Hope you had blessed Sixth Sunday of Lent! 🙏✝️
Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.


Hope you had blessed Sixth Sunday of Lent! 🙏✝️
Time for another Catholic Meme Monday.


Every year, right around the time you’re just starting to forget what you gave up for Lent, the Church presents us with the glorious mystery of the Ascension of Jesus. It tends to occur quietly—a pivotal event between Easter and Pentecost—and before you know it, Christ has ascended.
But what is the Ascension? And why should a regular Catholic (someone who’s just trying to make it to Sunday Mass without a coffee spill or toddler meltdown) care?
Let’s break it down in a way that makes sense if you’ve ever experienced spiritual dryness, stared into the sky for answers, or just wondered, “Wait—where did Jesus go?”

Picture the final scene in a superhero movie—but instead of a cape, Jesus has nail marks, and instead of vanishing into space, He ascends bodily into heaven in front of His friends.
According to Acts 1:9, “He was lifted up, and a cloud took Him from their sight.” That’s it. No fireballs, no angels playing trumpets (yet). Just Jesus, entering into glory, concluding His visible earthly ministry.
This wasn’t a mere disappearing act, but the completion of His mission. After rising from the dead and spending forty days preparing the disciples, Jesus returned to the Father—not to leave us, but to be with us in a new and profound way.
Let’s be honest: if I saw someone float into the sky, my next move would not be theological reflection. It would probably be asking, “Now what?”
That’s where the disciples were. For ten days between the Ascension and Pentecost, they were in limbo. Jesus was gone (visibly). The Holy Spirit hadn’t arrived (yet). No wonder they just stood there looking up until an angel basically said, “Why are you staring? He’ll be back.” (Acts 1:11, paraphrased.)
And maybe you’re in a spiritual “in-between” season too—where God feels distant, prayer feels like a voicemail, and hope feels like something for holier people. But take heart: even the Apostles had to wait.
We tend to think of Jesus’ Ascension as Him “leaving.” But here’s the reality: He didn’t leave to abandon us. He ascended to draw us upward, to elevate our humanity. As the Catechism states, Christ’s humanity entered into divine glory (CCC 659)—and He brought our humanity with Him.
Jesus didn’t just open the door to heaven; He held it open and propped it with His resurrected body. He is seated at the right hand of the Father—interceding for us, advocating for us, and sending us the gift of grace, the very life of God, like a fountain of divine love.
Jesus didn’t abandon the Church. He left us tools for the mission:

The Ascension isn’t just a cool theological event buried in Acts 1. It’s a promise rooted in the Paschal Mystery.

If you’re like me, the Ascension might feel less like a mountaintop and more like a foggy plateau. You believe, but it feels dry. You show up to Mass, but you feel… meh. Good news: the Apostles were right there too. And what did they do?
They prayed. Waiting became their act of faith. In community, they stayed together. And through it all, they trusted that the One who rose and ascended hadn’t left them alone.
You don’t need to feel extraordinary to be called to holiness. We are all called to holiness, and we strive towards it through God’s grace and our commitment to virtue. You just need to keep looking up—because the same Jesus who ascended will come again in glory.
Jesus ascended to heaven. Not to ditch us, but to elevate us. He’s still with us—especially in the Eucharist. He sent the Holy Spirit to guide us. He gave us His Mother to encourage us. And He’s coming back. Until then: don’t just stare at the sky. Live as people of faith—because heaven is real.
Want to go deeper? Crack open Acts 1 and John 14. Or better yet, swing by Adoration. Jesus may have ascended—but He hasn’t left the tabernacle.
And if you’re feeling stuck in the in-between, you’re not alone. God is with you. Always.