Stepping Into The Gap – An Ascension Day Sermon On Acts 1:1-11

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One minute Jesus was standing with and talking to his disciples. They can see him. They can hear his voice. And if they had reached out they could’ve touched him. The next minute, “he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight.” (Acts 1:1-11)

I have no idea how that happened or if it really did happen. But I do believe it is true. 

What do you make of Jesus’ ascension? What does it mean for us and how we live? I think it’s about more than just reciting in the creeds “He ascended into heaven.”

More and more I am coming to see that Jesus’ physical withdrawal from this world is less about his absence and more about our presence. 

It makes me think about helping my younger son learn to walk. At first I just stood in front of him holding his hands and helping him keep his balance. Later I’d face him, hold his hands, and take a step backwards while he stepped forward. At some point I let go of his hands and stepped backwards, withdrawing from him.

To him it probably looked like absence or distance between us. But from my perspective I was making space for him to become a bit more himself. I was inviting and calling him to step forward and fill the gap between us.  

Two men in white robes ask the disciples, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven?” Their question suggests that there is somewhere else to be looking. Maybe it’s not a question to be answered. Maybe it’s a call to fill the gap, an invitation to step forward. 

  • What if “the withdrawal of [Jesus] from our view is always a matter of justice”?
  • What if “[Jesus is] deflecting our eyes from [him] to our neighbor”?
  • Maybe Jesus is “declining to be made visible and palpable in order to incline us to justice for the visible neighbor and palpable stranger.”

    (John D. Caputo, On Religion, 202)

Look at the gaps in your life and our community today. For some there is a gap between the life we are living and the one we want to live, the person we are and the person we want to be. For most of us there is probably a gap between the world as it is today and the world we want to give our children and grandchildren. 

Every wound, loss, and broken heart is a gap waiting to be filled. Injustice is a gap that is swallowing up lives. Hunger, poverty, homelessness, loneliness, racism, gun violence are gaps asking for our presence. Broken relationships are gaps asking for someone to step in.

What gaps do you see in your life and Uvalde today? Some gaps are individual and personal. Others are communal and shared. Who is falling through and getting lost in the gaps?

Whatever the gaps in our lives and community might be today, we have a choice to make. We can keep looking up toward heaven, toward that which is unseen and intangible, or we can turn our eyes to our neighbor who is visible, reach out our hands to the circumstances that are tangible, step into the gap, and do something.

I wonder what stepping into the gap means and looks like for you today. What keeps you from stepping into the gap? What gravity keeps you stuck? And what would it take to step into the gap today?

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Image Credits:
1. Cropped Detail of “Ascension Icon” by bobosh_t is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.
2. Cropped Detail of “Ascension Icon” by bobosh_t is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

© Michael K. Marsh and Interrupting the Silence, 2009-2025, all rights reserved.

2 responses to “Stepping Into The Gap – An Ascension Day Sermon On Acts 1:1-11”

  1. mobersby@netspace.net.au Avatar
    mobersby@netspace.net.au

    Hello Mike, I love your idea of the gap. It reminds me of the station announcements in the UK saying ‘mind the gap, mind the gap’ every time a train enters or leaves the station, lest anyone fall through the cracks between the train and platform. It’s a fascinating idea, Jesus redirecting our gaze to our neighbour and addressing the many gaps that exist in our communities and within ourselves. One thing that has stayed with me from our new priest’s Ascension Day sermon is the fact that Jesus was going home – and how that feels for us when we go home. Gradwell lamented the fact that the Church has pretty much relegated the Ascension to a minor festival, instead of its being a culmination of the Easter season. So I’m adding your ideas to his as food for reflection on my own journey, ideas that have me looking at the Ascension with a new slant. Thank you. Blessings on your ministry and your reflections, Marilyn Obersby

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Marily, it’s good to hear from you and I hope you are well. “Mind the gap.” I like that. I agree with your priest that Ascension Day is often overlooked or seen as a bump in the road between Easter and Pentecost. I think we probably still spend a lot of time looking up toward heaven instead of “minding the gap.”

      God’s peace be with you,
      Mike

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