May 16, 2021
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois
Ephesians 1:15-23; Luke 24:44-53[1]
The tomb was empty and Jesus, alive again, appeared to the
disciples. Then, Luke tells us, “While he was blessing them, he withdrew from
them and was carried up into heaven.”[2]
Jesus the person was gone. Their last memory of him was not the frightening
night in the garden when the soldiers came. It was not the horror of the
crucifixion. It was not even the confusion and bewilderment of Easter morning. When
he withdrew from them at last, their memory was of his blessing, a blessing
that didn’t end but continued even as he left.
Parting from those we love, saying goodbye, is never easy.
We’re often standing beside the hospital bed, holding a hand that is colder
than before, blinking back tears as we try to express our love in some meaningful
way. Other times, we hear the news over the phone that breaks our hearts. What
a contrast, then, for Jesus to leave them with hearts full of joy and wonder,
blessing them without ceasing. Perhaps they knew by the way he left that the
blessing would never stop, that just because they could no longer see him did
not mean he was no longer with them.
There is a sense that the departure of Jesus opened, rather
than closed, a chapter in the story. The first part is over, but the story
continues, and now is carried forward by the apostles. The new church continues
the mission, now with people who will believe not because they have seen Jesus,
but because they have seen his followers and heard the witness of those who
have been blessed.
In a very real way, a new chapter does begin, since the
author of Luke continued the story in the Acts of the Apostles. The main
character of the Gospel has left the stage, but the new characters take on the
lead. New figures emerge, strong leaders in their own right such as Paul. The
stage expands, pulling back from Jerusalem and Galilee to reveal a wider world
that will include Turkey, Greece, and Italy, and eventually circle the globe.
It was with immeasurable hope that the apostles went from
Bethany to Jerusalem, and beyond. They had been reminded in their last moments
together of all that had come to pass. Their minds had been opened to
understand the scriptures in a new way, in light of the crucifixion and the resurrection,
the suffering and the renewal. They would continue the mission of Christ transformed
by the renewal of their spirits, and soon by the continual presence of the Holy
Spirit.
They would need the help. The apostles would encounter resistance
to their message, bitterness and resentment from those who had been their friends
and families. They would face persecution from their religious leaders and from
the Roman government. They would weather stormy seas, be imprisoned, harassed
and even killed. But they would not give up; they would endure because of that
blessing by the departing Christ that continues to bless the church even today.
“He withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven.”[3]
There is in that vision a powerful pull on our souls. We no longer think of
heaven as being physically above us, up in the clouds somewhere, over the moon
and behind the sun. We do, however, hold on to that upward vision in our
spirits and our hearts. As Yale professor Thomas Troeger wrote in a commentary
on this text, “The direction ‘up’ may have left our cosmology, but it has never
left our souls.”[4]
Think of how we use the word up. Rise up. Look up at the stars.
Get up on your feet. Stand up for what is right. Reach up to what is next. Lift
every voice and sing. When I look up to the hills, where my hope comes... The
hope that leads us upward and onward is the hope that keeps calling to us,
keeps beckoning us to reach beyond what we are to what we will become.
Like a long steady climb up the mountain, we are on an
upward trajectory. As we go, we may stumble, but we get up, dust ourselves off,
and walk on. There will be rivers and streams, troubled waters to cross, and
perilous footholds, but we’ll make it across if we keep our heads up. The night
may fall, bringing shadows and darkness to hide the path; but, if we look up to
the stars, we can find a way. What keeps us going, what helps us overcome, is
that which rises within us from the spirit that lifts us up.
Where do we go from here? There is nowhere to go but up!
Though Jesus withdrew from them, on the way up he continued to bless them. As
our ancestors have withdrawn from us, they continue to bless us on our journey.
Keep your chin up. There may be a long way to go. The way may be difficult. But
as we go, we continue to receive the ceaseless blessing of Christ empowering us
to minister to one another and to a world in need of blessing. With the eyes of
your heart enlightened, may you know what is the hope to which God has called
you, the fullness of him who fills all in all.
Amen.
[1] The
scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard
Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of
the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
[2] Luke
24:51.
[3]
Luke 24:51.
[4]
Thomas H. Troeger, Homiletical Perspective on Luke 24:44-53 in Feasting on the Word: Preaching the Revised
Common Lectionary, Year B, Vol. 2, David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown
Taylor, General Editors (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008), p. 523.
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