“But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Acts 1:8
The apostle Luke – deemed “Dear and Glorious Physician” in the wonderful novel by Taylor Caldwell – wants us to know that it is the Holy Spirit that acts through and with the disciples as they bear witness to the Lord’s resurrection. Luke also makes this point throughout his Gospel, and it certainly compels our attention. We are reminded that the Holy Spirit works through and with us as twenty-first century witnesses for Christ.
This is reassuring because Jesus as the disciples knew him has been carried up into heaven.
In his Gospel, Luke puts it this way: “Then he led (the disciples) out as far as Bethany and, lifting up his hands, he blessed them. While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven.” Luke 24:50-51.
In today’s scripture he adds a detail about the ascension of Jesus:
“As they were watching he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. While he was going and they were gazing up toward heaven, suddenly two men in white robes stood by them. They said, ‘Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven. This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way you saw him go into heaven.’” Acts 1:10-11
Up into heaven? Of course that doesn’t surprise us because we always think of heaven as “up,” a celestial paradise beyond the stars. We’ve all heard unlearned people refer to “the man upstairs,” and we like to think loved ones who have died are “smiling down on us.”
But is heaven “up there” somewhere? Centuries of star gazing from Galileo’s 17th century telescope to the James Webb space telescope have enabled us to see the awesome vastness of space. Gray beards like me remember when Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev bragged that the first human in space, Yuri Gagarin, “did not see God” when he orbited the earth.
Clearly, if we look for God or heaven among the galaxies we won’t find them. This is comforting, actually, because it reminds us that heaven – wherever it is – is much closer to us – as close to us as the Holy Spirit Who dwells within us and, in the fullness of time, guides us as we transition into eternity.
Even so, Luke’s description of Jesus’ transition “up” into heaven will do for now. We know that Jesus’ resurrected body was certainly capable of being carried “up” and Luke does his best to record the sometimes inexplicable new reality of Jesus’ body.
In Luke 24:36b-48, the resurrected Jesus startles the disciples with an abrupt and unexpected appearance.
He appears ghost-like through a solid wall.
But Jesus insists he is no ghost. He demonstrates the solidity of his flesh by eating fish.
How does he do it? What is going on?
Even for lifelong mystics and dedicated theologians, the resurrection of a dead Jesus may be hard to accept. I have known Christian educators who confessed their doubts.
Years ago I sat drinking beer in a darkened pub with a noted educator. “The resurrection is just not essential to my faith,” he said quietly.
My companion was several years older than me and seminary educated, which I am not. Otherwise I might have quoted Paul’s admonishment: “If Christ was not raised, your faith has nothing to it and you are still in your old state of sin.” (I Corinthians 15:17, REB).
But I kept my mouth shut and my learned friend and I sipped our beer in silence.
When my friend passed to the other side I knew eternal truths were surely revealed to him. But for me, awkward questions persist. If Christ was not raised, what did happen that got everyone so excited that long-ago Passover week in Jerusalem?
Each year my Lenten devotions include readings from Jesus: A Pilgrimage by the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest.
I was “gob-smacked” (to use Martin’s phrase) by his reference to a claim by New Testament scholar and archaeologist Jerome Murphy-O’Connor about whether the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is the actual burial place of Jesus:
The most important argument for the authenticity of the site is the consistent and uncontested tradition of the Jerusalem community, which held liturgical celebrations at the site until 66 years after the crucifixion, wrote Murphy-O’Connor.
Father Martin speculates that these celebrations had been taking place since about the year 45, less than 15 years after Jesus’ crucifixion. Many of the celebrants witnessed that event and were so profoundly affected by subsequent events that they returned to the site for years to express their awe.
What moved them so? Was it a contagion of hope? Mass hysteria?
I prefer to believe they actually caught glimpses of a resurrected Jesus. But what exactly did they see?
Even the biblical accounts leave open questions. Immediately after his resurrection, Jesus’ closest friends didn’t recognize him. Mary Magdalene, the first to arrive at his empty tomb, didn’t realize Jesus was the man talking to her until he called her name.
