And
He led them out as far as Bethany, and He lifted up His hands and blessed them.
Now it came to pass, while He blessed them, that He was parted from them and
carried up into heaven. And they worshiped Him, and returned to Jerusalem with
great joy, and were continually in the temple praising and blessing God. Amen.
Luke
24:50-53
See, the Conqueror mounts in triumph; see the
King in royal state,
Riding
on the clouds, His chariot, to His heavenly palace gate.
Hark!
the choirs of Angel voices joyful Alleluias sing,
And
the portals high are lifted to receive their Heavenly King.
He
has raised our human nature on the clouds to God’s right hand;
There
we sit in heavenly places, there with Him in glory stand:
Jesus
reigns, adored by Angels; Man with God is on the Throne;
Mighty
LORD, in Thine ascension we by faith behold our own.
CHRISTOPHER
WORDSWORTH
Forty
days had now elapsed since the Crucifixion. During those forty days nine times
had He been visible present to human eyes, and had been touched by human hands.
But His body had not been merely the human body, nor liable to merely human
laws, nor had He lived during those days the life of men. The time had now come
when His earthly presence should be taken away from them forever, until He
returned in glory to judge the world. He met them in Jerusalem, and as He led
them with Him towards Bethany, He bade them wait in the Holy City until they
had received the promise of the Spirit. He checked their eager inquiry about
the times and the seasons, and bade them be His witnesses in all the world.
These last farewells must have been uttered in some of the wild secluded upland
country that surrounds the little village; and when they were over, He lifted up His
hands and blessed them, and, even as He blessed them, was parted from them, and
as He passed from before their yearning eyes “a cloud received Him out of their
sight.”
Between
us and His visible presence—between us and that glorified Redeemer who now
sitteth at the right hand of God—that cloud still rolls. But the eye of Faith
can pierce it; the incense of true prayer can rise above it; through it the dew
of blessing can descend. And if He is gone away yet He has given us in His Holy
Spirit a nearer sense of His presence, a closer infolding in the arms of His
tenderness, than we could have enjoyed even if we had lived with Him of old in
the home of Nazareth, or sailed with Him in the little boat over the crystal
waters of Gennesareth. We may be as near to Him at all times—and more than all
when we kneel down to pray—as the beloved disciple was when he laid his head
upon His breast. The word of God is very nigh us, even in our mouths and in our
hearts. To ears that have been closed, His voice may seem indeed to sound no
longer. The loud noises of War may shake the world; the eager calls of Avarice
and of Pleasure may drown the gentle utterance which bids us “Follow Me”; after
two thousand years the incredulous murmurs of an impatient skepticism may make
it scarcely possible for Faith to repeat, without insult, the creed which has
been the regeneration of the world…. But the secret of the Lord is with them
that fear Him, and He will show them His covenant. To all who will listen He still speaks. He promised to be
with us always, even to the end of the world, and we have not found His promise
fail. It was but for thirty-three years of a short lifetime that He lived on
earth; it was but for three broken and troubled years that He preached the
Gospel of the Kingdom; but for ever, even until all the Æons have been closed,
and the earth itself, with the heavens that now are, have passed away, shall
every one of His true and faithful children find peace and hope and forgiveness
in His name, and that name shall be called Emmanuel, which is, being
interpreted,
“GOD
WITH US.”
The Life of Christ
F.W. FARRAR