UP, UP AND AWAY

It may have been better for the modern mind if Jesus had ridden off into the sunset, as cowboy heroes sometimes do in Westerns, rather than to have ‘ascended’. We have difficulty with the concept of ascension but ‘Up, Up and Away’, taken up and obscured by a cloud, might have been the only way that God could have enabled those followers of Jesus assembled on the Mount of Olives to understand that Jesus had returned to His Father’s presence (Acts 1.6-11).
Being lifted up into this cloud signifies the exaltation of Jesus to the highest place as the eternal, transcendent God, one with the Trinity. He who ‘humbled Himself and became obedient unto death’ has returned to take again the divine prerogatives He gave up for a time when He became a man, and is now the exalted Lord of all (Phil. 2.5-11).
But ‘Up, Up and Away’ does not mean that the Ascension is Jesus’ ‘escape’ from the world. Far from it, for it tells us that Jesus is no longer subject to the physical limitations that we experience. He is present with His people in the whole of the world because He is no longer confined by our dimensions of time and space.
Neither does ‘Up, Up and Away’ mean that our eyes should only be fixed on the skies for His promised return. The angelic messengers asked the disciples, ‘Men of Israel, why do you stand looking up toward heaven?’ - a reminder that Jesus had called them to an on-going work (Acts 1.8).
With Christ’s Ascension, we do look up in thankfulness and praise, because His return to the unity of the Godhead confirms that everything has been done to ensure our salvation. He is not only our Crucified and Risen Saviour, He is also our Mediator and Advocate in the presence of the Father, the guarantee of all the divine promises of the Gospel.
But we also keep our feet on the ground for Jesus has left us with -
an Unfinished Task Matthew 28.19
an Unchanging Message John 3.16
an Unfailing Promise Matthew 28.20b
The disciples returned to Jerusalem to continue, in witness and through prayer, the work given to them, knowing that they could both engage with the world and look to Christ’s coming again because of their Living and Ascended Lord. He calls us to do the same.








