Sunday, June 1, 2014

Jesus roots us that we might reach out – Acts 1:1-11, Matt 28:16-20

Ascension Sunday; Holy Cross parish.

We recently hired a new director of maintenance, Steve Velleman (which is very good news, by the way… he starts on Monday).  It’s of vital importance that he never hears the story I’m about to tell you.  This isn’t like a Messianic secret thing, where you go and tell the whole village anyway, seriously… he can’t know this.  We have various banners that are hung in this church for various seasons and Steve’s predecessor, Kevin, would put these up on his own.  What Kevin never knew, and Steve can never know, is that at the last parish where I was a regular parishioner before I entered seminary, I was on the banner hanging team.  I am happily retired from that, I desire no comebacks.  I had two partners in crime.  One was the designer and maker of the banners, who would stand back and tell me if they were hanging straight.  The other was an ex-Marine who held the base of the ladder for me, while I would climb up holding the banner.  Now, of course, the ladder couldn’t go right in front of the hook, it has to go off to the side a little.  So, once I’d gotten to the top, I would have to stretch out, sometimes almost straining, always leaning some, and reach, to hook the banner on, and then return a few times because it apparently was never quite straight.  You can see why I retired.  Now, I don’t think of myself as particularly weak, but I was pretty clearly less strong than Ron at the bottom holding my ladder, and that’s why we divided the tasks the way we did.  I could only dare to reach so far out, because I knew that Ron only needed to use a tiny fraction of his strength for me to be completely securely held.  I was rooted enough to reach out.

That’s what Jesus did for his apostles, and does for us.  In Acts, we read of his commission of them as his witnesses.  Jesus the prophet greater than all prophets not just commissions them but, with divine surety, predicts the success of their mission, to bear witness to him to the ends of the earth.  They are made his witnesses, and that admits of two readings both of which are important to grasp.  Firstly, and most obviously, they are his witnesses in that they bear witness to him, to the compassionate Messiah who in dying destroyed death, in rising restored us to life and in his ascension reassured us that human flesh can ascend and dwell forever with His Father, made Our Father in baptism.  But secondly, and just as importantly, they are his witnesses in the sense that they are his.  He claims them, he empowers them through His Spirit, he shares his life with them, embraces them.  In him, they are completely securely held.  They are rooted enough; they can reach out.

In the Gospel, we read of a bunch of disciples who respond connaturally to the appearance of Christ with worship.  They get that he is worthy of all praise.  But, they still doubt.  They simply can’t comprehend a love so intense, so powerful, that not even death could keep the lover from his beloved, not his death, from which he rose, not our death, from which he’ll raise us.  They doubt, and that’s not an intellectual skepticism, but a nervous wavering.  One of the most important words of this gospel, so often rushed over to get to other, also important words, is “approached.”  Jesus approached them.  He doesn’t remain distant.  Jesus approaches his nervous wavering Church.  Jesus never tires of approaching us when we waver.  And he commissions still.  He doesn’t commission perfect humans, or angels, but nervous wavering worshipers: that’s who he calls to make God known, loved and served.  He approaches, that we might not waver in trusting ourselves to be completely held; to be rooted enough that we can reach out.


The earthly Jesus had limited availability: you only got to see him if you were in the right place in Palestine at the right time for a thirty-three year or so span.  Our Risen, Ascended Lord is present through his witnesses in the Spirit, available to all.  Available to as many as we dare to reach out to.  We are completely held; rooted enough that we can reach out.

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