Showing posts with label Ascension. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ascension. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2013

More Than One Might Guess



Royal Priesthood, Holy Nation                                Acts 1:21 – 22
More Than One Might Guess
by Robert T. Cooper

If you study the Bible for very long, you quickly come to understand that the biblical writers under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit did not record every detail of every incident. Modern writers are mostly careful to give plenty of details in every scene, particularly if one of those details is going to matter later in the story. That is simply not the case in the Bible. Let’s look at a couple of examples.

Let’s start with the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist. And let’s look at it particularly from the perspective of the Gospel of Luke, since Luke is the one who also wrote the book of Acts. Luke says that when “all the people were baptized, Jesus was baptized too. But Jesus hasn’t been tempted yet. He hasn’t begun His public ministry yet. He hasn’t selected His apostles yet. The women aren’t yet following Him, not that Luke will quickly get around to mentioning them either.

Comparing Luke’s Gospel with John’s, the first two men who would eventually become apostles didn’t start following Jesus until the next time John the Baptist saw Jesus after His baptism.

For the second example, let us consider Luke’s account of the Ascension. The way the Gospel tells that incident, Jesus has just appeared to the apostles (plus Cleopas and Cleopas’ companion) on what we would call Easter Sunday night. We learn elsewhere that Thomas was not with the other 10 apostles that night. The very next thing Luke tells in his Gospel is that Jesus took this group out to the vicinity of Bethany for His Ascension.

The book of Acts begins with the Ascension. In this case, Luke only indicates that Jesus took the apostles (presumably the Eleven) to the Mount of Olives. It was there that He ascended.

Having laid all of that groundwork, let’s look at what Peter says later in Acts 1.

Acts 1:21 – 22 NIV
21Therefore it is necessary to choose one of the men who have been with us the whole time the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, 22beginning from John’s baptism to the time when Jesus was taken up from us. For one of these must become a witness with us of his resurrection.”
Acts 1:21 – 22 NIV

They were going to select someone to replace Judas as an apostle so there would once again be Twelve. To qualify to be a candidate, this person would have to have been with the apostles the entire 3½ years of Jesus’ ministry, just like the Eleven. The candidates would have to have been there for everything from Jesus’ baptism to the Ascension.

What does this mean? It means that all of the original Twelve, the two who were nominated to replace Judas, and presumably some others were present at Jesus’ baptism. It means that the two who were nominated to replace Judas, and presumably some others, were present at the Ascension. It means that the two who were nominated to replace Judas, and presumably some others, were present during virtually the entire ministry of Jesus between His baptism and His ascension, particularly for the post-Resurrection appearances.

Now tell me. When you were reading the Gospels, did you pick up that Matthias and Barsabbas were present at most all of those events? Did you pick up that there were others besides these two who were present at most all of those events? Did you even pick up that the ten besides Andrew and John were present at Jesus’ baptism? I confess I didn’t.

So when you are reading the Bible, understand that we are not getting all the details we would expect from a modern author. But understand that by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit we are getting everything we need to know for a proper spiritual understanding of what God is saying to us. Thanks be to God!

Which of these things have occurred to you previously? Which were new ideas to you? Do you indeed have confidence that God is communicating to you all you need to understand for your spiritual benefit? I look forward to reading your comments.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

This Same Jesus


Royal Priesthood, Holy Nation                                        Acts 1:11
This Same Jesus
by Robert T. Cooper

The Jesus Who ascended from the ridge of the Mount of Olives some 40 days after His Resurrection is the exact same Jesus Who will return to Earth to the very same ridge of the Mount of Olives.

There have been several attempts throughout history to characterize the Jesus of the Day of the Lord as a “different” Jesus. There have been the attempts of cults to create a Jesus with a different backstory and a different future. There have been the attempts of non-Christian religions to create a Jesus who is not a Person of the Trinity, the Second Person, God the Son, in particular. Sometimes this Jesus is a mere prophet. Sometimes He is an angel. Sometimes He is simply the Christ Spirit.

But the Jesus Who ascended is the exact same Jesus known personally today by those who have placed their faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. The Jesus who is known personally today by Christian disciples is the exact same Jesus Who is coming again.

Those who have not yet placed their faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior cannot fully comprehend the certainty of Christian disciples. However, they are invited to repent and believe. Then they will commence a relationship with Jesus, Who is and Who is to come.

If you have placed your faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, briefly comment about your relationship with your personal Redeemer.

Or

If you have not yet placed your faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, you are invited to do so at this time. When you do, record it in the comments section so we may rejoice with you.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Cloud Gazing



Royal Priesthood, Holy Nation                                          Acts 1:9
Cloud Gazing
by Robert T. Cooper

Jesus had said the last thing He was going to say in His human form on earth, at least until His Glorious Appearing. When He finished telling His Apostles the Holy Spirit would come on them and they would in the power of the Holy Spirit be Christ’s witnesses to the ends of the world, Jesus was taken up. We have to infer that from the Mount of Olives that Jesus’ body was lifted up into the clouds in the sky.

