The Sunday after the Ascension
June 1, 2025
Revelation
22.12-13, 16-17, 20-21
+ + This past Wednesday evening, at our regular Wednesday evening
Eucharist, we celebrated the Eve of the feast of the Ascension.
Now, for most of us, this just isn’t that big of a
feast day for us.
In fact, I don’t know a whole lot of Christians who, quite
honestly, even give the Ascension a second thought.
No one was packing it in on Wednesday for the Ascension Eve Mass!
Some of us might look at the Ascension as a kind of anticlimactic
event.
The Resurrection has already occurred on Easter morning.
That of course is the big event.
The Ascension comes as it does after Jesus has appeared to his
disciples and has proved to them that he wasn’t simply a ghost, but was actually resurrected in his body.
In comparison to Easter, the Ascension is a quiet event.
The resurrected Jesus simply leads his followers out to Bethany
and, then, quietly, he is taken up by God into heaven.
And that’s it.
There are no angels, no trumpet blasts.
There is no thunder or lightning.
He just goes.
And that’s that.
So, why is the Ascension so important to us?
Well, it’s important on two levels.
One, on a practical level, we recognize the fact that, at the
Ascension, this is where our work begins.
This is when our work as followers of Jesus begins.
We, at this point, become the Presence of Christ now in the world.
This is where we are now compelled to go out now and actually do
the work Jesus has left for us to do.
Those apostles who are left gazing up at Jesus don’t just simple linger there,
wringing their hands, wondering what has just happened.
Well, actually, yes, that’s exactly what they do.
For a while anyway.
But eventually, with a BIG prompting from the Holy Spirit, they
get going.
They go out and start doing what they are meant to do.
But we’re going to talk about that NEXT Sunday on the feast of Pentecost.
For now, we’re here, with them, watching Jesus being taken up, out
of their midst.
For now, we know Jesus is taken out of our midst and is seated at
the right hand of God.
Again, this is the point in which we become the presence of Christ
in this world.
Now, I love the Feast of the Ascension!
What I love about the feast is that it is more than just going out
to do Christ’s work.
Which brings us to our second point.
Again and again, as we see in the life of Jesus, it isn’t just
about Jesus.
Our job is not simply to observe Jesus and bask quietly in his
holiness.
A lot of Christians think that is all it is.
But, it’s about us too.
When we hear the stories of Jesus birth’ at Christmas, we can look
at them as simply fantastic.
They are wonderful stories that happened then and there, to him.
Or…we could see them for what they are for us.
We could see it our birth story in the births tory of Jesus as
well.
God worked in the life of Mary and Joseph and what happened?
God’s own Son was born.
But it should remind us that God worked in our birth as well.
Well. Maybe not with angels and shepherds.
But God worked in our lives even from the beginning, as God did in
the life of Jesus.
See, Jesus’ birth became our
birth.
At Easter too, we could
simply bask in the glorious mystery of Jesus’ resurrection from the tomb.
But the story doesn’t really mean
anything to us until we see ourselves being resurrected with him.
His resurrection is our
resurrection as well.
God, who raised Jesus, will raise us as well.
Well, the same thing happened last Thursday.
Jesus’s ascension is our
ascension as well.
What God does for Jesus, God does for us too.
That’s incredibly important to understand!
We are not simply followers of Jesus.
We are sharers with Jesus in all that happens to him.
And that is incredibly wonderful!
The event of the Incarnation is a reminder that in much the same
way God’s Word, God’s very essence, is incarnate in Jesus so God’s Word, God’s
essence, is incarnate in us as well.
So, regarding the Ascension, it is important for us to look at
what happened and see it not only with Jesus’ eyes, not only in his followers’
eyes, but in our eyes as well.
Yes, we are rooted to this earth, to creation.
We are children of this world.
But we are also children of the next world as well.
We are children of heaven too.
Jesus tells us in our reading from Revelation today:
“See, I am coming soon; my reward is with me, to repay according
to everyone’s work.”
Our reward, as children of Heaven, is with the One who says,
“I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the
beginning and the end.”
What the ascension reminds us is that we are inheritors of heaven
too.
We, like Jesus, will one day ascend like him, beyond this world.
We will be taken up and be with God, just as Jesus is with God.
In fact, our whole life here is a slow, steady ascension toward
God.
We are moving, incrementally, upward toward God.
This is our journey.
And as we do, as we recognize that we are moving upward, slowly
ascending, like Jesus, to that place in which we ultimately belong, we should
be feeling what Jesus no doubt felt as he ascended.
Joy.
Happiness.
Exultation.
When we are happy—when we are joyful—we often use the word soar.
Our hearts soar with happiness.
When we are full of joy and happiness we imagine ourselves
floating upward.
In a sense, when we are happy or in love or any of those other
wonderful things, we, in a sense, ascend.
Conversely, when we are depressed?
We plunge!
We fall.
We go down.
So this whole idea of ascension—of going “up”—is important.
Jesus, in his joy, went up toward God.
And we, in our joy, are, at this very moment, following that path.
We have followed Jesus through his entire journey so far.
We have followed him from his birth, through his ministry, to his
cross.
We have followed him to his descent into hell and through his
resurrection from the tomb.
And now, we are following him on his ascension.
And it is joyful and glorious.
Right now.
Right here.
In this world.
Doing the work God gives us to do.
And what is that?
It is doing what we must do to make God’s Kingdom present here and
now.
It means loving—loving God, loving others, loving ourselves.
It means doing what needs to be done to love and make God’s
Kingdom present right now, even weary as we may be, while we are in this world.
Even in this sometimes very ugly, very violent world.
So, let’s not just wring your hands like the disciples of Jesus
after the Ascension, wondering what to do next.
We know what to do.
So let’s do it!
Here we are.
In this place.
In this world.
Doing the best we can.
And just when we think God has provided just what we need for this
journey, we find one more truly amazing gift to us.
Next week, an event will happen that will show us that Jesus
remains with us in an even more extraordinary way.
On that day—Pentecost Sunday—God’s Spirit will descend upon us and
remain with us.
Always.
But we’re getting ahead of ourselves.
For now, we must simply face the fact that it all does somehow
fall into place.
All that following of Jesus is now really starting to pay off.
We know now—fully and completely—that God will never leave us
alone.
In what seems like defeat, there is amazing resurrection.
And ascension.
In what seemed like being stuck to an earth that often feels sick
and desolate, we now soar.
So, today, and this week, as we remember and rejoice in the
Ascension, as we prepare for the Holy Spirit’s descent, let our hearts ascend
with Jesus.
Let them soar upward in joy at the fact that God is still with us.
Let us be filled with joy that God’s Spirit dwells within us and
can never be taken from us.
Let us rise up, in joy.
Let us rise up in us and proclaim loudly.
We are children of heaven!
We are ascending to our God and your God.
And we are gaining our rightful inheritance!
And it is good!
Very good!
Amen.
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