To The Highest!

On Palm Sunday, Jesus was head and shoulders above the crowd as He rode into
Jerusalem on a donkey. On Good Friday, He was lifted up on a cross, in shame,
suffering and humiliation, for all to see. On Easter Day, He was lifted up from the
tomb, raised from death.
Now, on Ascension Day, He leaves His followers and, as they watched, He is ‘taken
up into heaven’ (Luke 24.51). Here is the culmination of that ‘lifting up’ which is
integral to Christ’s work of salvation.
Lifted up that we might see Him and know who He is.
Lifted up that we might know the agony of His death on the cross and realise the
depths of His love for you and for me.
Lifted up so that the tomb is empty, confirming God’s acceptance of Christ’s
sacrifice on our behalf and approving our redemption in Him.
And now lifted up to the glory of His rightful place in the Godhead, the glory which He
gave up when He ‘made Himself nothing’ (Philippians 2.7) [‘emptied Himself,’ ‘set
aside the privileges of deity,’ as some translations put it] to come down to serve and
save humanity.
As Jesus was taken from them, the disciples were lost for words – it would soon
happen again at Pentecost. They could only describe what they experienced in
terms of Him being lifted up to the highest, taken up into heaven. For them, His
immediate personal presence with them seemed to be over but His work on earth
had culminated in His glorious return to the heavenly realm and was further
confirmation that they had been in the presence of the Son of God.
One of Graham Kendrick’s hymns begins,
‘From heaven you came, helpless babe,
Entered our world, your glory veiled ‘
That veil has been removed as the Babe of Bethlehem has returned to the eternal
kingdom as the Crucified Saviour and Risen Lord. Now lifted up to the highest, His
work for our salvation has been triumphantly completed.








