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Sermon Illustrations for Christ the King (Proper 29) (2025)

Illustration
Jeremiah 23:1-6 and Luke 1:68-79
Vernon Kemplin shares this story on Guideposts webpage. Kemplin talks about a time when he and his wife had bought a 1905 farmhouse just outside of Mansfield, Illinois. They moved in during the summer of 1970 and began making repairs to the old house. When fall came and the weather turned cold, they realized they’d forgotten to check something…the furnace! It just wouldn’t work. It was an old furnace. When Kemplin called around, no one could fix it. It was simply obsolete. As Kemplin looked at it one last time, he noticed a card on the joist above the furnace. On the card was the date of installation and a name: Mr. Doss. It was a small town, and he’d heard of some “Doss” family members, so he took a chance and called. Mr. Doss answered. He told Kemplin that he was retired but he’d come and have a look. Turns out he was the right man for the job. He still had parts around his home that would work, and he had the furnace firing in a matter of minutes.

Mr. Doss was just the right guy for the job. That phrase in the story struck me. In our text for today, God has raised up just the right one to redeem his people and reign over them. He “has raised up a mighty Savior for us in the house of his child David” (Luke 1:69). Jesus’ coming to usher in God’s kingdom was no accident. He was sent for that purpose.
Bill T.

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Jeremiah 23:1-6 and Luke 1:68-79
We seem to be easy targets now, but woe! says Jeremiah, (and Jesus in Luke’s gospel says Wwoe! a lot too) An easy target now, but woe! Luke has woes. Woe to the false shepherds who destroy and scatter the sheep off God’s flock. It’s God’s sheep, God’s pasture. Who died and made them God? The new David will be revealed. He will reign as king and deal wisely and shall execute justice and righteousness. Maybe not just yet. But soon.

This is paired with the Magnificat, about God’s plan to vindicate the low and marginalized. This is the warning to all the bad shepherds who are scattering the sheep. God will draw us back together in one flock, and you who are on top now may not be there when the final score is tallied.
Frank R.

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Colossians 1:11-20
Commenting on v. 17 on how Christ holds all things together, John Wesley writes:

The original expression [that in Christ all things hold together] not only implies that he sustains all things in being, but more directly all things were and are compacted in him into one system. He is the cement as well as support of the universe. (Commentary On the Bible, p.546)

Famed Puritan preacher Jonathan Edwards provides interesting insight regarding God’s (and so Christ’s) kingly rule:

He [God] is everywhere present with his all-seeing eye. He is in heaven and hell, and in and through every part of creation. He is where every devil is; and where every damned soul is. He is present by his knowledge and his essence. He not only knows as well as those in heaven who sees at a distance; but he knows as perfectly as those who feel the misery. He seeth into the innermost recesses of the hearts of those miserable spirits. He seeth all the sorrow and anguish that are there; for he upholds them in being. (Works, Vol.2, p.69)

Famed modern theologian Karl Barth provides insights about Christ’s kingly rule (he refers to Christ as “the royal man’) and what the Kingdom looks like. He writes:

The starting-point here is the first and final fact that the being of this royal man Jesus was not only identical with the glory of God in the highest… but also identical on earth with peace among men as of the divine good-pleasure. (Church Dogmatics, Vol.IV/2, p.151)
Mark E.

* * *

Luke 23:33-43
John Hess-Yoder, a missionary, shares this story…

While serving as a missionary in Laos, I 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.

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 his or her nationality. Instead, each person belonged to the kingdom whose cultural values he or she demonstrated.

A crucified thief demonstrated, on his last day, what values he shared. When his compatriot derided Jesus, he pushed back. Then he made the request that was the most important of his life.  “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” With that statement he showed his values and his heart. Upon that statement Jesus promised him paradise. What do your values show with respect to the kingdom you belong to?
Bill T.

* * *

Luke 23:33-43
Martin Luther offered a remark about this text and Pilate’s comment in it which painfully and concisely paints the picture of our present ethos. As he observed:

The word of Pilate, “What is truth?” accurately paints our age. For the way things are going, people are wondering, what is truth? What do faithfulness and faith amount to anymore in the world? What is integrity? After they take your coat, next it’s your shirt. The one who has a concern for truth is already lost. The one, however, who wants to climb the ladder of success needs to lie, deceive, dissemble, and betray. (Complete Sermons, Vol.5, p.412)

The first reformer also comments on why God in Christ hides his power:   

Because men misused the knowledge of God through works, God wished again to be recognized in suffering and to condemn wisdom… Now if it is not sufficient for anyone, and it does him no good to recognize God in his glory and majesty unless he recognizes him in the humility and shame of the cross.

