Sunday, May 20, 2012

ASCENSION OF THE LORD - Year B


ASCENSION OF THE LORD – Year B (Acts 1:1-11; Eph 1:1-13; Mark 16:15-20) Theme: With the ascension of Jesus we are raised to the Capacity to Transcend Reflection Jesus ascends with the glorious body - Today we celebrate the Feast of the Ascension of Jesus. Jesus enters into the heavens. It is the important moment in the life of Jesus. He has come down from heaven and accomplished the purposed for which he has come and now is the time to go back and sit in the glorious throne from where he has descended. This moment of ascension complete the earthly life of Jesus even in his glorious body. Before the passion, death and resurrection earthly life of Jesus was in his human body. But once he has passed through the moments of suffering, death his body has become glorious. - It is with the glorious body that Jesus appeared to the disciples and other people after his resurrection. It is because of this glorious aspect that Jesus was able to enter into the room with the doors closed. It is because of this glorious aspect that Jesus was not recognized immediately by the disciples of Emmaus though he was walking with them and talking them about the scriptures. It is because of this glorious body that Jesus can appear to them suddenly and disappear from them in a fraction of a second. - Today Jesus ascends to heaven with the glorious body. He is taken up into heaven by the Father. He has the power to come down and has the power to go up too, just he has the authority to give his life and to take it again (John 10:18). He is always conscious of this and especially with this consciousness of his time to return to His Father (John 13:1-2) that Jesus has put himself towards Jerusalem and starting living the moments of glory in the humility and in the death on the cross. After gaining victory over sin and over death through his resurrection of the body Jesus confirms the glorious life that awaits all who believe in him. Assuring it further the hope of eternal life that Jesus ascends into heaven. Therefore, it is with the ascension that the earthly life of Jesus reaches its completion and it is with the ascension that the descent and the mission of the Holy Spirit has its beginning. Ascension is a moment of Joy and also a moment of Mission Entrusted - Jesus did not ascend into heaven immediately after his resurrection. He would have certainly done it. He preferred to remain with his own for some more time. It is not only to prove that he is truly risen. Apart from confirming them in the faith of risen life, he has something more to do. He has to give final testimony to all that he has done before the resurrection. His testimony of risen life was consisting in his donation of peace, unity and love to his people so that they all stay together as one community of believers. This is what we have been reflecting all through the time of Easter. To have a glance at what we have meditated upon we remind ourselves: that Jesus has offered peace to the frightened disciples; that he has given the comfort and consolation to the disparate disciples of Emmaus; that he has donated to them the possibility of remaining with him and be united to him with the resurrected life as the binding force. - This shows that Jesus had to accomplish the mission of affirming and confirming his disciples in the faith and hope of the eternal life. As a continuation of this mission Jesus entrusts the same vocation of calling the people of all nations into the faith that can save them. Jesus accomplishes from his part what is to be completed on earth. Even commissioning of his disciples to go and proclaim the gospel is part of his Risen Mission. only after doing this that He ascends into heave. This is what we hear from the readings of today: “After his suffering he presented himself alive to them by many convincing proofs, appearing to them during forty days and speaking about the kingdom of God… when he has said this, as they were watching, he was lifted up” (Acts 1:3, 9). And again “So then the Lord Jesus, after he had spoken to them, was taken up into heaven…” (Mark 16:19). He has given them the mission of preaching the good news of risen life and only then he ascended into heaven. - This indicates that there is certainly a connection between the resurrection and the ascension: the connecting aspect is the mission of proclamation and testimony. Jesus after showing them the glory and joy of resurrection he does not leave them like that but gives them the mission of testifying this glory and joy to the world. This mission in which we participate is the knot between the risen life we are called to in our baptism and the eternal life we will receive with our ascension into heaven. Therefore, we have the joy of having life of Jesus and we have also the vocation of spreading this life through our word and work. This is the preparation we can do for the moment of our ascension one day into heaven. Human capacity blocked by sin and re-opened by Jesus - “Reach High”, “Hold the skies” and “Climb to the heavens”, are the words we often use in our life. This is the aspiration every man has. Everyone wants to “go up” in life, “reach the heights”, and “touch the sky” and thus wants to climb to the heaven. Human being is capable of doing this. Naturally he is given the capacity for transcending what is below and to reach what is above. - Human being is a composite of both body and soul, thus a physic and a spirit. He has a need of the body and a need of the spirit. More than a need he has a desire: A desire to become better and best, a desire to supersede all, a desire to stand on the highest point of achievement. He is in tension between these two realities which are integrated into him as one being. The body seeks for something visible, touching, and earthly. The spirit instead looks for something invisible, beyond peripheral and thus other worldly. This tension that makes man both being and becoming. As a being he is in the world and as a becoming he wants to go beyond this world. - It is natural aspiration of man to grow and to better himself. The natural philosophy also affirms this that man is capable of transcending himself because he is spirited being, not just biological being. The theological understanding of man also confirms this that man is “the image and likeness of God” and thus has the dignity of his fellowship with God, the divine being. - The desire is took the wrong direction: the desire of human being to utilize his natural capability to reach heights is thwarted by his selfishness and pride. Biblical revelation helps us understand it better. The desire of first of man has taken wrong step and wrong decision. He desired not only to go beyond himself and to reach certain heights but more than that “he wanted to be God”. This is the first sin of man and we call it original sin or original guilt. By desiring to be like God man has lost his lost his natural capacity to ascend. He became incapable because he failed to judge between good