Ascension of our Lord (Observed)

Text: Acts 1:1-11
Theme: Living in the Lord’s blessing
Outline:
1. We like to know things
2. We cannot always know everything
3. Rest in the blessings the Lord has given to us while waiting for His return as He has promised.
Sermon
Alleluia! Christ has Risen!
He has Risen indeed! Alleluia!
Boys ad girls, I pray that you are doing well today. What do I have here? I have here a homework assignment. Why do your teachers give you homework? They want to test you. They want to make sure that you remember everything that they have taught you today. Sometimes the homework is easy, 2+2= ? 4! Right. Sometimes the homework is hard. “What walks on four legs in the morning, two in the day, and three at dusk? That’s a hard one. Did you know that God gives us homework? Depending on His grace and mercy, we, like the disciples, are His witnesses throughout the earth. How can we do this homework? Ponder that question as you hear the rest of the sermon. You may go back to your seats and those who love you.
1. We like to know things
At our Lord’s ascension, the disciples ask, “Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” Is now the establishment of the forever kingdom promised to David? Will you now rule and reign forever as the eternal King of kings and Lord of lords? You have all power and authority. You died and are alive forever more. Will you now fulfill all things? The disciples desire to know when everything will be accomplished. They are still thinking in earthly terms of earthly kingdoms and they wish to know.
How often are we likewise? Do any of you like to admit that you do not know something? None of us like to admit that we do not know. From something as simple as how to wash the dishes, change the oil in the car, how to do house repairs, what temperature water to wash clothes in. Admitting that we do not know something is hard to do because we want to know. There is a lot that we simply do not know. We have to learn it. We do not know exactly how the universe works. We do not know what holds an atom together. How black holes work. There is a whole subsection of science called theoretical physics which is just guesses as to how physics, mathematics, and other sciences work in the world around us. We do not know when or how our natural lives will end. None of us know when we are going to die. In not knowing, we are in good company with all the rest of humanity.
2. We cannot always know everything
Our Lord’s reply is clear. “It is not for you to know times or seasons that the Father has fixed by his own authority. 8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.” Effectively, Jesus says, that knowledge is not yours to know. It is known to the Father. He has fixed it by His own authority. He knows. You do not. Know that He is in control and be content with the work that He has given you.
We cannot always know everything. Our minds are frail and fragile. How often have we known something just to forget a detail or call someone by the wrong name mere moments after you hear them say it? Many times the best answer that we can give is I do not know. We then leave things into the hands of those who do know. The contractor who knows how to fix the house, foundation, or driveway. The doctor who knows your body, how it interacts with various medications, and the best ones to give in order to bring you speedily to fullness of health again. In faith we trust in God who established everything at His word, and daily sustains it. He knows our natural ends and everything else about our lives.
Just look at what He has done for the salvation of our souls. The Father in love sent Jesus to take upon Himself all of our sins. He lived and perfect life in our place. He suffered and died upon the cross to give us the forgiveness of our sins, the salvation of our souls, and life with Him forever. How do we know this? God the Fathe raised Jesus from the dead as proof that His perfect sacrifice upon the cross was accepted once and for all in the sight of God.
1. Rest in the blessings the Lord has given to us while waiting for His return as He has promised.
9 And when he had said these things, as they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. 10 And while they were gazing into heaven as he went, behold, two men stood by them in white robes, 11 and said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.” So what do we do? We do not, we cannot, know everything. We cannot see our Lord physically like the disciples did. They looked on as Jesus ascended into heaven.
Yet, notice what our Lord does while ascending? He ascends hands still raised in blessing. Still giving his people all the blessings of heaven.
In one sense, our Lord’s work is not done but continues on. As Luke opens our text, began to do and teach—a very important statement, dividing the work of Christ into two great branches: the one embracing His work on earth, the other His subsequent work from heaven; the one in His own Person, the other by His Spirit; the one the “beginning,” the other the continuance of the same work; the one complete when He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high, the other to continue till His second appearing; the one recorded in “The Gospels,” the beginnings only of the other related in this book of “The Acts.” “Hence the grand history of what Jesus did and taught does not conclude with His departure to the Father; but Luke now begins it in a higher strain; for all the subsequent labors of the apostles are just an exhibition of the ministry of the glorified Redeemer Himself because they were acting under His authority, and He was the principle that operated in them all” [OLSHAUSEN]
Jesus continues to be present and to speak and act in the world through His people. With all disciples of every age, we are now waiting for His return in glory as He promised. In the meantime, we are living under His rule, knowing that He is with us. We do not continue to stand looking skyward twiddling our thumbs. Rather knowing that He is still with us, who are still bound by time and space, in his Word and Sacraments, as well as in our neighbors through their everyday relationships and responsibilities. We are strengthened to do the work He has given us to do.
What work is that? The work of witnessing. We spread the same message as the disciples. While not being eyewitnesses ourselves, we spread the wonderous news of what we do know. That your sins, my sins, everyone sins have been forgiven. That death does not have the last say but Jesus does. He died and rose from the dead for you. Someday, He will return just as He has ascended, in power and glory. He will raise the dead and we will live with Him forever. What will that look like? I do not know. But I do know the One who does. The same one who rules at the right hand of the Father who was crucified and risen for me, and for you.
