

Given in Spanish at St. Joseph Parish: Rochester, IN – December 7th, 2025


Monday, December 1, 2025

The Second Coming is our hope

 Homily: 1st Sunday of Advent – Cycle A

It’s always good to be back home during the Thanksgiving holiday and break.  I pretty rarely get to spend more than a day or two here with my family, so I relish these days.  Back home in Indiana I don’t watch much TV (traditional, streaming, or otherwise), but when I’m visiting home, given that my family spends more time than I watching TV, I end up watching more than usual.  I mention this because, on Thanksgiving evening, I ended up sitting and watching a replay of the movie Mary Poppins with my parents.  It was a delight!  Julie Andrews, Dick Van Dyke… c’mon.  If you can’t smile watching that movie, you might just need a long hug, ya know?

One of the things that stuck with me after watching the movie, was that Mary Poppins seemed to be someone who had it all together.  In other words, her life seemed to be lacking nothing.  She was perfectly content, supremely confident, devastatingly charming, and seemingly unconcerned that anything would go wrong that she couldn’t handle herself.  In fact, her life seemed to be “practically perfect in every way.”

For us, it is a fun diversion to think about a life that is “practically perfect in every way”, and unrestrained by many of the limitations that we experience in our lives.  But it’s just not our lives, is it?  For the many joys that we can experience in our lives, there are, nonetheless, a lot of struggles, too.  Often, these struggles can be overwhelming.  And as much as this “season of giving” promises to provide relief, it often isn’t quite enough to take away the disquiet that remains within us.  The “disquiet” that says, “My life is not all right”, and “The world is not all right”.  It’s an unsettled-ness that, in our more quiet moments of the day–early morning, lying half awake in bed or those moments after you turn the TV off at night as you’re preparing for rest–stirs within us and clouds our thoughts.

Imagine for a moment a non-Christian–one who’s never heard of the Good News that God is real and that he has come among us to save us–imagine this person realizing for the first time that his life is not all right, and that the world is not all right, and that, in truth, it never will be.  Imagine the despair that this person would feel knowing that, no matter how hard he worked for the good, and no matter how many people he could (in his limited capacity) rally to join him in working for the good, his life and the world would never be “all right”, but that limitations, brokenness, and suffering would always be something with which he would have to contend and with no promise that anything better would be attained after this life ended.  To me, that doesn’t seem like a very pleasant place to be.  Yet, if we pay close attention to what is happening in us, this desperate idea is the source of the disquiet in all of us.

Most non-Christians, I would guess, and (sadly) a lot of Christians, I assert, just try to ignore the disquiet of these realities.  How do I know?  Because I sit in the confessional.  There, I often hear things like, “Father, I just keep trying and things don’t seem to be getting better” and “I pray and I pray, but nothing seems to change”.  These are statements of a person who has lost sight of the end and is despairing because her life isn’t “all right”, and the world isn’t “all right”, and it never will be.  But what if there was a way to soothe the disquiet in all of us and to have hope in the midst of a hopeless situation? /// Friends, welcome to Advent!

You see, Advent is about hope.  “No, Father, Advent is about celebrating Christmas!”  Okay, sure, but only secondarily.  Primarily, Advent is our yearly reminder of “the reason for our hope”: namely, that God so loved the world that he sent his only begotten Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish, but may have eternal life.”  But not only that (which, frankly, would be enough), Advent is our yearly reminder that he is here with us still and that he is coming again to bring and end to this imperfect world and to usher in the new creation–that is, the world that is “all right”, so that we might live “all right” lives for all eternity.  In other words, Advent is our reminder to have hope: a firm belief that a better future is ahead of us; and not simply that this world, in all its limitations will be made “all right”, but rather that the one who is to come will make all things new–with no limitations–a creation in which the harmony of the first Garden is restored–something far beyond anything even Mary Poppins’ “practically perfect” life could imagine.

Thus, on this first Sunday of Advent, we hear this hope-filled prophecy from Isaiah: “In days to come…”  “In days to come” is one of my favorite phrases in Isaiah, because it almost always foretells a coming turn of events that will lead to a desperate situation being made new.  In this case, it is the end of the Babylonian exile and the restoration of the temple mount in Jerusalem.  But not only that, it is also the foretelling of the coming fulfillment of the covenant promise that God had made to his chosen people, the Israelites: that nations and peoples will no longer war against each other and strive to deprive others of resources to their own advantage, but that all will stream together towards Jerusalem to worship God and live in harmony and prosperity–swords turned into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks.  In short, an establishment of universal unity, harmony and peace… the very things that each of us, in our hearts, wishes we could see today.

