The Lord Jesus passed forty days on earth after His Resurrection from the dead, appearing continually in various places to His disciples, with whom He also spoke, ate, and drank, thereby further demonstrating His Resurrection. On this Thursday, the fortieth day after Pascha, He appeared again in Jerusalem. After He had first spoken to the disciples about many things, He gave them His last commandment, that is, that they go forth and proclaim His Name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem. But He also commanded them that for the present, they were not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait there together until they receive power from on high, when the Holy Spirit would come upon them.
Saying these
things, He led them to the Mount of Olives, and raising His hands, He blessed
them; and saying again the words of the Father's blessing, He was parted from
them and taken up. Immediately a cloud of light, a proof of His majesty,
received Him. Sitting thereon as though on a royal chariot, He was taken up
into Heaven, and after a short time was concealed from the sight of the
disciples, who remained where they were with their eyes fixed on Him. At this
point, two Angels in the form of men in white raiment appeared to them and
said, "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into Heaven? This same
Jesus, Who is taken up from you into Heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye
have seen Him go into Heaven" (Acts 1:11). These words, in a complete and
concise manner, declare what is taught in the Symbol of Faith concerning the
Son and Word of God. Therefore, having so fulfilled all His dispensation for
us, our Lord Jesus Christ ascended in glory into Heaven, and sat at the right
hand of God the Father. As for His sacred disciples, they returned from the
Mount of Olives to Jerusalem, rejoicing because Christ had promised to send
them the Holy Spirit.
It should be
noted that the Mount of Olives is a Sabbath's day journey from Jerusalem, that
is, the distance a Jew was permitted to walk on the day of the Sabbath.
Ecumenius writes, "A Sabbath day's journey is one mile in length, as
Clement says in his fifth Stromatis; it is two thousand cubits, as the
Interpretation of the Acts states." They draw this conclusion from the
fact that, while they were in the wilderness, the Israelites of old kept within
this distance from the Holy Tabernacle, whither they walked on the Sabbath day
to worship God.
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