First, let us remind ourselves that Ascension Day should not be thought of as a historical commemoration. The New Testament treats the ascension as an integral part of the Easter event.
In fact, the earlier Easter narratives depict the appearances as manifestations of the already risen and ascended One. Hence Paul could include his Damascus experience among the appearances in 1 Corinthians 15.
The later appearance narratives (Luke and John) show a tendency to separate the Resurrection and the Ascension, but still they are not regarded as two successive events. They are separated in order to contemplate the meaning of two aspects of a single, indivisible event.
When this separation occurs, the Ascension seems to be variously located: in Luke 24, on Easter Sunday evening or, at the latest, the next day; in John 20, sometime between the appearance to Mary Magdalene (who is told not to touch the risen One because he has not yet ascended) and the appearance to Thomas (who is invited to touch him); in Acts 1, after the forty days (which, however, are symbolic of the time of revelation; there may be no intention to suggest that the Ascension actually “occurred” on the fortieth day).
For several centuries the church did not, either in its writings or in its liturgy, treat the Ascension as though it actually “occurred” on the fortieth day.
With the revised church calendar, we still keep it on the fortieth day as a matter of convenience (and that this is not an absolute rule is indicated by the rubrical permission [in the Roman Liturgy] to transfer the observance to the following Sunday). This allows us to isolate for contemplation one particular aspect of the total Easter event.
Reading I: Acts 1:1-11
It is curious that in his two-volume work Luke tells the story
of the Ascension twice (Luke 24; Acts 1). Each narration brings
out a different aspect of the truth. The version in Acts looks
forward to the future, to the inauguration of the church’s
mission and the final return of the ascending One.
Luke’s perspective
on salvation history represents an adjustment. Salvation history,
already in the Old Testament, is constantly readjusted in the
light of earlier events.
The earliest Church looked for only a brief interval between the Ascension and
the parousia, an interval that would be marked by the apostles’ mission to Israel
and by persecution and martyrdom.
Now salvation history is greatly extended.
Paul already had modified it to include the mission to the Gentiles.
Now, for
Luke, the church is here to stay, with a mission to the whole civilized world.
But the hope of the parousia is still maintained, and the church’s mission is
viewed as a preparation for the end.
|
|
|
|
Responsorial Psalm: 47:2-3, 6-7, 8-9*
This is one of the enthronement psalms, which, according to
some scholars, were sung at a (hypothetical) annual feast at
which the king was enthroned to symbolize Y(HWH)’s kingship over his people.
As the king took his seat upon his
earthly throne, the whole people would have chanted this psalm in celebration of the kingship of Y(HWH).
The Church in its liturgy has associated this psalm with, and transferred
it to, the ascension of Christ. Ascension Day is the feast of Christ’s enthronement.
Henceforth God exercises his sovereignty over the universe through his exalted Son.
|
|
|
Reading II: Ephesians 1:17-23
Ephesians, whether written by Paul himself or, as now seems more likely,
by a close disciple steeped in the thought of his master, begins, like most of
Paul’s letters, with an opening thanksgiving and prayer. This prayer reproduces
the pattern and phraseology of a liturgical hymn.
The first part of our passage prays for the church’s growth in wisdom and knowledge,
and looks to the risen and ascended Christ for the power to foster this growth.
The hymn then goes on to elaborate on the exaltation and kingship of Christ.
The
New Testament views Christ’s kingship as exercised in two concentric circles.
The inner circle embraces the church, where his kingship is known and acknowledged;
the outer circle embraces the world, where he is de facto king but his kingship
is as yet unrecognized (O. Cullmann).
The church’s function is to extend that inner circle
to cover more and more of the outer one. |
|
|
|
Gospel: Matthew 28:16-20
As we noted in our introduction
to this feast, the earlier Easter narratives saw the appearances as manifestations
from heaven of the already risen and ascended Christ. This is still the situation
in Matthew’s story of the final appearance in today’s gospel.
It is the ascended
One who says, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” It
is the ascended One who commissions his apostles and sends them out into the
world in the great missionary charge (see Ephesians
4:8-13, where the apostolate
appears
as the gift of the ascended Christ).
The final appearance takes place on a mountain. This, for Matthew, has theological
significance.
The great sermon had been preached on a mountain. The Transfiguration
took place on a mountain, as in the other Synoptists. And now the great appearance
also takes place on a mountain.
