This sermon was preached at St Matthew's Lutheran Church, Maryborough, 8.15am (lay-reading), and Grace Lutheran Church, Childers, 9am.
Grace, mercy and peace be
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
And when he had said these things, as they were
looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. (Acts
1:9)
Prayer: May
the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O
Lord, our Rock and our Redeemer. Amen.
Today we’re celebrating one
of the most significant festivals of the church year, which is Ascension. Today
we commemorate that event which is summarised in the Apostles’ Creed: He
ascended into heaven, and sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty.
In the New Testament, Matthew and John don’t mention the Ascension. But Mark
tells us about it at the end of his gospel, Luke tells us about it at the end
of his, and also Luke writes about it again at the beginning of the Book of
Acts. Today, we’re going to focus on the event of Jesus’ ascension into heaven,
and we’re going to look at all three of these passages, from Mark, Luke and
Acts.
First, let’s look at Luke 24, where it says
that Jesus led them out as far as Bethany, and lifting up his hands he
blessed them. This gives us a wonderful picture. Here Jesus has come to the
end of this period of forty days after he rose from the dead, and now he is
about the ascend into heaven. And just before he does so, he raises his hands
into the air, and he blesses them. We are so used to this gesture, since in the
church, a pastor will do the same thing, and lift up his hands and bless the
congregation. In fact, this is the place where our custom of doing this comes
from. Many people have said to me over the years that the blessing at the end
of the service is one of their favourite parts of the service.
But one of
the most important things about the blessing is that we’re not simply copying
Jesus, but we do this because we believe that it’s not just a pastor who gives
us a blessing at the end of our service, but Jesus himself. In fact, there’s a
sense in which the whole service is here for one purpose: to receive the
blessing of Jesus. There’s a kind of sense here too in which Jesus raises his
hands to bless his disciples, and as he ascends into heaven he doesn’t put his
hands down, but continues to bless them and all of his disciples right up to
the very end of the world, when he will bless us forever and ever.
So now we read about the actual ascension itself. Mark
writes: So then the Lord Jesus, after he had spoken to them, was taken up
into heaven and sat down at the right hand of God. Luke says: While he
blessed them, he parted from them and was carried up into heaven. And in
Acts we read: When they had said these things, as they were looking on, he
was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. We see so many
similar but different ways of saying the same thing: he was taken up,
carried up, lifted up.
In being taken up, carried up, lifted up, Jesus
reveals to the disciples the great power of his natural human body. You see,
Jesus is not just any human being, like you and me. He is both true man and
true God, and he can allow his human body to do whatever he wants it to do, and
to be and to go wherever he wants it to go and to be. With you and I, we might
imagine travelling overseas or to a faraway place, but our desires alone won’t
be able to take us there. But with Jesus, it is different. His human body is
transformed and glorified and transfigured by his divinity, by the fact that he
is true God. And so, if he wants his body to ascend, then it can.
Many people think for example that the Ascension of
Jesus, and the presence of his body and blood in the Lord’s Supper are two
mutually exclusive things. People think that he can’t be here in the church on
the altar in the Lord’s Supper, because he is in heaven at God’s right hand.
But God himself is everywhere, and his right hand is everywhere. And if Jesus
says that this is his body and blood, he has the power and the ability to make
it happen just as he says, and to be in the place where he has promised to be.
Just as when Jesus was on the mountain and was transfigured and his body shone
with divine light, so also in the Ascension Jesus’ body is alive and active
with all the fulness of divine power.
Now Luke also says: [Jesus] parted from them. And
in Acts, Luke writes: a cloud took him out of their sight. It is such a
wonderful mystery that occurs when Jesus ascends into heaven, that there comes
a point when we can’t imagine it anymore, and the disciples can’t watch it
anymore. The whole event is too great, too mysterious, too high and lofty, that
Jesus is hidden in a cloud. You see, on one hand, Jesus is removed from them.
