Ephesians 1:15-23 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
It’s a Good Thing He’s Gone!
Ephesians 1:15-23, Acts 1:1-11
Sermon
by Steven E. Albertin
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Today I want you to participate in the proclamation of today's message. Perhaps it will help you to remember the spectacular event and its significance that we are commemorating today.

Today is perhaps the most misunderstood and forgotten holiday of the entire Christian church year. Today, forty days after the resurrection of Jesus, the church for millennia has commemorated the ascension of Jesus. The first reading reports that memorable day when Jesus took his disciples to a hill outside of Jerusalem where he ascended into the clouds and disappeared from their sight. It used to be one of the biggest holidays of the church. Churches were packed for worship. In Germany, it is still a national holiday, Himmlefahrts Tag. Today only a few churches bother to have worship services. Nevertheless, it commemorates an important event in the life of Christ. In order to impress upon you the importance of this day, this sermon is going to employ some audience participation.

Every time I raise my hand like this (demonstrate), I want you to say this: It's a good thing he's gone! You may wonder as to the significance of these words. You may question whether the pastor has gone off the deep end. But by the end of this message you will appreciate the wonderful significance and glorious good news proclaimed by these words.

No doubt that when Jesus ascended into the heavens and disappeared into the cloud, there were plenty of people around to say, "It's a good thing he's gone!" They were glad to get rid of him, to no longer have this Jesus of Nazareth walking around and disturbing their orderly little world.

There were people like Pontius Pilate who may have said, "It was bad enough that this Jesus got everyone worked up by claiming to be some sort of a king. And then there was that messy trial and death sentence. I got manipulated into releasing that troublesome Barabbas. I know I'm going to regret that some day. I didn't want to put the man on trial, but I really had no choice. If I hadn't, there certainly would have been a riot and it was my job to keep law and order. Most of all, there was this strange talk of the empty tomb. Now I hear that he has disappeared into the clouds! What a relief! I'm finally rid of him. Yes, it's a good thing he's gone!"

Then there were people like the religious leaders who may have said, "It was bad enough to see all the common people flock after him. For someone who claimed to be a man of God, he certainly could have chosen to associate with more respectable people than tax collectors, thieves, harlots, lepers, the blind, and all other such notorious sinners. Then to do it all in the name of God! And to claim to be able to forgive their sins! And to show such disrespect for the religious traditions of our fathers and the customs of our people! Why, the man was sacrilegious! Dangerous! A heretic! Yes, it was too bad that we had to railroad him to a death sentence, but there was just too much at stake. He gave us no other choice. It was the right thing to do. And then all this foolish talk about an empty tomb? His crazy disciples just wouldn't admit that they had lost, that their dreams were in vain. Well, it's a good thing he's gone!"

There are people like the sophisticated cynics of our day who say, "Who needs Jesus and his religion? It's just for women and children, for the weak and puny, this talk of God and mercy and forgiveness. We can make it on our own. We can do it ourselves. We know how to succeed. We can achieve and make money and be good people and be happy without this Jesus. Yes, it's a good thing he's gone!"

Then there are the intellectually elite, the highly educated, and worldly wise of our day who say, "I never believed in God anyway. Where is God? What proof is there that God even exists? If God does exist, why does God permit so much suffering and sorrow? Why is there so much injustice and oppression in this world? Jesus? ... ascended into heaven? Up there somewhere in the clouds? Well, if you're foolish enough to believe in some heaven ‘up there,' good riddance! It's a good thing he's gone!"

There are also those who live and die by the bottom line, those me-first, looking-out-for-number-one kinds of folk who say, "We don't want somebody always bugging us to give our money away to the poor. Let the poor take care of themselves! We don't want someone telling us to love our enemies. Let us give them what they deserve! We don't want someone reminding us to take up our crosses and follow him, about working for peace and justice, even if we don't get anything in return! Yes, it's a good thing he's gone!"

As a matter of fact, it is a good thing that he's gone! All of these people are right about that, but, of course, for all the wrong reasons! Yes, we Christians can join in with all these people and say, "It's a good thing he's gone!" Yes, he has ascended into heaven. Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God, with flesh and blood just like you and me, who lived in a particular place in a particular time, who spoke with an audible voice with a certain tone and timbre, who weighed so many pounds, who had such and such color of hair, this one is no longer here! He has ascended into heaven!

