Ascension Day
A Sermon preached by Fr James Heard for Ascension Day
In some old stately
homes and hunting lodges, one sees deer’s heads on the walls, complete with
antlers, which are probably annoying from the point of view of dusting, but
very useful for hanging Christmas decorations. It’s often been observed that
the stag must have been going at quite a rate to have got its head through the
wall like that! The same could be said of the famous chapel dedicated to the
Ascension in Walsingham, which features two plaster feet sticking out from
beneath the ceiling! Jesus must have had quite a G-force to have achieved such
vertical take-off speed in the space of two metres!
But, of course, the
plaster feet are just a pictorial representation of something impossible to
represent. Christians have never imagined that the Ascension was a spatial
journey in the way that the Space Shuttle embarks upon spatial journeys. When
the Russian cosmonaut returned to earth and declared that he hadn’t seen
heaven, his observation didn’t trouble the faith of Christians. When we say the
Apostles’ Creed – ‘He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of
the Father’ – the creed is making a theological, not a geographical, point. The
theologian, Oliver O’Donovan, puts it like this: ‘we do not think of the
incarnation and ascension as journeys through space from one location to
another, like a journey between the earth and the moon… These events are
transitions between the universe of space and time that God has made and His
being which is…beyond it.’ With any talk of God we have to use metaphors, we
use art, poetry, and at the Ascension we have to use spatial language such as
‘up’ and ‘ascended’ because we are creatures of space and time and cannot think
without the help of such dimensions, but that doesn’t mean that we think of
heaven as being literally ‘up there’.
But once we have
disposed of the rather crude and simplistic ideas of ascension, we are left
with the question of what the Ascension means.
At the Ascension,
we celebrate, as it were, Jesus' disappearance. At Easter we celebrated the
appearances of the Risen Lord to the disciples. And now we celebrate that they
ceased. Jesus withdraws and is seen no more.
Timothy Radcliffe
describes the whole long history of salvation throughout scripture has been of
God's slow disappearance. At the beginning, God walks in 'the cool of the day'
in the garden, just like one of us after a hard day at work. But God comes to
Abraham and Sarah in fire and smoke in the night, and then as three mysterious
strangers needing food. He wrestles with Jacob. But the time we get to Moses,
we have only a voice from a burning bush, and unbearable visions on the
mountain. Then with the establishment of the Kingdom of David, God is seen no
more. He speaks through the voices of the prophets. Finally he appears in an
ordinary man who dies on a cross and shouts out, 'O God, my God, why have you
abandoned me?' Today he disappears altogether.
But this isn’t to
suggest that God becomes completely absent but rather so that we may become
more intimate. We lose God as over against us, God perceived as a powerful
stranger, the great big boss who runs the Universe, we lose that picture of God
so that we can discover him at the very heart of our existence. St Augustine
famously said, God is closer to us than we are to ourselves. Or as Thomas
Merton said, we loose him as an object so as to find him as a subject, the core
of our own subjectivity. We do not look at God so much as with
God.
Most of us will
live through moments in which God appears to disappear from us. We lose God.
When we are children we may loose God as the old man with a beard in the sky,
as we shall lose Father Christmas. As we grow older, we may lose God as a
comforting presence, or Jesus as our friend.
Perhaps this is
simply part of the natural process of maturation – I tried explaining to my
daughter that it would be strange if I called her when she goes at university
to remind her to brush her teeth. Hopefully, we instill good habits now so that
our children internalize them and grow into healthy responsible adults.
I went through a
period in my life when God seemed to have gone. All of my old certainties about
life and faith and God unraveled – what was happening was that I was going
through the critical or adolescent dimension of faith, asking difficult
questions. It was actually when I did my first degree in theology. It was a
rather frightening and disorientating experience, feeling that I had tumbled
out of belief and that the world had no meaning. I remained agnostic for many
years. And part of the problem was due to the tradition I was in at the time,
which didn’t know how to handle such doubt – I was told that it was either the
devil attacking me or due to sin in my life, which only made me feel worse.
There is a fascinating PhD on such people who go through periods of doubt and
questioning, perhaps experiencing God’s absence, and because they had grown
beyond the maturity level of the church or minister, they left church. But
interestingly they retained a faith.
But going through
this experience of God’s absence, experiencing profound doubt, we discover that
we have to wait until God gives himself more intimately, unexpectedly and
differently than we could have guessed.
At the Ascension,
as we celebrate Jesus’ disappearance, we await Pentecost when we are filled
with the Holy Spirit and we, the church, the body of Christ, are to stand on
our own two feet. To be Christ’s feet and hands and eyes in our community. With
the disciples, we are invited to rejoice today at the disappearance of Jesus.
It is all part of God making his home in us.
The Church should
be a sign of our home in God. But let's be honest. It doesn’t always feel like
home. Lots of people don’t feel at ease in the Church. This may be because we
feel that God doesn’t want us here. If that is the case, then we are living
with some image of God that needs to disappear. Maybe we still have God as the
celestial policeman, the accuser of sins, God as the eternal parking attendant,
waiting to catch us out, or God as the great President of the Universe.
In which case, we
have not yet fully celebrated the Ascension. We must let these images of God
disappear, fade away, so that we can discover the God who delights in our very
existence, and dwells at the core of our being.
Or maybe it’s other
people who make us feel ill at ease, not at home. We may feel that we are not
proper Christians or second class because we are gay, or divorced and
remarried, or poor, or rich, or because life has just taken unexpected turns.
Most lives do! In which case rather than be angry or internalise that
rejection, we must show compassion to those whose lives are haunted by
oppressive images of God.
The apostles who
witnessed the disappearing of Jesus still clung on to images of God that took
time to go. It took them time to realise that the God who only wanted to have
Jews in his community was gone and that we Gentiles also are at home.
The chapel of the
Ascension in Jerusalem is both a Church and also a mosque, it’s a shared holy
place for Christians and Muslims. It’s a sign of God's unimaginably spacious
home. Happy Ascension!
Reference:
Mike Lloyd, Café
Theology
Timothy Radcliffe
OP