and bad and finally failed to choose good and has fallen to the temptation of equating himself with God. From here the natural desire of man to reach heights has taken another direction. In everything man stated looking for his own achievements and success in selfishness and in pride. The result is that he has become purely earthly and this worldly. He started suppressing his spirit which strives for goodness and for something beyond this world. He started neglecting and destroying the cries of the soul which longs for the life of happiness and blessedness. As a result, the doors of heaven and the possibility of transcendence are blocked in some way. Alone and by himself, Man finds himself incapable of attaining what his spirit desires. He needs someone to open the doors of the skies/heavens. He needs someone who can bring back to him the possibility for transcendence. He needs someone who can buy back to him the natural capability which is lost by his sin of pride and arrogance. It is Jesus who has come to rescue man from this condition of incapacity and put him in the right way of self-transcendence. - In Jesus the Heavens are Opened: the heavens are opened by Jesus for his coming and for his going back, thus for the incarnation and for the ascension. By his death, resurrection and ascension Jesus has re-opened not only the doors of heaven but also the blocked incapacity of man. Man is made capable again. Man is raised from the fall of grace. Man is given the capacity to transcend. The way is prepared, the truth is revealed and the life is offered and it happened in Jesus who is the Way, the Truth and the Life. Today’s liturgy reassures us this truth that in the ascension of the Lord our humanity is elevation to the divine living and divine nature. - Peter too proclaims the truth that in the resurrection and ascension of Jesus we have become participants in the divine nature: “His divine power has given us everything needed for life and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness. Thus he has given us, through these things, his precious and very great promises, so that through them you may escape from the corruption that is in the world because of lust, and may become participants of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1:3-4). We are made holy. We are made capable of godliness. Our human nature assumes the divine nature. Our body becomes glorious with the effect of resurrection. Our spirit is place in the capacity to transcend and reach heights with the effect of ascension. - Paul also acclaims our condition of being elevated with the fruits of the paschal mystery of Jesus, that is, with his death, resurrection and ascension: “God, who is rich in mercy, out of the great love with which he loved us even when we were dead through our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ – by grace you have been saved – and raised us up with him and seated us with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus” (Eph 2:4-6). We are saved. We are given mercy. We are raised to new life. We are elevated to the grace of sitting with him in heaven. With the death our human old nature is buried and with the resurrection we are called to participate in the divine and glorious nature. - The work of God in Jesus Christ and in the Spirit is this: that God knows the helplessness and pathetic condition of man and thus he himself comes down in the person of Jesus to drag man out the pit of incapacity. He does this with the very act of assuming the same fallen nature of man. He has taken upon himself the fallen and deteriorating nature of man as the consequence of sin and has raised it to the glorified and transcending divine nature. We are called to Ascend and Transcend: we are place in the ascending movement - With the work of Christ and in particular with his resurrection and ascension Jesus has made fallen man divine and holy. Man is brought back to the ascending movement. With the selfishness, pride, arrogance of technological development on the one hands, and with the fears of limitedness and desperation on the other, Man is in continuous and constant struggle in his journey towards the transcendence. To such man, an answer for his paradoxical existence and strength for his frightened living is provided in the very person of Jesus Christ. Therefore, the solution is available. - The availability of the answer or solution is not enough. First thing is that man should come to the consciousness of that God has already answered all his existential problems. Secondly he should believe that he is elevated to the capacity for transcendence. Thirdly, he should step ahead to assimilate to himself the dispositions available. Only then man can fully become capable for making this movement towards the heavens – reaching to the skies. - Once he knows where he stands with the faith made available in God he always has the possibility to “look upwards”. This looking upwards, growing in heights has the positive meaning. It is not as the first man has done with desiring to become ‘like God’. It is looking up with hope and not with arrogance. The hope of rising above himself and reaching out to God who is the sources of this ascension. - We, as Christians, have to understand that we are the children from “above” and we belong to the nature and sphere “above”. This knowledge leads us to the truth that we have no stable tent here on earth but only up in the heavens. This truth which keeps us looking above as the disciples were looking above as Jesus was ascending. They did not want to keep their eyes down or their sight on earth. It is here that the angels remind them this ascension will take place also in their lives when they carry on the vocation that he has called to. - Look above but work down: the ascension also teaches us that we are in the world and we have to work in and for the world, at the same time keeping in mind that we are not of the world. Our citizenship is not of this world. Our permanent living is not in this world. Our tent is only temporary here. One day we have to fly. One day we have to rise above. One day we have to reach the heavens. But the time we have now and here is the time of hope. - With the hope as our weapon we keep on battling with the earthly nature that makes us fall again and again. With the hope as our instrument of growth we strive for the realization of Kingdom by and through us in the world. And with the hope as our guard we rise every moment above ourselves so that we come nearer and nearer to our future ascension. Conclusion: One thing we should keep in mind always: as the result of the ascension of Jesus we are called to Ascend and Transcend: we are placed in the ascending movement. Our true humanity is being available for the work of the Spirit in and through us. Our true divinity is to look upwards with the hope of meeting our Lord one day in His Glory. Mean while what we have to do is: to keep ourselves completely in this movement towards the Glorified Lord.

No comments:

Post a Comment