
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Turns out the rest of the Bible also has some pretty negative things to say about human kings too.
So why do we praise Jesus Christ as King? It turns out that Jesus is not like other kings. The way in which he revealed to us his kingship on the cross casts judgment on all other kings and teaches all of us something about power.
The kings of this world use their power to create their own paradise, come what may for others. Jesus uses his power to create a paradise for others, come at the cost of his own life. And the power he uses to create that paradise, as it turns out, is mercy. And for this mercy, we can give thanks!
Art credit, Wikipedia, The Embarkation of the Pilgrims, an 1857 portrait by Robert Walter Weir now housed at Brooklyn Museum
By Pastor Robert Myallis5
11 ratings
Turns out the rest of the Bible also has some pretty negative things to say about human kings too.
So why do we praise Jesus Christ as King? It turns out that Jesus is not like other kings. The way in which he revealed to us his kingship on the cross casts judgment on all other kings and teaches all of us something about power.
The kings of this world use their power to create their own paradise, come what may for others. Jesus uses his power to create a paradise for others, come at the cost of his own life. And the power he uses to create that paradise, as it turns out, is mercy. And for this mercy, we can give thanks!
Art credit, Wikipedia, The Embarkation of the Pilgrims, an 1857 portrait by Robert Walter Weir now housed at Brooklyn Museum