The Ascension Alliance

The Ascension Alliance The Ascension Alliance is a mystical movement, religious organization, Church, and umbrella organization for like-minded pilgrims.

Today, we join with Ecclesia Gnostica and the rest of the universal church to mourn Bishop Stephan A. Hoeller. He was a ...
05/04/2026

Today, we join with Ecclesia Gnostica and the rest of the universal church to mourn Bishop Stephan A. Hoeller. He was a wise man, mystic and enlightened soul, who left his physical body on May 3, 2026.

We give thanks for Bishop Hoeller’s many contributions to the esoteric church. Indeed, he authored a chapter in Patriarch Herman Adrian Spruit’s Sacramentarian, which we are honored to have published.

We join members of Bishop Hoeller’s Ecclesia Gnostica and the church universal, in rejoicing at his resurrection, as he joins the company of saints, wedded to the mystery of the universe. Until we meet again.

Most Rev. Dr. Alan R. Kemp
Presiding Bishop, Ascension Alliance

02/26/2026

Widening our love in a fearful age

BREAKS YOUR HEART (or should)Regardless of what we think about politics, as human beings we are called to speak out abou...
02/26/2026

BREAKS YOUR HEART (or should)

Regardless of what we think about politics, as human beings we are called to speak out about social justice.

Here’s a fascinating story just published by ProPublica about how the Dilley Detention Center in Texas removed crayons and paper from child detainees because what they drew made the center look bad.

Detainees told ProPublica that art supplies have been removed in room searches, immigrants have lost access to Gmail and staff hover within earshot during video calls.

Dear friends; I belong to a loose-knit band of folks in an independent sacramental movement. Among our number is a forme...
02/11/2026

Dear friends; I belong to a loose-knit band of folks in an independent sacramental movement. Among our number is a former Roman Catholic Franciscan friar, Jayme Mathias, who has an amazing Substack.

In today’s post he looks at the power of organization and the value of taking minority voices seriously.

As a member of a religious minority, I appreciate the message.

Lessons from Adrian Fortescue and the “Lesser Eastern Churches”

LET MY PEOPLE GO — 2026At a time in our history when Americans are reacting to the current attacks on immigrants, a new ...
02/05/2026

LET MY PEOPLE GO — 2026

At a time in our history when Americans are reacting to the current attacks on immigrants, a new documentary, “Let My People Go,”premiered on PBS, February 3, 2026.

Among other things, it highlights why Jews and Blacks can understand each other: each has tasted oppression and slavery.

We can look what’s going in our nation today as an attack on social justice. And, as evil so often does, it is making a mockery of all that is good, right, and true. It is turning justice on its head—and paradoxically so, by the U.S. Department of Justice. If thats not a mockery what is?

As people of faith, we can take heart in the Truth. God heard the cries of their oppressed people, then. And, God hears the cries of their oppressed now. God responds, and God works through us.

As we consider the focus of Convocation 2026, September 25-28, in Peoria, AZ, perhaps we can devote our time of fellowship, prayer, and conversation to how we can address what we are seeing today.

Perhaps, we can also stand in awe at can we can learn from oppressed peoples of the past about how to respond to the oppression we face today.

At our Zoom Convocation 2021, we began the conversation with the theme “Whatsoever you Do … Social Justice, Sacramental Justice, and the Whisperings of Holy Spirit.”

How might we productively continue, deepen, and contextualize that conversation in 2026?

New Bruce Springsteen song, "On the streets of Minneapolis."
01/31/2026

New Bruce Springsteen song, "On the streets of Minneapolis."

Directed by Thom ZimnyEdited by Thom Zimny and Samuel ShapiroProduction Footage: Pam Springsteen and Thom Zimny

01/06/2026

Dear present and future Ascensionistas;

One of the things I’m doing as rector of our seminary, Ascension Theological College, is re-reading, and sometimes reading for the first time, the primary texts we’re using in our courses.

In the Hebrew Scriptures course we’re using Yoram Hazony’s The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture.

Here’s a quote from Hazony that I think is relevant to us and the work we are doing, or trying to do, as Ascensionists:

“Many of Jeremiah’s orations point in just this direction [to the path of what is beneficial and good] in doing so, introducing a term that is significant … the word ho’il … a cognate of the Hebrew root yud-ain-lamed which means to ascend…” (Hazony, 2012, p. 177). So, as we do our ministry we are endeavoring to walk in the path of what is beneficial and good. Good to keep in mind, I think.

Hazony, Y. (2012). The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

+ Alan

01/06/2026

Standing at the Threshold of Escalation

12/28/2025

A Reflection on the 55th Anniversary of the Ordination of Ludmila Javorová

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