Ascension - The Ascension of Our Lord

Ascension - The Ascension of Our Lord

Author: Pastor Scott Schul
May 12, 2024

To paraphrase today’s lesson from Acts, I ask you, people of Grace: why are you looking at the paschal candle we just extinguished?  The reason of course is that for seven Sundays in a row we’ve lit that candle as a symbol of the resurrected Christ’s presence in the world.  Though it’s just a candle, seeing it suddenly extinguished is unexpected and a little jarring. 

All throughout the Easter season, as that candle has been lit, we’ve heard the stories of Jesus’s post-resurrection appearances during the forty days after Easter, when he walked and talked and even ate with his disciples.  But Jesus stopped appearing in that manner when he ascended to heaven, something we heard Luke describe today both in his Gospel and in the Book of Acts, which he also wrote.

On the day of the ascension, the day Jesus was enthroned in heaven, the disciples had to wrestle with this change.  As they watched him being lifted into the clouds, questions stirred in their hearts.  What would it mean for Jesus to be in heaven instead of next to them?  Is he gone forever?  Does anything we do on earth now matter?  Or is our job now just to bide our time and wait out the clock until we too go to heaven?

Maybe these are questions you too have pondered.  After all, the situation is the same for us as it was for the disciples on Ascension Day.  Jesus is no longer with us in a physical body like he was during that 40-day period.  So has Jesus totally left us?  Do we matter to him?  How are we supposed to live?  These are big questions.  Overwhelming questions.  You can see why the disciples might get caught up in them and become fixated on watching Jesus depart into the clouds.  And you can understand why we likewise can get stuck in place, with our heads in the clouds, unable anymore to see or sense Jesus in our everyday lives.

For the disciples, the risk that day was that if they just stayed there staring at their king in the clouds, they’d never go to all the places Christ was calling them to go.  That’s our challenge too.  Interpret the king’s enthronement incorrectly, and problems follow.  A famous king learned that lesson the hard way.  Remember William the Conqueror?  In 1066 he and his Norman army crossed the English Channel and defeated the Anglo Saxons at the Battle of Hastings to win the English crown. 

William’s enthronement, his coronation, took place in Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day of 1066.  The ceremony was conducted in both French and English, and at the culmination of the coronation, the assembled guests were asked to shout their assent to being ruled by the new king, William.  They all did so, some in French and some in English.  The problem though was that to the Norman soldiers on guard outside the abbey, it sounded like a riot or maybe even an assassination attempt and so they “began setting fire to houses around the Abbey.  Smoke filled the church and the congregation fled and riots broke out.”  In the ensuring panic, some even died.  It was a tragic end to an otherwise historic day.1

And so friends, as we consider Jesus’s enthronement, his ascension into heaven, it’s critical that we not misunderstand or misinterpret the meaning of what happened.  Rev. Philip Pfatteicher was an important contemporary Lutheran theologian and expert on liturgy and worship.  He died in 2021, but in one of his final books he noted that Ascension Day “marks the completion of our Lord’s redemptive work, and yet the story is not finished, for as the angel reminds… us… the risen Lord, whose earthly appearances have ended, will come again.”2

But don’t think of the Ascension as a moment when Jesus puts a big “out to lunch” sign on the window and then disappears for a few thousand years.  On the contrary, as Pfatteicher goes on to note, Jesus “being taken from the earth into heaven does not imply his absence from his Church.  In fact, because he is now beyond the bounds of time and space and free of their confinement, he is able to be present everywhere at once.”3 

In other words, friends, it’s like a monarch who has gone to a high mountain and from that lofty vantage point can now see the big picture and can direct the forces of good in a more complete and effective manner.  The Ascension of Our Lord does not mean that Jesus is forever gone from us or that he doesn’t care about us anymore.  It does not mean that our mortality is meaningless or that our task as Christians is to just sit around staring at the sky while our world goes up in flames.  The Ascension of Our Lord is Christ’s urgent call to us to love and serve our God and our neighbor with renewed commitment.  So long as we’re not just staring at the sky, we can do this because Jesus is directing our work from above, and he has sent us a powerful reinforcement, the Holy Spirit.  We are, as our Gospel states, “clothed with power from on high.”4

It reminds me of something that happened in my third year of seminary, when I was on internship.  Maybe the most important lesson I learned didn’t happen in Sunday worship or a meeting with my supervising pastor, but in a state park one afternoon near Slippery Rock.  I had gone there to birdwatch.  But on that day, a park ranger handed me a sheet of paper which I accepted, just out of politeness, not interest.  It had photos of all the wildflowers that were blooming in the park that week. 

Not far into my hike I realized I was spending more time looking for wildflowers than birds.  My eyes stopped scanning the skies for Red-winged Blackbirds, Scarlet Tanagers, and Downy Woodpeckers, and instead I found myself absorbed in the wonder of Valerians, Violets, and Trillium.  I was shocked at all I’d been missing, just because my eyes had been staring at the clouds.  With my broadened viewpoint, suddenly my world became so much bigger and so much more beautiful.

In a similar way, as we mark the Ascension of Our Lord, Jesus is reminding us to broaden our perspective and to widen our view so we do not miss the many places Jesus resides, now that his physical body has ascended to his heavenly throne.  Right now we’re living in an age of unending distraction.  We have so many demands and possibilities competing for our attention.  I especially see the weariness in the eyes of young parents, who are balancing work, school, sports, band, hobbies, and so many other things for themselves and for their families. 

They aren’t the only ones of course.  We all have too many things we’re trying to watch and tend at once.  And so when we do manage to get to church, it’s easy to think that this is the one place we find Jesus: here within these walls.  We look for Jesus in the hymns, the liturgy, the sermon, the communion elements, and yes even the big candle next to the font.  And certainly he is here, amongst us in a very real and meaningful way.

But every place you see Jesus in this building is preparation for the adventure of seeing Christ in the world after you exit church, because he’s there, in your work, your play, your home, and everyone you meet.  Our neighbors need this Good News!  If we don’t tell them, who will?  So, people of Grace: why are you looking at that candle, or me?  You heard our Gospel.  Jesus is calling us to transform the world with his grace, his mercy, and his love.  That might start in here, but the real work takes place out there.  If that sounds daunting, fear not!  We have the Holy Spirit at our back and our Lord guides us from above.  We have everything we need!  All that’s left is to roll up our sleeves and get to work.  Amen.

Citations
1 See www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/royals/william-i-the-conqueror; www.thehistoryoflondon.co.uk/the-norman-conquest-and-coronation-of-king-william-at-westminster/
2 P. Pfatteicher, Journey into the Heart of God: Living the Liturgical Year (2013 Oxford University Press), p. 258.
3 Ibid, p. 259.
4 Luke 24:49

Sermon Texts: Acts 1:1-11 and Luke 24:44-53

Luke 24:44-53

44[Jesus said to the eleven and those with them,] “These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you—that everything written about me in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms must be fulfilled.”45Then he opened their minds to understand the scriptures, 46and he said to them, “Thus it is written, that the Messiah is to suffer and to rise from the dead on the third day, 47and that repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem. 48You are witnesses of these things. 49And see, I am sending upon you what my Father promised; so stay here in the city until you have been clothed with power from on high.”

50Then he led them out as far as Bethany, and, lifting up his hands, he blessed them. 51While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven. 52And they worshiped him, and returned to Jerusalem with great joy; 53and they were continually in the temple blessing God.

Copyright Rev. Scott E. Schul, 2024 All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission. 


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