Mark 16:14-20 – Festival of Christ’s Ascension
– May 29, 2014
Ascension
Ascension
We confess in the Creed that Jesus
ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of God the Father
almighty, and that from thence he will come to judge the living and the
dead. What does “thence” mean? Why don’t we just say “from there”? The reason is so we don’t get the idea that
the right hand of the Father is some distant geographical location. It isn’t.
If we said, “and from there he
will come,” it might sound that way. But
“thence” means more. It means not only from
that time and place, but it also
means from that source, or position of authority. This is to say that when Christ returns, he
will judge the earth with the same authority by which he ascended into heaven, and with the same authority by which he
has been ruling his Church for the last 2,000 years.
And what is this authority? Of what does it consist? His authority consists in the forgiveness of
sins, the rescuing from death and the devil, and the giving of eternal
salvation to all who believe. It is
through the means of grace that Christ exerts his authority as the King of
kings and Lord of lords over all nations, and indeed over all creation. And it is by distributing this salvation which
he has won that he shall reign forever and ever. “He who believes and is baptized will be
saved. He who does not believe will be
condemned.”
In Psalm 2, the eternal Father speaks
to his eternally begotten Son, “Ask of Me, and I will give You the nations
for Your inheritance, and the ends of the earth for Your possession. You shall break them with a rod of iron; you
shall dash them to pieces like a potter’s vessel.”
Well, his only begotten Son asked of
him.
He asked for his inheritance of all
nations by joining the flesh and blood of all nations. He willingly came down from his glorious
throne in heaven to be seated in the lowliness of Mary’s womb. He asked for his inheritance also by placing
himself under the demands of the law, as subject to it, even though the
righteousness that the law required was his own from eternity. And finally, he asked for the inheritance his
Father promised by taking our unrighteousness upon himself and submitting
to the just punishment for the sins of the whole world. He died for all nations. “Ask and I will give,” the Father said. Jesus asked by giving his life, and so the Father
gave what he promised by raising his Son from the dead. He gave him the nations for his inheritance
by giving him the authority to rule all nations in mercy.
The Father gave Jesus a kingdom that
shall outlast every earthly kingdom, because it consists not of steel and
armies, but of the gospel through which the Holy Spirit works faith in our
hearts and saves us poor sinners from hell.
All things have been placed under Jesus’ feet, both as the eternal Son
of God and as the Son of Man united forever in one Person. The God who rules in heaven is none other
than the Man Jesus Christ who lived the perfect life in our place here on earth
and shed his holy blood to redeem us.
But now he is exalted, and all
authority in heaven and on earth is his.
He sends his Apostles to make use of this authority by baptizing all
nations in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, “and
behold,” he says, “I am with you always even until the end of
the age,” that is, until he comes again in glory to judge. The weapons of his kingdom consist of the
gospel and sacraments, which are themselves nothing other than the gospel attached
to earthly elements. Jesus does not send
his disciples out with a law that must be obeyed. That is how every other kingdom works, by
issuing sanctions and no fly zones and imposing taxes and stuff. Yet all of these are temporary and forgotten
in time. All of these produce resentment
and distrust in the process of accomplishing their goals. But no, instead Jesus sends his disciples out
with the word of forgiveness that teaches that he has been obedient for
us, and that by his obedience, he has purchased forgiveness, life, and eternal
communion with God. In the process of
accomplishing his goal, he produces peace and joy and profound trust. This is what Jesus does with all his
authority. This is how he makes
disciples.
When people turn Baptism into a sign of
our commitment rather than the means by which God freely forgives and
regenerates sinners and commits himself to us, they are not just missing out on
an enormous blessing of comfort. Much
worse, they are replacing the weapons of Christ’s kingdom – from the gospel to
the law. Jesus did not send the
disciples out to get the world to submit and hand their lives over. No way.
That’s what Mohamed did. Jesus
sent them out to preach the gospel, through which the Holy Spirit freely gives
new life. And he gives new life by creating
faith. And he creates faith in no other
way than by clothing us in the righteousness that Christ earned as our God and
Brother. It is Christ who
submitted. It is Christ who surrendered
his life. It is we who in faith simply receive
what our Lord and King now offers. And
our faith clings to nothing other than to where he promises to give it: “He
who believes and is baptized will be saved.”
There is nothing more that we must
overcome. Faith receives it all. There is no obedience we need to fulfill
other than the obedience that was reckoned to us when we were baptized
according to Christ’s command and promise.
No, we are living under Christ’s kingdom of grace by hearing and
believing the gospel that assures us that Jesus has secured everything for our
eternal salvation. Nothing can take that
away. The gospel we hear has already
overcome the world. So then, what in the
world can separate us from the love of God in Christ? No one!
And Jesus wants everything in the world to know it.
