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Ascension

October 26

Second Glorious Mystery of the Rosary
The Ascension of the Lord

Most people think of the Ascension of Jesus as being a ‘departure’ moment. Jesus was here and now he is gone. We imagine Jesus going up into the clouds and the disciples watching and waving from below.

This is an unhelpful image.

It is essential that we understand what does happen and what does not happen in the Ascension event.

It would be easy to wrongly think that in his ministry showed us how to build the city of God on earth, and now he has gone and the mission is left to us.

Our mission is always Jesus’ mission. HE is the missionary. We are the loved servants. We are the tenderly embraced instruments.

True liberation is instigated and gifted by God. When humans respond and co-operate with this divine initiative, real freedom becomes an earthly reality.It is only when we relax into God’s love for us, and the enduring and intimate presence of Jesus with us in every situation and every moment, that we become effective disciples of the Master Missionary.

We are never alone. Jesus is with us.

Because of the event of the Ascension and Pentecost (which we will reflect on tomorrow), Jesus is with us even more intimately. When we live in intimate relationship with him, our efforts bear fruit.

I have never seen this more clearly presented than in Pope Benedict’s book Jesus of Nazareth.

As we reflect on this Second Glorious Mystery, the Ascension, I invite you to set aside some time to savour these excerpts from his reflections. It’s a bit long and I tried to shorten this quotation, but I think it’s too good to cut:

Pope Benedict    “Jesus of Nazareth Part Two”

“Let us turn, then, to the end of Luke’s Gospel. Here it is recounted that Jesus appears to the Apostles gathered in Jerusalem, who have just been joined by the two disciples from Emmaus. He eats with them and issues instructions. The closing lines of the Gospel are as follows: “then he led them out as far as Bethany, and lifting up his hands he blessed them. While he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven. And they worshipped him, and returned to Jerusalem with great joy, and were continually in the temple blessings God” (Luke 24:50=53)

“The conclusion surprises us. Luke says that the disciples were full of joy at the Lord’s definitive departure. We would have expected the opposite. We would have expected them to be left perplexed and sad. The world was unchanged, and Jesus had gone definitively. They had received a commission that seemed impossible to carry out and lay well beyond their powers. How were they to present themselves to the people in Jerusalem, in Israel, in the whole world, saying: “This Jesus, who seemed to have failed, is actually the redeemer of us all”? Every parting causes sadness. Even if it was as one now living that Jesus had left them, how could his definitive separation from them not make them sad? And yet it is written that they returned to Jerusalem with great joy, blessing God. How are we to understand this?

“In any case, it follows that the disciples do not feel abandoned. They do not consider Jesus to have disappeared far away into an inaccessible heaven. They are obviously convinced of a new presence of Jesus. They are certain (as the risen Lord said in Saint Matthew’s account) that he is now present to them in a new and powerful way. They know that “the right hand of God” to which he “has been exulted” includes a new manner of his presence; they know that he is now permanently among them, in the way that only God can be close to us.

“The joy of the disciples after the “Ascension” corrects our image of this event. “Ascension” does not mean departure into a remote region of the cosmos but, rather, the continuing closeness that the disciples experience so strongly that it becomes a source of lasting joy. pp.280-281

“the departing Jesus does not make his way to some distant star. He enters into communion of power and life with the living God, into God’s dominion over space. Hence he has not “gone away”, but now and forever by God’s own power he is present with us and for us. In the farewell discourses of Saint John’s Gospel, this is exactly what Jesus says to his disciples: “I go away, and I will come to you” (John 14:28). These words sum up beautifully what is so special about Jesus’ “going away”, which is also his “coming”, and at the same time they explain the mystery of the Cross, the Resurrection, and the Ascension. His going away is in this sense a coming, a new form of closeness, of continuing presence, which for John, too, is linked with the “joy” that we saw in Luke’s Gospel.

“Because Jesus is with the Father, he has not gone away but remains close to us. Now he is no longer in one particular place in the world as he had been before the “Ascension”: now, through his power over space, he is present and accessible to all-throughout history and in every place   pp283-284

Now, if you’ve managed to read this far, pick up your beads sometime in the next few hours and pray the Second Glorious Mystery, the Ascension of the Lord.

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3 Comments

  1. This is a very insightful post thank you Father John. I have always struggled with this mystery and although reluctant to read the long excerpts from Pope Benedict’s book I did and found them very easy to understand. The second glorious mystery will take on a new meaning for me now.

    Reply
  2. Thank you very much John for your insightful reflection on th first two Glorious mysteries of the Most Holy Rosary.

    Reply
  3. Amen thanks Father John for beautiful reflection Amen

    Reply

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