LITURGY
AND LIFE
By Lucie Leduc
Ascension
Sunday
May
16, 2010
Acts
1:1-11
Psalm
47
Ephesians
1:17-23 or
Luke
24: 46-53
Today we
celebrate the awesome event of the apostles witnessing Jesus being
lifted up into heaven. The readings from Luke invite us into Christ’s
glory, to receive the blessing he gives to the apostles and with the
ears of faith to hear and be present to his conclusive instructions.
The beginning of
the first reading from the book of Acts presents the author’s summary
of everything he wrote in his first book about Jesus (ie. The Gospel of
Luke), picking up where he left off with the many appearances of Jesus
to the disciples over 40 days, the number echoing once again the
connection of Jesus with the expectations of Israel throughout the
Hebrew Scriptures. Jesus fulfils the promise of the long-awaited
Messiah for Israel and for the whole world.
The power and
glory of Jesus’ authority is newly manifested as he orders the apostles
not to leave Jerusalem, “but to wait there for the promise of the
Father . . . you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days
from now.” With these words, and the words of the second reading from
Ephesians, we, today, experience our union with Jesus and the
transition from knowing him in his humanity to knowing him completely
as Jesus Christ “far above all rule and authority and power and
dominion, and above every name that is named, not only in this age but
also in the age to come.” We hear the fullness of his humanity and
divinity in these ascension accounts.
We also remember
our beginnings as church “which is his body, the fullness of him who
fills all in all,” and the promise of the Spirit in our lives as having
received the “riches of his glorious inheritance” among us. This day
gives us grounds to celebrate fully our share in Christ’s glory. As St.
Irenaeus would express it later, “The glory of God is humanity fully
alive!”
Nevertheless,
all kinds of questions might arise for us as it did for the apostles.
“Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?”
We might like to see Christ’s power displayed to crush oppression in
the world, to end wars happening in our time, to end suffering here and
now in the context we experience as most devastating. For example,
today we might ask, “Lord, is this the time when you will restore your
church from the scandal of sexual abuse?” Jesus’ response is
instructive. As Diane Bergant says in the Year C volume of her trilogy
Preaching the New Lectionary, “They are to concern themselves with
being Jesus’ witnesses to the ends of the earth and not with the
limited restoration of one nation.
Furthermore, it
is not for them to know God’s timing. They will have the power of the
Spirit to guide them for whatever length of time God desires.”
In Luke’s Gospel
account of the ascension, the further instruction of Jesus is to
proclaim repentance, change of heart and forgiveness of sins to all
nations, from having witnessed him throughout his life doing the same.
Along with the
apostles, “we are witnesses to these things.” We share in the profound
privilege of blessing others with the hope that comes from faith in
Christ’s victory over sin and death, and the forgiveness born of
self-emptying love that is forever being poured out on the whole of
creation.
We can trust and
celebrate today with great joy that in God’s time a new creation will
emerge. All will be well and fully alive in Christ!
Leduc
is the program co-ordinator at Queen’s House Retreat and Renewal Centre
in Saskatoon.