Two
Rivers Pastoral Charge
Sunday May 17, 2026 – 7th Sunday in Easter (Ascension Sunday)
Scripture: Acts 1:6-14
Jesus’s ascension into heaven is a story that comes around every year. It’s not one of the big flashy church
holidays like Easter or Christmas or Pentecost.
It doesn’t even fall on a Sunday – technically last Thursday was the
Feast of the Ascension. But it is part
of the story of Jesus, and it bridges the gap between Easter and Pentecost.
Easter is a season in the church year – one that stretches on for 50 days, or 7 full week. Today is the last
Sunday in the season of Easter, but Easter doesn’t end until next Saturday. And I love how long the season of Easter
is. The 40 days of Lent can feel like a slog, in a season of contemplation and repentance and continual turning
back to God and extinguishing our candles as we move into the shadows. But then we get 50 days to celebrate the joy
and the hope of Easter before the year asks us to move on to the next exciting
festival.
But 40 days into the season of Easter – it’s always on the Thursday between the
6th and 7th Sundays of Easter – we encounter the curious
story of Jesus ascending into heaven to return to be with the one whom he calls
Father.
It is a strange and holy moment of transition, equivalent to his birth at
Christmas, his death on Good Friday, his resurrection on Easter - a moment of transitioning from one way of being to another. And holy moments can be hard to translate
into words or into images. Jesus’s
disciples were there to witness Jesus’s ascension, yet it hasn’t become a core
story to our faith the way that the resurrection has. In my Mid-Week Message last week, I said that
the strangeness of this story often gets translated into art as pictures of
Jesus’s feet dangling down from a cloud.
“The Ascension of
Christ”
Hans Süss von
Kulmbach, 1513
Public Domain
But
I actually think that the story of the resurrection is just as strange, or
maybe even more so. Have you even
noticed, though, that there is no witness to the resurrection of Jesus. His disciples see his dead body being laid in
the tomb. They witness the tomb being
sealed shut. But then the next thing
that they see is the empty tomb. No-one
witness the moment when Jesus’s body goes from being dead to being
resurrected. I also sometimes wonder –
if there had been witnesses to the resurrection, would Easter art be equally as
strange as Ascension art? Paintings of
Easter usually focus on Jesus’s lifeless body lying in the tomb, or of the
empty tomb, or of the already-resurrected Christ meeting with his disciples. When artists try to depict the moment of
resurrection, they usually turn to very abstract art to try and convey the
holiness of the moment. And here with
the ascension, we have Jesus’s dangling feet.
Anyways, all of this to say that the Ascension is a key story in Jesus’s life,
but one that we usually don’t usually linger on.
But it’s a story that we read every year, and every time I turn to a
familiar story, I like to ask myself, “What detail in this story is jumping out
to me this time?”
This week, the detail that jumped out at me were the angels in the story. Or were they angels? They actually aren’t identified – the author
of Acts only names them as “two men in white robes” standing next to the
disciples. But I think that this might
be the case for a lot of the angels who appear in the bible.
Sometimes the angels are definitely named as angels. The heavenly choir that appeared to the
shepherds to announce the birth of Jesus – they were definitely angels. The angel who appeared to Mary and invited
her to carry, birth, and raise God’s son – again, explicitly named as an angel.
But do you remember the story in the Old Testament of Jacob wrestling an angel
on the banks of the river, trying to win a blessing? That angel was only ever named as a man.
Going back even further, Sarah and Abraham saw three men standing outside their
tent, and welcomed them and fed them, and it was only later that they realized
that they had been entertaining angels.
Even when you look at the resurrection stories from the four gospels, and who
was at or in the empty tomb when the disciples showed up on Easter morning, the
accounts don’t agree with each other. in Matthew, he is named as an angel, a
being dressed in white with a face like lightning. But in Mark, sitting in the tomb was a young
man in a white robe who tells the women not to be afraid. In Luke there are two men standing there in
gleaming bright clothing. And in John, we are back to two angels named as angels,
sitting where Jesus’s body was.
But taking all of this together, I’m fairly confident with naming the two men
in white robes standing next to the disciples after they have watched Jesus be
carried away – I’m fairly confident with naming them as angels.
And angels, at the core of their being, are messengers from God and bringers of
good news. So what good news do they
have for the disciples in this moment?
Their message is “Stop standing here, staring up into the heavens. Get
yourselves back to Jerusalem, the way Jesus told you to do!” Which is a strange bit of good news to go
with a story that is always strange.
But then I think about those disciples who were standing there. They had been with Jesus through his life and
had witnessed his ministry. They were
the first ones to hear the parables he told and had front row seats to see his
miracles. But then they had been through
the utter devastation and grief of watching their beloved teacher and friend
arrested and tortured and murdered by the state. Two days later though, they encountered the
empty tomb, and once they were able to overcome their fear, they have just had
40 days, once more in the presence of their beloved. But now they have just seen him carried away
on a cloud, back to the fullness of the presence of God.
And I can totally understand their inclination to stay there staring at the
sky, focused on the place where he has just disappeared. I can even imagine them choosing to stay
there, setting up a picnic lunch, remembering Jesus as they broke the bread and
poured out the wine. I can picture them
reminiscing about the good old days, and re-telling the parables that Jesus has
taught them, every so often glancing back up at the sky to see if Jesus is
going to float back down, “Just kidding – did you really think I was gone?!”
But then those messengers from God, those two angels show up, and basically
tell them to get on with things. Don’t
stand here looking up at the sky; get back to Jerusalem just as Jesus told you
to do.
I think that maybe God saw that the disciples risked getting stuck there, that
they were at risk of spending so much time reminiscing and looking backwards
that they might forget that they had to keep on moving forward. If they had stayed there staring at the sky
and watching for Jesus’s feet to come back, they would have missed everything
that comes next. Ten days later is going
to be Pentecost – if they were out in the field staring at the sky, then they
would have missed that whole event where the Holy Spirit shows up with a rush
of mighty wind and tongues of fire, and the ability to speak in different
languages to reach all of the people.
They would have missed the opportunity to be the church moving forward
if they were stuck looking at the sky feeling nostalgic for what used to be.
Sometimes I wonder if we in the church need a visitation of angels like these
two – a message to stop lingering in the past, a message to stop staring at
Jesus’s feet up there in the sky; a message to instead move into the future
with excitement and anticipation.
Churches – and I’m not necessarily talking about our churches
specifically, but churches in general tend to be very good at nostalgia, very
good at remembering the good old days.
But we don’t want to get stuck staring at the sky, visions of former
Sunday Schools, visions of past events and gatherings, filling the clouds where
Jesus’s feet used to be. Because if we
get stuck there, then we’ll miss our Pentecost moment – that moment that
catapults us into the future. We can’t
be the church that God is calling us to be if we are stuck reminiscing about
the church that we were ten years ago, or thirty years ago, or fifty years ago.
And even if this might be a hard message to hear, the message of the angels is
good news. Don’t stand there staring up
at the sky where Jesus’s feet used to be.
Get on with life, keep moving forwards, for Pentecost is coming!
And so today, as we prepare to celebrate Pentecost next week, let’s wave
goodbye to the space where Jesus’s feet used to be, and let’s start dreaming
about where God is calling us next.
Let’s intentionally release the burdens of the past that are weighing us
down, so that we can dance our way into Pentecost; for the future that God has
planned for us can be much more vibrant than the echoes of the past, if only we
have the courage to be the dreamers who will lead us there.
And may it be so. Amen.

Wonderful message, Kate. Too often we get stuck in the past and don't see a way forward. If your congregation is declining, it's even harder to see any future.
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