Today, the Seventh Sunday of Easter, we celebrate the feast of the Ascension of the Lord, it is the fortieth day after Easter when Jesus ascended to heaven. This solemnity directs our attention to Christ, who ascended into heaven before the eyes of his disciples and who is now seated at the right hand of the Father. He is there to prepare a place for us in the Kingdom of heaven, and is destined to come again.
The Ascension is an image used in praying the glorious mysteries of the Rosary. It is the second glorious mystery and the fruit of this mystery is hope. We as Christians live in hope of being united with Christ in heaven and for Christ’s second coming, when Jesus ascended it did not mean that he was gone forever. At the beginning of the Gospel reading, Jesus commissions the disciples to go out and proclaim the Good News to all the world. He then gives a list of signs which will accompany those who believe in Him and are baptised in His name. They will have the power to preach, heal, and cast out demons in Jesus’ name. After Jesus said these words, he was taken up to heaven, seated at the right hand of God. Then the disciples left and started to preach everywhere, the Lord was with them as they were able to perform miracles in the name of Jesus.
Today’s Gospel does not point to Jesus’ absence but tells us that he is alive in our midst in a new way. Jesus is now in the Lordship of God, present in every space and time, he is close to every one of us. Whilst Jesus is at the right hand of the Father he still dwells in his Body, the Church. Through the Church, Christ acts in the world. Jesus sends out his disciples and that includes us to continue his work of proclaiming the Good News through our words and deeds. At the end of every mass the Priest ‘sends us out’ to announce the Gospel, not all of us can go out into the whole world but we as Christians are called to bring the Good News to others in our daily lives. It’s a call to the whole of creation. We can ask ourselves if there are any areas of our lives where we can bring good news to others or for the environment around us. Do we need to reconcile ourselves with a member of our family with whom we have quarrelled? Can we commit to recycling waste or reduce consumerism, share with those in need or plant a tree!
The Ascension, today, directs our gaze towards heaven and reminds us that the mission of the Church is a boundless mission. The Lord’s Ascension into heaven was the start of a new era, a new form of Jesus’ presence among us, Pope Francis says, “it calls us to keep eyes and hearts open to encounter Jesus, to serve him and bear witness to him to others.” Through our baptism we are called to be “men and women of the Ascension” and with the same power given to the first disciples he sends us today to establish visible and concrete signs of hope. This hope comes from the Risen Christ who went to heaven and opened the gates, and we live in the hope that we will one day reach it.
Coming soon.