As Christians, we know that God has sent his Son to save us.  It is the very reason we gather on each Sunday: to celebrate the Paschal Mystery by which Christ, through his passion, death, resurrection, and ascension, has redeemed us and restored our relationship with God.  The season of Advent is our reminder to look eagerly for his second coming: that is, not to “fall asleep” in the daily grind of life and thus forget that there is hope for what is yet to come.  The strength of this hope is that he has already come, which is why we connect this yearly reminder to look for his second coming to the season of preparation that ends with our celebration of his first coming.  This year, as we celebrate the Jubilee Year of Hope, we have even more reasons to celebrate and to look longingly for his return.

And so, how do we prepare?  That is, how do we prepare in hope for his second coming?  Well, let me say something unpopular.  It’s not by putting up trees and holiday decorations.  (I’m just sayin’.)  Rather, it’s by following Saint Paul’s admonition from the second reading.  Let’s hear it again:

Brothers and sisters:

You know the time;

it is the hour now for you to awake from sleep.

For our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed;

the night is advanced, the day is at hand.

Let us then throw off the works of darkness

and put on the armor of light;

let us conduct ourselves properly as in the day,

not in orgies and drunkenness,

not in promiscuity and lust,

not in rivalry and jealousy.

But put on the Lord Jesus Christ,

and make no provision for the desires of the flesh.

These are strong words, but necessary for us to hear in this season that often gets overwhelmed with dinner parties and family gatherings that can stir up old “rivalries and jealousy”.  Our work this Advent–our work of hope–is to look past these things, acknowledging them as parts of our lives and our world that is not “all right”, and to look towards the one who is to come and so “put on the armor of light” and to “conduct ourselves properly as in the day”; so that we might be ready: both to celebrate with proper joy the anniversary of his first coming, as well as the day when he comes again. ///

“We need a little Christmas, right this very minute…”  No, what we need is a little Advent: a season that reminds us to look beyond the limited joy we can experience in this world towards the infinite joy that is yet to come.  And so, as we begin this new year of grace, let’s resolve to stay awake, and to strengthen (and give witness to) our hope in Christ’s second coming: the coming that all of us (Christian and non-Christian) unknowingly desire in our hearts, and which is foreshadowed for us by his presence here, in this Eucharist.

Given at Saint Mary Nativity Parish: Joliet, IL – November 30th, 2025


Sunday, November 23, 2025

No "No Reyes" pero "Si, Rey!"

 Homilía: 34o Domingo en el Tiempo Ordinario – Ciclo C

Solemnidad de Nuestro Senor Jesucristo, Rey del Universo

Hermanos y hermanas, al celebrar esta gran fiesta de Cristo Rey, recuerdo acontecimientos recientes en las noticias: en concreto, las protestas "No Reyes" que han tenido lugar en varias partes de nuestro país este año. Como lo entiendo, estas manifestaciones de protesta pretendían destacar lo que algunos consideran las acciones altamente autoritarias de nuestro presidente actual. Si bien no me atreveré a decir nada sobre el fundamento de sus afirmaciones... francamente, no las he investigado lo suficiente como para saber qué son exactamente... puedo reconocer que hay algo muy "estadounidense" en alzarse y protestar contra cualquier cosa que suene a regreso al gobierno autocrático de un rey. La razón por la que declaramos la independencia hace casi 250 años fue liberarnos del gobierno autocrático de un rey; y, durante casi 250 años, nos hemos esforzado por "gobernarnos a nosotros mismos" mediante un gobierno representativo. En pocas palabras: resistirse a ser gobernado por un rey es algo fundamental para ser estadounidense. (Y sospecho que, para cada uno de ustedes, sin importar de dónde sean originalmente, tienen un sentimiento similar.)

Como cristianos, sin embargo, reconocemos que servimos a un rey: el Rey… Jesucristo; y entonces, ¿cómo conciliamos esta verdad con nuestra resistencia fundamental a ser gobernados por un rey? En otras palabras, ¿cómo podemos, como cristianos, permitirnos ser gobernados por un rey y, al mismo tiempo, resistirnos a serlo? Resulta que la respuesta es: “No es fácil”, pero veamos por qué.

