Preached at St Peter’s, Poulshot
Readings – Acts 1. 1-11; Luke 24. 44-53
“While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven.”

The Ascension of Christ by Salvador Dali (1958). In a private collection.
Poor old Jesus. Even after all that the apostles had seen and experienced, even after all that happened and didn’t happen in Jerusalem, even after the encounters when He appeared to them on the lake and stood among them even though the doors were locked, the apostles really didn’t know what He was about.
“Is this the time when you will restore the kingdom” they ask Him. They’re still expecting that at some point, probably very soon, Jesus is going to seize power and put them, of course into top jobs. They still want Jesus’ to give them a kingdom that is of this world. Instead Jesus’ kingdom is something that can only be shared in in its fullness in a state that is higher than the one in which we live, when we are in the nearer presence of the Father. It is a state to which it seems that even Christ Himself must ascend to participate in fully, and to do so must withdraw from them. This kingdom is much greater than any state we or the apostles could imagine for ourselves on this Earth. For most of us, in this life, we can only detect little flashes of this kingdom for brief and wondrous moments.
Christ, truly God as well as truly human, knows what this kingdom really is, and how much greater it is than the kingdoms of the world. So, you can almost hear the exasperation when He answers the apostles’ question, “It is not for you to know.” Authority over everything belongs to the Father. The apostles wish to seize that authority, to rule over the Earth, and they think they’ll be much better than the world’s existing rulers and not corrupt or cruel or incompetent. No, not them! God knows what is actually best for them, however. The job of the apostles at this point is something very different—to wait for the Holy Spirit; to wait for God who is love to flow and blow and make His move.
Life often seems to be a waiting game – waiting for the train, waiting for exam results, or medical results, waiting for the money to clear into your account or, worst of all, for the contracts to be exchanged. The worst waiting comes when you don’t exactly know what you’re waiting for, when it feels like you’re going nowhere and being left behind. We can see why the apostles are getting a little impatient to find out what they’re supposed to do next.
But the Holy Spirit will indeed move, not long after the events we heard tonight, at Pentecost. Then the apostles will see another little part of God’s plan revealed to them, for on this Earth there is indeed much to be done to build God’s kingdom. The lesson here is that what God needs us to do is often very different from what we expect it should be. On that day in Galilee when Christ ascended, the apostles were too caught up in their half-baked certainties to understand what God actually required from them.
We’re often just like that ourselves. We want God to sort the world out, and we assume we’re at least vaguely on the right track about how the world should be. Like the apostles, we want God to restore the kingdom as would suit us. But do we give enough attention to trying to understand why God has ordered the world the way it is? Do we try to make our understanding fit the mind of God?
One thing God doesn’t seem to do often is to give us simple answers. Our two readings tonight comprise everything written in the Bible about the Ascension, and both are by the same author. The first brings the Gospel of St Luke to a conclusion, the other begins the Acts of the Apostles. Despite being written by the same author, the chronology is difficult to reconcile between them; the geography isn’t consistent; the dialogue doesn’t quite match. It certainly doesn’t seem like St Luke was that worried about what we might think of as accuracy in the courtroom witness statement sense. We can treat Ascension as purely a feast of Christ triumphant in Heaven and a chance to praise Him in His majesty, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But we could also look at it as a feast that teaches us to be less dogmatic; less sure of ourselves; more prepared to have our preconceptions challenged by God, through His written world and in many other ways. Ascension is a feast of waiting patiently and giving God the space to lead us deeper into the mystery of His truth.
For God can leave us feeling as bamboozled as, in Christ, He often left the apostles bamboozled. Why does God so often seem to withdraw from us? It is tempting to give the old answer that when we can no longer see God’s footsteps next to us, it is only because He was carrying us. I wouldn’t want you to think there’s anything wrong with that, but… there is an interesting phrase in the text of the Gospel reading—“he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven”. Part of what that might be hinting at I’ve already touched on, that even Christ could not participate in the Kingdom in all its fullness from this earth. But sometimes it seems we do need to be on our own, to grow and test our limits, to exhaust our need to tell God what to do—before God can show us what He needs us to do.
So here are five little practical lessons that I take from Ascension about my own Christian discipleship and they might be helpful to you too. Firstly, be patient. Secondly, be faithful. Thirdly, be open to changing and growing. Fourthly, long for Christ to return. And then fifthly and finally, get on with living your life.
Be faithful. Trust that Christ went into Heaven so we too could ascend there. Try to get closer to God’s nature – in prayer, in the Bible, in the sacraments, and yes in living well in this wonderful world God has made for us and enjoying the pleasures that it gives. Scripture tells us that Christ certainly enjoyed earthly pleasures that in His earthly life.
Whatever you are waiting for – and we are all waiting for something – be patient. Not something I find easy myself, but sometimes there’s nothing to do but wait to see how things develop.
Be open to changing and growing, right through your life. The apostles, who had the benefit of having breakfast with Jesus regularly, constantly had to learn and discover that many things they’d taken for granted were at best only partially true. To be perfect is to change often. Don’t be afraid to allow God to change you.
In this mess of a world where we dread switching on the news, long for Christ to come back. Don’t fear the idea of the second coming but instead pray that God might bless you with seeing it.
And finally, go about your business. While you wait for the things you can’t make happen, do the things that you can, great or small, for the people you live among, in your daily life.
As the angels told the apostles in Galilee “why do you stand looking up to heaven? This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way you saw him go.” Wait for Him in joyful and hopeful expectation.
Now to God the Father who reigns in heaven, to God the Son who leads us to heaven, to God the Holy Spirit who fills us with the love and peace of heaven, be all glory and majesty, dominion and power, as is most justly His due, now and forevermore. Amen.