Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord
[In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.] Sometimes we use words in the Church that are very important, but whose meaning is not always clear. For example, in December we celebrate the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary. But many Catholics think that it refers to the Annunciation, when Jesus was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Blessed Mother, while it really refers to our Blessed Mother’s conception without original sin. Another phrase that is especially important today is Paschal Mystery.
The place from which Jesus ascended in Jerusalem |
But while the Jewish Passover happened some 3,450 years ago, and the fulfillment of that Passover in Christ happened some 2,000 years ago, God does not relegate the Paschal Mystery to the past. No, we celebrate it each time we come to Mass, and especially each Sunday, the Lord’s Day, as we enter into the moments of our redemption in a mystical way, and participate, as it were, in our own redemption because we join ourselves to Christ’s Passion, death, Resurrection, and Ascension at each Mass. We do not simply remember what Christ did for us; God through visible signs, allows us to join in what Christ did for us so that we can share the fruits of that Paschal Mystery, which is resurrection and glorification.
But as disciples of Christ, God calls us to live that Paschal Mystery each day of our life, and not just in the church building. Each day we have the opportunity of living out in ourselves what Christ did once for all some 2,000 years ago. This is what St. Paul means when he says in the first chapter of Colossians: “in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ on behalf of his body, which is the church.” So how do we live each day in the Paschal Mystery? How do we participate in Christ’s Passion, death, Resurrection, and Ascension?
We participate in the Passion and death of the Lord in our daily lives through the sufferings that come to us. We don’t have to seek out suffering. It readily makes itself available to us. Suffering, by itself, is a lack. But suffering united to Christ’s becomes redemptive by participating in His Paschal Mystery. We all have various sufferings each day. Maybe we hate our job; maybe our family drives us up a wall; maybe our sports team lost; maybe gas is more expensive than we would like it to be; maybe we lack trust in our political leadership. However we experience it, we suffer daily. But when we unite it to Christ, when we suffer in obedience to the will of the Father and seek not to do our own will, but “the will of the one who sent me,” we participate in redemption, both of ourselves and of the whole world. This is what the sisters meant when they would say, “Offer it up.” Now, I know we can use that phrase to basically mean, “stop whining,” but in its truest sense, that phrase reminds us to live out the Paschal Mystery, to suffer (the passion) and die (the crucifixion) to what we want and offer that pain to the Father, who receives it as an offering of love.
We participate in the Resurrection when we see God change our suffering that we have offered to Him into new life. This is when we offer up that bad driver and find that our heart actually grows in love and mercy for whoever he or she may be. This is when someone at work commends us and maybe even gives us a raise when we think they don’t notice the work we do. This is when the child who has brought you to the brink of insanity and tested your patience to its last limit runs up to you, smiles, and gives you a hug saying, “I love you, mommy.” When we offer our sufferings to the Father through Christ the Son in the power of the Holy Spirit, God transforms them into something which gives new life, just as the Father transforms ordinary bread and wine into the Body and Blood of His Son through the power of the Holy Spirit when we offer them to Him.
Our participation in the Ascension is something finds its fulfillment when the end of our earthly ministry is over, just as it did the same for Christ at the end of His earthly ministry. Christ’s Ascension is His glorification, because the Father raises Christ up into glory at His right hand. For us, the fullness of the ascension happens when we have done everything we can to offer our lives to the Father, when He has given us new life through those sufferings united to Him, and when He welcomes us into glory in heaven. Christ led the way for us, but He wants us to follow Him–in His suffering and death; in His resurrection; and lastly, in His Ascension. God does not keep glory for Himself, but shares it with us, according to our nature. What a joy to allow God to raise us up to the fullness of who we are meant to be, a reality which can only be completed in heaven.
But that’s our hope, a hope based in following Christ, not just in His teaching (but certainly those), but also in His Paschal Mystery. May we rejoice in this Paschal Mystery each time we assemble for Mass, and especially on the Lord’s Day, but may we also live out that Paschal Mystery every day of our lives, suffering and dying with God, allowing God to raise us to new life, and waiting for God the Father to glorify us with His Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns in the unity of the Holy Spirit, for ever and ever. Amen.