Sermon for the Sunday after the Ascension

“These things have I have told you, that, when the time shall come,
ye may remember that I told you of them”

“God has gone up with a merry noise, / the Lord with the sound of the trumpet” as the Psalmist wonderfully puts it in what is the gradual psalm for today, capturing in a strong image the joy and the meaning of The Sunday after Ascension Day. We celebrate the “going up” – the Ascension – of Christ to sit, as the Creed puts it, at “the right hand of God the Father Almighty”. What is this all about?

The Ascension marks the culmination, the fullness, we might say, of the Resurrection. If the Resurrection is about the fullest vindication of our individuality as persons comprised of soul and body, then, the Ascension is the fullest possible vindication of the spiritual nature of the world in which we live.

In other words, there is an inescapably cosmic dimension to the doctrine of the Ascension. In the comings and goings of God with us and among us, signaled in the Incarnation of Jesus Christ, we are opened out to the understanding of the spiritual nature of our lives and our world. The whole world participates in Christ’s redemption of our humanity. Our liturgy, to use a phrase and idea of a remarkable seventh century theologian, Maximus the Confessor, is a cosmic liturgy. Or, to put in the words of a seventeenth century Anglican divine and poet, Thomas Traherne, “you never love the world aright until you learn to love it in God.” The Ascension and the Session belong to this larger theological sensibility. We are not in flight from the world as if it were evil. By no means. The Ascension and the Session are entirely about the redemption of the world and as such they are doctrines which free us to the world in responsible thought and action.

To think the world in God counters the very real dangers of thinking God in the world which often runs the risk of collapsing God into the world. The paradox is that this makes the world less than what it is in God. We make the world into our little playbox or spielraum only to discover that we have made it into a wasteland and a mess. The teaching of the Ascension and the Session corrects our mistaken ways of thinking about God and the world and our relation to both.

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Week at a Glance, 9 – 15 May

Monday, May 9th
6:00-7:00pm Sparks – Parish Hall

Tuesday, May 10th
6:00pm ‘Prayers & Praises’ – Haliburton Place

Wednesday, May 11th
6:30-8:00pm Brownies – Parish Hall

Thursday, May 12th
3:15pm Service at Windsor Elms
6:30-7:30pm Girl Guides – Parish Hall

Friday, May 13th
7:30pm Christ Church Concert: Annapolis Valley Honour Choirs

Sunday, May 15th, Pentecost
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion
4:00pm Evening Prayer

Upcoming Events:

Friday, May 20th
3:00pm KES Cadet Corps Church Service

Tuesday, May 24th
7:00pm Christ Church Book Club: An Instance of the Fingerpost (1998) by Iain Pears and Curiosity (2015) by Alberto Manguel

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Sunday After Ascension Day

The collect for today, Sunday After Ascension Day, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

Victoria and Albert Museum, Last Supper (Nuremberg)O GOD the King of Glory, who hast exalted thine only Son Jesus Christ with great triumph unto thy kingdom in heaven: We beseech thee, leave us not comfortless; but send to us thine Holy Ghost to comfort us, and exalt us unto the same place whither our Saviour Christ is gone before; who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.

The Epistle: 1 St. Peter 4:7-11
The Gospel: St. John 15:26-16:4a

Artwork: Workshop of Veit Hirsvogel the Elder, after a design by Hans Baldung Grien, The Last Supper, 1504-5. Clear and coloured glass with paint and silver stain, Victoria and Albert Museum, London. (From the choir of the Augustinian church of St. Veit, Nuremberg.) Photograph by admin, 27 September 2015.

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