
The Ascension, James Thornhill 1720s, Dorset Museum and Art Gallery, Dorchester, UK.
(All dioceses have the option of celebrating the Feast of the Ascension either on the traditional Thursday, 40 days after Easter/Passover, or on the Seventh Sunday of Easter. The New York Diocese celebrates on the traditional feast day.)
Click here for the readings on Ascension Day.
Click here for the readings on the Seventh Sunday of Easter.
“….as they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him from their sight. While they were looking intently at the sky as he was going, suddenly two men dressed in white garments stood beside them. They said, “Men of Galilee, why are you standing there looking at the sky? This Jesus who has been taken up from you into heaven will return in the same way as you have seen him going into heaven.” Acts of the Apostles, 1:9-11.
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The Ascension of the Lord effectively brings to a conclusion the time on earth of the Son of God, the Messiah. Prior to the feast of the Nativity, it was the time of God the Father, carefully preparing the people of God for the arrival of the Messiah. In that time were revealed the essential divine qualities of God: Power, Mercy, Listening, Forgiveness, Freedom, Loyalty and Relationship. Jesus demonstrated and lived all those qualities in his life, setting the perfect example for all of us to follow. Very shortly after his return to heaven, God sent down the Holy Spirit upon the disciples, inaugurating the Era of the Holy Spirit, in which we now live. It is our destiny to live by those same qualities so that we echo in our lives the identical vision of life God the Father and God the Son established for us. We are enabled to do so with the strength and direction of the Holy Spirit of God. We are not alone! We can model our lives with those same qualities and so become true disciples of God.
Power: God enabled the 90-year old Sarah, wife of Abraham, to bear a child, Isaac, thereby establishing God’s people here on earth. Jesus demonstrated the power he has as God’s Son by curing the incurable. By virtue of the gifts God has given each of us, we have power to fulfill God’s will in our lives. And we all have power! Even youngsters, for example, have the power to make their mothers’ lives a misery or make her day glorious! We all have power. It is how we use it that counts!
Mercy is when we show compassion on those who do not deserve it. Even when we mess up, God shows mercy, even though we do not deserve it. So we have to do likewise to others.
God listens! God heard the cries of the Hebrew slaves in Egypt, and told Moses at the burning bush. Jesus heard blind Bartimaeus cry out to him, he heard him, turned and healed him. We should always be aware of what we are told, and the meaning behind it, perhaps requiring help.
God forgives us. Remember the ultimate example, from the cross itself, Jesus forgave his torturers. We must forgive, which is healthy compared to bottling hatred up and allowing it to dominate us.
God believes in freedom. Count the number of times Jesus released people from captivity, both in body and in mind. We can each of us try to do that in some way. It is of God.
Loyalty is a divine characteristic. In the Old Testament, for example, Hagar, Sarah’s slave and mother of Ishmael, Abraham’s son, was expelled from the camp by Sarah, but God protected her and ensured she was safe. God was loyal in proving she was safe. Jesus was overwhelmingly loyal to his Father, even though that led to the most horrific consequences. He remained loyal to the bitter end.
And finally, God is has the closest possible relationship with us. How more intimate can Jesus be by stating “Take, eat: this is my body”? We actually incorporate the Lord of All literally into us! Try to link up as many examples of these virtues as you have shown in your life. The more you can recall, the closer you are to God!
So, in all these ways, we are able to adopt and incorporate within our lives, the very qualities demonstrated by God. In that way we become true children of God, fulfilling our true destiny of union with the Lord forever.

Welcome Home, Danny Hahlbohm.
PLEASE FORWARD THIS THOUGHT TO ONE YOU THINK WOULD APPRECIATE IT. THANK YOU.
Reflections on next Sunday’s Mass Readings will be posted on Wednesday.
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