
By John Singarayar
In a world increasingly dominated by noise, by endless scrolling, loud opinions, and digital clutter, it feels almost radical to imagine Christ the King not as a figure draped in majesty and thunder but as a quiet presence in our digital wilderness.
The feast of Christ the King, celebrated at the end of the liturgical year, reminds believers of a kingship that rules not through might or dominance but through love. Yet today, that same spirit finds a new frontier in the digital world, where power is measured in algorithms and influence.
The internet connects us yet divides us. It offers community but also deep loneliness. It gives voice to the marginalized while sometimes drowning them out in distraction. In that fragile balance, we might imagine Christ the King not as an abstract ruler but as a presence, steady, discerning, and deeply human, who moves through the noise to find the forgotten and lonely.
In the language of faith, Christ walks where others will not, bending down to lift-up what society overlooks. In the digital sphere, that means standing with the vulnerable: the poor seeking support online, the addicted seeking connection, the abandoned seeking belonging.
Consider something as simple as content moderation. When platforms choose to protect users from harassment rather than maximize engagement at any cost, they echo Christ’s kingship. When mental health apps prioritize genuine wellbeing over addiction to notifications, they serve rather than exploit. When AI tools are designed to assist teachers in reaching struggling students instead of replacing human connection, they reflect a spirit of care over efficiency.
Artificial intelligence, born from human creativity and curiosity, mirrors both our light and our shadow. It holds immense potential to build, heal, and teach, but only when guided by empathy.
Christ’s kingship becomes a model here. His reign is not about data dominance or control but about serving truth and mercy. Applied to technology, it calls for systems that listen, that defend the voiceless, and that resist exploitation masked as progress.
The digital world rewards speed, outrage, and perfection. But Christ’s way is slow, thoughtful, and vulnerable. He is the king who washes feet, who spends time with the forgotten, who listens before speaking.
Imagine if our algorithms behaved that way, prioritizing compassion over profit, understanding over division, healing over harm. We see glimpses of this when recommendation systems direct people in crisis toward helplines instead of harmful content, or when social platforms amplify fundraisers for medical emergencies rather than sensational clickbait.
For the poor and marginalized, the online world can be both sanctuary and snare. A single mother finds remote work that lets her stay home with her children. A veteran with PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) discovers an online support group that understands his struggles. Yet others drown in predatory lending schemes dressed up as “financial opportunities,” or fall into gambling apps designed to exploit addiction.
Technology can comfort or consume, depending on which values guide it, profit or compassion. The challenge is not whether digital advancements will continue but whether they will serve humanity’s heart or its hunger.
This vision depends not on machines but on people, individuals choosing empathy in a culture prizing efficiency.
Every time a developer builds accessibility features into an app, every time a content creator uses their platform to elevate marginalized voices, every time someone offers kindness online instead of joining a pile-on, they proclaim Christ’s kingship in a small but real way. His reign expands not through systems of control but through acts of service, humility, and love.
The image of Christ in our digital spaces might seem strange because it envisions divinity not on a golden throne but within the circuitry of human connection. Yet this echoes the Incarnation itself, God choosing to enter human frailty.
To speak of Christ the King in terms of technology might seem futuristic, but it is actually a return to the gospel’s core: relationship. The mission of the king is not to dominate creation but to redeem it, to pull it back toward life.
At its heart, the feast of Christ the King declares that truth and goodness endure even when power shifts and empires fade. Digital empires, social media platforms, tech giants, AI systems, will also pass. What remains is not code but compassion, not data but dignity. The real measure of digital progress will not be its intelligence but its humanity.
Christ the King, whether imagined in ancient robes or infused within the glowing circuits of our interconnected world, continues asking the same question: whom do you serve?
If the answer is love, love that protects, restores, and uplifts, then even the digital realm can become holy ground. And in that space, amid all the static and screens, a silent king still reigns, not with force but with patient mercy that never grows old. – UCA News
*The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official editorial position of UCA News.
















