Thus, God destroys the wisdom of the wise… It is impossible for a person not to be puffed up by his good works unless he has first been deflated and destroyed by suffering and evil until he knows that he is worthless and that his works are not his but God’s (Luther’s Works, vol.31, pp. 52-53)
Mark E.

* * *

Luke 23:33-43
Don’t pass by these words about those who jeered at Jesus during his agony on the cross. We’re so used to the words we don’t think about how horrifying it is, how callous the hearts must be for those who stop to make fun of helpless people tortured to death in full view of passersby. It’s just as easy to ignore those who are suffering in plain sight as we go about our daily business. Certainly, we see this happening talk shows, social media, easy targets. Low hanging fruit. Sharing in the cross of Christ has never been so easy.

The Lord is mocked when we spray the venom of our words against the outcast, the marginalized, the weak, and the suffering. Yet this is the passage we read this year on the Reign of Christ Sunday. Ours is a king who suffers. Behold the king!

And that king, even while he himself suffers, not only from the cross two thousand years ago, but gazing at the way we treat each other today, has mercy on us in our suffering. Just as the king promised the thief who defended him that they would be together in paradise that very day, so all of us who suffer (remember Luke’s parable of the rich man and Lazarus) are saved and served with Christ. Julian of Norwich, the first woman to write a book in English, was lying on her deathbed when the cross which was lowered to her face by clergy came to life to her in a vision, and she beheld a suffering Jesus on the cross whose greatest concern was for her, and for all people. That’s the king we have. Not one who is distant and aloof. One who bleeds like us.

One of the thieves was saved. Hold on to that.
Frank R.
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Baptism of Our Lord
29 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
40 – Children's Sermons / Resources
25 – Worship Resources
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Epiphany 2 | OT 2
30 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
39 – Children's Sermons / Resources
24 – Worship Resources
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Epiphany 3 | OT 3
30 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
31 – Children's Sermons / Resources
22 – Worship Resources
25 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

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For February 8, 2026:

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Praxis, the pixie whose skin changes colour according to his mood, was bright, bright blue. He was feeling very fed up. All by himself with nobody to play with, he had nothing to do but get into mischief. His mother was annoyed with him for eating all the jelly she had ready for tea, and she had ordered him out of the toadstool.

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Contents
"The Way to God" by Peter Andrew Smith
"Looking Up" by David O. Bales


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The Way to God
by Peter Andrew Smith
Isaiah 58:1-9a (9b-12)

In his story "The Way to God," Peter Andrew Smith tells of a people seeking to know God in their lives who discover the answer is not about what they do but about how they live.

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SermonStudio

James Evans
Stan Purdum
Carlos Wilton
This is a dangerous psalm -- dangerous, because it is so open to misinterpretation.

"Happy are those who fear the Lord...." Well, who could quarrel with that? Yet this psalm goes on to describe, in concrete terms, exactly what form that happiness takes: "Their descendants will be mighty in the land.... Wealth and riches are in their houses" (vv. 2a, 3a).

Power? Wealth? Are these the fruits of a godly life? The psalmist seems to think so.

