Luke 24:44-53
SERMON Dude from Galilee
The Christian Century, established in 1884, remains the journal of record for Mainline Protestants in America, even as both print publications and Mainline Protestant churches have been in decline for years.
In the May issue, the Rev. Rachel Mann, a Church of England priest and author, reflects on the Ascension of Jesus, technically last Thursday on the liturgical calendar but celebrated today in many churches, including ours. Mann finds the Ascension to contain absurdity and a bit of low comedy, and wonders if Jesus ascended slowly, smiling and waving to his disciples, or quickly, like a rocket ship or a superhero. She finds meaning in the words of the poet John Donne, whose sonnet “Ascension” includes the line “O strong Ram, which hast batter’d heaven for me!” She ends with a both/and, both absurd narrative and important theology.
Jesus as battering-ram does not improve matters for me. I cannot take the Ascension literally, and now that I have read Mann’s piece, I’ll be forever stuck with the image of Jesus slowly ascending, maybe with a thumbs up and a wink to those below, like a sky-bound Buddy Christ from Kevin Smith’s 1999 film “Dogma.” At least that movie gave us Alanis Morissette as God, every bit as plausible as Morgan Freeman or George Burns.
The Ascension has theological meaning, as Mann points out, as captured in John Donne’s sonnet, and it solves a practical problem in the narrative, and that matters too. The story as a story has a power of its own, even if the story as we have constructed it from the four gospels and the actual historic Jesus, as best we can understand him, are not a perfect match.
I am able to love both at the same time, the beauty of this narrative arc that runs from Incarnation to Ascension, from angels in the sky to Jesus in the sky, and the dude from Galilee preaching a Jewish reform in the tradition of the prophets who came before him, a revolutionary murdered by an occupation army and the collaborating leaders of his own people. There is Jesus, and there is the Christ, sometimes but not always the same.
Continue reading “Dude from Galilee: 17 May 2026”