EPISODE · Jun 29, 2026 · 26 MIN
The Ascension of Jesus: He Lifted His Hands and Blessed Them (Luke 24:50–53)
from Scott LaPierre Ministries
Ask almost any Christian to tell you the Easter story, and they can: the cross on Friday, the grave on Saturday, the stone rolled away on Sunday, the empty tomb, the folded grave clothes, the risen Lord, and the disciples who could hardly believe their eyes. We have built an entire season of the year around that account. But ask what happened next — the ascension of Jesus — and many believers are not sure what to say. We tend to stop reading at the resurrection, as if that is where the story ends. It isn’t. The closing scene of Luke’s Gospel is not simply tacked on to the end of the book — it ties all the way back to the beginning. In Luke 24:50–53, Luke seems to tie a knot around the whole story, connecting the end to where it started. Below are five lessons from those four verses, and why the last thing the disciples saw should fill us with joy. https://youtu.be/pjgpIcGZgaE Table of contentsLuke 24:50–53 — The PassageLesson One: Christ Blesses His People as the Priest Who First Offered HimselfLesson Two: Luke Is Framed Between a Priest Who Could Not Bless and the Priest Who DoesLesson Three: The Last Sight of Christ — His Hands Raised in BlessingLesson Four: The Disciples Rejoiced Because the Ascension Was a CoronationWhy the Ascension of Jesus Matters1. The work is finished2. Jesus reigns3. Jesus is praying for you right now4. The Spirit could comeLesson Five: We Bless God Because He First Blessed Us in ChristThe Image to Carry Until He Returns Luke 24:50–53 — The Passage Luke 24:50–53 And he led them out as far as Bethany, and lifting up his hands he blessed them. While he blessed them, he parted from them and was carried up into heaven. And they worshiped him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy, and were continually in the temple blessing God. Luke tells us where this happened: the eastern slope of the Mount of Olives. (Luke says Jesus led them out “as far as Bethany,” and Acts 1:12 says the disciples returned “from the mount called Olivet.” There is no conflict — Bethany sits on the eastern slope of the Mount of Olives, so both describe the same hillside Jesus had crossed for the triumphal entry, near where He had wept over the city and prayed in Gethsemane.) Notice that Jesus does not simply wave goodbye or offer a few final words before leaving. He lifts up His hands and blesses them. And there has been a lot of attention on Jesus’ hands in this chapter. The disciples likely saw the scars when He broke the bread (v. 35); He told them, “See my hands and my feet” and showed the scars (vv. 39–40); and now His hands come up again — raised in blessing. And don’t miss who received this blessing. These are the men who fell asleep in the garden, scattered when He was arrested, denied Him, hid behind locked doors, and refused to believe the reports of His resurrection. If anyone had earned a rebuke, it was they. But Jesus did not leave them with a rebuke. He left them with a blessing. From beginning to end, His disposition toward His failing, fearful people has been grace. Lesson One: Christ Blesses His People as the Priest Who First Offered Himself This whole scene would have sounded priestly to Jewish ears. We tend to think of Old Testament priests as those who offered sacrifices, but blessing the people was also part of their ministry: Deuteronomy 10:8 At that time the LORD set apart the tribe of Levi… to minister to him and to bless in his name, to this day. Numbers 6:23–24 Thus you shall bless the people of Israel: you shall say to them, The LORD bless you and keep you… And here is a crucial detail: the blessing came after the sacrifice. Leviticus 9:18, 22 [Aaron] killed the ox and the ram, the sacrifice… for the people… Then Aaron lifted up his hands toward the people and blessed them. The order matters: the priest offers the sacrifice, lifts his hands, and then blesses the people. The blessing follows the sacrifice because the blessing depends on the sacrifice. A blessing cannot be pronounced over unaddressed sin. The sacrifice deals with the sin between God and the people, and once that obstacle is removed, God’s favor can rest on them openly. The blessing tells the worshipers they are sent away with God’s acceptance rather than His judgment. The priest does all of this as a mediator standing between God and man. He presents the sacrifice, representing the people toward God; he pronounces the blessing, representing God toward man. And all of it looks forward to Christ. Jesus is our great High Priest who has offered the true and final sacrifice. He went to the cross, suffered for sin, and rose from the dead. His sacrifice was accepted by the Father — and now, before ascending, He lifts His hands in the unmistakable posture of the priest and blesses His people. There is an even more striking example from Hezekiah’s day: 2 Chronicles 30:27Then the priests and the Levites arose and blessed the people, and their voice was heard, and