Positive Leadership

A homily for Christ the King Sunday

When I was newly ordained, I was assigned to a parish in New Jersey. I thought I’d be assigned to a high school. So I was really surprised. But everyone said, oh, you’re going to be with Father Peter. Father Peter is excellent. They oftentimes say your first pastor, when you’re newly ordained, will teach you more about how to do the work of a priest than anything in the seminary.

And so everyone said, you are with the best. Well, I turned out, I was with the best. Father Peter was an excellent mentor, an excellent coach, an excellent example, an excellent teacher, and just an all around great guy. Perfect guy to have as your first pastor as this great teacher. Today we celebrate the feast of Christ the King.

What does that mean? We’re Americans, and kings are less and less in the world anyway. I interpret it as Christ the leader. That’s what it really means. Christ the great leader. And I use this example of great leader, Father Peter. Years ago, I took a course in the business school on management, leadership, management, and they were talking about positive leadership models and there are four that they were talking about authentic, charismatic servant and transformational and a good leader does all of those.

And that’s what I think Father Peter was. He was he did all of those. He was authentic, true to himself. Boy, he knew himself charismatic. He. He just inspired people to do the work of a parish servant. He was the servant of the people and transformational. I think he really transformed the parish to be a spectacular, cutting edge parish.

That’s what I think we see in today’s gospel. Jesus is on trial before Pilate. They’ve dragged him before Pilate, but he he starts to engage Pilate in this great discourse. And you could see he’s being authentic. And he knows who Pilate is, too. He’s being charismatic. Know pilot is reacting to him positively. He’s being the servant servant of the people, and he’s being transformational.

He’s trying to inspire Pontius Pilate. So this is what I think is the key to understanding this feast of Christ the King. It’s not Jesus lording it over us. It’s Jesus transforming us and inspiring us and serving us and telling us to be authentic. And on this feast day, maybe we are called to be leaders ourselves. I think that’s what Jesus does to the apostles, does to everyone in the gospel.

He beats. He inspires them to be leaders, not followers. Saint Teresa of Avila says, for all who follow Christ, if they do not want to get lost, must walk along the path he trod. He trod the paths of leadership, of being servant, authentic, charismatic transformational. That’s the call of this feast for us to be those same, that same, those same, that same kind of leader.

That’s the call of today’s feast.

Saint Teresa of Avila

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