To fully grasp and articulate the ascension is beyond my
ability, but like you, l confess this mysterious truth in the Creed we confess
at every mass
“He
suffered death and was buried, and rose again in accordance to the
scripture. He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of
the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the
dead and his kingdom will have no end.”
We confess this in the closing of most prayers
“We
ask this in the name of Our Lord, Jesus Christ, who lives, and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, One God, forever and
ever.”
We know that this new sovereign kingship is foreshadowed
throughout the OT. 200 years before Jesus
was born we hear in the Book of Daniel about the glorification of the Son of Man.
“Let
us praise and exalt him above all forever.
Blessed are you, Lord, in the firmament of heaven.
Praiseworthy and glorious and exalted above all forever.” Daniel 3 57-58
Blessed are you, Lord, in the firmament of heaven.
Praiseworthy and glorious and exalted above all forever.” Daniel 3 57-58
These words capture the majesty of the transcendent Christ
and it is in this all powerful transcendence that Jesus can accomplish what he
promised us all -
"I
will be with you always, even until the end of time."
Today we celebrate the mystery of
the ascension and exaltation, when Jesus already risen from the tomb is raised
again, and not only with a new and glorified body, but raised on high as the
exalted Christ, to became not only our Lord, but the Sovereign Lord of all that
was and is and will be.
Paul captures the totality of
Christ as
“The fullness of one who fills all things in
every way”
In Acts we hear that the risen Jesus continues to teach the
disciples about the Kingdom of God. He instructs
them to remain in Jerusalem and he promises the gift of the Holy Spirit which
will come to them there. You would think that the disciples by
this time would understand more, but they ask him
“Lord, are you at this time going to restore
the kingdom to Israel?”
How limited their vision still is.
The disciples still think in conventional ways and in the terms of earthy
power.
Princely, political, military power is a small
thing, this power comes and goes, and are wiped away by the sands of time. compare this to Christ’s Lordship which includes all times and places, every
empire that ever was, every culture that ever existed and every peoples that ever where or ever
will be. God’s life-giving sovereignty and eternal
authority is now Jesus’.
It is through this power that Jesus
leaves them with the promise of the Holy Spirit, who will continue to teach
them, remind them of all things, and drive them to witness that; Jesus was
raised from the dead. He ascended into heaven and now sits at the right hand of
the Father. With the promise of the Holy Spirit still in
their ears, the disciples surround Jesus and watch as he ascends into heaven. While the disciples still look heavenward an angel
questions them as to why they look into the sky as if it were the end – a
farewell.
The angel declares
"This Jesus who has been taken up from
you into heaven will return in the same way as you have seen him going
into heaven”
The angel is clear -It is not the
end - it is only the “in between”
time. It is the time of both Jesus’ hidden but real presence
in the Church & his temporary absence until he comes again in glory. This in between time is the time of the Holy Spirit - It is the time of the Church.
In today’s Gospel we have the same story. Jesus reminds them that the Christ
would suffer (which he did) and rise from the dead (which he did)And they would witness this by
preaching the forgiveness of sins in his name (which they did & we still do). Again, we hear the promise of the
Spirit, but now there is also a blessing and after the blessing the disciples
did him homage and in joy they praised God in the temple.
These two short descriptions in
Acts & Luke are surely the “ascension
experience” condensed.
Imagine trying to capture the mindset
of the disciples; anguish and sorrow at the arrest and crucifixion of Jesus, three
days of deep despair and fear, followed by unfathomable joy of the resurrection
and the amazing encounters with, at first, the unrecognizable glorified Jesus, and
now, after forty days Jesus leaves them again, but not by the hands of the
authorities but by God’s own exaltation. And perhaps in those bittersweet
moments of elation and sadness when their minds raced with questions - they
remember (and begin to understand) Jesus’ words spoken at the last supper
“Now
I am going to the one who sent me. I
tell you the truth, it is better for you that I go, for if I do not go, the
Advocate will not come to you, but if I go, I will send him to you”
And perhaps they spoke and even
argued amongst themselves about Jesus and where he went.
And perhaps those words they heard
Jesus speak took on a new truth that could cut through everything laid before
it
“I came from the Father and have come
into the world. Now I am leaving the
world and going back to the Father. I have told you this so that you might
have peace in me. In this world you will
have trouble, but take courage, I have
conquered the world”
These words cut through the lies of
the world, and are worthy of homage and they are certainly worthy of Joy and
praise. The simple, but divine truth that
now colored everything the disciples and the Church ever knew about Jesus shone
like bright light.
I have come from the Father
I return to the Father
I have conquered the world.
I return to the Father
I have conquered the world.
“And you - are witness to these things”
And the disciples did witness, and
Mother Church does and we do. We confess by our creed and prayers. We witness by Christian lives lived out unafraid
in the world. We sing in endless praise - that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the
living God.
With the Ascension of Our Lord began
a new reality, a new kingship, over the entire cosmos,
though sometimes this new kingship
is; dimmed by our pride, hidden by our blindness, or clouded over by our
sinfulness. In thinking only of ourselves we
fail to give him homage that is his due. Weighed down by secular society we fail to
give him the joyful praise that is our
duty.
Each Sunday we a confess His
Lordship with our lips, but some turn away from this truth as fanciful.
Others believe, but do not fully grasp it, and
so do not live out its meaning in their everyday lives.
Still others cling in faith, with open hearts,
to the mystery of the ascension and they make Paul’s words their own confession
of faith-
“Jesus
is seated at the right hand of the Father far above every principality,
authority, power and dominion and over every name that is named, not only in
this age, but also the one to come.”
Brothers and sisters, let us take
away and remember from time to time,That the ascension of Jesus was not
only the beginning of His sovereignty
over all and the start of our in
between time, but his ascension guarantees his two great promises to us;One already fulfilled at Pentecost,
with the coming of the Holy Spirit - the light and grace that you and I still
live in.The other promise yet to be
fulfilled - Jesus’s own return, which we wait for in Christian hope and joyful expectation
- our voices raised as one voice - Come, Lord Jesus, come.