This is, in fact, the only appearance that Matthew
records, apart from the personal and private one to the women (28:9-10).
All
the meaning of the Resurrection appearances is, for Matthew, compressed into
this single story.
Such a device was probably suggested to him by the angel’s
charge to the women in Mark
16:7 to tell the disciples to go to Galilee, where
they would see the risen Lord.
The primary significance of the appearances is
that they are revelations of the risen One. Because they are revelations,
they can be doubted as well as believed. But those who do believe respond in
adoration (v. 17).
In his opening words about his authority, the risen One echoes the language about
the Son of Man in Daniel
7:14 in the wording of the Greek Old Testament, a fact
that suggests that this story must have crystallized in the Greek-speaking church.
The declaration of authority is followed by a missionary charge in three parts:
1. The disciples are commanded to “make disciples” of all nations. This
is typically Matthean phraseology (cf. Matthew 13:52; 27:57).
The longer ending in Mark, which has “proclaim the good news” (16:15),
probably represents the earlier tradition, which Matthew has reworded to suit his own interests.
The association of the appearances with the command to mission
goes back to the earliest tradition, as the word “apostle” itself shows, as do the terms
in which Paul speaks of his own call on the road to Damascus (Galatians 1:16).
2. As in Mark 16:16, the call to mission includes the charge
to baptize. All our evidence agrees that baptism was practiced by the church right from the outset,
and this despite the fact that baptism had not been a feature of the Lord’s public ministry.
This remains true even if there was an earlier period when Jesus worked side by side with John the Baptist and during which he too baptized (John 3:22).
There can be no doubt that it was the impact of the post-resurrection appearances that led to the revival of baptism by the earliest Christians. Baptism became the way in which those who had not had a firsthand encounter with the Christ event were brought into its sphere.
The command to baptize given by the risen One in Mark and Matthew (see also the allusions to the forgiveness
of sin in the appearance stories of Luke and John) is a verbalization of this experience.
In the earliest community and for some time, baptism was administered in the name of Jesus. It is only in this
passage of Matthew and in the Didache,
a Christian writing probably dating back to the end of the first century, that we hear of the threefold formula.
One may say, however, that the use of Jesus’
name alone as a baptismal formula implies the threefold name, for baptism in the name of Jesus implies the confession of him as the
Messiah (“Jesus is Lord” was probably the earliest baptismal confession), and in Jewish context
Messiah means the agent of God’s final salvation, while the bestowal of the Spirit is a consequence of messianic salvation.
Hence, we may say that from the earliest date the Jewish Christians would have understood baptism in an implicitly
trinitarian sense. The development of the threefold formula would have become necessary in Gentile communities, where
the implications of the primitive confession of Jesus as Lord were no longer understood and had to be spelled out.
This does not mean that we should now go back to the single formula of earliest times. That would have
quite a different meaning now—the repudiation of what was implicit in the earliest use of the single formula.
3. The command to baptize is followed by a charge to teach.
It is not clear whether this teaching means post-baptismal instruction. “Baptizing” is a present
participle in the Greek, as in the English translation, and this could suggest teaching accompanying baptism, that is, catechetical instruction.
After the charge to teach comes a final promise of the permanent presence of the ascended Christ from now until the parousia.
This is a far cry from the perspective of the earliest community, which thought of the interval between the Ascension
and the Second Coming as a period of Christ’s temporary absence (Acts
3:21).
The wording of this promise thus verbalizes the experience of Christ’s presence, an experience made possible for the church
through the gift of the Spirit and in the cultus during the intervening period.
|
Reginald H. Fuller,
Daniel Westberg |
Copyright © 1984, 2006
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota.
All rights reserved. Used by permission from Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
|
Preaching the Lectionary:
The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller and Daniel Westberg. Liturgical Press. 2006 (Third Edition), pp. 96-99.
*Webmaster Note: Commentary on the Responsorial Psalm
is from the 1984 Revised Edition, p. 89. |
|

Thank
you to Liturgical Press who makes this page possible
|
|
For more information about the 3rd edition (2006) of Preaching the Lectionary or for more information click picture above. |
Back

Art by Martin Erspamer, O.S.B. (formerly Steve Erspamer, S.M.)
from Religious
Clip Art for the Liturgical Year (A, B, and C).
Used by permission of Liturgy Training Publications. This art may be reproduced only by parishes who purchase the collection
in book or CD-ROM form. For more information go to:
http://www.ltp.org/
|
|
 |