THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"A Profitable
Departure"
Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
To take your leave of another person is sad. It
is hard to say good-bye. Especially is that
the case when the person who leaves you is one whom you love and on whom you have
depended. You can hardly bear the thought of
being without him.
Still more is this the case when the departure is permanent as far as this life is
concerned your loved one will never come back to you the way he was once with you. To say good-bye, to take your leave of another one
whom we love, that fills our hearts to the brim with sorrow. We can hardly bear to think about it.
Apparently this is the case with the ascension of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Head
of the church, into heaven. This Thursday
will mark the 40th day since the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. And it was on that day that Jesus Christ ascended
bodily up into heaven, there to remain until He returns yet once more at the end of the
world.
The disciples responded to Jesus announcement that He was going to go away
with sorrow filling their hearts. Let us listen to it in
John 16:5-7,
these words of the Lord, But now I go my way to him
that sent me; and none of you asketh me, Whither goest thou? But because I have said these things unto you,
sorrow hath filled your heart. Nevertheless
I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come
unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you.
The Lord was telling them that soon the time would come when they would see Him
return to His heavenly Father. He was bidding
them good-bye. And sorrow filled their
hearts, they were crushed. They shrank back
at the thought. It was painful and
unbearable.
Maybe you too, then, as a child of God, upon a moment of reflection when you
consider the truth of the ascension of the Lord into heaven, greet that truth in a similar
way. Jesus, Son of God in glorified body,
risen Lord, proof positive of full salvation, is not with us in the body here on earth. He went away into heaven.
But if our response to the ascension of Jesus Christ is sorrow, then we are wrong! We are mistaken, we are downright foolish. The Lord immediately corrected the disciples and
arrested the sorrow that was coming up in their heart by pointing out the profit of His
ascension. He said, It is expedient for
you that I go away, it is very advantageous, it is profitable. And it is expedient because, by going away, I
will send the Comforter, that is, the Holy Spirit, with the fullness of My
salvation. In effect, the Lord Jesus
Christ was saying that by going away in His ascension and returning as the Holy Spirit, He
will, in fact, draw nearer to us than ever before. The
Lord was saying that the ascension into heaven is a rich, deep, profound, spiritual
advantage for you and me as His disciples upon the earth.
A great work of Jesus Christ was performed for us when He ascended into heaven.
Is that the way you think of the ascension? Are
you at a loss to explain why the Lords going up into heaven is so profitable for you
and for the church? Or do you greet the
ascension with some type of indifference, or with some type of uneasiness? We must know the ascension of Jesus Christ as yet
another great and mighty deed of our Lord for the salvation of the church. We must not bury it in insignificance behind Good
Friday and Easter and Christmas. But we must
remember it with joy and we must live in its confidence and blessedness. Through the ascension of Jesus Christ the Holy
Spirit comes to us. No, we may put it this
way: through His ascension Jesus comes to us
exactly in the way that we need Him to fill our hearts with all His salvation through the
Holy Spirit.
Yet, apparently, of all the great works of Jesus Christ that were done for the
church, apparently the ascension could be cause of sorrow or heard with a tinge of grief. That is immediately different from the other great
works and events of our Lord Jesus Christ. Consider
His birth. There we hear the tidings,
Behold, I bring you glad tidings of great joy.
His death we call it Good Friday.
We boast in the death of Jesus Christ. Resurrection
what joy and victory floods our souls when we hear that He is risen. Then when we consider yet another great work of
Jesus Christ His return at the end of the world in judgment that is our
hope, that is something we look forward to. We
shall see Him again. What joy that shall be,
we say.
But the ascension? When, 40 days after
the resurrection, He went up into heaven that is a sad event, is it not? Never again would He be on earth as He was. We cannot follow Him right now. The realm of the heavenly? The realm of the glorious? He is on that side, and we on this side in the
valley of the shadow of death.
The departure of Jesus Christ in the ascension was a real departure. Jesus said to His disciples, I am going My
way to Him who sent Me. In chapter
14:28 of the book of John, He said, I go unto the Father: for my Father is greater than I. The Father is the One who dwells in heaven, as
Jesus taught us to pray, Our Father, who art in heaven. The heavenly Father had sent His Son, Jesus
Christ. The Son of God, Jesus, dwelt in our
flesh. In the flesh He paid for our sins and
is risen from the dead. And now in that
glorified flesh He returns to heaven to the Father who has sent Him. In the glorified body Jesus is not on the earth. But where is He then? He is in heaven, seated at the right hand of God,
says the Bible. And through Him God rules
over all things to lead perfectly to the full and final glory of the church.
Jesus went to heaven.
Learned men in religious circles today deny that.
They say that heaven is a state of mind. They
talk about nirvana, or reincarnation. Man
first begins by denying the reality of hell as a place of torment. He denies, basically, his responsibility to God
for his sin. From that foundation, that
error, he proceeds and begins to teach that heaven is not a real place either.
