That our flesh should be seated in the heavens and be
worthy of worship by the Angels, Archangels, Seraphim and Cherubim is truly a
great, astonishing and marvelous thing. On contemplating that, I am often
struck with amazement, and I entertain exalted thoughts about mankind, for I
see God’s great and abundant care for our existence. - St. John Chrysostom
While
he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven.
We
modern folks have been told so many times that to say that God is ‘up there’ or
that heaven is ‘up there’ is to think in terms of an outdated primitive
cosmology that the Ascension of Jesus ends up being something of an embarrassment.
God and heaven after all are beyond space and time, no up or down. Maybe so. But in a remarkable little book Sacred Signs Romano Guardini pointed out
how hard it is for us to keep from talking about up and down.
“Every
one of the innumerable times we go upstairs a change, though too slight and
subtle to be perceptible, takes place in us. There is something mysterious in the
act of ascending. Our intelligence would be puzzled to explain
it, but instinctively we feel that it is so. We are made that way.
When
the feet mount the steps, the whole man, including his spiritual substance,
goes up with them. All ascension, all going up, if we will but give it thought,
is motion in the direction of that high place where everything is great,
everything made perfect.
For
this sense we have that heaven is "up" rather than "down"
we depend on something in us deeper than our reasoning powers. How can God be
up or down? The only approach to God is by becoming better morally, and what
has spiritual improvement to do with a material action like going up a pair of
stairs? What has pure being
to do with a rise in the position of our bodies? There is no explanation. Yet
the natural figure of speech for what is morally bad is baseness, and a good
and noble action we call a high action. In our minds we make a connection,
unintelligible but real, between rising up and the spiritual approach to God; and
Him we call the All-Highest.” Or a higher power.
We
talk about being ‘down’ or ‘up’ to describe our moods. Or describe people as
being ‘upright’ or ‘low life’‘high
minded’ or ‘base’ . Maybe even ‘high church’ or ‘low church’.
One
feature of this church building that we are likely to take for granted is that
the steps leading up to the altar. The priest has to go up to the altar
and what he says before he goes up is this: ‘send out thy light and thy truth
that they may lead me unto thy holy hill and thy dwelling’. So every time the
priest makes his way up those steps we are to think of all those other treks up
holy hills and mountains: Moses on Mt. Sinai, Elijah on the mountain and the
Lord on the mount of the Transfiguration. “The altar is the threshold of
eternity”.
Priesthood
is the very heart of the mystery of the Ascension: as St. Thomas puts it ‘the presence
of the human nature [of Jesus] in heaven is itself an intercession for us, for
God who exalted the human nature in Christ will
also show mercy towards those for whose sake this nature was assumed.” Because
Jesus sits at the right hand of the Father – even if there is no right or left –
we sit there too in the human nature which he has taken.
St.
John Chrysostom insists ‘that our flesh should be seated in the heavens and be
worthy of worship by the Angels, Archangels, Seraphim and Cherubim is truly a
great, astonishing and marvelous thing. On contemplating that, I am often
struck with amazement, and I entertain exalted thoughts about mankind, for I
see God’s great and abundant care for our existence.’
Every
proper church has steps so that ‘with our minds on what we are doing, we really
do leave below the base and
trivial, and are in actual fact ascending up on high. Words are not very
adequate; but the Christian knows that when he ascends it is the Lord that
ascends. In him the Lord repeats his own ascension. ‘Thither we might also
ascend and reign with him in glory’.
While
he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven.
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