But on the other hand, Jesus does not leave them. Beforehand, the twelve
apostles had all had to continuously gather altogether wherever Jesus was. But
soon, Jesus is going to send these twelve apostles out to all the nations to
speak the good news. And so Jesus ascends into heaven, not so that everyone
will need to travel and come to meet him in Israel, but so that he can go out
with the twelve apostles and his missionary church, and lead them and be with
them wherever he sends them.
So we read in Mark a very special detail about this
whole event. It says: So then the Lord Jesus, after he had spoken to them,
was taken up into heaven and sat down at the right hand of God. When Jesus
ascended into heaven, he didn’t simply go to heaven, just as we look forward to
going to heaven. For example, Jesus promised to the thief on the cross: Today,
you will be with me in Paradise. St Paul says: My desire is to depart
and be with Christ. The old man Simeon says: Now, Lord, let your servant
depart in peace. All these people have a great desire to go to heaven. But
what happens to Jesus is different; the thief, Paul and Simeon never sat
down at the right hand of God.
In the book of Ezekiel, we read about Ezekiel’s vision
where he saw the angels, the cherubim, these wonderful living heavenly
creatures. But then above these living creatures is an expanse, with the throne
of God on top of the expanse. This expanse is a kind of dividing line in heaven
between the realm of the angels and God’s own throne. In Ezekiel’s vision, God
sits above the expanse and the angels are below the expanse. When Jesus ascends
into heaven, he doesn’t go there to be equal to the angels or the saints. He
doesn’t enter heaven and dwell below the expanse together with all the angels.
He enters heaven and sits above the expanse, at the right hand of God, ruling
heaven and earth, not as God’s servant, but as God’s equal. Jesus is both true
man and true God.
In
Philippians chapter 2, we read a well-known passage which mentions the
Ascension: Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus,
who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing
to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born
in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by
becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore God
has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name,
so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and
under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the
glory of God the Father. Here we see the great humiliation that Jesus went
through in dying on the cross. But in the Ascension, we see this wonderful way
in which God has highly exalted Jesus.
And so now, we’re going to look at these three
passages, from Mark, Luke and Acts, and see what happens now. Mark, Luke and
Acts tell us about three different things that happened after Jesus ascended
into heaven. Mark, Luke and Acts don’t tell us about the same thing that
happens after Jesus ascended. Instead, the three different books tell us about
three completely different things that happened, and yet none of these three
things contradict. Acts tells us what happened immediately after Jesus ascended
into heaven—within seconds of the event. The Gospel of Luke tells us what the
apostles were then doing after Jesus ascended over the next few days. But then
in Mark, we read about what the apostles were doing for the rest of their
lives.
So let’s first of all look at the Book of Acts. We
read: And while they were gazing into heaven as he went, behold, two men
stood by them in white robes, and said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand
looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will
come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.” Here we see two men in
white clothes, two angels, come and speak to the apostles. The angels appear at
all the major events in Jesus’ life: at his conception, his birth, his
temptation in the wilderness, in the Garden of Gethsemane, and at Easter.
So they say to the apostles here: Why do you stand
looking into heaven? Now is the beginning of the end times, when the Holy
Spirit will be poured out, and there will be a holy Christian church on earth.
Jesus has ascended into heaven, and now we will wait for him to return. This
Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you
saw him go into heaven. Just as Jesus ascended into heaven in a cloud, so
also he will return at the end of the world on a cloud. Even when Jesus was on
trial, he said to the high priest, You will see the Son of Man seated at the
right hand of Power, and coming with the clouds of heaven. So here were
learn that the Ascension teaches us to eagerly and joyfully wait for that time
when Jesus will appear and bring this sad world to an end.
But now, let’s look at what is recorded in Luke, which
tells us what the apostles were doing in the days that followed. It says: And
they worshipped him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy, and were
continually in the temple blessing God. In this passage, we read about the
great joy of the apostles, and about worship. When Jesus ascends into heaven,
there is not a single drop of sadness. This is because Jesus doesn’t actually
leave his disciples. The Ascension doesn’t mean that Jesus is now stuck up in
heaven and is no longer here. Jesus says: Behold, I am with you always to
the very end of the age. Jesus isn’t with them like a ghost, or simply
spiritually. Jesus is physically with them, because he is both true God and
true man, and he is actively working with them and leading them.
