Acts 1:1-11 When we think of our Lord’s
ascension into heaven we tend to think of it as a well-deserved rest at the end
of a long day of work. Jesus did what he needed to do for our
salvation and so he went back to heaven to take it easy until it is time to
judge the world. But that really is
a misunderstanding of what it means that he is seated at the Father’s right
hand in glory.
From
everlasting to everlasting our Lord has been working for our salvation. From before the creation of the world he knew
us and loved us and chose us to be his own.
He worked out his plan of salvation throughout history. He entered into human history himself and
died and rose again.
And EVEN NOW that he has ascended into
heaven and resumed his place at the Father’s right hand, he continues to work
for us so that we would live with him in heaven.
As we reflect on
God’s Word tonight what we are going to see that our Lord is actively accomplishing
his saving will in our lives and in the church and the world-- and we are
witnesses of that salvation. The bible
says:
In the first book, O
Theophilus, I have dealt with all that Jesus began to do and teach, until
the day when he was taken up, after he had given commands through the Holy
Spirit to the apostles whom he had chosen. He presented himself alive to them
after his suffering by many proofs, appearing to them during forty days and
speaking about the kingdom
of God.
If
the ascension WAS about the Lord
taking a much-needed break—who could blame him?
His entire life was dedicated to our salvation—every thought, word, and
deed done for us so that we can have a life with God.
All of this is written
down in the bible so that we can believe in him and have life in his name. John said at the end of his Gospel that these things are written so that we would believe
in Jesus. That’s the point of the whole
Bible—including the two books that Luke wrote.
The story of our
Lord’s work of salvation is not like the story of the Greek and Roman gods or
the pagan myths of the ancient world. It
is a story that is grounded in history. People
like us Jesus’ miracles and heard his teachings. His death and resurrection are facts of
history that people just like us witnessed.
Luke interviewed these
eyewitnesses and gathered reports and traveled to the places of our Lord’s life
so that he could write an accurate history of our Lord’s saving work.
And not only did
he write a human history—he wrote the
very words of God, inspired and empowered by the Holy Spirit so that those who
read his words could come to faith in Jesus.
Theophilus was one
who did. Luke’s Gospel was the means by
which God brought him to faith and with the “Book of Acts” Luke tells him the
rest of the story—the story of the church- and the mission of Christ- and the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit, all of which Jesus accomplished AFTER his ascension into heaven.
Our Lord continued
to work for the salvation of the world even after his return to the Father. He had a specific plan for the EVENTS of salvation-- but also for how
that salvation would go forth into the world, empowered by the Holy Spirit. The Bible says that while staying with the
apostles:
Jesus ordered them
not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father, which,
he said, “you heard from me; for John baptized with water, but you will be
baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.”
Even
though he would ascend into heaven, Jesus was not abandoning the church or
leaving his disciples to their own devices.
He commissioned them to tell the world about all that he had said and
done and he had a plan -and the provisions for that plan- to see salvation accomplished—throughout
the world, down through history.
His plan to save
the world would begin were they were right then—in Jerusalem—close to home. And he would provide them what they needed—the
gift of the Holy Spirit that he would pour out on them in just a few short
days.
As we read the
story of the church in Acts -and as we study history to see how the church went
from an oppressed, persecuted group of a few hundred to thousands and today to
billions, the wisdom and power of our ascended King is on full display.
Jesus has not been
napping over these two thousand years since his ascension! He has been graciously and wisely ordering
the affairs of the church- and providing for us spiritually- and ruling the
world so that all people can be saved.
In every place and
time where the Good News about Jesus is preached and given in the Sacraments,
there the Holy Spirit is given so that we can come to faith in Jesus and then
take our place and do our part in his mission.
Before his
ascension, Jesus told his disciples that it was for their own good that he was
ascending to his Father—and we see in what follows how true that is. The Bible says that:
When they had come
together, they asked him, “Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?”
He said to them, “It is not for you to know times or seasons that the
Father has fixed by his own authority.
We
know how the disciples struggled to understand what Jesus had come to do. Even when they confessed him as the Christ
and the Son of God they were still painfully mistaken about what that meant,
thinking only of an earthly things—not salvation from sin or reconciliation
with God.
But Jesus came to give his life as a
ransom to set us free from sin. He came to destroy death by rising from
the dead. He came to make us a part of God’s
kingdom and restore us to God’s
family.
He did not come to
heal every sick person. He did not come
to raise every person form the dead only to see them die again. And he certainly did not come to re-establish
an earthly Israel
filled with material blessings for a select few.
So long as Jesus
was right there beside them, the disciples would always be tempted to long for
these kinds of things and it is only after his ascension and the outpouring of
the Holy Spirit that we really begin to see them grasp the greatness of our
Lord’s mission—that it wasn’t really about one little country or one particular
group of people—but that Jesus’ mission encompassed the entire universe and all
people.
The salvation of
the world is what he had come to accomplish and the disciples needed to turn
their eyes away from their own narrow interests and take their place in his
mission to make known the greatness of our Savior’s love for all people.
The same is true
for us. We too are tempted to see our
relationship with Jesus as having a “genie in a bottle” who will give us what
we want and serve our narrow vision of what’s important.
But Jesus’ concern
is for the world and for all people and he calls us to look beyond ourselves to
the salvation of others. And so Jesus blesses
us with the gift of the Holy Spirit to empower our witness to his salvation. Jesus told them:
You will receive power
when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.” And
when he had said these things, as they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a
cloud took him out of their sight.
Jesus
kept his promise. Ten days after these
words were spoken, he poured out the Holy Spirit on his disciples and
immediately they began to bear witness to God’s salvation in Jesus. Jesus has given us the Holy Spirit for the
same purpose.
That we believe in
him and trust in him is a sure sign that we have the Holy Spirit. The Bible says that: no one
can say: Jesus is Lord EXCEPT by the
Holy Spirit. But that we know and
believe in Jesus (as wonderful as that is!) is not the end of his saving
purpose in our lives.
Jesus has given us the Holy Spirit so that we
would take our place and fulfill our purpose in his mission to save all people
before the day of judgment when it will be too late. The Bible says that:
While they were
gazing into heaven as he went, behold, two men stood by them in white robes,
and said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand
looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will
come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.”
Jesus
ascended into heaven with power and glory and was welcomed as a mighty,
conquering king who is to be worshiped and adored and glorified forever.
He
will return in exactly the same way—in power and glory for the final
deliverance of his people-- but also for the final destruction of his
enemies. Between his ascension day and
his judgment day he has called us and equipped us by the Holy Spirit to be
witnesses to salvation and do all within our power to make sure the number of
his enemies is as small as possible!
And so our eyes
are not directed to the clouds --but to our fellow man and to the mission that
our Lord has entrusted to our hands, confident that our ascended King will
accomplish his saving purpose through us.
May God grant it for Jesus’ sake!
Amen.
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