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Christ's ascension gives us a glimpse at the awesomeness of God. According to a 2008 poll conducted by Baylor University 1 in 2 Americans find our God to be judgmental (Paul Froese and Christopher Baden, America's Four Gods). So we are likely to experience life and the power of God as expressed by famed French intellectual Blaise Pascal:
"I see the terrifying spaces of the universe hemming me in, and I find myself attached to one corner of this vast experience without knowing why I have been put in this place rather than that, or why the brief span of life allotted to me should be assigned to one moment rather than another of all the eternity that went before me and will come after me. I see only infinity on every side hemming me in like an atom or like the shadow of a fleeting instant. All I know is that I must soon die, but what I know least about is their very death which I cannot evade. (Pensees, p. 158)
But the Ascension reminds us that Christ is present in this majesty that God is for us. A writer named Eric Collier beautifully captures the comfort of this insight: "God's power, glory, and majesty makes me feel like I don't deserve to be in the same room with him. His love, mercy, and compassion lets me know I don't belong anywhere else."
The Ascension helps us sing with Holocaust survivor Corrie ten Boom: "No matter how deep our darkness -- he is deeper still."
"I see the terrifying spaces of the universe hemming me in, and I find myself attached to one corner of this vast experience without knowing why I have been put in this place rather than that, or why the brief span of life allotted to me should be assigned to one moment rather than another of all the eternity that went before me and will come after me. I see only infinity on every side hemming me in like an atom or like the shadow of a fleeting instant. All I know is that I must soon die, but what I know least about is their very death which I cannot evade. (Pensees, p. 158)
But the Ascension reminds us that Christ is present in this majesty that God is for us. A writer named Eric Collier beautifully captures the comfort of this insight: "God's power, glory, and majesty makes me feel like I don't deserve to be in the same room with him. His love, mercy, and compassion lets me know I don't belong anywhere else."
The Ascension helps us sing with Holocaust survivor Corrie ten Boom: "No matter how deep our darkness -- he is deeper still."

