Ascension of Jesus Christ [June 2, 2019] Luke24:46-53
If you are a fan of Marvel universe movies, you will easily remember Thanos, the primary villain with twisted moral conviction. After he swept half of the living beings in the universe with the power of the infinity stones, he went into hiding. Yet, the Avenger found him and forced him to restore the world, but he said it was no longer possible because he has destroyed the stones, because what he did was inevitable, and he said, “I am inevitable”.
Thanos’ words echo the message of Jesus in today’s Gospel that any human relation will find its end. Separation is inevitable. Yet, it is natural for us that we do not want to be separated from our loved ones in life. Every separation surely will bring pain and anguish. I still remember when I needed to enter a seminary, and I had to be separated from my mother for good. My mother cried, and I shed some tears, too, but I guess my father was happy that I am leaving!
Thus, we can imagine that when Jesus is going up to heaven, and He will be no longer with the disciples, they are grief-stricken and full of anxiety. They would ask each other, what’s next? They are going to lose their Master, their hope, their expected Messiah and King. Yet, Jesus said that He is leaving for their own good.
Yes, separation can be painful and fearful, but Jesus assures us that separation is part of life, and it is good for us.
We take an example of my mother. Had my mother refused to let me go, I would not have been a priest and served you here in this celebration. Or another example, a mother who is pregnant. We know that she loves her baby, but she must let her baby go from her womb and let the baby breathe using his own lungs. Otherwise, the baby and the mother will both die. The separation is inevitable, but properly understood, it can be something good.
Separation can also mean allowing our loved ones to face life’s adversities and pain. After I entered the seminary, my life did not get any comfortable, yet it went in the opposite direction. No more mother to wake me up, no more father to bring me to school or help in my assignment. But what does not kill you, builds you up. Often, we love so much our children, and we want to shield them from life’s trials and pain, but it may backfire. It may create a soft generation with deadly entitlement mentality: children who believe that they are entitled to the privileges of life, people who too quickly complain about life.
Jesus understands this, and He leaves disciples so that the disciples may grow and bear fruits. Jesus knows that He will stay and protect them; they will remain a group of crying men. After Jesus left, life did not get any easier for the disciples. Eleven out of twelve were martyred. Other Jesus’ followers shared the same lot. Yet, through adversaries, they grew and flourished. True enough, after two thousand years, the Church Jesus founded, has become the biggest community in the world with more than 1/3 of the earth’s population as its members.
The separation is inevitable, but properly understood, it can be something good and even fruitful.
Deacon Valentinus Bayuhadi Ruseno, OP
