Saturday, May 28, 2022

THE ASCENSION: AS TIMELY AS EVER


Sunday, May 29. in our archdiocese we celebrate  the Solemnity of the Ascension of thwe Lord, In the past this feast was sort of buried on a Thursday, and many people, for various reasons, missed the celebration, It seems to me that this year especially it's a great idea to make this feast available to the largest number of people possible.

The liturgy of the paschal season has been leading us toward this feast for weeks, and reflecting on the meaning of the mystery of the Ascension can be a help to all of us during these days of contnuing pandemic, mass shootings, invasions and so on. We truly need to hear once again the message of the Ascension. 

In  the naïve worldview of ancient Israel, where the earth was as flat as a dinner plate and the firmament was above and the netherworld below, the idea of Jesus’ “ascending” up into a cloud was easily accepted. Too easily, perhaps, because it would then seem to mean that Jesus, taken “up” into heaven, had gone away from us and was thus no longer present.

Fortunately our modern astronomy won’t allow us to settle for this simple picture of Jesus rising “upward” to heaven. And that’s great, because we’re not as likely to misinterpret it as meaning “Jesus left us.” We are forced to look for the meaning of the event rather than simply settling for “Jesus went up into the clouds of heaven.” And it is precisely this theological meaning that can be a comfort to us during these sad and uncertain times when bad news keeps assaulting us on every side.

The feast of the Ascension celebrates Jesus’ passing beyond the familiar dimensions of time and space, beyond the reach of our senses and into the presence of the Father. So what? Well, think about it: This means that Jesus is no longer bound by time and space, so he is now more present to us than he ever was previous to the Ascension. He is in our hearts and bodies, in our friends and our foes, in the spring breeze and, mysteriously, in the strands of DNA inside the novel coronavirus or the murderous assaults against civilians in Ukraine.

Now, we may be repelled by the idea that God could somehow be present in a terrible, deadly virus and all of the suffering it has caused, but that’s far more comforting than the alternate view – that God is totally absent from those tragic events and horrible microorganisms, and that we are left to face these horrors on our own. A God who’s only present to us when times are good is not much of a God.

So as we continue to struggle with the depressing statistics, the deaths of family members or friends, the dark uncertainties of world econmics and politics, let's remember the lesson of the Ascension: Christ is intimately present with each of us in the midst of this whole mess, and is walking every step with us through this valley of the shadow of death.


 "Though I walk in the valley of darkness
I fear no evil, for you are at my side. (Psalm 23:4)" 

1 comment:

  1. join in with me praying a rosary for my wife Flavia and family (Langan). We have been suffering through many infirmities and spiritual afflictions. I ask this of you in the name of Jesus Christ

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