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A reflection for the Ascension of the Lord

Grace Ji-Sun Kim reflects on the readings for May 12, 2024.
Catholic Voices

Readings (Year B):

Acts 1:1-11
Ps 47:2-3, 6-7, 8-9 
Eph 1:17-23
Mk 16:15-20

Reflection: Seek Jesus in everyday places

When I was a child, on a lazy sunny day, I would lie on my back on the cool grass and just stare up at the clouds. I loved to watch the clouds move and wished that one day, I could fly up to the clouds and jump all over them. I marveled at the various shapes of the clouds and was curious what was beyond the clouds.

In my fourth-grade science class, my teacher taught us about the different types of clouds, such as cumulus, cirrus, stratus, and nimbus. Then he told us that at the end of the year, he would make clouds and make it rain in the classroom. I couldn’t wait for it to happen; throughout the whole school year, the teacher kept us in anticipation, telling us to bring raincoats and umbrellas when it happened. When the end of the year came, I waited excitedly for him to make clouds and make it rain in the classroom. All he ended up doing was boil water under an aluminum tray and tell us to watch as the water condensed and formed a cloudy mist—then became water drops that dripped down the tray like rain. The last class was anticlimactic, to say the least.

But here in this Acts passage, the story is hardly anticlimactic. It’s an exciting moment, with Jesus being lifted up, and a cloud taking him from the disciples’ sight. Jesus had talked about going up to be with God on many occasions, but the disciples hadn’t quite understood him until now.

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The ascension happened 40 days after the resurrection. Numbers are meaningful in scripture, and the number 40 occurs frequently. God flooded the earth for 40 days and nights, Moses fasted for 40 days, Jesus fasted for 40 days, and the Israelites roamed the desert for 40 years. Here, after several appearances to the disciples over a 40-day period, Jesus ascends into the clouds. 

There are other stories of clouds in the Bible: the pillar of cloud in Exodus and the cloud at Jesus’ transfiguration (Luke 9:28-36). Clouds in the Bible are often a symbol of God’s presence.

Jesus’ ascension is momentous as it acclaims who Jesus is and illuminates the resurrection to us.

After the ascension, the disciples are told to stop gazing up at the clouds, in expectation of Jesus, as they are looking for him in the wrong place. Jesus’ ministry doesn’t end with his return to heaven, but continues on, as the ascension means Jesus can send the Holy Spirit to God’s people.

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The Holy Spirit continues to be poured upon all of us today, helps the church to proclaim the good news, to help the poor, and to love our neighbor. It is through the work of the Spirit that we meet Jesus and can see his work today.

Therefore, we don’t look up at the clouds to experience Jesus but rather seek him in everyday places. Through the Holy Spirit, we receive power not to be passive onlookers staring at the clouds but to become an active cloud of witnesses in ministry with the living Christ who is among us.

Jesus said: when you do it to the least of them, you are doing it to me. Let us all be encouraged to do God’s work in the world through the guidance and power of the Spirit.

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About the author

Grace Ji-Sun Kim

Grace Ji-Sun Kim is professor of theology at Earlham School of Religion and the author and editor of 21 books, most recently Invisible (Fortress Press) and Reimagining Spirit (Wipf and Stock). She is the host of Madang podcast which is sponsored by the Christian Century. She blogs on her substack: Loving Life and has written for Huffington Post, The Nation, Sojourners, and TIME.    

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