Thursday, May 14, 2026

Feast of the Ascension, May 14, 2026

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Bernard Delcourt
Ascension Day, May 14, 2026

 Click here for an audio of the sermon

In the name of God, the Lover, the Beloved, and the Love ever flowing. 

***** 

There is a moment in Luke's telling of the Ascension that I find quietly astonishing. Jesus leads his disciples out to Bethany, lifts his hands over them in blessing — and while he is still in the act of blessing, he is carried up into heaven. He does not finish and then depart. He departs in the blessing itself. The blessing does not end. It simply expands beyond their sight. As today’s collect puts plainly: he ascended “far above all heavens” — not to be removed from us, but precisely that he might fill all things.

 

That detail arrests me every time. Because it tells us something essential about what the Ascension actually is — and what it is not. 


***** 


It is not an ending. It is not Jesus leaving us. It is Jesus becoming, as Meshali Mitchell puts it*, "restored to full presence and access to all time and all space” and, I might add, beyond space-time. The one who was constrained by a single body in a single place at a single moment is now — by virtue of the Ascension — present everywhere, to everyone, always. The blessing that began in Bethany is still, right now, in motion. 


This is why Luke tells us the disciples returned to Jerusalem not in grief but with great joy. That is a startling response to watching someone you love disappear into a cloud. But they understood, or were beginning to understand, that they had not lost him. They had gained something far wider. What they were being given, is faith to perceive that, according to his promise, he abides with his Church on earth. The joy in their returning was not denial. It was the first fruit of that perceiving faith. 


***** 


But before the departure, Jesus does something equally remarkable. Luke tells us he "opened their minds to understand the scriptures." Notice that word: opened. And notice, too, that Luke uses the singular — not "their minds" in a diffuse, general sense, but one unified act of illumination, touching them together. Throughout the Gospel, it is the failure to understand that marks the disciples — they are confused at the transfiguration, bewildered at the passion, slow to believe the resurrection. Here, at the very threshold of his departure, the risen Jesus gives them the gift of comprehension. 


What do they come to understand? That his life is not an interruption of history, but its fulfillment. That everything written in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms — the whole long arc of God's covenant with humanity — was bending toward this. Jesus insists that his life and ministry is continuous with God's presence from the very beginning. He embodies God's deepest longing for us and for all creation. His ministry is not a new plan; it is the ancient covenant reaching its fullness. 


This is a God, we might say, who allows the triumph of love to become clear through the life and ministry of a human being who is finally tortured and killed because of the way he loves — and whom he loves. Death does not have the last word. Death simply makes terribly, luminously plain how powerful God's love is. 


***** 


Luke also reaches back, as he does so often, to frame Jesus in the company of Moses and Elijah. The image of Jesus raising his hands in blessing recalls Moses. The description of his being carried up into heaven recalls Elijah. And what those two figures have in common — beyond their appearance at the transfiguration, speaking of Jesus' "departure which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem" — is this: at the end of their ministries, they each passed the mantle to the next generation. Moses to Joshua. Elijah to Elisha. Now Jesus, in the same gesture, passes his prophetic mantle to his disciples. To us.

 

The question the two men in white robes put to the disciples is therefore not a gentle rebuke. It is a commission: "Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven?" In other words — the baton has been placed in your hands. You know what you have witnessed. You know the scope of God's saving love. Now: go. 


***** 


At the close of his ministry on earth, Jesus is focused on helping believers understand his life and ministry, death and resurrection, and the scope of God's saving love. He is not focused on escape routes or end-time timetables. When the disciples ask, "Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?" — fishing, perhaps, for a celestial schedule — he redirects them entirely. It is not for you to know the times or the periods. What you are to know is this: you will receive power, and you will be my witnesses — in Jerusalem, in Judea, in Samaria, to the ends of the earth. 


That expansion — Jerusalem to the ends of the earth — mirrors the expansion of the Ascension itself. The particular becomes universal. The local becomes cosmic. And we are the instruments of that widening. This widening does not end — he abides with his Church on earth even to the end of the ages. We do not labor toward a distant God who has retreated beyond the clouds. We labor with one who has promised to remain. 


***** 


This lection today, puts me in mind of this prayer, commonly attributed to Teresa of Ávila: 

God of love, help us to remember that Christ has no body now on earth but ours, no hands but ours, no feet but ours. Ours are the eyes to see the needs of the world. Ours are the hands with which to bless everyone now. Ours are the feet with which he is to go about doing good. 


That prayer takes on new weight when we hold it alongside the Ascension. It is precisely because Jesus has ascended — precisely because he is no longer bounded by one body in one place — that his body is now ours to offer. The universal Christ works through particular hands. Our hands. In a climate-changed, war-torn, beauty-starved world that needs blessing now, today, in this moment. 


***** 


So we do not stand gazing up at heaven — not because heaven is unreal, but because heaven is already here, pressing into every atom, every quark, every suffering face we will meet this week. The Ascension does not remove Christ from the world. It releases him into all of it. 


The blessing that began over Bethany is still extending. And according to his promise, the one who ascended far above all heavens abides still — with this Church, with every church, with every trembling heart that dares to believe — even to the end of the ages. We are living inside that promise. 


May we have the courage — and the joy — to extend it further still. 

Amen. 


