Luke 24:50-53 · The Ascension
The Beginning And The Ending
Luke 1:1-4; 24:44-53
Sermon
by J. Will Ormond
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Some people, when they pick up a new book, look first at the beginning and read a few lines, then they turn to the end to see how it turns out. This gives them a preliminary feel for the book and helps them decide whether they want to read it or not.

We are faced with something of the same situation by the lectionary passages chosen for today. They are the first four verses from the Gospel of Luke and the last ten verses of the last chapter. We are asked to consider the beginning and the ending of Luke's gospel. The passages are the preface, Luke 1:1-4, and the summary at the end, Luke 24:44-53.

I am sorely tempted to ask the entire congregation to open your Bibles and read the whole Gospel of Luke at one sitting. I suspect this is something few of us have ever done before. But to do so would give us an overall impression of the entire Gospel. It would help us grasp something of the wholeness of the story and sense the beauty and power of Luke's themes and motifs. We could be impressed with the uniqueness of Luke's narrative, especially that which Luke records that we do not find anywhere else in the New Testament.

But we can learn a great deal about the Gospel of Luke and its author by considering the beginning and the ending of the book.

Luke begins his gospel in an entirely different manner than any other gospel writer. He begins with a well-crafted preface which establishes his qualifications as a reliable writer and gives something of the purpose of his book. Many writers in the first century A.D. began their works with a preface similar to Luke's.

Luke's preface is one long, elegant, well-balanced Greek sentence. Such a sentence would catch the eye of an educated reader and establish Luke as a person with literary skills who knows how to write history.

Luke acknowledges that he has used written sources which are based on eyewitness accounts. He has also done scholarly research by investigating "everything carefully from the very beginning."

The subject matter of his research is "the events which have been fulfilled among us." Luke writes as a member of a community which was brought into being by the events to which he is about to bear witness. These events are a fulfillment of long-awaited promises of God.

Luke states the purpose of his writing: "so that you may know the truth concerning the things about which you have been instructed."

As was often the custom in the ancient world, Luke addresses his book to a particular person, "most excellent Theophilus." Such respectful address may imply one of high rank, perhaps a Roman official of some kind. Theophilus already knows something about the Christian faith, for he has been "instructed in" or "informed of" the significant events. Luke wants to emphasize the truth of what Theophilus already knows, and he will add a great deal which Theophilus has not yet heard.

Theophilus may be Luke's patron who will see to it that Luke's work is published and distributed. "Theophilus" means "friend of God." Anyone who helps preserve Luke's great story is certainly God's friend and ours.

But of course Luke is not writing for the benefit of Theophilus alone. He has a much wider audience in mind. He echoes the message of the Christmas angel, "I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people" (Luke 2:10). Luke is both historian and evangelist. He wishes to spread the good news of Jesus Christ far and wide.

Surely anyone who reads Luke's preface is eager to move on into the book to hear about the things that have been fulfilled and about which Luke has done such careful research.

Now let us look at the end of the book and see what it has to tell us about the story of Jesus and the motivation for spreading the good news.

The passage at the end of the Gospel is made up almost entirely of words of Jesus. But this is the risen Christ speaking. The crucifixion is past and the reality of the resurrection has just burst in upon the startled disciples. Amazement, joy, and wonder almost overwhelm them as they see their crucified Master standing among them risen and alive.

His voice reaches back over the whole sweep of the story Luke has been telling. "These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you." The risen Christ, although transformed, is the same person they followed from Galilee to Jerusalem.

Surely these words bring back memories of the early days in Galilee as Jesus went from place to place teaching, calling followers, doing mighty works, and ministering to the poor, the blind, the oppressed, and those on the margins of respectable society, such as prostitutes and lepers.

The disciples remember the day when Jesus decides to set his face to go to Jerusalem (9:51). He deliberately chooses the journey to the Holy City and nothing can deter him from his goal. Luke uses the motif of a travel narrative to emphasize that Jesus is moving ever nearer to where he will fulfill his destiny and complete his work.

