Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Terrance KleinMay 08, 2013

What do we know of heaven? Jesus. Where is heaven? Jesus. What is heaven like? Jesus. The questions and answers may seem blithe, but they come to the core of the bittersweet mystery we call the Ascension.

"As they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him from their sight" (Acts 1:9). The Ascension of Christ is a rueful parting. The Bride sees the Son of Man ascend. Jesus is no longer present to the Church as he was in the days immediately following his resurrection, and we, who come after the apostolic band, can’t help but to feel an evitable, if often unacknowledged, sadness, never having seen the face of one we love. Yet the Ascension is also a glimpse of what is to come. Jesus, body and soul, in his humanity and in his divinity, becomes our destiny, and heaven itself stands revealed, more as person than as place.

Nothing like a bittersweet ballad to bring home the point. Cucurrucucu Palomais a Mexican serenade about a love that cannot find rest, save in the arms of the beloved. There is no heaven without her. True, this serenade ends in sorrow, and that is not the fate of our love. Yet the longing is the same (The link is to Pedro Almodóvar’s Hable Con Ella; the singer is Caetano Veloso).

Dicen que por las noches
no más se le iba en puro llorar;
dicen que no comía,
no más se le iba en puro tomar.Juran que el mismo cielo
se estremecía al oír su llanto,
cómo sufrió por ella,
que hasta en su muerte la fue llamando:
Ay, ay, ay, ay, ay cantaba,
ay, ay, ay, ay, ay gemía,
Ay, ay, ay, ay, ay cantaba,
de pasión mortal moría.
Que una paloma triste
muy de mañana le va a cantar
a la casita sola
con sus puertitas de par en par;
juran que esa paloma
no es otra cosa más que su alma,
que todavía espera
A que regrese la desdichada.
Cucurrucucú paloma, cucurrucucú no llores.
Las piedras jamás, paloma,
¿qué van a saber de amores?

And here is the English

They say that at night
he did nothing but cry,
they say he didn’t eat
he did nothing but drink.
They swear that the very sky

trembled on hearing his weeping,
how he suffered for her,
that even in his death, he went calling her

Ay, ay, ay, ay, ay, he sang,
ay, ay, ay, ay, ay, he groaned.
Ay, ay, ay, ay, ay, he sang,
of a mortal passion he died.

That, very early in the morning
a sad dove goes to sing

at the empty small house
with its little doors open wide;
they swear that dove
is nothing other than his soul,
that he is still waiting
for the lamented to return.

Cucurrucucu Dove, don’t cry,

the stones never, ever do, Dove,
what can they know of love?

Rather than picture the Ascension as a galactic journey, think of it as that bittersweet day when Christ broke from our arms to prepare a place for us. "And he put all things beneath his feet and gave him as head over all things to the church, which is his body, the fullness of the one who fills all things in every way" (Eph 1:22-23).

Remember, we first saw heaven in the eyes of Jesus, and to live in heaven, more than anything else, is to live with Christ and those whom we have loved in Him. There was no heaven before Christ. There can be no heaven without him.

Acts 1: 1-11 Ephesians 1: 17-23 Luke 24: 46-53

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

The two high-profile Catholics are among a diverse group of 19 individuals to be honored by President Biden for making “exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States.”
Speaking May 3 on the need for holistic higher education, the pope said that some universities are “too liberal” and do not place enough emphasis on forming their students into whole people.
Manifesting techniques abound in the online world. But creators are conflating manifesting with prayer, especially in their love lives.
Christine LenahanMay 03, 2024
This week on Jesuitical, Zac and Ashley share their conversation with Cardinal Wilton Gregory—the archbishop of what he calls “the epicenter of division”—on the role of a church in a polarized society.
JesuiticalMay 03, 2024