their prayer came to his holy habitation in heaven. The Passover sacrifice is offered, the priests bless the people, and their prayer ascends to God’s holy habitation in heaven. That beautifully prefigures Christ, our true and greater Passover Lamb (1 Corinthians 5:7). After His sacrifice, He blesses His people, and then ascends bodily into heaven to appear before God on our behalf (Hebrews 9:24). So the earthly priests blessed in the Lord’s name, but Jesus blesses as the Lord Himself; they blessed after offering animals, but Jesus blesses after offering Himself; they stood before men as they interceded, but Jesus ascended to stand before the Father as He intercedes. Lesson Two: Luke Is Framed Between a Priest Who Could Not Bless and the Priest Who Does To see the connection between the beginning and end of Luke’s Gospel, turn back to Luke 1. Zechariah is serving as a priest, gone in to burn incense while the people pray outside (Luke 1:10). The angel Gabriel appears and tells him his wife, Elizabeth, will have a child; because he does not believe it, he is struck mute (Luke 1:20). Outside, the people keep waiting (Luke 1:21). Ordinarily the service ended with the priest pronouncing a blessing over the people — but when Zechariah finally comes out, he cannot speak: Luke 1:22 And when he came out, he was unable to speak to them, and they realized that he had seen a vision in the temple. And he kept making signs to them and remained mute. Picture it: a crowd standing before you, waiting for you to bless them, and you cannot make a sound. So the people go home without the blessing they came for. Now think about where the Gospel opens and where it closes. It opens with an earthly priest who enters the earthly temple, offers incense, and comes back out — but cannot bless the waiting people because of his unbelief. It closes with Jesus, the true and greater High Priest, who offered His once-for-all sacrifice, blessed His people, and ascended into the heavenly temple to go on interceding for them. What Zechariah could not do, Jesus did. The Gospel that began with a silent priest ends with the great High Priest lifting His hands and blessing the people. And there is one more contrast: in Luke 1, the people go home without their blessing, confused and discouraged; in Luke 24:52, they go home with great joy. I’ll offer this last point a bit more tentatively, though I believe it holds: this is the transition from the Old Covenant to the New. Zechariah is a priest of the Old Covenant; Jesus is the Priest of the New. Zechariah enters an earthly temple; Jesus ascends into heaven itself. Zechariah offers incense; Jesus offers Himself. Zechariah comes out unable to speak a blessing; Jesus ascends while blessing His people. The Old Covenant was not bad — God Himself gave it — but it was preparatory: its priests, sacrifices, temple, and blessings were shadows, and Christ is the substance. Zechariah’s silence reminds us of the Old Covenant’s incompleteness; Christ’s blessing reveals the New Covenant’s fullness and finality. Lesson Three: The Last Sight of Christ — His Hands Raised in Blessing Think about how powerful a final image can be. Parents stand in the driveway watching the car back out as their son leaves for college, waving until it turns the corner. A family gathers around a hospital bed before a loved one passes, and for the rest of their lives, that is the picture in their minds. A soldier stops at the airport security line, turns one last time to find his family, and lifts his hand to them — and then he is gone. We tend to remember the last time we saw someone. Here is the last time the disciples saw Jesus: Luke 24:51 While he blessed them, he parted from them and was carried up into heaven. This is the final image of the risen Christ before He left: His hands, with the nail marks in them, raised over His people in blessing. The hands that were nailed to the cross for their sins are now lifted to send them off with the peace of God. And that final image could easily have been different. The disciples had failed Him — slept in Gethsemane, fled at His arrest, denied Him, struggled to believe the resurrection. If Jesus had wanted to leave them with a rebuke, He had plenty of material. But their last sight of Him was not anger, coldness, disappointment, or distance. It was their risen Savior with uplifted, scarred hands, blessing them. Notice, too, that He was “carried up into heaven.” The book of Acts describes it the same way: “a cloud took him out of their sight” (Acts 1:9). We would expect it to say Jesus went up through the clouds, but instead the cloud took Him. That cloud is the glory cloud, or Shekinah — the visible representation of God’s presence that accompanied Israel in the wilderness (Exodus 13:20–22) and from which God spoke to Moses (Exodus 33). In other words, God the Father received His Son into heaven. Lesson Four: The Disciples Rejoiced Because the As
NOW PLAYING
The Ascension of Jesus: He Lifted His Hands and Blessed Them (Luke 24:50–53)
No transcript for this episode yet