"In the Incarnation, Christ is not trying to cling to divinity but to share it -- his divine life with the Father and the Spirit -- so he humbles himself and becomes human."
The Ascension changed everything, for the event discloses a great mystery: that to be God is, in essence, to be human, to be flesh and blood, because of Jesus Christ.
A human is now forever God in the person of the Son, and what it means to be God is now forever tied to *this* particular human being, and what it means to be human is now forever tied to this God.
As a fellow human Jesus is our mediator and advocate, made like his brothers and sisters in every way so that he might be One who rules and judges those whose existence he understands from the inside, because he lived our human story with us in the most vulnerable, authentic, and beautiful way.
In Jesus, God has a mother and a betrayer. In Jesus, God has scars and God has memories… of meals and laughter with his friends and cold nights huddled together against the desert air in cloaks, he recalls storms at sea and a grinding emptiness at the tomb of his friend.
In Jesus, God knows hunger and thirst and loneliness and pain. In Jesus, God knows the human devastation of divorce and disease and death.
In Jesus, the One like a son of man who's been given all authority in heaven and on earth is also one of us. And Jesus discloses a God who rules all things by a humility we cannot even begin to grasp. His power is disclosed in weakness and poverty, by surrender and trust.
The One who is to be our judge, renders his judgment on his human brothers and sisters from the brutal cross to which we nailed him: "Father, forgive them. They do not know what they are doing."
And he is now and forever there with the Father in the flesh, for us, and we are there close to the heart of Father in Jesus, as his body. We are mystically one with God in the humanity of Jesus and God is one with us, and loves us. Praise Him.
Thank you, Kenneth; this is a lovely reminder. Makes my head explode just thinking about it.
Posted by: Jean Hoefling | June 11, 2018 at 10:56 AM