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Ascension Day—the celebration of Jesus being taken up into heaven—is one of the Church’s lesser-celebrated commemorations. But as Books & Culture editor John Wilson noted, “The Ascension marks the beginning of the church—and anticipates the Second Coming. It requires us to think in Trinitarian terms, as Christ ascends to sit at the right hand of the Father, where he is our high priest, and promises the Spirit to the church.”
God’s mysterious work of consolation and concealment.
Jesus’ return to heaven was not an awkward stage exit but the climax of our redemption story.
Seated at the right hand of God, what’s Jesus doing up there?
Why the church should resist technologies that aim to liberate us from ordinary, embodied life.
Jesus’ Ascension seems to happen at a rather inopportune time.
‘He took us with him to the heart of things’
Exploring the reason for Christ’s ascension into heaven.
“The Ascension has been forgotten in many Protestant churches, jettisoning an essential part of the Christian story.”
We tend to focus on the way Jesus came into the world. It will pay us not to overlook the way he left.
When Jesus had said this, as they were watching, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight.—Acts 1:9.