The disciples surely recall the last days before the crucifixion when Jesus taught daily in the Temple and debated with the religious authorities. These same authorities continued to press him until at last they persuaded the Roman governor, Pilate, to have him crucified.

The principal thing Jesus now wants his disciples to understand is that his life and ministry is rooted in the Hebrew Scriptures. In his gospel Luke emphasizes from the beginning that the story of Jesus is a continuation, a fulfillment, of God's dealing with God's people in history. Jesus makes the claim that the whole of Scripture -- the law, the prophets, and the Psalms -- is fulfilled in him. In order for the disciples to grasp this significant truth, Jesus helps them read their Bible in a new way, "He opened their minds to understand the scriptures." He wants them to see that there is continuity between the mighty acts of God recorded in the Old Testament and the things they have seen in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

The days immediately before and including the crucifixion had been a difficult and puzzling period for the disciples. It must have seemed to them that God's plans had failed and that Jesus' ministry among them had gone for naught. But Jesus shows them that all that has happened is a fulfillment of scripture. "Thus it is written, that the Messiah is to suffer and to rise from the dead on the third day."

The entire story Luke has told has most significant consequences. Jesus tells the disciples "that repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem." Here is the good news. People are offered the opportunity to repent and the gift of forgiveness is available to all peoples. The fact that the spread of the message begins from Jerusalem is further evidence that the Christian gospel is rooted in and grows out of God's saving acts on behalf of Israel. Jerusalem is the symbol of the foundation of the faith of Israel; from there the message will extend to the whole world. Luke, the evangelist, sets no limits on the boundaries for the gospel.

Now Jesus lays the responsibility for spreading the message on the disciples themselves. Since they are witnesses to the things which have been fulfilled among them it is up to them to tell the good news.

A formidable task indeed, but Jesus gives them a promise that they will receive a power far beyond their own strength. "I am sending upon you what my Father promised; so stay here in the city until you have been clothed with power from on high." They are to wait in faith and patience until it is time according to God's schedule.

Now we see that there are only a few more lines in Luke's gospel. There is no room to tell about the coming of this power from on high. Therefore, we want to know more.

Now the scene shifts its location. Jesus takes his disciples outside the city as far as Bethany and pronounces a benediction upon them. Then Luke recounts in one single brief sentence one of the most mysterious scenes in the story of Jesus. "He withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven."

This sentence, too, arouses our interest and makes us want to know more. But the symbolism is clear. Jesus is now exalted to the highest place of power and authority. He shares the glory of God. His work on earth is completely vindicated.

The disciples seem to have no sense of loss as Jesus leaves them. They worship him and return with joy to the Temple in Jerusalem where the first scene in Luke's gospel is laid. There the priest, Zechariah, had heard the joyful news that his aged wife, Elizabeth, would bear a son who would "make ready a people prepared for the Lord" (Luke 1:17). The story has come full circle.

Luke completes his story, but not his book. Luke cannot write "The End" on the last page. A much more appropriate phrase is "To be continued," for the conclusion is open-ended. We have already noticed how Luke's gospel cries out for a sequel. And Luke does not disappoint us. In the book of the Acts of the Apostles he continues the story. There we find a fuller account of Jesus' ascension into heaven. We see the promise of the coming power fulfilled when the Holy Spirit descends on the gathered company on the day of Pentecost. We find many stories of the disciples fulfilling their role as witnesses to all nations. They move from Jerusalem, the center of Judaism, to Rome, the center of the world of that day.

I dare to hope that this look at the beginning and the end of the Gospel of Luke has stirred your interest and aroused your curiosity to the point that you can hardly wait to get home and read the entire book from beginning to end. Can you think of a more profitable way to spend a Sunday afternoon?"

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Good News Among The Rubble, by J. Will Ormond