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Homilies

Homilies

November 23, 2025

November 23, 2025

Jesus Christ, King of the Universe (C)

Bishop Robert Barron

Bishop Robert Barron

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Christ the King (C)

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King of All, Warriors of Mercy

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Bishop Barron’s homily for the Solemnity of Christ the King Year C emphasizes Jesus’ unique kingship: uniting people through his personhood and love, transcending politics. His kingdom draws all to him, fostering unity beyond human divisions. As a warrior king, Jesus battles evil with self-sacrifice and forgiveness, triumphing on the cross through mercy. Followers must choose love and service over worldly ways, embracing Christ’s path instead of earthly temptations.

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The Marks of Spiritual Leadership

Friends, we come to the final weekend of the liturgical year and the celebration of the Solemnity of Christ the King. Now, our country was formed in rebellion against a king, and kingship as a political reality is far removed from us. But what does kingship mean for us spiritually? In a word, everything. If youโ€™re baptized, youโ€™re a king, because youโ€™re conformed to Christ, who is priest, prophet, and king. And your job, wherever God puts you, is to order thingsโ€”first and foremost in your own soulโ€”toward the end of Godโ€™s kingdom.

Deacon Greg Kandra

Deacon Greg Kandra

Christ the King (C)

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โ€œWho โ€“ or WHAT โ€” really rules our lives?โ€ Thatโ€™s a question we could spend all of Advent asking ourselves, and praying over. And maybe we should. But today, I want to spend a few minutes considering not just Christ the King โ€“ but Christโ€™s kingdom. Because this feast reminds us what we pray for, day after day, week after week, when we pray โ€œthy kingdom come.โ€

โ€” originally preached in 2013

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Deacon Peter McCulloc

Deacon Peter McCulloch

Christ the King (C)

20222025
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In his book Food for the Soul, Peter Kreeft draws our attention to the last sentence in todayโ€™s Gospel. He notes that itโ€™s the last sentence of the last reading of the last Sunday of our liturgical year, and itโ€™s Jesusโ€™ answer to the good thief who was crucified next to him: โ€˜Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.โ€™

Kreeft says that these are the words we will be hearing from Jesus on the last day of our own lives, if we accept him as our King.

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In the game of chess, the goal is to trap your opponentโ€™s king. When he cannot move, you declare โ€˜checkmateโ€™ and the game is over. In 1822, the German artist Friedrich Moritz Retzsch (1779 โ€“ 1857) captured this moment in a famous artwork he called Die Schachspieler (The Chess Players). Today, itโ€™s more commonly called Checkmate, but this picture depicts two chess players โ€“ a sneering devil and a worried young man, often said to be Goetheโ€™s Faust. If the devil wins, the prize is the young manโ€™s soul.

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Dominican Blackfriars

Dominican Blackfriars

Christ the King (C)

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Dicastery for the Clergy

Dicastery for the Clergy

Christ the King (C)

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ยฉ 2000 Dicastery for the Clergy A | B | C

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Fr. Joe Jagodensky, SDS

Fr. Joe Jagodensky, SDS

Christ the King (C)

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Fr. Austin Fleming

Fr. Austin Fleming

Christ the King (C)

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Fr. Austin notes society’s preference for the comforting “newborn King” of Christmas (angels, manger) over the harsh realities of the adult “Christ the King” (soldiers, Cross). The central argument is that these two aspects are inseparable: “we canโ€™t have one without the other.” The child in “swaddling clothes” was being prepared for the “linen” of the tomb. Christ’s reign is paradoxical: a King with no palace, army, or throne. His crown was thorns, and his law is love. He rules by serving and dying for “the guilty.” The homily concludes that while we “cradle” the infant, the adult Christ of Calvary, who “reigns from the throne of the Cross,” now asks us to “be cradled in his arms,” ruling our hearts with the “royal, lavish gift” of his love.

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Fr. Carmen Mele, O.P.

Fr. Carmen Mele, O.P.

Christ the King (C)

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Fr. Charles E. Irvin

Fr. Charles E. Irvin

Christ the King (C)

Fr. George Smiga

Fr. George Smiga

Christ the King (C)

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Father Kevin Rettig

Father Kevin Rettig

Christ the King (C)

20222025
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Fr. Kevin’s homily explores how true freedom and “kingship” are found in selfless sacrifice for others. It highlights heroes who stepped “outside the tent of our selfishness,” like Captain Oates, who died to save his team, and the Good Thief, who showed empathy while suffering. This idea is furthered by Lincoln and Kennedy, who worked to liberate others. The homily’s core message is that suffering is a call to become a “wounded healer,” and by working to free others, we find the “new birth of freedom” and unleash the “king” within ourselves.

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Fr. Ruttig’s homily explores how focusing on others’ suffering and showing kindness and compassion can help alleviate our own pain and transform it into something positive.

TWTW Infographics with images created using Nano Banana Gemini AI generator. Permission is granted to non-profits to use them in their ministry. Please give credit to TWTW website and Fr. Kevin Rettig’s homily (above) on which the graphic is based.

Monsignor Peter Hahn

Msgr. Peter Hahn

Christ the King (C)

20192022
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Christ: The True King

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This homily for the Feast of Christ the King observes that the feast is often overlooked in favor of the civil calendar, like Thanksgiving. It contrasts the world’s distorted view of power with Christ’s true authority.

Ironically, the Gospel reveals Christ’s kingship not in glory, but on the cross. While the inscription “King of the Jews” was meant as a final, mocking insult, Christ performed his most powerful royal act: a pronouncement of infinite mercy to the good thief (“Today you will be with me in paradise”). This mercy, which reconciles the world, is his true power.

As we begin Advent, the homily calls us to prepare our “inner selves” for this true King, rather than just getting lost in “busyness.”

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The King’s True Treasure

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The homily contrasts the “regular calendar” (Thanksgiving, Christmas) with the “Liturgical Calendar,” which is ending with the Feast of Christ the King. It highlights the irony that Christ’s infinite power is revealed not as worldly force, but at the Crucifixion.

While the inscription “This is the King of the Jews” was meant as an insult, Christ performed his true Royal Decree: offering infinite mercy to the helpless criminal (“Today you will be with me in Paradise”). The homily urges us to avoid being consumed by the world’s treasure (earthly wealth) and instead seek the King’s true treasure of “infinitely greater value”: reconciliation, forgiveness, and deliverance from darkness.

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Msgr. Joseph Pellegrino

Msgr. Joseph Pellegrino

Christ the King (C)

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Msgr. Charles Pope

Msgr. Charles Pope

Christ the King (C)

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Fr. Michael Chua

Fr. Michael Chua

Christ the King (C)

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Fr. Jude Langeh, CMF

Christ the King (C)

Father Geoffrey Plant

Father Geoffrey Plant

Christ the King (C)

2025
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Today You Will Be With Me In Paradise

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The feast of Christ the King is a comparatively recent addition to the Churchโ€™s liturgical calendar. In fact, this year we celebrate the centenary of Quas Primas, the encyclical of Pius XI which established the feast in 1925. In todayโ€™s Gospel for the feast of Christ the King the scene could hardly seem less regal. There is no crown of gold, but a crown of thorns; there is no throne, but a cross. There is no retinue of courtiers, but jeering soldiers and mocking onlookers.

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