Do you know? Not everything, but you know the wonderous work that Christ had done, and continues, to do for you. Let us always be His witnesses, both in word and in deed, forever living in His grace and mercy until He returns.
The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, guard, and keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.
Resurrection of Our Lord

Text: Isaiah 25:6-9
Theme: A Defeat of death itself
1. A feast greater than we can imagine we are invited to
2. Why? JC conquered death
3. Feast still join in today.
Alleluia Christ is Risen!
He is Risen indeed Alleluia!
My dear beloved flock, the text for our meditation today is the Old Testament lesson of Isaiah twenty-five verses six through nine.
Boys and girls, I pray that you are doing well this joyous Easter. What is the best food that you can think of? Candy, chocolate, cake, veggies? Well maybe not them…many times, when we gather together to celebrate an event, food is involved. When you get married, there is a fancy cake and other food at the reception. When there is a funeral, there is usually a light luncheon. Today the Lord says that He is preparing a feast that everyone in the world is invited to. Why is the Lord doing this? How do we join in that feast today? Ponder those questions as you hear the rest of the sermon. You may go back to your seats and those who love you.
1. A feast greater than we can imagine we are invited to
What is the best feast that you could ever imagine? The most expensive banquet in history was in 1821 at the coronation of King George IV. He was famous for his extravagant lifestyle and racking up eyewatering debts, his coronation costing the equivalent of more than £20,000,000 in today's money. In Westminster Hall, now the oldest remaining part of the original Houses of Parliament, the king and 300 of the most important guests dined under the gaze of thousands of spectators sitting on specially constructed platforms. Dining elsewhere in the palace were 1,300 other guests. French-style cuisine was served from temporary kitchens constructed to cope with the quantity of food, and the king's table alone had more than 70 dishes over three courses. In total, the guests ate 7.3 tons of beef, veal and lamb, more than 1,600 chickens and 8,400 eggs. You want to talk about a grand feast. I do not think that any of us would leave the table hungry if we had attended that one
Yet as grand as that feast was, Isaiah declares that i the Lord will “prepare a feast,” “destroy the shroud,” “swallow up death,” “wipe away the tears,” and “remove the disgrace. The Lord is making a feast greater than anything King George IV could have dreamed up. The Lord prepares a great feast. It is a feast not just for anyone but for all nations, everyone in the entirety of the world.
A great feast for anyone who suffers from the horrors of death. For anyone who has ever mourned over loved ones no longer with them. For anyone who is missing the touch, kiss, caress of a spouse now no longer here. All of us have faced the specter of death. We have seen loved ones slowly dying as they get older and older. We have mourned those taken too soon, taken from of in the youth and vitality of life. Even we ourselves are not immune. We face the reality of death ourselves every day. When we wake up with more grey hairs, more aches, and pains then yesterday, we are reminded that we too will eventually die and be buried.
2. Why? JC conquered death
Yet, there is hope and joy even in the face of death itself. How can we be joyful? Because of the work of the Lord. The Lord prepares this feast purely because of His great love and mercy towards everyone across all of time and space. He prepares a feast to give us hope, to give us comfort as we mourn, to wipe away every tear from our eyes. How does He do all this? Look at why He is throwing this great feast. Because Jesus has swallowed up death forever. Jesus risen from the dead. Because He has destroyed the power of death forever. He has won the victory over sin, death, and the power of the devil! See, where He was laid. The Tomb is empty! He is no longer there! By dying, Jesus has destroyed the power of death. He has taken away our sins from us, paid the price for all of them, and buried them with Him in the tomb. By rising again, He gives to us new life with Him forever, leaving our sins dead and buried. Jesus has taken away the veil of death from us forever. Because of His great love towards us, we get to join in this feast with Jesus forever. He wipes away our tears, even as we mourn, by reminding us that there will come a day when death itself will be ended and crushed beneath His nail scarred feet because He is alive forever more.
3. Feast still join in today.
This is a future reality that we celebrate today. Jesus gives us a foretaste of the feast to come. That we today, even while we wait, even while we mourn, get to join in the feast for the comfort and salvation of our souls! We join with angels, archangels, and all the company of heaven in the great marriage feast of the Lamb in His Kingdom forever. A feast for all nations, purified by the blood of Jesus Christ, because of His sacrifice upon the cross, and alive forevermore. We join in a foretaste of this feast every time we gather at this altar. We feast on Jesus’ body and blood, in, with, and under, the bread and the wine, given and shed for us. We join with all of the redeemed, all of the host of heaven, as we look forward to the day when we will get see our Crucified, Risen, and Ascended Lord face to face, and join Him, and everyone, physically forever and ever.
Be of good cheer my beloved flock, the Lord has taken away your veil. He has swallowed up death forever because of His great love for you.
Alleluia Christ is Risen!
He is Risen indeed Alleluia!
The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, guard and keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.