In Luke 24, the resurrected Jesus joins two of his disciples on a walk to Emmaus, but Luke reports “their eyes were kept from recognizing him.” (v.16). Mark reports, a bit mysteriously, that Jesus appeared to them “in another form” (Mark 16:12) which, as author Garry Wills writes in What Jesus Meant, is “hard to interpret.”
“Jesus appeared in numinous form (Wills writes) … his body was not the earthly body anymore, but one both outside time and space and affecting time and space.”
The resurrected body of Christ could pass through walls and, ultimately, ascend into heaven, but Jesus could also allow Thomas to touch his wounds of crucifixion. Even more amazing, Jesus could eat with his companions.
Looking back on my conversation with my Christian educator friend, I wonder if his problem with the resurrection was that he knew beyond doubt that a dead body could never spring back to life in the same form as when life dwelled in it.
Most clergy see dead bodies all too often and have observed they are cast-off, useless shells of the vibrant creature that once occupied them.
Whether an individual dies in bed or in a violent accident, it is obvious to witnesses that something essential has departed from the body. A young cop viewing a murder victim for the first time never forgets how similar the inert remains look to that of a dead raccoon decaying on a country road. Dead is dead. Funeral directors whose business it is to make the deceased look lifelike know they must act quickly because death is immediately and totally disfiguring. The millions of microbiota that dwell within us become ravenous foragers of decaying flesh.
The most convincing argument against the resurrection of Jesus is every dead body you see – especially the ones that have lain three days without benefit of the mortuary arts.
Even so, something extraordinary happened that Passover long ago that kept Jesus’ contemporaries returning worshipfully to the site of his crucifixion and inspired his disciples to risk their lives to keep his story alive.
How closely did Jesus’ numinous body resemble the body of the Jesus his disciples knew and loved? That’s hard to tell. As we have seen, Resurrected Jesus was often not recognized until he did something to call attention to himself. Only on rare occasions could the disciples actually touch him, and Jesus – when he chose to affect time and space – could eat food and – when he chose to be outside time and space – could disappear in front of their eyes.
What is that to us?
According to Paul, the numinous body of Jesus gives us a glimpse of our own numinous bodies when he shed our earthly shells.
“So it is with the resurrection of the dead; what is sown as a perishable thing is raised imperishable. Sown in humiliation, it is raised in glory; sown in weakness, it is raised in power; sown a physical body, it is raised a spiritual body.” (I Corinthians 15:42-44, REB)
What will our numinous bodies be like?
We hope, of course, that our resurrected bodies will be young, attractive, and – God willing – sexier versions of the husk we carried through life.
But more than that, I think.
Our daughter Katie had a dear friend who, like her, was developmentally disabled on the autism spectrum. Joseph was a charming young man who, despite his limitations, was a loving and delightful presence in all our lives. He was a caring and giving person and I have no doubt he walked this earth exactly as God intended him to be.
When Joseph fell ill with leukemia, neither he nor Katie were fully able to understand what was happening. We loved him and when he died, we mourned him deeply.
Not long after his death, I dreamed I was sitting at a table with a young man I slowly recognized as Joseph. He was relaxed and his eyes twinkled and we engaged in light conversation. It was only after I woke up that I realized Joseph and I were conversing at a level he could not have attained when he was alive, a conversation filled with humor and subtle nuance. He demonstrated insights and understandings that would have been beyond him.
I like to believe I was receiving an important message in that dream. I was introduced to Joseph as he will appear at his resurrection.
I certainly do not suggest that Joseph was incomplete when he lived among us, but there were many things his disability prevented him from understanding. But so it is with all of us: while we live on this earthly plain, there are many mysteries we will never comprehend.
But the promise of Jesus is that God will restore us to a higher level of understanding when our own numinous bodies live outside time and space but continue to experience the effects of time and space.
Exactly how that will happen, as Professor Wills acknowledges, is “hard to interpret.”
But for those who view death as an inevitable result of the time and space in which we are imprisoned, it’s good to be reminded that God transcends our earthly limitations.
Regardless of the forensic details, this is most certainly true:
The Creator God who loves us all unconditionally sent God’s son into the world to conquer death. Regardless of how God did it, Christ is raised. And because Christ is raised, so will we be raised.
We cling to this hope: that what has been sown in us in weakness will be raised in power.
Christ is Risen. Hallelujah.
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