Ascension and Embrace
http://www.ekklesiaproject.org/blog/2013/05/ascension-and-embrace/
9 May 2013
The Feast of the Ascension
Acts 1:1-11
Psalm 47
Ephesians 1:15-23
Luke 24: 44-53
Acts 1:1-11
Psalm 47
Ephesians 1:15-23
Luke 24: 44-53
Nor doth he by ascending show alone,
But first He, and He first enters the way.
But first He, and He first enters the way.
John Donne, Ascension
I was puzzling over what to write
here when across my Facebook newsfeed came the story of a New
Englander (a “Yale grad” the headline noted) who has offered a burial
plot for the Boston Marathon bomber, Tamerlan Tsarnaev. Three
weeks after Tsarnaev was killed in a shootout with police, and with no
cemetery willing to receive his remains, Douglas Keene of Vermont made the offer to
Tsarnaev’s family on the condition that it be done
in memory of my mother who taught Sunday School at the Mt. Carmel Congregational
Church for twenty years and taught me to ‘love thine enemy.’
It is surprising how surprising
Keene’s simple, straightforward gesture seems. But it strikes me that part
of its beauty is that it invites us to remember what
crucifixion-resurrection-ascension make possible: the overcoming of our
violence and our need to scapegoat and exclude. In Jesus’ living and dying, in
his rising from death and his ascension into heaven, a new social order is
opened up to us–God’s new creation–in which enemies are loved and
we are free to relinquish the cherished fiction of our innocence.
The iconography of ascension makes
it difficult for us to reckon fully with this “crown of all Christian festivals.”
Jesus being “carried up into heaven“ (Lk. 24:51) is conceived,
understandably, in spatial terms and we think absence, or at least distance.
And there is the sense in the theology of
crucifixion-resurrection-ascension that Jesus is not here but there:
“seated at the right hand in the heavenly places” (Eph. 1:20).
But there is also the truth
that in returning to the Father Jesus takes our humanity into the very heart of
God. We who are his body are caught up in the divine life and its communitas
of mutual gift. God’s life and love spills its bounds, so to speak,
drawing us in, enfolding us, embracing us. In the ceaseless flow
of such gifts we in turn embrace others.
Yet this truth surprises us,
epecially, perhaps, because we live in a world ruled by fear and exclusion. As James Alison observes
We can imagine retaliation, we can
imagine protection; but we find it awfully difficult to imagine someone .
. . generously irrupting into our midst so as to set us free to enable
something quite new to open for us.
This generous irruption makes
possible our own ascension: “He first enters the way,” as Donne’s exquisite
sonnet has it. Jesus has gone before us in our suffering, our failure, our
despair, our death. And in his resurrection and ascension he brings us
home to the Father so that here in this place and in this
time we might bear witness to “the fullness of him who fills all in all”
(Eph.1:23).
A Vermont
schoolteacher’s surprising gesture of hospitality shows us what that might
look like. Embraced by God, we embrace others.
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