The Sunday after the Ascension
John 17.6-19
+ Well, as you know, the mask mandate was lifted by the CDC on
Thursday.
I will be releasing updated protocols today after asking for feedback
from our Vestry today.
It is a time to be cautiously optimistic about our future.
And, as I’ve been saying for several weeks, we need to start thinking about
moving into “post-pandemic” mode.
We are in a kind of plateau right now.
We are in a flat, open space between where we have been and where we
are going.
So, what does that mean?
How do we do that?
What does the post-pandemic world—and more specifically, the
post-pandemic St. Stephen’s—look like?
Well, I don’t know.
None of us do.
But I do know that, just as somehow we got through the darkest day of
the pandemic, so we continue to move forward and do what we’re called to do in
the wake of this pandemic.
When these things happen—when bad stuff or times of major change
happens, I always say: look, at how the Spirit of God moves in our midst.
I do believe that we are finding ourselves moving into a place, yet
again, that is very similar to place those first followers of Jesus were in
right about now in their following of Jesus just after Jesus ascended to heaven.
They are being prepared for the movement of the Spirit of God in their
lives.
This week, in our scripture
readings, we move slowly away from the Easter season toward Pentecost.
For the last several weeks, we have
been basking in the afterglow of the resurrected Jesus.
In our Gospel readings, this
resurrected Jesus has walked with us, has talked with us, has eaten with us and
has led the way for us.
Now, he has been taken up.
We find a transformation of sorts
happening.
With his ascension, our perception
of Jesus has changed.
No longer is he the wise sage, the
misunderstood rebel, the religious renegade that he seemed to be when he walked
around, performing miracles and upsetting the religious and political powers
that be.
He is now something so much more.
He is more than just a regular
prophet.
He is the Prophet extraordinaire.
He is the fulfillment of all
prophecies.
He is more than just a king—a
despotic monarch of some sort like Caesar or Herod.
He is truly the Messiah.
He is the divine Son of God.
At his ascension, we find that he
is, in a sense, anointed, crowned and ordained.
He does not just ascend back to
heaven and then is kind of dissolved into the great unknown.
He ascends, then assumes a place at
God’s right hand.
At his ascension, we find that what
we are gazing at is something we could not comprehend before.
He has helped us to see that God has
truly come among us.
He has reminded us that God has
taken a step toward us.
He has showed us that God loves us
and cares for us.
He has shown us that the hold death
held on us is now broken.
He has reminded us that God speaks
to us not from a pillar of cloud or fire, not on some shroud-covered mountain,
not in visions.
But God is with us and speaks in us.
We are God’s prophets now.
The puzzle pieces are falling into
place.
What seemed so confusing and unreal
is starting to come together.
God truly does love us and know us.
And next week, one more puzzle piece
falls into place.
Next week, we will celebrate God’s
Spirit descending upon and staying with us.
For the moment, we are in this
plateau, caught in between those two events—the Ascension and Pentecost—trying
to make sense of what has happened and trying to prepare ourselves for what is
about to happen.
But things are about to really
change.
Man, are things about to change!
We are caught between Jesus’ ascent
into heaven and the Spirit’s descent to us.
See, plateaus are not bad things.
A plateau offers us a time for to
pause, to ponder who we are and where are in this place—in this time in which
everything seems so spiritually topsy-turvy, in this time before the Spirit
moves and stirs up something incredible.
This week, smack dab in the middle
of the twelve days between the Ascension and Pentecost, we find ourselves
examining the impact of this event of God in our lives.
And God has made an impact in our
lives.
The commission that the ascended
Jesus gave to the apostles, is still very much our commission as well.
We must love—fully and completely.
Because in loving, we are living.
In loving, we are living fully and
completely.
In loving, we are bringing the ascended
Christ to others.
And we must go out and live out this
commission in the world.
When we do, the ascended Christ is
very much acting in the world.
When we think about what those first
followers went through in a fairly short period of time—Jesus’ betrayal and
murder, his resurrection and his ascension—we realize it was a life altering
experience.
Their lives—their faith, their whole
sense of being—was changed forever.
They would never be who they were
again.
That is where we are right now as
well, right here in this plateau in the pandemic.
We find ourselves simply moving
through the life-altering events with bated breath.
Only later, when everything has
settled down, will we have the opportunity to examine what had just happened to
us.
And it is then that we realize the
enormity of the changes in our lives.
For those first followers of Jesus,
it seems like they didn’t have much of a change to ponder their life-altering
experiences.
As soon as one life-altering
experience happened, another one came along.
Just when they had experienced
Jesus’ death, resurrection and ascension, they encountered this outpouring of God’s
Spirit in their lives.
The waters, it seemed, were kept
perpetually stirred.
Nothing was allowed to settle.
That is what our ministry is often
like.
One day, very early in my career, I
came to that realization myself.
I’m sure Deacon John knows this to
be true as well.
Ministry is perpetually on-going.
There is never an ending to it.
It’s always something.
One week brings another set of
opportunities, set-backs, trip-ups, tediums, frustrations, joys, celebrations.
These are things those first
followers of Jesus no doubt struggled with.
Yet we, like them, are sustained.
We, like them, are upheld.
We, like them, are supported by the God
who welcomed the ascended Jesus, whose work we are doing in this world.
In those moments when our works
seems useless, when it seems like we have done no good work, the God who
brought Jesus back still triumphs.
We all remember that song by the
Beatles, “Eleanor Rigby.”
I remember how sad I used to feel
when I heard them sing about Father Mackenzie, how he
“…wipes the dirt from his hands as
he walks from the grave.
No one was saved.”
You know what?
It feels like that sometimes.
But those moments are moments of
self-centeredness.
Those moments are moments when we
think it all depends on us.
On ME.
Our job, in this time between Jesus’
departure from us and the return of the Holy Spirit to us, in the post-pandemic
era that we are entering, is to simply let God do what God needs to do in this
interim.
We need to let the Holy Spirit work
in us and through us.
We need to let the God who brought
Jesus to heaven be the end result of our work.
When we wipe our hands as we walk
from the grave, lamenting the fact that it seems no one was saved, we need to
realize that, of course, it seems that way as we gaze downward at our hands.
But above us, the Ascension is
happening.
Above us, Jesus, seated at God’s
right hand, is triumphant—as Prophet of prophets, of King of Kings, as the High
Priest of all priests.
Above us, in that place of glory
with God, Jesus triumphs—and we with him.
Above us, God’s Spirit is about to rain
down upon us as flames of fire.
All we have to do is look up.
All we have to do is stop gazing at
our dirty, callused, over-worked hands—all we have to do is turn from our
self-centeredness—and look up.
And there we will see the triumph.
And as we do, we will realize that
more were saved than we initially thought.
Someone was saved. We were saved.
Jesus has ascended.
And we have—or will—ascend with him
as well.
He prays in today’s Gospel that we
“may have [his] joy made complete in [ourselves].”
That joy comes when we let the Holy
Spirit be reflected in what we do in this world.
So, let this Spirit of joy be made
complete in you.
Let the Spirit of joy live in you
and through you and be reflected to others by you.
When we do, we will be, as Jesus
promises us, “sanctified in truth.”
We will be sanctified in the truth
of knowing and living out our lives in the light of the ascension.
We will be sanctified by the fact
that we have looked up and seen the truth happened above us in beauty and light
and joy.
Let us pray.
Loving God, we rejoice today in the
fact that you have brought your Son Jesus to be seated at your right hand.
Prepare us as we wander about in this plateau in our lives, so that we can
truly receive your Spirit and all the gifts that comes with Pentecost. In Jesus’
name, we pray. Amen.
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