“He was lifted up while they looked on, and a cloud took him from their sight.” Jesus ascended to the Father. It’s a mystery. Mystery is not a hidden secret, but a truth that we long to enter. The divine mysteries, we watch closely in symbols, and see clearly in faith. We contemplate, celebrate and participate in them. We had the Easter Candle brightly shining. It has melted down and has disappeared. We received its light, and that light is now within us. The Risen Christ lived among us and he has given his light to us. Christ is in us, and we are in Christ. So, the ascension of Jesus is not a distancing from us, but it is a continuing and constant presence. Christ’s ascension is not a separation into a heavenly realm, it is a gathering of us all into a Christ realm; being united in the Holy Spirit, doing the will of the Father in the reality of our lives.
“Lifting up his hands, he blessed them.” According to Jewish customs, raising hands to bless was a priestly gesture. One who sacrificed himself, one who emptied himself taking the form of a servant, is raised as the eternal priest and mediator. The Jewish blessing had these words: “The LORD bless you and keep you; the LORD make his face shine upon you and be gracious to you; the LORD lift up his face upon you and grant you peace.” (Numbers 6:22-27).
Peace was the gift of the Risen Christ. His presence re-created them, his glory shone on them, and clouds of mystery come once again. The disciples were full of joy. This joy has a reason. In the opening prayer we have a phrase, “…where the head has entered, the whole body may follow in hope.” Christ is the ‘head’ of the Church, which is his ‘body’ (Ephesians 1:22-23, Colossians 1:18). His ascension signifies that the entire humanity, united in Christ, shares in the beauty of God. It guides us in courage and hope in the face of daily struggles, suffering, and uncertainties. We can participate in this beauty only in communion with God and the entire humanity that is Christ’s body.
Just as different parts of the body depend on each other, members of Christ’s body are called to support, encourage, and love one another, recognizing their mutual need. Genuine unity in Christ comes not from any enforced conformity or superficial agreements, but from a shared relationship to Christ. Christ’s love was sacrificial, unconditional, and inclusive, and our ascension into a Christ-realm can be only by the same love and communion. We understand, experience, and complete the truth of Christ only by sincerity, compassion, mercy, and kindness.
“He will return as you have seen him being taken away...” The return is not about the presence, he is ever present; it is about the revelation of the glory of the Son of Man. His constant living with us is recognised and realised in becoming mutually-compassionate-being in Christ. His humanity seeks consolation, justice, and mercy. His wounds were alive when he blessed them. Evacuated and displaced, wandering, abandoned, objectised and used humanity our extended self in Christ looks for a further descension into a Christ-self. Though the progresses today make rapid changes, inequality, poverty, exploitation and so on are pains that Christ continues to suffer. Reinforced social structures that nurture alienation, isolation and separatedness, very often covered in religious narratives, stand as original sin that prevents our being one body in Christ to enter into the glory of God. Our Gospel-response is our following of the path of ascension.
He returns to his glory, the beauty of the logos, the Word. It is worth contemplating this beauty of Christ before incarnation and after ascension; gathering, nurturing, sustaining presence in the entire creation, history, and culture. Being one in Christ calls us to honour and serve the glorified and wounded body of Christ in creation.
Unfortunately, instead of being united in Christ, our ideological and devotional worlds have created strange and conventional Christs for us. These worlds maintain spiritual pride and elitism claiming to have superior spiritual knowledge, insight, or favour from God. This is a deceptive holiness that breeds division rather than Christ-like love. These days there are many ‘true Christians’ who only knows that there are so many things kept hidden from you. These people who make false prophecies and sensationalism claiming special divine revelations ultimately lead to fear, exclusivity, or condemnation of others. True holiness points to Christ and His unifying love, not to sensational claims that elevate individuals or create panic. Now also, while doctrine and moral principles are important, an overemphasis on rigid interpretations or definitions, presented as the only path to God, can become a source of judgment and exclusion. This ‘holy’ strictness can mask a lack of love and compassion, which Jesus desired as the sign of his disciples. Sadly, faith is often exploited by individuals seeking personal power, influence, or material gain. They may use religious language and symbols to manipulate the faithful, fostering dependence and division from those outside their circle. Identifying too radically with a theological camp, or religious heroic-leader to the point of viewing others with suspicion, hostility, or as ‘lesser’ believers, is a divisive element.
St Paul wrote to the Colossians, “Seek the things of above” (Colossians 3:1-3). It is not disengaging from the world, but rather viewing and interacting with the world from the perspective of God’s nature – goodness, love, truth, and holiness. Seeking the things of above is to open every way of realising these values in our lives. The matter of above is right and left and among us. We have seen him, he was lifted up, we have seen him in the flesh, we have him in Spirit, and we continue to be him in mutually completing the body. If we are sincere, the mystery we participate will take us to full knowledge of him.
The disciples asked him, “Lord, has the time come? Are you going to restore the kingdom?” We are fascinated by the end of the world predictions and the clear signs identified. Rather than a matter of excitement, it is a revelation that adds responsibility. “You will receive the power of the Holy Spirit, and then you will be my witnesses to the ends of the earth.” Let us sincerely pray that we as the body may follow what the head has done; mutually completing the body, and thus experiencing the glory that Christ has entered. So, the time of the restoration of the kingdom is now, a permanent now in Christ, the time of God’s favour, the time to make active commitment to realise the beatitudes of the kingdom.
“May he enlighten the eyes of your mind so that you can see what hope his call holds for you, what rich glories he has promised the saints will inherit, and how infinitely great is the power that he has exercised for us believers.”
31 May 2025
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
തളിരുകൾ Reflections in Malayalam
Most Viewed
-
The Crucified continues to speak: "Here is your mother, here is your father." We have known them for years, but it is good...
-
A grateful heart is due glory to God. Gratitude enables us to accept our life events and the people involved in it. They may be good or ...
-
We see in the Bible, King Jeroboam set up a new worship place, a new god, a new faith story for the people to believe. He tells them: “...
-
Is agape not erotic and philial? Do we not see agape in eros and philia in our own life examples? Even if we use 'carnal,'...
-
സ്വന്തം ജീവിതത്തോടു തന്നെയും, ചുറ്റുപാടുകളോടും തോന്നുന്ന ആദരവാണ് ആത്മീയതയിൽ ആദ്യപടി. ആധുനിക മനുഷ്യന് തീർത്തും അപരിചിതമായിരിക്കുന്നതും അത...
Featured post
Ascension
“He was lifted up while they looked on, and a cloud took him from their sight.” Jesus ascended to the Father. It’s a mystery. Mystery is not...
No comments:
Post a Comment