But then we also read that the disciples worshipped
him, that they returned to Jerusalem, and were continually in the
temple blessing God. Because Jesus is now seated at God’s right hand, it
means that when they worship God, they worship Jesus. Wherever God is, Jesus is
there too. Where God hears their prayers, Jesus also hears their prayers. And
so when we come to church, we come here to worship Jesus, and we come to meet
together in the presence of Jesus. When we hear the words of the Scripture,
Jesus comes to speak these words himself. And Jesus gives us his own body and
blood to eat in the Lord’s Supper. All this is possible because of the
ascension, and so the apostles worship Jesus with great joy.
But the third thing we read about after the Ascension,
is from Mark, where he tells us about what the apostles were basically doing
for the rest of their lives. It says: And they went out and preached
everywhere, while the Lord worked with them and confirmed the message by
accompanying signs. Jesus did not command the apostles to preach, and then
abandon them. Jesus is not like a CEO of a large company, who sets his
employees to work, and then leaves them to it. Jesus sends his apostles to
preach, and then Jesus works with them. He promises them: He who hears you
hears me. He who receives you receives me. He says: As the Father sent
me, even so I am sending you. And so, on the day of Pentecost, the
disciples dedicate themselves to the apostles’ teaching.
And so even today in the church, we confess in the
creed that we believe in one holy Christian and apostolic church. The
word “apostolic” means that we stick to the teaching of the apostles, because
where we have the teaching of the apostles, there we have the teaching of
Jesus. Jesus himself never wrote anything, but he commanded the apostles to
bring the message of the Gospel to the world. And so even today, we Christians
dedicate ourselves to the apostles’ teaching, just like the first
Christians. And where we have the apostles’ teaching, then we know, from our
reading that the Lord will work with them and confirm the message by
accompanying signs. Amazing things will happen when we remain to this
heritage, this legacy, this doctrine, this Gospel, that the apostles have given
to the church.
Today in the church, we have the wonderful gift of the
word of God, and the Sacraments. And Jesus promises to speak to us personally
himself when we read and preach his word. When pastors speak the absolution,
this is not the pastor’s word of forgiveness, but Jesus’ word of forgiveness.
When we baptise people, Jesus himself comes into our midst and baptises them.
In the Lord’s Supper, Jesus feeds us with his very own body and blood. Jesus is
ascended into heaven and he is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.
Many people think that the Jesus abandoned the church, or that he is isn’t
working, or that he isn’t here. Nothing could be further from the truth. Jesus’
ascension means the exact opposite of these things: he hasn’t abandoned us, but
is right here every day with us. He is here, and he is living and active. He is
our risen and ascended Lord, and he is the Lord who works with us and confirms
his apostolic word by accompanying signs.
So we see in Acts the wonderful promise of Jesus
return as the king of heaven on the clouds of heaven. In the Gospel of Luke, we
see the great joy that Jesus gives to his church through his presence, so that
they worship him, and continually bless and praise him in the temple. And in
the Gospel of Mark, we see the wonderful way in which Jesus works with the
apostles and confirms and strengthens their preaching. Even today, as we live
in a world that seems to be getting worse, the message of Jesus’ return at the
end of the world fills us with hope. The fact that Jesus is present in his
church to bless us fills us with great joy. And the fact that Jesus works and
strengthens the preaching of the word strengthens and encourages our faith. So
let’s thank Jesus for the amazing and wonderful way in which he has ascended
into heaven and now sits at the right hand of the throne of God. Amen.
Dear Jesus,
we thank you for the wonderful miracle of your ascension. Strengthen us while
we walk here on this earth, until that time when you will take us to yourself,
and transform our lowly bodies to be like your glorious body. Amen.
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