The Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord (2024)
As they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him from their sight. While they were looking intently at the sky as he was going, suddenly two men dressed in white garments stood beside them. They said, “Men of Galilee, why are you standing there looking at the sky? This Jesus who has been taken up from you into heaven will return in the same way as you have seen him going into heaven.”
—Acts 1:9-11
In her novel, Gilead, Marilyn Robinson shares the story of Reverend John Ames who, looking back on a life of pastoral service, love, loss, faith, and hope, tells his young son:
Sometimes the visionary aspect of any particular day comes to you in the memory of it, or it opens to you over time. For example, whenever I take a child into my arms to be baptized, I am, so to speak, comprehended in the experience more fully, having seen more of life, knowing better what it means to affirm the sacredness of the human creature. I believe there are visions that come to us only in memory, in retrospect.
The New Testament is also a story of how memory shapes vision and the course of life itself.
Having lived alongside Jesus, his followers—including Mary and the Apostles—had to discern what his life, death, resurrection, and return to the Father revealed about who Jesus was and what God was asking of each of them. Their memories of his words and actions inspired them to go beyond their comfort zones or religious tradition, to risk becoming something more, and their faith and courage changed the world.
An understanding of Jesus’ return to the Father—of his Ascension into Heaven—was one of those visions “that come to us only in memory, in retrospect,” in much the same way that the experience of Jesus’ Resurrection could only be understood after the disciples lived their Easter-faith through years of praying, preaching, communion, fidelity, and suffering.
Calling this dynamic to mind, Pope Francis has reflected:
“The Ascension does not point to Jesus’ absence, but tells us that he is alive in our midst in a new way. He is no longer in a specific place in the world as he was before the Ascension. He is now in the lordship of God, present in every space and time, close to each one of us.” Although, for many believers, the Ascension of Jesus seems to focus on his departure, the truth of the Ascension is that Jesus is still with us, but in a new way.
The Solemnity of the Ascension is a celebration of two promises. First, Jesus has promised that he will send us the Holy Spirit, the Advocate, to guide and sustain the growth of the Church. Beyond this, the Ascension also contains a promise about what is now made possible for us in Christ:
May the eyes of your hearts be enlightened,
that you may know what is the hope that belongs to his call,
what are the riches of glory
in his inheritance among the holy ones,
and what is the surpassing greatness of his power
for us who believe,
in accord with the exercise of his great might. (Ephesians 1:18-19).
The challenge for us is to live in this promise.
It is so easy for us to become weighed down by our day-to-day responsibilities and the legion of distractions and diversions that are such a part of our contemporary culture, that the hazy promise of some future reality (however glorious) can’t really compete.
And yet, for us as Christians, it is trust in this promise that shapes who we are and what we believe.
The Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord invites us to foster the same spirit of discernment that the Apostles and the first generations of Christians practiced as they gradually came to understand who Jesus was and could be for them. The vision of the glorified Lord, a promise of future glory, is something we can realize and live here and now.
O Christ our God, upon fulfilling Your dispensation for our sake, You ascended in Glory, uniting the earthly with the heavenly. You were never separate but remained inseparable, and cried out to those who love You, "I am with you and no one is against you."
-Kontakion for the Ascension of the Lord from the Orthodox liturgy