From a sermon by Saint Leo the Great, pope
Our faith is increased by the Lord's ascension
At
Easter, beloved brethren, it was the Lord’s resurrection which was the
cause of our joy; our present rejoicing is on account of his ascension
into heaven. With all due solemnity we are commemorating that day on
which our poor human nature was carried up, in Christ, above all the
hosts of heaven, above all the ranks of angels, beyond the highest
heavenly powers to the very throne of God the Father. It is upon this
ordered structure of divine acts that we have been firmly established,
so that the grace of God may show itself still more marvellous when, in
spite of the withdrawal from men’s sight of everything that is rightly
felt to command their reverence, faith does not fail, hope is not
shaken, charity does not grow cold.
For such is the power of great minds, such is the
light of truly believing souls, that they put unhesitating faith in what
is not seen with the bodily eye; they fix their desires on what is
beyond sight. Such fidelity could never be born in our hearts, nor could
anyone be justified by faith, if our salvation lay only in what was
visible.
And so our Redeemer’s visible presence has passed into
the sacraments. Our faith is nobler and stronger because sight has been
replaced by a doctrine whose authority is accepted by believing hearts,
enlightened from on high. This faith was increased by the Lord’s
ascension and strengthened by the gift of the Spirit; it would remain
unshaken by fetters and imprisonment, exile and hunger, fire and
ravening beasts, and the most refined tortures ever devised by brutal
persecutors. Throughout the world women no less than men, tender girls
as well as boys, have given their life’s blood in the struggle for this
faith. It is a faith that has driven out devils, healed the sick and
raised the dead.

The truth is that the Son of Man was revealed as Son
of God in a more perfect and transcendent way once he had entered into
his Father’s glory; he now began to be indescribably more present in his
divinity to those from whom he was further removed in his humanity. A
more mature faith enabled their minds to stretch upward to the Son in
his equality with the Father; it no longer needed contact with Christ’s
tangible body, in which as man he is inferior to the Father. For while
his glorified body retained the same nature, the faith of those who
believed in him was now summoned to heights where, as the Father’s
equal, the only-begotten Son is reached not by physical handling but by
spiritual discernment.
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