Acts 1:19 And when had said these things, as they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out for their sight.
The ascension of Christ is a historical fact that Luke (the writer of Acts) intentionally mentioned by recounting the disciples’ act of “looking on.” It was a sight that was both overwhelming and rich with
implications.
Christ had served and gave His life for many. After His resurrection, He appeared to His disciples for forty days and He was talking and instructing them more. When Christ ascended to heaven, it marked the end of His earthly ministry and the beginning of His High Priestly work, as He now intercedes for us day and night before the Father (Hebrews 7:25). This means that Christ’s work did not end with His perfect sacrifice on the cross—it continues even now. And while we go about our days, often distracted by many things, He remains faithful in praying for us. What a loving and reliable Savior Jesus is. Indeed, our Savior lives forever and will forever keep us in Him.
Acts 1:9 also declares that “a cloud took him out of their sight.” The impression Luke wants us to grasp is
that Christ was received into the heavenly realm—not because He was being removed or prohibited from earth, but because He had completed the atonement for His people’s sins. God was welcoming Him home through the cloud, which is a symbol of His Shekinah glory. This glory belongs to Christ as part of the Triune Godhead and was now revealed in fuller clarity to affirm His divine identity.
What an amazing God we serve! He is not only glorious in majesty, but He is also amazing in that, despite His supremacy, He remains faithful to His promises—preserving us today through His intercession and sustaining us until He returns. Then He will give us imperishable bodies to share in His glory.
His ascension points us to our future hope: that He will return, just as the angels declared (Acts 1:10). This perishing world will pass away, but we will not, for our lives do not end with the perishable. Instead, they continue in the presence of the Lord forever.