Now as he blessed
them, he withdrew from them and was carried up to heaven.
They worshipped
him and then went back to Jerusalem full of joy;
and they were
continually in the Temple praising God.
Luke 24:52 - 53
As a child I had
a great imagination, fueled as it was by stories told to us by the Sisters that
often filled the ‘missing gaps’ of the Gospels – extended versions of Jesus’
childhood, the shroud of Turin, conversations between Mary and Martha. Throw in
repeats of Flash Gordon, images of a bearded God, and an infant Jesus who could
perform miracles. Top that up with the ascension stories of Enoch, Ezra,
Baruch, Ezra and Moses, and the wonderfully brave stories of the Maccabees,
mixed up with Bonanza!
The world of my
childhood gave me dreams and games, ideas and opportunities. Just recollecting
conjures up lively images. Saints with haloes, stigmata, virgin martyrs!
Nothing was too much of a stretch for my imagination. The Immaculate Conception
of Mary, Annunciation, Visitation, Nativity, Resurrection, Ascension, Pentecost
were all not only possible, but made sense when we could count on miracles at
Lourdes, babies and mothers were saved by St Gerard Majella, and when the
Sacred Heart and Immaculate Heart reigned over our family in grave serenity
from the dining room and living room.
Then we grow up.
Then we learn to think for ourselves. Then we critique. We make sense of the
stories and they fall into place – they have meaning – and not necessarily what
we first thought.
The Evangelists
wrote more, far more than history of course. Imbedded throughout are
assumptions about the audience, about their faith, about their community, about
their struggles and triumphs. The stories about Jesus and his disciples are
viewed from many years later and possess strong convictions about who the
person of Jesus was for them. Some stories are by way of explanation. Such is
the Ascension.
Within and
without the Bible ascension into heaven was expected of holy and great persons,
for it indicated divine approval and the continuation of their power in the
heavenly realm. In the hierarchical world of the ancients, heaven could only be
up, for God ruled from above. Ascension could only mean going upwards.
For the first listeners the Ascension, then, was an
affirmation of Jesus’ authority (for he subsequently sends out his disciples on
their greatest mission), it is a clear statement about his abiding, continuing
presence among them, working in them and through them. This is their
unmistakable understanding and experience.
When you and I hear this story, it is not
an invitation into a child’s imagination. It is a palpable call to see Jesus
not only in our own lives, but in the lives of those about us. Jesus’ constant
call to love others, to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, give drink to the
thirsty, visit the imprisoned - because we
do this to him, should be as unmistakable now to us as it was to those first
disciples.
Peter Douglas
HEAD OF SCHOOL SERVICES, NORTH
Prayers and thoughts
Tracie's husband, Dave and Dave's mother have both been seriously ill these past few days. Your continued prayers and thoughts have been well-appreciated. Tracie will return to duties this week.
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