To read the texts click on the texts: Acts1:1-11; Eph1:17-23; Mk 16:15-20
The
Ascension of Jesus into heaven celebrates the fact that, after completing his
work on earth, work that the Father had entrusted to him, Jesus returned to his
rightful place at the right hand of the Father, However, this is only one side
of the story. The other side is that, before he ascended into heaven, he
entrusted a commission to his disciples and to all who believe in his name.
This commission was to proclaim to every living creature, till the end of time,
God’s unconditional love for them, manifested not only in the sending of his
only Son, but also in the Son’s crucifixion, and death. It was a love that was
manifested, ultimately, in raising this Son on the third day and granting him
his rightful place at the right hand of God.
The first
reading from the Acts of the Apostles sets the tone for the universal mission
which the disciples are given. Here, they are commissioned to be witnesses, not
only in Jerusalem, but to the ends of the earth. However, even as they are
commissioned, they are cautioned about two things. The first is patiently
waiting for the gift of the Spirit. The second is that it is not for them to
know too many details about time, place, and the like.
Their job
is only to be witnesses. To use the words of St Francis of Assisi, they are
called to “Proclaim the Gospel at all times. When necessary, use words.” Their
testimony was about him, not just about what happened long ago and far away.
They could not be witnesses unless they had met the Risen Christ – unless their
lives had been transformed by him.
This idea
is reiterated in the Gospel text of today which begins with the commission of
the risen Jesus to his disciples of salvation. The Good News was that God had
shown his unconditional love for the world by saving all people in Christ, his
Son. The signs that would accompany this preaching and its acceptance were
practical signs. These would be shown in action and could be summarized as
healing and wholeness. The disciples followed the instructions of the Lord and
continued the mission that he had inaugurated.
This Lord,
whom the disciples obey, is indeed the Lord of the whole Universe. The second
reading affirms that he has been given dominion over all persons, things, and
situations and sits at the right hand of God. The Church, which he inaugurated,
is his body which continues his work even today.
We need to
ask ourselves some serious questions on the feast of Ascension. The first of
these is whether we, as Church today continue the mission of Jesus or whether
we are still looking up at the sky like the disciples did, until they were
reminded that the Mission had to be continued on earth. When we keep looking up
to heaven for answers to questions that can be found on earth, we are still
looking up to the sky. When we respond theoretically rather than practically to
the problems of others, we are still looking up to the sky. When we expect God
to do everything for us rather than ask him for help when we are faced with
insurmountable odds, we are still looking up to the sky. We need to remove our
gaze from the sky and bring it down to earth.
We also
need to ask whether our focus is so much on the miraculous that we fail to find
God in the ordinary events of life. While it is true that Jesus did promise his
disciples that extraordinary signs would accompany belief in him, it is also
true that he never used his miracles as proof of his divine identity. As a
matter of fact, he consistently refused to give signs. He wanted people to find
him and to find God in the ordinary, humdrum, mundane, everyday activities of
life. If we are not able to find God in all things and find all things in God,
it probably means that we are focusing too much on the extraordinary and
stupendous and not enough on the fact that God, in Jesus, is all and in all.
We need to
ask ourselves whether, in our enthusiasm to spread the Gospel of God, we have
been honest to it or whether we have mangled and distorted it so much that it
has become our personal and often bigoted and biased interpretation rather than
God’s Good News. When we find that we are spreading the Good News by dint of
human might and craft and not by listening to God’s Spirit of openness and
sincerity and, when we find that our intentions in spreading this news are
selfish and self-centred rather than selfless and altruistic, then we are
guilty of not being true to God, to his Good News and to ourselves.
The feast
of the Ascension reminds us that we, as disciples of Jesus, are today his body,
mind, and heart. Jesus was true to himself and true to his Father. We need to
be true to Jesus and true to his Father. If we are, then we can celebrate this
feast with great joy knowing, that, though the Lord is in heaven, he continues
to be present on earth.
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