To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 1:1-11;Eph 1:17-23; Lk 24:46-53
The ascension of the Lord might be seen, on the one
hand, as a feast that celebrates the completion of the Lord’s work on earth. On the other hand, it might be seen as a
feast that celebrates the beginning of the work of the Church. The Lord has done
what he was meant to do; he had the courage of his convictions and even went to
his death for them. He is now raised and has gone to his rightful place. What
matters now is that the Church continues the work that he inaugurated. What
matters now is that the Church has the courage of its convictions. What matters
now is that the Church be prepared to face all kinds of difficulty and
hardship, turmoil and tribulation, and still dare to believe that God will
accompany the Church every step of the way just as God accompanied Jesus, even to
the Cross.
The work that Jesus inaugurated is summarised in the
first verses of today’s Gospel. These verses contain, in a capsule form, the
whole purpose of the Incarnation. Jesus came to proclaim repentance and
forgiveness of sins. He was willing to
go to his death because of such a proclamation, but was raised by the Father
and now lives with the Father. However, there is more. The repentance and forgiveness of sins is to
be preached by his disciples to all nations. No one is excluded or to be
excluded. The message is too good not to be shared. It is too good to be kept
exclusively for a select group of people. It is too good not to be communicated
to the whole world.
What does repentance and forgiveness of sins entail?
How does one repent? How are sins forgiven? Repentance does not mean being
sorry. Rather, it means the willingness
to put on a new mind. It means the
willingness to see things, persons, and events in a new way. It means letting
go of the past, without regret, and putting on the new with courage, conviction,
and confidence. Repentance is not the condition for forgiveness of sins but its
consequence. Precisely because our sins are forgiven, we repent. Repentance
follows the forgiveness of sins. The
desire to repent is proof that one has accepted the forgiveness that God
grants. This is exactly what the disciples do after they receive the commission
from Jesus. They “returned” to Jerusalem
with great joy even as Jesus was carried into heaven. They had received his
blessing and had accepted it; they had received his forgiveness and had shown
this in their response.
Their response is shown in the beginning of the
first reading of today which recapitulates the last verses of the Gospel. The
disciples received the power of forgiveness and were to become witnesses of
this power to all nations. Jesus, who had been a witness of this power in his
life time, was now taken up to heaven and the responsibility of being witnesses
now rested on the shoulders of the disciples. According to these verses, discipleship
is defined in terms of an active witness to the risen and ascended Jesus. Jesus’
disciples must show, as he did, that God was indeed forgiveness and love. They
must show that the plan and will of God was to reconcile the world to himself
in Jesus.
This is the hope to which the Ephesians were called in
the second reading and to which each one is called, even today. This hope was
made manifest and tangible in what God did in Jesus and in what God will
continue to do in those who believe. The end of the reading reinforces the
command that Jesus gave to the disciples in the Gospel text of today. Since the
Church is the body of Christ, it has to live like his body and not separate
from him. In other words, it means that the Church is an extension of Jesus and
all that he was, and must be, to the world.
Today, more than two thousand years after the death,
resurrection, and ascension of Jesus, the mandate, the commission, remains the
same. We, as Church, are called to make present Jesus through the words we
speak and the actions we perform. We are called to preach that same forgiveness
and repentance that Jesus brought from God. We can do this, as the disciples
did, by “returning to Jerusalem ”.
This means a conviction that we have been forgiven, accepted, and loved by God,
in Jesus. We can show this conviction, in
a tangible way, by accepting, forgiving, and loving in return. The world will
never know or receive this forgiveness if we do not proclaim it and make it
known. The body of Jesus is visible today in all who claim to be his disciples.
This is to be shown to the world as “proof”, not only of the fact that Jesus is
alive, but that in his name, forgiveness is even now being preached. It is
significant that the content of the preaching, even after the resurrection of
Jesus, is to be forgiveness. That is why
Jesus came into the world; to save people from their sins. This forgiveness can
be preached and made real only if we bear witness to it through our lives.
Since God, in Jesus, saves, sends and blesses, the
Church must, in continuation of God’s action, do the same.
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