Para empezar, deberíamos preguntarnos: "¿En qué se diferencia el Rey de otros reyes (o del efímero "rey autócrata" contra el que los estadounidenses protestaron recientemente)? ​​Comienza, por supuesto, con el hecho de que el Rey no es autócrata. En otras palabras, no es un rey que gobierna a sus súbditos con mano de hierro, creyendo, ante todo, que sus súbditos le sirven, en lugar de ver su posición como una de servicio a sus súbditos (el servicio de verlos prosperar). Los reyes autócratas tienden a estar absortos en sí mismos, creyendo que necesitan acumular poder y autoridad–ya sea por vanidad o por temor a perder la realeza si dejan que el poder se les escape de las manos. El Rey, Jesucristo, nos muestra que un verdadero rey es más como un pastor: alguien que usa su posición y autoridad para servir a quienes gobierna, garantizando su seguridad y esforzándose por fomentar las condiciones para su salud y prosperidad. El Rey incluso se describió a sí mismo de esta manera: "Yo soy el Buen Pastor que da su vida por sus ovejas.” El Rey, Jesucristo, es diferente de los reyes autocráticos porque ve la realeza como un llamado a servir a aquellos a quienes gobierna, y no como un cargo que debe ser desempeñado por aquellos que están sujetos a él.

Otra diferencia de el Rey es que su reinado es imperecedero. Una de las presiones que enfrentan los reyes del mundo es que un día morirán y su reinado pasará a manos de otro. Por ello, a menudo sienten la necesidad de consolidar el poder para asegurar una transición fluida hacia un heredero. Si el rey es autocrático, tomará medidas para asegurarse de que el heredero sea alguien elegido personalmente por él para asegurar que su legado de gobierno perdure tras su muerte. El Rey, Jesucristo, tiene un reinado imperecedero. Por lo tanto, no tiene por qué preocuparse por ceder su poder a otro, ni por tener favoritismos mientras busca un heredero que lo suceda en el trono. No, a través de cada generación, puede seguir pastoreando a su pueblo sin temor a perder el poder ni la autoridad de su reinado.

Vemos esto en las Escrituras, ¿verdad? A lo largo de los Evangelios, Jesús nunca busca quitarle poder ni autoridad a nadie. Siempre que realizaba un milagro y quienes lo presenciaban querían aclamarlo rey, él se alejaba y no les permitía seguir adelante. Cuando desafiaba a los escribas y fariseos, nunca exigía que los destituyeran de sus cargos y que él los reemplazará. Nunca hizo declaraciones políticas contra los gobernadores romanos, sino que recordaba al pueblo una y otra vez que no se dejarán llevar demasiado por la autoridad política; en cambio, los guiaba hacia el reino de Dios, que era su verdadero hogar.

De hecho, la mayor afirmación de su realeza fue cuando entró triunfalmente en Jerusalén (en lo que hoy conocemos como Domingo de Ramos) y permitió que el pueblo aclamarlo como el “Hijo de David”, el gran rey israelita. Sin embargo, ni siquiera esto fue una afirmación de poder, pues, como veremos, esta entrada triunfal no lo llevó a sentarse en un trono real, sino a ser clavado en el madero de una cruz: el pastor se convirtió en el cordero del sacrificio para salvar a todas las ovejas.

Por eso hoy leemos este relato del Evangelio de San Lucas. Es la imagen de Cristo Rey sentado en el único trono terrenal que jamás aceptó; y esto no porque fuese derrotado, sino porque precisamente así salvaría a sus ovejas y regresaría triunfante a su trono eterno en el reino de Dios.

Así que, no, mis queridos hermanos y hermanas, como estadounidenses (o mexicanos, guatemaltecos, hondureños, etc.), no es fácil aceptar la idea de honrar a un rey… nuestras "sensibilidades liberales" naturalmente se estremecen ante la idea. Sin embargo, no debemos temer reconocer a nuestro Señor Jesucristo como el Rey… y, por lo tanto, nuestro Rey. Porque él es el único rey que no puede ser corrompido y, por tanto, que siempre gobernará de manera de servir al florecimiento de su pueblo. Pero esto solo puede suceder si nos sometemos a él.

