Brian LePort interviewed me on the topic of the ascension. Iโm happy to be able to share the video with you below.
These are the questions Brian posed to me:
- Explain to myย students why Iโm talking to you about this subject. In other words, whatโs the focus of your research and academicย career?
- This week my students will be reading the Resurrection Narratives in the (canonical) Gospels. Theyโll notice that only the Gospel of Luke mentions Jesusโ ascension directly (though thereโs a sense that Jesus will be departing soon in the others). Why is this?
- If I were living in the first century, and I was told that the Messiah had gone to be with the Father but would return, and that when he had gone to be with the Father he ascended into the sky, howย would Iย have understood this? Would I have thought he went into the sky, literally? Would Iย have understood this to be a metaphor?
- What purpose did the doctrine of the Ascension serve for early Christians and their proclamation of the Gospel? In other words, whatโ the point of the doctrine?
- As modern people, our cosmology is different from that of the ancients. In your opinion, how should modern Christians understand the doctrine of the Ascension? Does it have worthย today?
- The Ascension seems to be connected closely to another doctrine that my students will encounter soon: the Parousia or โSecond Coming/Appearingโ of Jesus. Whatโs the connection between the Ascension and the Parousia?ย
- While many of my students identify as Christian, many others donโt. In your opinion, why is studying ancient texts like the Gospels of the Book of Acts, and thinking about Christian doctrines like the Ascension, valuable exercises? Are they valuable for Christians only or is there a reason that non-Christians should have at least anย academicย interest in these topics?ย
Here are some earlier blog posts of mine on this topic:
And hereโs that meme I said ought to be madeโฆ












