"He walked in the ways of the kings of Israel, as the house of Ahab had done, for he married a daughter of Ahab." (2 Chronicles 21:6)
Jehoshaphat's son Jehoram succeeds him and kills all his brothers with the sword. He walked in the ways of the kings of Israel, as the house of Ahab had done, for he married a daughter of Ahab. He did evil in the eyes of the LORD. He builds high places and leads Judah astray. The prophet Elijah sends him a letter: because you have led Judah and Jerusalem to prostitute themselves, and because you have murdered your own brothers who were better than you, the LORD is about to strike your people, your sons, your wives, and everything that is yours with a heavy blow. And you yourself will be very ill with a lingering disease. The LORD stirs up the Philistines and Arabs to attack; they take everything and carry off all his sons but the youngest. The LORD afflicts him with an incurable disease of the bowels; he dies in great pain. He passes away, to no one's regret, and is not buried in the tombs of the kings.
The Catechism notes that the consequences of leadership unfaithfulness are borne by both the leader and those under his care: the children who are carried off, the wives taken, are the people who suffer for the king's marriage into Ahab's house (CCC 1897).
Brothers and sisters, he departed to no one's regret. The saddest epitaph in Chronicles. The leader whose passing no one mourns has spent their authority on themselves. Govern in a way that your passing will be mourned: not because you were great, but because you served.
Lord God, let our lives and our leadership be the kind that is mourned when it ends, not because we were impressive but because we served faithfully. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.