Y ese es el quid de la cuestión, ¿no? ¿Podemos dejar que nuestro Buen Rey sea Señor de nuestras vidas? El reto para nosotros es grande, porque tenemos tanto control sobre nuestras vidas. Sin embargo, la invitación de la celebración de hoy es esta: reflexionar sobre el bien que ha resultado de entregar ciertas áreas de nuestra vida al señorío de Jesús, nuestro Rey, y luego identificar aquellas áreas que aún necesitan serle entregadas. Luego, confiando en que él proveerá el mismo bien que nos proporcionó cuando le entregamos esas primeras áreas, realizamos un acto de sumisión, dándole permiso a Jesús para que sea Señor de esta área de nuestras vidas también. Hermanos y hermanas, si podemos hacer de esto una parte regular de nuestro crecimiento como discípulos, no hay forma de saber cómo su reino podría crecer entre nosotros. ¡Así que no tengan miedo de someterlo todo a él! Jesucristo es el Rey, el Buen Pastor, que solo desea guiarnos a pastos de descanso. ///

Al recordar aquellas manifestaciones de protesta "No Reyes", tuve una idea curiosa sobre una oportunidad perdida. ¿No habría sido maravilloso si los cristianos hubiéramos acudido a esas protestas con nuestra propia “contraprotesta”?–una protesta de "Sí Reyes", por así decirlo? Esa protesta sea una procesión en honor a Cristo Rey, encabezada por una imagen de él crucificado, invitando a todos nosotros aquí en los Estados Unidos a reconocer al único Rey verdadero. Eso habría sido maravilloso, ¿verdad?

Queridos hermanos y hermanas, si realmente vivimos bajo el señorío de Jesús, habremos hecho lo mismo, pues todos comprenderán la bondad de permitir que Cristo sea Rey de nuestras vidas. Fortalecidos por esta Eucaristía, que nuestras vidas proclamen a diario esta verdad: Cristo es Rey del Universo. ¡Viva Cristo Rey!

Dado en la parroquia de San Patricio: Kokomo, IN – 23 de noviembre, 2025


Not "No Kings", but "Yes, King!"

 Homily: 34th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Cycle C

Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe

Sisters and friends, as we celebrate this great feast of Christ the King, I am reminded of recent events in the news: namely, the “No Kings” protests that have taken place in various parts of our country this year.  As I understand it, these protest demonstrations were intended to highlight what some believe are the highly authoritarian actions of our current President.  While I won’t dare say anything about the merits of their assertions… frankly, I haven’t researched them enough to know what they are, precisely… I can acknowledge that there is something very “American” about standing up and protesting against anything that smells like a return to the autocratic rule of a king.  The very reason why we declared independence nearly 250 years ago was to free ourselves from the autocratic rule of a king; and, for nearly 250 years, we’ve been striving to “govern ourselves” through a representational government.  To put it simply: resisting being ruled by a king is something fundamental to being American.  (Hopefully, this is something on which we can all agree.)

As Christians, however, we acknowledge that we serve a king–the King… Jesus Christ; and so how do we square this truth with our fundamental American resistance to being ruled over by a king?  In other words, how can we, as Christian Americans, both allow ourselves to be ruled by a King, while at the same time resist being ruled by a king?  Turns out that the answer is, “Not very easily”, but let’s take a look at why.

To start, we should ask the question, “How is the King different than other kings (or, of the ephemeral “autocratic king” against which Americans recently protested)?  It starts, of course, with the fact that the King, is not autocratic.  In other words, he’s not a king that rules over his subjects with an iron fist, believing, first and foremost, that his subjects serve him, instead of viewing his position as one of service to his subjects (the service of seeing them flourish).  Autocratic kings tend to be self-absorbed, believing that they need to hoard power and authority in themselves–either from conceit or from a fear that they will lose the kingship should they let power escape from their control.  The King, Jesus Christ, shows us that a true king is more like a shepherd: one who uses his position and authority to serve those he governs, assuring their safety and striving to foster the conditions for their health and flourishing.  The King himself even described himself in this way: “I am the Good Shepherd who lays down his life for his sheep.”  The King, Jesus Christ, is different from autocratic kings because he sees the kingship as a call to serve those he governs, and not as an office who must be served by those subject to him.

