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O Happy Fault, O Happy Departure, by Adam Lucas – Brown Pelican Society of Lousiana

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Artist: Pietro della Vecchia (1602/1603–1678). "Ascension of Christ". Collection San Teonisto church, Treviso. This work is in the public domain

By Adam Lucas, Crisis Magazine, May 9, 2024

Adam Lucas holds a Masters of Theology from Franciscan University of Steubenville. He’s the coauthor of Feasts of Our Fathers: Praying the Church Year with the Early Christians (Catholic Answers Publishing) with Mike Aquilina. He lives in Pittsburgh with his wife and son.

 

The Ascension is sometimes just an Easter afterthought. But the full extent of our salvation isn’t revealed until this feast, when the Paschal Mystery is complete.

Adam LucasToday the Church celebrates the Feast of the Ascension, although in many U.S. dioceses it will not be celebrated until Sunday. The feast evokes many thoughts and feelings. It tells us we’re near the end of the Easter season. We may wonder where the time went. We might be looking forward to Pentecost and anticipating the newness of the Holy Spirit. Or, we might be remembering ham dinner and wondering how we gained so much weight in only forty days.

But rarely are we thinking about the actual Ascension, mostly because there doesn’t seem to be much to think about. Of course Jesus had to go back to Heaven, and we should be happy for that. For many years, I didn’t see the Ascension as having any more significance than this. It was a necessary bookend on the Easter narrative, something to cap off the story, but had little bearing on me. If anything, it brought a certain sadness to it. Jesus is gone; and I, for one, would appreciate being able to sit and chat with Him. …

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