*Meshali Mitchell, an author, storyteller, and acclaimed photographer wrote that phrase in her debut b ook, “Restored: Partnering with God in Transforming Our Broken Places.” 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Sixth Sunday of Easter, May 10, 2026

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Francis Beckham, OHC

The Sixth Sunday of Easter, May 10, 2026


Let us pray.

Holy and Loving God,
We give thanks for all the women in our lives who have shown us your love.
For those who have nurtured and inspired us,
for those who have taught and mentored us,
for those who have respected and befriended us.
Bless abundantly, we pray, all who are mothers to your people.
May we also show your maternal love to those who walk life’s path with us, today, and in the years to come.
We ask these things through Jesus Christ, who dwells in and with you and the Holy Spirit, now and forever. Amen.

On behalf of everyone who has a mother, I’d like to wish all you moms a happy and blessed Mother’s Day, and to say “thank you” for everything you do.

I think Mother’s Day is a wonderful occasion to mark this last Sunday of Easter before the Ascension. Today, I’m put in mind of one Mother’s Day in particular: Sunday, May 14, 1989, to be exact. On that sunny, long-ago spring morning, I made my First Holy Communion. It was the first time I received Jesus sacramentally under the forms of bread and wine. 

As part of the special day, my fellow first-communicants and I were surrounded by our entire church family, as well as legions of relatives including, naturally, our mothers. We gathered around the altar, received the Eucharist, and then sang songs honoring the mother of Jesus and all of us, the Blessed Virgin Mary. Afterwards, there were cake and way too many pictures in the parish hall, and each of us received a rosary and our very own Saint Joseph’s Children’s Missal, both of which I still happen to have. 

And, while amid the joyful celebrations, I remember basically understanding what the day meant – that Jesus was now present within me – what my eight-year-old self couldn’t quite yet understand was that I was now also present in Jesus.

“You in me, and I in you,” Jesus says in today’s Gospel reading. It’s part of Jesus’ message to the disciples about the need for him to leave in order to be more present to them. This seems a little paradoxical, though. How can leaving someone help them be more together? Well, don’t worry. Like any good mom, Jesus knows what’s best for us; just trust, and it’ll eventually all make sense.

This discourse takes place within chapter fourteen of Saint John’s Gospel, where Jesus is preparing the disciples for what’s about to happen; namely, his passion and death, followed by his resurrection and ascension, and finally the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost.

Liturgically speaking, this reading fits a little bit differently into our timeline, since having already passed through Lent, Holy Week, and most of Eastertide during the past three months, only the Ascension and Pentecost remain for us at this point. But in both the disciples’ case and ours, I think Jesus’ message is essentially this: “I’ve taught you everything you need to know; now, it’s time for you to start doing for yourselves. If we all stay together here in this little group, the message of God’s love will never be proclaimed to anyone else. And I need you to proclaim that message to everyone, everywhere. It’s the whole reason I came to you in the first place!”

This is something important that every parent, teacher, coach, and even novicemaster, understands. The whole point of investing time and attention into those placed in our care is to help them grow in understanding and confidence so they can become more fully themselves. And while it’s natural to want to protect and nurture, there comes a time when continuing to do so in the same way as before becomes counterproductive. 

As people mature, they must be set free to grow their gifts through experiences beyond what current configurations permit. Jesus knows this firsthand, thanks to his own upbringing. Think of Mary at the Finding in the Temple. Although she treasured up that experience in her heart, she and Joseph make it clear to the twelve-year-old Jesus that he needs to come home with them. 

Yet, by the time we arrive at the Wedding Feast in Cana, we see that their relationship has adjusted. Mary is now clearly supporting, rather than supervising, her adult son in his new role – a role she, more than anyone else, helped prepare him for. And it’s within this truth that the paradox of ‘leaving to grow closer’ begins resolving itself.
 
In his death, resurrection, and ascension, Jesus isn’t actually leaving at all. In fact, he tells us, he’s really going to be more present now than ever before. “I will not leave you orphaned,” he promises. “I am coming to you. In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live, you also will live.”

So there it is. Instead of being just one person walking around first-century Palestine, Jesus becomes all of us, wherever and whenever we are. Like an unsure young adult learning to navigate the world on their own, or a disciple struggling to adapt their ministry to new and
challenging realities, the time has also come for us to start putting Jesus’ lessons into practice, proclaiming the Good News of God’s merciful love to everyone, and inviting those who are lost and discarded into relationship with God and one another. 

If this seems daunting – especially in light of the world’s disordered structures and systems that reject mercy and reward greed and violence – we need only remember Jesus’ own assurance: “If you love me, you will keep my commandments … They who have my commandments and keep them (that’s us!) are those who love me; and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and reveal myself to them.” So, if we do as Jesus teaches, rather than as the world does, we’ll have all we need to reveal Christ to others and to encounter Christ in them.

On this Mother’s Day and Sixth Sunday of Easter, I invite us all to reflect on the ways God’s love has been shown to us through all the ‘mothers’ who have touched our lives, regardless of whether they happen to be related to us by blood or not: Those women who have nurtured, taught, mended, supported, corrected, forgiven, and believed in us. 

Like the disciples, may each of us take what we have learned from our mothers and from Jesus to show forth God’s love in our own, special ways. And as we come forth to receive Jesus in the Holy Communion, whether for the first time or the ten-thousandth, may we do so knowing that Jesus is truly present around and in us, and we, together, are present in him. Amen.