But Gods Word is plain. Heaven
is a place. So real is it that when Jesus
ascended, He went there. He is now there with
the saints and with the angels. Jesus left
the realm of the earthly, the physical, and He entered into the realm that the book of
Hebrews tells us is the realm of just men made perfect, the place that is described as
Fathers house of many mansions, a place of indescribable bliss and glory
Gods very sanctuary.
But although that must have been glorious, and was glorious, for Jesus Christ, is
it not too bad for us? The disciples,
at least, responded that way. Jesus said,
When I tell you this, sorrow hath filled your hearts.
Floodgates opened, floodgates of grief.
Their grief, really, was first of all selfish.
We get that from Jesus mild rebuke in verse 5.
The Lord said to them, And none of you asketh me, Whither goest thou? The word ask refers to a polite
request, a question indicating interest in another person.
None of you asked me, Where are you going?
Jesus had been explaining to them that He was going back to His Father, and now was
the time for questions. What does that mean
for you, Lord? What does that mean for us? We know that you have done everything for us. What does it mean that you are now going to go to
heaven? But they did not ask. Their own loss crowds out every other
consideration. And their failure to ask was
selfishness on their part.
It was, secondly, not only selfish, but serious.
Sorrow filled their hearts. Not a
sorrow that, if left alone, would simply pass away. But
a very profound and deep sorrow in their heart. The
heart, of course, according to the Scriptures, is the spiritual center of our entire
being. And when sorrow filled their hearts,
the Lord tells us that they experienced a sorrow that left no possibility for hope, for
courage, for peace, for enthusiasm in the work that He had left them to do. In one word, the disciples were filled with
despair. What had they ever been able to do
without the Lord? Now He was going away from
them.
It was, in the third place, an understandable sorrow. Jesus was leaving them for a place where they
could not follow. They would witness His
ascension up into heaven. But then the old
earthly tie that held them to Jesus would be severed.
They felt that already after the resurrection of the Lord. The risen Lord was different. He did not arise to return to them as He had been
with them before. He was now heavenly. He was spiritual.
He was incorruptible. He no longer
belonged on the earth among the corruptible. And
they loved Him. They depended upon Him. If they lose Him, they lose everything. He was their beloved. And, what is more, Jesus left them with a task, a
great task. That task was to disciple all
nations in His name, a task that He had been telling them repeatedly would be a difficult
one. He had prepared them, in His words in
John 14
and
John 15,
for the reality that they would be opposed and persecuted and that
all the forces of hell would be unleashed against them.
They would have to battle. They would
have to fight the good fight of faith. They
were left with the task of spreading the gospel of the crucified, risen Lord, and the
entire forces of hell would be unleashed against them.
And now, apparently, they must do it without Him.
He leaves them alone apparently.
Finally, their sorrow was a shared sorrow, for we share it, do we not? Sometimes we might ask, Would it not be
better if the Lord Jesus were right here with us today in the church? Oh, yes, we have the full Scriptures, the
revelation of the truth. It is all there. Yet, are there not times when it burns in our
hearts that we would say, Lord, if Thou hadst been here!
And, as we confront the task of the church to be faithful to the truth, to spread
the gospel, to live a holy life, we battle the enemy who sneers. The sneers of the unbelieving world are all around
us. You see, it is not a problem to those who
do not know, personally and experientially, fellowship with Jesus Christ. For them it cannot be a problem that Jesus is
ascended up into heaven. It is not a problem
for those who are not concerned with the high calling of the church, the calling to be
faithful to the truth. It is not a problem
for those who do not feel the intensity of the assault of Satan, of the world against
them, and the power of sin within them.
But it is a problem for those who do know all of these things, for those who love
Jesus Christ, for those who are committed to His cause, for those who fight against the
powers of sin within them would it not be better if He had been here and if He had
remained with us? Would it not be better if
He were physically here in times of trouble in our home and in our marriage, when we face
problems that defy solutions, in times of sorrow and death and depression and battle
against temptations and the sneers of the enemy? Would
it not be better if the church had the physical presence of the risen Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ with us?
Do you not want to say, Oh, if only the Lord were with us in body so that we
could see Him and hear Him. It would be
better?
But that is not true. The Lord
corrects us. He says, Nevertheless I
tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away. With all the other works of Jesus Christ
the work of His birth, death, and resurrection so the ascension is a work that is
aimed at our profit. He did this for us. So we ought to respond with the saints in heaven as they responded to the ascension:
Revelation 12,
Now is come
salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ. It is profitable for us. It is glory for us.
It is a great work of Jesus Christ for the church.
That means, for you, believer.
In this work Jesus says, I dont forget you. But Im doing this work of ascension with the
same focus I had when I was born and while I was on the cross and when I arose from the
dead. I do it for you.
