See The Son Rising
Almighty God, whose blessed Son our Savior Jesus Christ ascended far above all heavens that he might fill all things: Mercifully give us faith to perceive that, according to his promise, he abides with his Church on earth, even to the end of the ages. Once upon a time, in a universe far far away, I was awakened from sleep in a cabin near a lake in northwest Connecticut by the voice of friends in a canoe on the lake singing the dawn of a new day, “See the Sun rising, see the Sun rising. Years later as I recalled that singing, and while pondering the new dawn that day of Jesus’s Ascension, I began to sing, “See the Son rising, see the Son rising,” calling us to a new dawn of being the Christ’s witnesses here and now, “to the end of the ages.”
Storyteller Luke is the only one of the Gospel writers to describe the Christ’s ascension. Curiously, Luke offers two differing accounts: one at the end of The Gospel of Luke, and one Volume 2 at the beginning of the Book of the Acts of the Apostles, his account of the early days of the people of The Way – the Way of Jesus – becoming what would eventually be called Christ’s One Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. It may surprise us to learn that the Feast of the Ascension has less to do with Jesus than it does with us and with the Church.
In Luke’s first account at the end of the gospel, we find Jesus issuing final instructions to his disciples, which by the time he had reached Jerusalem was a crowd considerably more than twelve men, and as Luke has chronicled, included women, many of whom were the primary supporters of Jesus’s efforts to gather a community of God’s love, peace and justice for all people. What Jesus calls the kingdom of God, or the kingdom of heaven, on Earth.
As he had all along, especially following his resurrection [i], he “opened their minds to understand the scriptures,” the sacred texts of Israel: “that repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem. You are witnesses of these things.” [ii] Who is meant by “You”? The antecedent is not clear. We might presume it is this enlarged crowd of disciples and camp followers. Or, it has been suggested, one might answer “the Jewish community,” since this commission reconstitutes the people of God in Jerusalem and gives them the particular responsibility to begin at Jerusalem and proclaim the gospel to the non-Jewish world. [iii] Note that they return to the Temple to worship, praise God every day as they wait for the Holy Spirit Jesus promises will empower them to proclaim God’s intention for there to be a world-wide community of God’s love and Shalom – Shalom being justice, mercy, compassion, forgiveness, and peace for all people – not some people, not most people, but all people.
“At still another level,” writes scholar and commentator Robert Cousar, “the “you” is directed to a broader company of readers, ancient and modern, who at the end of the narrative are drawn in as participants in the story. They/We are to be witnesses, who are not allowed to put the book down like a good novel and return to business as usual, but are mandated to proclaim the story, to call for repentance, to declare divine forgiveness. They/We, like the original hearers, are to be recipients of the power [of the Holy Spirit] that the Father promises, an indication that God intends for the plans to be completed and the divine strategy to work.” [iv] That would be us. The Church Universal, and the local church congregation. Because of how As Luke portrays it, The Ascension is more about the Church and our assigned mission than it is about Jesus.
This assignment is so important, that in Luke’s Volume 2, The Book of the Acts of the Apostles, he portrays Jesus’s departure a second time to make sure we understand our mission. Although some details are differed, the essential message is the same. Only this time it is clear that enlarged group of disciples has not fully understood the scriptures and are focused on only one political issue: “Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?" [v] Displaying a tremendous degree of patience, Jesus once again seeks to open their minds to understand the scriptures pertaining God’s intention for a world of Shalom in which there is justice and peace for all persons in which the dignity of every human being is to be respected: and “you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth." Then he is gone. Or, so it seems. As Psalm 47, a psalm of enthronement suggests, he is to be enthroned with God his Father, so that he may “abide with his church on earth to the end of the ages!” That is, they/we are not alone as he sends the Holy Spirit, God’s Holy Ruach which hovered over the face of the waters in creation, and has led and inspired God’s people throughout all the scriptures to which Jesus seeks to open our minds.
It seems as if Luke thinks that they/we still not get it as we see them remaining stationary, gazing up into the sky. Suddenly, two men dressed in white robes appear. Though not identified by Luke, is it too much to assume that this is an immediate appearance of the Holy Spirit kick starting them, and us, to be the witnesses to the ends of the Earth Jesus commands them to be? "Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven? This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven." There’s no time to stand around gazing up into the heavens. There is work to be done right here. Right now! Which, as the story picks up in the Book of Acts, they do, immediately replacing the recently departed traitor, Judas. They cast lots, and the lot fell to Matthias as he joined the Eleven. One might say, the whole thrust of the story of the Ascension is the birth of the infant Church with all of us like them commissioned to be witnesses to the end of the ages.
Ascension Day isn’t about Jesus leaving us - It is about Jesus abides and reigns among us and within us. Now! Just as Jesus fills all things, Ascension is meant to fill us, his community of love and with Hope – Hope that one day, God’s Dream, God’s intention, of a world-wide spirit of Shalom, inspired by God’s Holy Spirit of mercy, compassion, forgiveness, and care for all persons and all of Creation. That we may become witnesses to these things!
It is said that the Blessed Augustine, Bishop of Hippo Regius, in Roman North Africa, once said: Hope has two beautiful daughters: Anger and Courage. There is such a thing, says the Bible, as righteous anger [vi]- what we see as injustice, what we hear from hate speech, and feel when wounded and frightened - is not a sin! It is Hope inspired by injustice and hate that gives us courage to continue the work begun back in the Gospel of Luke and in the Book of Acts. Luke bears witness to how a once frightened cohort of disciples became inspired by Hope, born of the Holy Spirit, to be witnesses to the ends of the Earth, and the world has never been the same.
May we be so inspired on this day of our Celebration of the Feast of the Ascension! May we join the Christ, who even now abides with us as he fills all things, as witnesses and participants in the dawning of God’s reign of Shalom, on Earth as it is in heaven! Amen.
[i]
Such as the conversation on the road to Emmaus, Luke 24:13-35
[ii] Luke
24:44-53
[iii]
Cousar, Robert B., Texts for Preaching Year C (Westminster John Knox Press
(Louisville, KY: 1994) p.329
[iv]
Ibid, Cousar
[v] Acts
1:1-11
[vi]
Ibid, Cousar suggests, for example, the story in I Samuel 11 in which Saul’s
righteous anger inspires the frightened people of God to rise with Hope and
head off the threat of an oppressive regime. p.324