Jesus’s Ascension into Heaven

Open Your Bible

Matthew 28:16-20, Acts 1:1-11, Deuteronomy 31:6, Hebrews 7:26-27, Hebrews 10:11-14

I often listen to film scores when I write, and a never-skip on my curated soundtrack playlist is the theme from the movie Pirates of the Caribbean. When I listen to that soundtrack, you might as well grab me a parrot and an eye-patch, because I suddenly think I am as capable of taking on the high seas as the ever-witty Captain Jack Sparrow. 

As Bible readers, we get to go on a treasure hunt in our own way. We trace storylines like the dots on a map, hunting for the hope of God’s great restoration. As we do this, we find a million little clues leading us to the true treasure, Jesus Himself. 

Today’s Scripture is a great opportunity for us to hunt treasure together. 

When Hebrews 7:26 says, “For this is the kind of high priest we need: holy, innocent, undefiled, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens,” we can remember the places in Leviticus and Deuteronomy where God spoke about imperfect priests who temporarily made a way for God’s people to be in relationship with Him. The Old Testament priests continually offered sacrifices for sin, but Hebrews says of Jesus, “He doesn’t need to offer sacrifices every day, as high priests do—first for their own sins, then for those of the people. He did this once for all time when he offered himself” (v.27). 

When Luke writes about Jesus’s ascension in Acts, he says, “After he had said this, he was taken up as they were watching, and a cloud took him out of their sight” (Acts 1:9). Remember the pillar of cloud leading God’s people out of Egypt (Exodus 13:21) and the cloud that settled over the first tabernacle (Exodus 33:9)? That’s the visual I’m reminded of when I read Luke’s account of Jesus’s ascension in Acts: “After he had said this, he was taken up as they were watching, and a cloud took him out of their sight” (v.9). The cloud of God’s presence takes the living, resurrected Jesus up into heaven to sit down “at the right hand of God” (Hebrews 10:12). 

I see these connections across the entire narrative of Scripture as evidence of how completely fulfilling Christ’s salvific work is. Jesus lets us see how He’s always been there, eternally holding humanity as the Father writes His redemptive story. 

Jesus’s crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension are a set of three climactic events that, combined, are the turning point in God’s redemption story. The ascension completes Jesus’s physical and spiritual triumph over death; I don’t have to wonder if evil and death are fully conquered because I get to read that the risen Jesus ascended into heaven and is, at this very moment, triumphantly reigning with God the Father. The ascension concludes the chapter on God’s people expectantly waiting for their Messiah, opening the part of the story we exist in now: abundant life with Christ through the gift of the Holy Spirit. 

Because Jesus sits at God’s right hand, we have a secure pathway to the Father. And by the presence of His Spirit in us, we get to invite others to come along: 

“Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe everything I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”
—Matthew 28:19–20

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29 thoughts on "Jesus’s Ascension into Heaven"

  1. Eileen Dowd says:

    Thank you Kayla for your amazing analogy of searching for clues in the Bible for Jesus. I will put together a fun pirate game for my young grandsons who love all things pirate!

  2. Molly R says:

    Ascension Day always seems sadder to me than Crucifixion Day – in hindsight, of course. After several years of intimate living and learning alongside each other they see their beloved teacher crucified, they live through the exhilarating resurrection, spend a few weeks seemingly going back to “normal” of learning from Jesus only to have Him give a last instruction and be taken from their presence.
    I can’t imagine the mental processing during this time. It reminds me that even in my “crazy season” lately that Jesus is still here with me, instructing me, guiding me in my stress, comforting me in my doubts, but still giving me work to do while I wait for Him. It reminds me that even during the crazy, mentally exhausting time God is still working out His plan, His hope of salvation for all, and using me, despite my doubts and heartaches, to “make disciples” and instruct them in all the ways God has commanded.
    Thankful today for the perfect sacrifice that was once and for all, and that it’s not a daily task still left to me to present my sacrifice to atone for my sin – Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe. Sin had left a crimson stain, He washed it white as snow.

    Praying for the requests mentioned – especially TAYLOR’S mom’s cousin! How awful and traumatic. Have a blessed day, dear SHE’S!

  3. Candace Smith says:

    ❤️

  4. Jeanie Mclellan says:

    Amen

  5. Allison M says:

    Amen. And whenever we earnestly look for Jesus, we will find him.

  6. Millie D says:

    It is really cool to see how the written word proves itself to be God-inspired although penned by man. There is no other way the words of the Old Testament would align with the New Testament, uses of the same imagry etc. God’s word is alive, true and relevant!

  7. Kyle Hopkins says:

    I love Kayla’s analogy of the treasure hunt as we search for clues throughout the whole Bible for Jesus❤️

  8. Aimee D-R says:

    Amen