John R. Brokhoff
THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Isaiah 58:1--9a (9b--12) (C); Isaiah 58:7--10 (RC)
John N. Brittain
I had a much-loved professor in seminary who confessed to some of us over coffee one day that he frequently came home from church and was so frustrated he had to go out and dig in the garden, even in the middle of winter. Robert Louis Stevenson once recorded in his diary, as if it were a surprise, "I went to church today and am not depressed." Someone has said, "I feel like unscrewing my head and putting it underneath the pew every time I go to church." Thoughts like these are often expressed by people who have dropped out of church, especially youth and young adults.
Charles L. Aaron, Jr.
Sometimes when we read a passage of scripture, we may need to pay careful attention to who in the text is speaking. Our understanding of the words themselves may change, depending on whose mouth they come from. If we are reading Job, we need to know which character is speaking in the passage. If Job's friends are talking, we know their words cannot be trusted. They are too self-righteous. Sometimes, we are not sure who is speaking. Job 28 is a beautiful poem extolling the virtue of wisdom, but we can't be sure who delivers this elegant piece.
William B. Kincaid, III
Of all the pressing questions of the day, a sign on one person's desk asks, "How much can I sin and still go to heaven?" The question seems amusing until we stop to think about it. Inherent in this question is a bold-faced confession that there is no interest at all in pursuing a life shaped wholly by the spirit of God, but at the same time we do not want to be so recklessly sacrilegious that we forfeit completely the rewards of the hereafter.
Robert A. Beringer
A Japanese legend says a pious Buddhist monk died and went to heaven. He was taken on a sightseeing tour and gazed in wonder at the lovely mansions built of marble and gold and precious stones. It was all so beautiful, exactly as he pictured it, until he came to a large room that looked like a merchant's shop. Lining the walls were shelves on which were piled and labeled what looked like dried mushrooms. On closer examination, he saw they were actually human ears.
John T. Ball
When pastors retire they have a chance to check out some of the Sunday morning religious television before going off to worship, presuming they don't succumb to the Sunday paper. One retired colleague who has the leisure to monitor Sunday morning television says that churchy television fixes mostly on the personal concerns of the viewers. Anxiety, depression, grief - all important and life--threatening matters - make up much of Sunday morning religious television.
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Hymns
Hail To The Lord's Anointed (LBW87, CBH185, NCH104, UM203)
When I Survey The Wondrous Cross (PH100, 101, CBH259, 260, NCH224, UM298, 299, LBW482)
Break Forth, O Beauteous Heavenly Light (CBH203, NCH140, PH26, UM223)
God Of Grace And God Of Glory (CBH366, NCH436, PH420, UM577)
You Are Salt For The Earth (CBH226, NCH181)
This Little Light Of Mine (CBH401, NCH524, 525, UM585)
Ask Me What Great Thing I Know (NCH49, UM192, PH433)
There's A Spirit In The Air (NCH294, UM192, PH433)

Emphasis Preaching Journal

One of the difficulties that confronts us who drive our vehicles is forgetting to turn off the lights and returning to the car after some hours only to discover a dead battery. I have found that the problem occurs most often when I have been driving during a storm in daytime and had to turn on headlights in order to be seen by other drivers. By the time I get to my destination the rain has often ceased, and the sun is shining brightly. The problem happens, too, when we drive into a brightly lighted parking lot at night.
Wayne Brouwer
Schuyler Rhodes
Some years ago Europa Times carried a story in which Mussa Zoabi of Israel claimed to be the oldest person alive at 160. Guinness Book of World Records would not print his name, however, simply because his age could not be verified. Mr. Zoabi was older than most records-keeping systems. Whatever his true age, Mussa Zoabi believed he knew the secret of longevity. He said, "Every day I drink a cup of melted butter or olive oil."

CSSPlus

Good morning, boys and girls. I brought some salt with me this morning. (Show the salt.) What do we use salt for? (Let them answer.) We use it for flavoring food. How many of you put salt on your popcorn? (Let them answer.) What else do we use salt for? (Let them answer.) We put salt on the sidewalks in winter to keep us from slipping. We put salt in water softeners to soften our water.

In this morning's lesson Jesus said that we are the salt of the earth. What do you think he meant by that? (Let them answer.) In Jesus' time salt was very important. It was used to keep food
Good morning! Once Jesus told a whole crowd of people who
had come to hear him preach that they couldn't get into Heaven
unless they were more "righteous" than all the religious leaders
of that day. Does anyone know what that word means? What does it
mean to be righteous? (Let them answer.) It means to be good, to
be fair, and to be honest. Now, what do you think he meant by
that? Was he telling people that they had to do everything
perfectly in this life in order to get into Heaven? (Let them
answer.)
Good morning! How many of you own your own Bible? (Let them
answer.) When you read the Bible, do you find some things that
are hard to understand? (Let them answer.) Yes, I think there are
some tough things to comprehend in the Bible. After all, the
Bible is God's Word, and it's not always easy to understand God.
He is so much greater than we are and much more complex.

Now, I brought a New Testament with me this morning and I
want someone to read a verse for us. Can I have a volunteer? (Let
Teachers and Parents: The most common false doctrine, even
among some who consider themselves strong Christians, is that we
can earn our way into Heaven by our own works. Our children must
learn the basic Christian truth that Heaven is a gift of God and
that there is no way to be righteous enough to deserve it. We
must rely on the righteousness of Christ for our ticket into
Heaven.

* Make white paper ponchos with the name JESUS written in
large letters on each one. (A large hole for the head in a big

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