Now, our Lord Jesus Christ is singling out one of the benefits of the ascension for us in His words in
John 16.
There are other
benefits that the Scriptures reveal to us. The
Bible makes very plain that the Lords ascension into heaven in the body is the
pledge that we go to heaven in death.
Still more. It is the assurance that
now we have access to our Father, for our Lord intercedes for us with His Father. And, still more.
The rich profit is that our Lord, the One who was made like us in all things yet
without sin, the glorified Lord, our elder Brother, sits at the right hand of God to rule
over all things for our advantage and to bring the day of days, the day of final victory
in His return.
But in
John 16
our Lord is referring to a different benefit. He says, for if I go not away, the Comforter
will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you. Who is the Comforter? The Comforter is the Holy Spirit, as Jesus has
made plain to them. He has called Him the
Spirit of truth, the One who will take all that is of Christ and show it unto us
(John 16:14).
Literally, the Comforter is the
helper, He is the One who will stand by our side, by the side of one who is in trouble, by
the side of one who is defenseless and weak. The
Comforter is the Holy Spirit. I go away, said
Jesus, so that the great helper will come to you. He
will come to you exactly because you need Him the most.
Jesus considered the coming of the Holy Spirit as the Comforter to be of greater
profit to us than if He had remained with us physically as the risen Lord.
Why? Because the Comforter is the One
who brings Christ and all of His blessings to our hearts. The Holy Spirit is the One, the only One, who can
put Christ in us. Christians are not
self-made. Christians do not become
Christians by accepting Jesus out of their own will.
Their will is depraved and dead. They
are dead in sins. It is the Comforter who
puts Jesus in us and makes us Christians. The
Holy Spirit coming in the name of the ascended Lord comes with all the benefits of Jesus
Christ. He comes with the forgiveness of
sins. He comes with adoption as a child of
God. He comes with comfort and with peace. In the coming of the comforter Jesus Christ comes
to us in the only way that will do us any good. That
is what the Lord means to say. He means to
say to us that He ascends, He goes up into heaven, for our profit, in order that through
the Holy Spirit He may now return to be in our hearts and to illumine the Scriptures to
our minds and to work powerfully in us. He
returns, not simply to walk by our side as He once did in Galilee, but to dwell within
every believer and to dwell in the church. He
comes not to hold our physical hand, and He comes not so that we can see Him with the
physical eye, but He comes that He might dwell in our hearts in a covenant of faith. Christ will be, in us, the hope of glory, says
the Scriptures.
But for this to happen, for this great blessing of the coming of the Comforter, the
coming of the Spirit of Jesus Christ into our hearts, Jesus must go away in the ascension. Note His words, For if I go not away, the
Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you. To send Him to us, He must first ascend to the
Father. The Scriptures reveal that, in
ascending to the Father, He received the Spirit of the Father. In the ascension, Jesus returned to the One who
sent Him. God sent Him in the incarnation, in
the virgins womb, with a mission. And
that mission was this: Obtain the eternal
salvation of My church, the salvation that you will freely bestow upon them as their Lord. Now, in the ascension, Christ returns to His
Father. What a moment that was in the history
of our redemption! It was the triumphant
entrance of the conqueror. It was then that
the angels sang and the trumpets sounded forth and the saints shouted, Ye gates,
lift your heads, the glad summons obey; ye doors everlasting, wide open the way; the King
of all glory shall enter in state! It
was a royal pageantry. He came before the
Fathers throne, the One who had sent Him, and He said, Father, glorify Thou
Me. I have finished the work that Thou gavest
Me to do and I have lost none of those given to Me. My
mission is accomplished. I have done Thy
will. And the Father crowned Him with
many crowns and gave to Him all power in heaven and on earth. And He gave Him the Spirit, so that the Comforter
may now come to us and breathe upon us and make us His temple and seal to us the day of
full redemption.
And so, in the ascension, just as in His birth, we cry out with the angels,
Glory to God in the highest! We
have the helper. We do not just have help,
but we have the helper. We have the
Comforter. We do not just have comfort, we
have the Comforter. We have the Comforter in
all of our life, in all of our work, in our home and school, sorrows and joy, struggles
and temptations. He is not simply next to us,
by our side. But He is in us, in our hearts. He is with us.
Christ Himself is with us.
His ascension into heaven was not sorrow. It
was not loss. It is not too bad. But it is joy.
It is the news of salvation for you in the ascension of the Lord Jesus Christ. His words have come true. We know it. And
now therefore ye have sorrow. But I will see
you again. And your heart shall rejoice. And your joy no man will take from you.
The Lord is ascended and has poured out upon us the Comforter. Hallelujah!
Let us pray.
Father in heaven, we thank Thee for Thy word.
Now, heavenly Father, seal it by the Comforter to our hearts. In His name we pray, Amen.
Last modified: 08-jun-2004