Because Jesus is gone does not mean that he is absent or has abandoned us to struggle in this life on our own. It means that he is in heaven "sitting at the right hand of the Father," as the creed reminds us. Today's reading affirms that he is at the "right hand in the heavenly places." That means that Jesus is now in charge of this whole broken world. His victory of the cross and resurrection is now complete. Being in heaven doesn't mean he is absent and gone, but rather that he can be everywhere and anywhere and any time in the universe to share with us his victory. It means that he can be with us in our sufferings and temptations. It means that he can be with us in our joys and successes. Being at the right hand of the Father in heaven means that time and space no longer confine him. Sitting at the right hand of the Father means that he can even be with us now as ascended Lord to share with us his victory over death.

I cannot be standing here in the sanctuary and be out there in the parking lot at the same time. I cannot be in Indiana in the year 2010 and be in medieval Europe at the same time. That is impossible because I am confined to this body at this time and place. That is the nature of living in time and space. But not for Jesus! Because Jesus is now ascended in heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father, he is no longer confined to space and time. Because Jesus is ascended, because he is not "here" in time and space but in heaven, Jesus is everywhere in the universe. There is no place and no time where Jesus is not present to share his love. "He has put all things under his feet!" From the most distant black hole light years removed from this place and time to the personal privacy of your bathroom, Jesus is there.

Oh, oh! Is that really good news? Do I really want Jesus with me all the time? Do I really want him there when I am doing shameful and embarrassing things? Do I really want Jesus there when my sins are getting the best of me? Do I really want Jesus there when doubt and despair are haunting my soul?

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone, because as the ascended Jesus, he is with us in a new way, not as a judge or prosecutor out to find all the dirt on us. No, on the contrary, he is present through the power and presence of his Holy Spirit. Just before Jesus ascended into heaven, he told his disciples to wait in Jerusalem until they would be "clothed with power from on high." Jesus was speaking of the coming gift of the Holy Spirit that he would shortly give to his disciples. That giving of the Holy Spirit to his disciples we will celebrate next Sunday, the Day of Pentecost. Through the power and presence of the Holy Spirit, Jesus was going to be able to be present with his disciples in a more personal and intimate way than he was when he walked around with them on the hills and dirt roads of Palestine. He would be present as risen Christ who had defeated the powers of sin and death. He would be present as the friend of sinners, as the one who suffered and died and rose again so that their sins, shames, and embarrassments might be forgiven.

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone! It is good news that he is gone because that means whenever we are ashamed and embarrassed and want to run and hide, he is there to forgive us, to clothe us in his righteousness, to make us clean and whole again.

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone! It is good news that he is gone because that means whenever we feel alone and forgotten, whenever we feel that God is distant or absent, Jesus can be with us to comfort us in our loneliness.

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone. It is good news because that means that he can be present with us in the ministry of this congregation today even though he ascended into heaven 2,000 years ago, 10,000 miles from this place.

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone. This is a good thing because that means whenever the gospel is preached or the sacraments are administered, whenever bread is broken and wine is poured at this table, whenever water is poured at this font, the risen ascended Jesus is present here ... for us ... now! What had been hidden is now made visible for us through the eyes of faith!

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone. Why? Because wherever and whenever the gospel is preached, the hidden presence of the risen and ascended Jesus who fills the universe is revealed.

It's like this. I carry around my wallet in my pocket wherever I go. But you don't see it, even now, because it is hidden in my back pocket under my robe. When I pull that wallet out of my pocket and show it and its contents to you, I have revealed what was hidden. I have revealed the presence of a wallet that was with me everywhere I went. Even though it was hidden, it gave me confidence. I had money to help out, even when I was in a fix. So also does the risen and ascended Jesus comfort and assure us. There is no place in the universe where he is not with us. But we may not know that or believe that. We might doubt that. The evidence is not clear, like that wallet hidden in my back pocket. When Jesus is proclaimed and shared, when the wallet is pulled out of my back pocket and its contents revealed, we are blessed and comforted ... wherever we go. Because Jesus is in heaven, there is no place in the universe where he can't be to reveal his love for us.

Yes, it's a good thing he's gone because then this congregation can be the body of Christ. Because Jesus now is no longer confined to space and time, he can be here in this place, in the life of this congregation, whenever we go about doing God's "right handed thing," such as bringing this world the life and love of the risen Jesus. It is literally through the actions of this congregation, of any congregation, that the body of risen and ascended Jesus appears in this world.

Even though you must live in a world that often mutters to itself, "it's a good thing he's gone" for all the wrong reasons, you know because of what we celebrate today, it's a good thing he's gone! It's a good thing he has ascended to the right hand of the Father, because then he can be with you always, everywhere, forever, as you struggle with the never ending tasks of being his body in the world.

Let's say it one more time? It is good news to our ears: It's a good thing he's gone! Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: But!, by Steven E. Albertin