“Go into all the world and proclaim the
gospel to the whole creation,” Jesus
said. To whom? To all
creation! Not only to everyone whose
sins Jesus bore on the cross, but also to everything that might touch their
lives, everything that might threaten them, and tempt them, and accuse them – preach
the gospel to every rock, tree, and squirrel, to every height and depth, every
principality and power, to everything that is present and everything that is to
come. Preach it. Preach that Christ the Savior of sinners has been
raised from the dead and has received power and authority from God the Father
almighty to give eternal life to everyone in the world. Preach that nothing in all creation can
separate him who believes and is baptized from the inheritance which Christ has
purchased by his blood, and which he bestows to us by water and his word.
Those who are saved are those who believe
this. Those who are damned are those who
do not believe this. And so they are
shattered like a potter’s vessel.
And what shatters them? What damns them? What stands against them as they face God on
the Day of Judgment? Is it the fact that
they have committed too great a sin? Is
it the fact that they have been too persistent in some particular vice? Is it because they have broken too many vows
or wasted too many second chances? Is it
because they have lived too shameful a life or because their flesh continues to
find the world alluring? Is it because
they have not fully yielded their hearts to the Lord? No. It
is not any of these things. It is
because they do not believe.
It is the gospel alone, which stands
against those who will not repent and receive the righteousness of Christ. It is the gospel alone, which gives
forgiveness, which will also expose the hearts of those who refuse forgiveness. Christ has earned the forgiveness of all
sins. The only unpardonable sin is the
sin of refusing to be pardoned; it is the sin of unbelief. And so it will be that the same rod that
comforts the Good Shepherd’s sheep according to Psalm 23 will dash to pieces
the unbelievers according to Psalm 2. It
is the authority of Christ and his almighty kingdom, which he has earned by
suffering and dying for the sins of all humanity. It is the gospel.
The confidence of the gospel is the
confidence of what Christ’s judgment will be when he returns. You know it now, because Christ serves you
now through the means of grace. We call
them the means of grace, because they are the means through which Jesus
continues to send the Holy Spirit to bring us to and keep us in the one saving
faith.
Jesus ascended to heaven. We live on earth. But we don’t ascend to Jesus to benefit from
him – whether by some religious exercise or by our good works. Rather Jesus comes down to us in similarly
humble fashion as when he hid his glory as a lowly servant. He comes to us and to all Christians in the
preaching of the gospel, in the absolution you hear, in the promise of Baptism
that saves, and in the bread and wine of the Lord's Supper, where Jesus gives
us his very body and blood for us to eat and drink. Through all these means, Jesus is truly
present with his Church.
Jesus’ ascension was not Jesus
leaving. He did not ascend to his Father
in order to be somewhere other than where he was while he walked the
earth. On the contrary, he ascended in
order that he might no longer limit himself and be bound to one location at a
time, but so that he might always be with his Church wherever she is gathered
in his name, just as he promised. To
ascend into the highest heavens is to fill all things, but not just in the
sense that he is everywhere. It is
more. As God he has always been
everywhere. As the Son of God, he has
always been equal to the Father. But for
Christ to ascend to God’s right hand means that, as true God and true
Man, he now assumes the honor, power, and glory that belong to God alone. He has earned it by paying the redemption
price for all humanity. This is what is
meant by the right hand of the Father. It
means that Jesus our God and Brother has received the authority that his Father
gave to him to embrace all of sinful humanity in mercy.
When Christ is dealing with us, God is
dealing with us. He is the God who humbled himself to bear our sin. The only God whose presence surrounds us is
the God who took up his cross to redeem us and reconcile us to his Father so
that we might always be with him. This
is of great comfort.
Natural law will teach us that God
exists and that his tends to his creation.
Natural man can conclude that he is always near. But God gave his apostles the power to bend
and defy natural rules of his creation in order to teach that there is
something greater for us to learn and discern about God. Signs followed the preaching of the gospel
that teaches us still that God’s gracious presence and reign is found where he
freely and liberally forgives sinners their sins and assures his children that
he remembers them no more.
Today the laws of nature are not so
defied by the preachers of the gospel.
But your reason will be. Your
natural assumptions about how God should work will be defied by God as he sends
his ministers out with even greater signs – signs that may not look miraculous,
but signs that give more than any healing or raising or show of strength can
give. He buries us and raises us with
Christ in our Baptism. There you have a
sure sign of God’s favor. He feeds s
with the very body and blood of Christ whereby he made full satisfaction for
humanity’s sin (and so just as surely, dear Christian, your deepest most
shameful sin that won’t stop harassing and plaguing and tempting you!). Here’s a sign that he who lives gives life to
those who die. We see in these signs,
not in miracles, but in signs of divine kindness and promise – we see here the
world submit to Christ. For here the
world has testimony from heaven that we have God’s favor and that his
propitiated face shines upon us. And if
this is so, and it is – Christ lives and furthermore reigns in heaven as our
Brother and Lord – if this so, then surely he shall come again – whether buried
or living – to bring us to where he has gone!
Amen!
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