Another way that the King is different is that he has a kingship that does not pass away.  One of the pressures that worldly kings must face is that one day they will die, and the kingship that they hold will be passed to another.  Thus, they often feel like they need to consolidate power to ensure a smooth transition to an heir.  If the king is autocratic, he’ll take steps to make sure that the “heir” is someone he’s handpicked to ensure that his legacy of rule will continue after he dies.  The King, Jesus Christ, has a kingship that will never pass away.  Thus, he has no reason to worry about handing over his power to another, and so no reason to play “favorites” as he looks for an “heir” to succeed him on the throne.  No, through each subsequent generation, he can continue to shepherd his people without fear that he will lose any of the power and authority of his kingship.

We see this in the Scriptures, right?  Throughout the Gospels, Jesus never seeks to take power and authority away from anyone.  Whenever he performed a miracle and the people who witnessed it wanted to acclaim him king, he moved away from there and would not let them follow through.  Whenever he challenged the scribes and Pharisees, he never called for them to be removed from their posts and that he would take their place.  He never really made political statements against the Roman governors, but rather reminded the people over and over again not to become overly occupied by political authority; instead, he pointed them to the kingdom of God, which was their true home.

In fact, the most that he asserted his kingship was when he entered Jerusalem triumphantly (on what we now know as Palm Sunday) and allowed the people to acclaim him as the “Son of David”, the great Israelite king.  Even this, however, was not an assertion of power, because, as we would see, this triumphant entry did not lead him to being seated on a royal throne, but rather nailed to the wood of a cross: the shepherd becoming the sacrificial lamb in order to save all the sheep.

This is why today we read this account from Luke’s gospel.  It is the image of Christ the King mounted on the only earthly throne he ever accepted; and this not because he was defeated, but because it was precisely through this that he would save his sheep and return triumphantly to his eternal throne in God’s kingdom.

And so, no, my dear Sisters and friends, as Americans, it is not easy to square the idea of honoring a king… our “American sensibilities” naturally cringe at the idea.  Nevertheless, we should not fear to acknowledge our Lord Jesus Christ as the King… and, thus, our King.  Because he is the only king who cannot be corrupted and, thus, who will always rule so as to serve the flourishing of his people.  But this can only happen if we subject ourselves to him.

And that’s the rub, isn’t it?  Can we let our Good King be Lord over our lives?  Sisters, this is a little bit of a rhetorical question for you.  You’ve allowed Jesus, our King, to be Lord over your life and to call you out from the world into the cloister.  And all of you (except our newest sister) have made vows of obedience, which gives further sign that you continue to allow Jesus, our King, to be Lord over your lives, trusting that his will comes to you through the legitimate instructions of Mother Abbess.  Nonetheless, it is still fruitful for each of you to reflect on whether there are any areas of your lives that you have yet to submit to the lordship of Jesus.  Perhaps it’s most fruitful to begin by reflecting on the good that has already come to you by allowing Jesus to be Lord over your life, so that, if you encounter any area of your life that still has not been turned over to him, you might readily do so, trusting that the Lord will bring the same (or better) good that he has already brought into your life.

For all of us on this side of the grate, the same question certainly applies: Can I let our Good King be Lord over my life?  The challenge is greater for us, as we have much more control still.  Nevertheless, the invitation is the same: to reflect on the good that has come from turning over certain areas of our lives to the lordship of Jesus, our King, and then to identify those other areas that still need to be turned over to him.  Then, trusting that he will supply the same good that he supplied when we turned over those first areas to him, we make an act of submission, giving Jesus permission to be Lord over this area of our lives, too.  Friends, if we can make this a regular part of our growth in discipleship, there’s no telling how his kingdom might grow in our midst.  And so do not be afraid to submit everything to him!  Jesus Christ is the King, the Good Shepherd, who desires only to lead us into restful pastures. ///

Thinking back to those “No Kings” protest demonstrations, I had a funny thought about a missed opportunity.  Wouldn’t it have been something if we Christians would have shown up to those protests with our own “counter-protest”–a “Yes Kings” protest, if you will: a procession honoring Christ our King, led by an image of him crucified, inviting all Americans to acknowledge the one true King.  That would’ve have been something, wouldn’t it?

My dear Sisters and friends, if we truly live our lives under the lordship of Jesus, we’ll have done the same, for all will come to see the goodness of allowing Christ to be King over our lives.  Strengthened by this Eucharist, may our lives daily proclaim this truth that Christ is King of the Universe.  Long live Christ the King!

Given at the Monastery of the Poor Clares: Kokomo, IN – November 23rd, 2025