We don’t know how Enoch was translated. There is simply no information given. Elijah was taken into heaven in a fiery chariot. But there is no such device cited in the Ascension of Jesus. It is an event that defies gravity. It seems He went straight up rather than off at an angle. Did He ascend only until He was no longer visible to the naked eye? Did the thinner atmosphere and cold of the upper atmosphere bother Him? Did He at some point disappear into the spiritual realm, or did He keep traveling in that general direction forever? We simply do not know.

All we know is that a cloud moved into position that from the Mount of Olives the ascending body of Jesus was no longer visible to the apostolic observers. They just stood there for some time gazing into the clouds, hoping for one more glimpse of Jesus in the air. But apparently they never did catch sight of His body again.

We know that when Jesus returns He will come back the same way He left. We assume that means that the clouds will move and there He will be in the air, coming back down. We also know that He will return to the Mount of Olives, to virtually the same location from which He left. One difference in His return is that somehow, every person in the world will be able to observe the event. (Does that mean television on mobile devices? Does that mean that God will have gathered every living human to the Greater Jerusalem area? Again, we don’t know.)
from Standard Bible Story Readers
 
We know we should live in expectation the Christ’s return could happen at any moment. We should live so as to be ready for it when it happens—there won’t be time to clean up your act then!

Paul tells us that God reveals Himself through nature. Certain authors suggest the observation and contemplation of nature and of natural revelation as a spiritual discipline.

Think about that! You can go for a hike in the mountains, or go into a park, or go to the coast. Sit on a rock or lie on the grass and gaze at the clouds. Don’t just look for shapes in the clouds. Look for Jesus. He’s coming back in the clouds and it could be today!

Questions:
1.      What do you think about cloud gazing as a spiritual discipline?
2.      Are you ready for Jesus to come again, perhaps even today?
3.      When and where could you spend some time cloud gazing?

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Ordinary Days, Extraordinary Days



Royal Priesthood, Holy Nation                                      Acts 1:6 – 11
Ordinary Days, Extraordinary Days
by Robert T. Cooper

That morning I got up and got dressed as usual. It was a Sunday, but it was an ordinary Sunday. The family went to church. I went to my Bible Study group. What I had not counted on was being gripped by the idea of what it means to be a Christian, a person who has placed his faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. When we went home, we had lunch. It was a Sunday dinner, but it was an ordinary Sunday dinner. But after dinner, I asked my mother about this idea of what it means to be a Christian. I figured she would be able to answer my questions. And did she ever! But more than that, in the course of the conversation with her open Bible on the dining room table, the Holy Spirit spoke to my heart as well. That day I placed my faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. It was an ordinary day, but it was an extraordinary day as well!

The Sunday the Jesus met His disciples at the summit of the Mount of Olives, it was a rather ordinary day. They had met there many times. Of course, this was the resurrected Jesus. It had been 40 days since Jesus rose from the dead. But He had met with the disciples enough times now that this was in one sense an ordinary meeting with them, or at least so they thought.

Suddenly, their ordinary teaching, questioning, conversing interaction with Jesus was interrupted. Something extraordinary happened. Jesus was answering a question and telling them about what would happen when the Holy Spirit came upon them. Suddenly, He “was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid” Him so that they could not see Him anymore. The ordinary turned extraordinary.

Isn’t that how God works a lot of the time? We are going about our ordinary, daily lives as though time will continue forever. Then, bang! God does the totally unexpected. Or it may be that we were expecting something, but we never realized it would be quite the way God finally brought it to pass. Extraordinary!

Enoch had been walking with God for a long time. He walked with God every day. He went out to walk with God on a particular day. It was an ordinary “walk with God” kind of a day. But that day, Enoch did not come home to his earthly home because God had translated him, taking him on to his heavenly home without going through death. So far as we know, besides the ascension of Jesus, Enoch and Elijah were the only ones to go straight to heaven without dying. It was an extraordinary day!

Noah and his family had been building on that boat for decades. They moved into it. But for the folks around him, it was just an ordinary day. Work, eat, sleep. Births, deaths, weddings, funerals. Ordinary days. Only on this one day, God does something extraordinary.

And at the end of time (could it be just any day now?) it will be like it was in the days of Noah. Work, eat, sleep. Births, deaths, weddings, funerals. Two will be working in the field; one will be taken and the other left. Two will be in the bed; one will be taken and the other left. An ordinary day, but an extraordinary day.

But before then, God may do something else extraordinary in you, around you, through you, or with you. There is just no way of telling. We just live our ordinary lives. We live them for Him. We walk with Him today, and then we walk with Him again tomorrow. And just when you least expect it, bang! God just may do the extraordinary! He really might, you know?

Question: Have you ever had an extraordinary day because God did something totally out of the ordinary? If you don’t mind, please tell us about it. Be sure to give God the glory.