Recently, riding in the car, I heard an old, late 19th-century
Canadian folksong:
From this valley they say you are
going.We will miss your bright eyes and sweet smile,
For they say you are taking the sunshine
That has brightened our pathway a while.
So come sit by my side if you love me.
Do not hasten to bid me adieu.
Just remember the Red River Valley,
And the cowboy that has loved you so true
As I was listening, it occurred to me that the disciples might have had
similar feelings as they watched Jesus go away. If moving is one of the most
stressful of all human activities, then this was the move to end all moves – not
for the one leaving, of course, but certainly for those left behind!
Some of us, I suspect, are surely old enough to remember when, right
after the Gospel on Ascension Day, the Easter Candle – our very visible symbol
of the presence of the Risen Christ – was ceremonially extinguished. Even more
dramatically, in former days, in certain places, the Easter Candle (or
sometimes an image of the Risen Lord himself) might be hoisted up into the
Church’s roof until it disappeared. The people would stand and stretch out
their arms, while a shower of roses would recall Christ’s parting promise to
send the Holy Spirit to his Church.
Such quaint customs recall those familiar pictures of the Ascension that
show the disciples staring up at an empty space – sometimes with 2 feet
sticking out from a cloud (with holes in them, just to make sure we get it who
is missing). The point, of course, is that Jesus is now gone, and that, like
the cowboy in the Canadian folksong we are left behind. But are we also alone?
Historically speaking, the Ascension commemorates the end of the short
period when the Risen Christ appeared periodically to his disciples after the
resurrection. Then, those appearances ended. And the disciples were left behind
to continue his mission in the world. But not quite alone, since Christ
continues in his Church through his promised gift of the Holy Spirit. “I am sending the promise of my Father upon
you,” the departing Jesus said to his disciples, “so stay in the city until you are clothed with power from on high
[Luke 24:49]. So Jesus may be gone, but he is still with us in a very real way.
Meanwhile, the point of the Ascension is where Jesus has gone now.
He is, as we say Sunday after Sunday in
the Creed, seated at the right had of the Father. And,
just as he is still really with us here, through the power of the Holy Spirit
and in the sacraments we celebrate, so we too are also in some sense with him there.
As we say in today’s Eucharistic Prayer, we celebrate the most sacred day on which your Only begotten Son, our Lord, placed
at the right hand of your glory our weak human nature, which he had united to
himself. In having his Son’s human nature enthroned at his side in heaven,
God now has at his side in some sense the whole human world which his Son embraced
in himself and experienced to the full – the human world of our lives, our
loves, our work, our play, our successes, our failures. And so now, having
experienced our world with us (and in the process having invested it
with more meaning that it would ever otherwise have had), God in turn now
shares his world with us. For where Christ has gone, there we hope to
follow. Where he is now, there we hope to be.
So the Ascension is also about us, as well as about Jesus – and not just
about our being left behind, but about what’s now in store for us thanks to
Jesus’ resurrection, and about what goes on in the meantime. The Ascension sets
the stage for that hoped-for future, which we get a glimpse of already in
Jesus, who, although ascended, still invites us to approach him even now – as
the epistle says with a sincere heart and
in absolute trust [Hebrews 10:22].
Homily for the Ascension of the
Lord, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, May 12, 2013.
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