Forty days after His resurrection,
the Son of God ascended into heaven. In
Him, humanity and divinity are united in one Person; He goes up into heaven as
the God-Man. The Son shares in the glory that He had with
the Father and the Holy Spirit before the creation of the world. And He brings our humanity into that glory
with Him. There is perhaps no more
powerful sign of our salvation than the Ascension, for it makes clear that our
Lord has raised us—not only from the tomb, not only from hades—but into the
eternal life of the Holy Trinity. Our
calling to become participants in God, partakers of the divine nature by grace,
is fulfilled in our ascended Lord.
The Ascension also makes clear that
Jesus Christ is not merely a great teacher or example or even an angel or
lesser god. As the Fathers of the
Council of Nicaea proclaimed, He is light of light, very God of very God, of
one essence with the Father, the only begotten Son of God. For only One who is truly divine and eternal
can ascend into heaven and bring us into the divine, eternal life of the Holy
Trinity. That is why the Council of
Nicaea rejected the teaching of the heretic Arius, who did not think that the
Son was fully divine. That is why the Orthodox Church has always
disagreed with those who deny our Lord’s full divinity or His full
humanity. For only One who is truly both
God and human can bring humans into the life of God.
Unfortunately, we often view Jesus
Christ and ourselves in ways that reflect our low expectations. If we want a Savior who merely teaches and
models a good life, we might become a bit better by listening to Him. But human teachers and examples cannot
conquer death and cannot raise us with them into eternal life. Many continue to want a Lord in their own
image: a teacher of secret spiritual
truths to an elite club; a social or political activist of whatever ideology;
or a philosopher who speaks with wisdom.
There are those in every generation who claim to discover a secret Jesus
who looks pretty much like them and their preferred way of life.
Countless martyrs going back to the
original disciples, however, did not go to their deaths out of loyalty to just
another teacher or politician. They looked death in the eye and did not blink
because they knew that their Lord was God, that He had conquered death and
would share His victory with them in heaven.
In a matter of days, Christ’s disciples went from total despair and
defeat at His crucifixion to the astounding joy of Pascha and Pentecost. These were life-changing experiences that
gave them the strength to sacrifice their own lives for the Lord. Even the most admired human beings die and
are usually forgotten; generations of martyrs do not give their lives for them. But the life of the risen and ascended Son of
God continues in the Church, especially in the witness of the martyrs who share
in a victory that is not of this world.
We share in the eternal life of
Christ through His Body, the Church. The
Son prayed to the Father that His followers “may be one as We are…that they all
may be one, as You, Father are in Me, and I in You; that they may also be one
in Us, that the world may believe that You sent Me. And the glory which You gave Me I have given
them, that they may be one just as We are one…”
Here is a very high, very exalted
view of what it means to be a human being in the image and likeness of God. In Christ’s Body, the Church, we are to be
one in Him, showing forth the unity of holiness and love that are
characteristic of the Holy Trinity.
Christ has given us His glory, a share in life eternal, the life to
which He has ascended as the Son of God. And that glory, that eternal life, is
never an individual undertaking; it is the life of unity in Christ, of His
Body, of which we are all members by baptism.
No doubt, we all fall short of the fullness
of life in Christ. We often would rather
not ascend in Him to a life of holiness, for we prefer to do things which are
beneath us, which are not fitting for those created in the image and likeness
of God, for those called to live the life of heaven even now. Instead of dwelling on what is true, noble,
just, and pure, we too often dwell on what inflames our passions, our self-centered
desires. Instead of recognizing that our
salvation is a life together in the Body of Christ, we try to live as isolated
individuals, continuing the division from one another that has beset humanity
since Adam and Eve. Instead of seeing
that we participate in Christ through our brothers and sisters in the faith,
our neighbors, and every human being whom we encounter, we define ourselves
over against one another and thus make ourselves less than truly human in the
image and likeness of the Holy Trinity.
It might be possible to follow the
guidance of a teacher in isolation from others, on our own terms, according to
whatever private interpretations seem right to us. But it is impossible to embrace the fullness
of life in our Risen and Ascended Lord as isolated individuals as though our faith means
whatever we want it to mean. We can
interpret the words of a merely human teacher however we want, but the One Who
has conquered death and ascended into heaven requires something different. He
is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, the Alpha and Omega of the universe. The point is not to try to make Him in our
image, to water Him down into someone Whom we can accept and understand on the
terms of our own culture or preferences. Instead, the point is to fall before Him in
worship, to accept in humility the great blessing of the resurrected, ascended
life which He gives us, and to live faithfully in the unity of the Church as we
grow in Him.
Let us celebrate the Ascension,
then, by embracing the great dignity that is ours in the God-Man Who has gone
up to heaven. Let us pay close attention
to our thoughts, words, and deeds, and do only that which help us live as those
called to the glory of the Kingdom. Let
us make of our life in the Church an icon of the Holy Trinity, a Communion of
love and holiness, for we are truly members of a Body whose life is in one
another. Let us treat every human being
we meet with the same love and care that we would show to the Lord Himself.
Yes, we really can live this way
because we are not simply following the teachings of a human being; instead, we
are participating even now in the eternal life of the One Who has conquered
death, the tomb, and hades, and taken our humanity into heaven. If Jesus Christ can do that, we may put no
limits on what He can do with us. For the Lord has ascended into heaven, and He
will take us with Him if we will only embrace—with faith, humility and
repentance-- the great glory that He has brought to us as those created in His
image and likeness.
This is not a message for a few
select souls or for people with no problems who seem to have everything in
life. It is good news for us all, no
matter how broken, imperfect, and difficult our lives may be. Christ rose again and ascended with His
wounds for our salvation. He turned
death itself into a pathway to eternal life, and He can transform even our worst struggles and pains into our greater
personal participation in the new life of the Kingdom. No, we cannot do that by ourselves any more
than we can raise the dead or rise to heaven by our own power. But in our ascended Lord, all things are
possible. Were He simply a great human
personality kept alive only in our memories, we would have no hope beyond the
world as we know it. But in the God-Man
Who conquers death for our sake and deifies our humanity, we may live even now
the life of heaven as a foretaste of the eternal peace and joy that are not of
this world. That is what He calls and
enables each and every one of us to do through a life of holiness in His Body,
the Church. Yes, He has ascended in
glory. The only question is whether we
will follow Him.
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