Luke 9:28-36 · The Transfiguration
Awake to Glory
Luke 9:28-36
Sermon
by J. Ellsworth Kalas
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Today we celebrate one of the most neglected passages in the Bible. It's possible that more sermons have been preached from some of the obscure places in First and Second Chronicles than from this tremendously significant scripture which describes the transfiguration of our Lord. At the time of the transfiguration, Peter finally broke the awed silence, but the Gospel writer says that he knew not what to say. I expect we preachers and teachers still feel a bit that way when we approach this story; probably some of us fear that, when we finally have our say, our words will be as inept or inadequate as were Peter's. 

Let's review the story to see why it awes us. It was one of those occasions Jesus took Peter, James, and John -- his three closest associates -- to be alone with him. We see this as a signal that something special was about to happen. I wonder if Peter, James, and John realized it.

While they prayed, a glory settled upon Jesus The effect was so powerful that Jesus' very appearance was changed. Luke doesn't tell us the nature of the change, but he does say that Jesus' garments became "dazzling white." Suddenly two men were talking with him -- Moses and Elijah -- about a specific subject: What Jesus was to accomplish at Jerusalem. As Moses and Elijah were ready to leave, Peter broke the silence. His statement was typical of Peter -- well-meaning and earnest, but just missing the point. "Master," he said, "it is good for us to be here; let us make three dwellings, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah" (v. 33).

Then it is as if heaven corrected Peter's plan. "This is my Son," the voice said, "my Chosen; listen to him!" (v. 35). The Holy Spirit seemed to be saying, "Moses and Elijah are fine, but don't think of building three equal tabernacles. There is one voice, and one alone, to whom you should listen -- the voice of my Son, my Chosen."
 
Then, just as suddenly, there was no one there with the disciples, but Jesus. Something about the occasion was so special, however, that Peter, James, and John said nothing about it to their fellow disciples.  This is a key story in the life of our Lord. Luke points out that it was set between two special events. It came, he says, about eight days after Jesus had charged his disciples to remain true to him even in the face of persecution, promising that some of them would not taste death before they had seen the kingdom of God. Apparently Luke looked upon this event as a sampling of the kingdom of God; it was the unique moment when Jesus' glory was revealed.

It was also preparation for Calvary. Moses and Elijah had apparently come to discuss this event with Jesus. From this point on, Jesus was headed relentlessly toward Calvary. 

Why did the vision include Moses and Elijah? First, because they symbolized the law and the prophets -- the two great segments of the Hebrew Scriptures. Additionally, perhaps because they were both described in the scriptures as being spared by God from the actual experience of death.  But the voice from the cloud made clear that they were in no way to be compared with Jesus. Peter fumbled with the idea that they could build three tabernacles to honor them all; there could be no such equal honor. Jesus was the beloved Son, the Chosen One, utterly different from Moses and Elijah. 

As much as the disciples loved Jesus, I doubt that they saw his uniqueness. If anything, Peter may have felt he was stretching a point when he suggested three tabernacles, thus putting Jesus on a level with Moses and Elijah. Something in him may have said, "The Master will be pleased that I honor him so." It's always so difficult for us to estimate the greatness of someone near at hand, particularly when compared with notable historic figures. But even more so when they were looking upon one who was in a completely different category from all their previous judgments. 

Some Bible scholars feel that perhaps this incident is actually a resurrection story which somehow became misplaced in ancient manuscripts. I can understand why they came to such a conclusion, because this event is so out of the ordinary. I think they miss the point, however. This transfiguration is, rather, a kind of preface to the resurrection. It is as if the Spirit of God were giving the disciples a basis for receiving the resurrection when it happened. Peter, James, and John were thus given an insight into the glory of their Lord which prepared them for the climactic event of Easter.
 The key phrase in this story is in verse 32. I particularly like the language of the New International Version: "Peter and his companions were very sleepy, but when they became fully awake, they saw his glory and the two men standing with him." Their realization of the glory of our Lord came to them, not when they were in a state of dullness or of stupor, but in a moment of heightened consciousness: "when they became fully awake." And ironically, when Peter became logical -- or as logical as he could manage to be, when he didn't know what he was saying -- he offered an inadequate statement. 

It is popular in our time to discredit religious experiences. We assume that people receive such experiences when they are not in full possession of their powers. Or perhaps, when we take a posture of intellectual superiority, we reason that such things happen only to basically unstable people. 

We should be properly cautious regarding ecstatic religious experiences. There have been innumerable instances where people have done irrational things on the basis of presumed visions or revelations. But we shouldn't rule out or downgrade the true and transforming occasions of religious insight just because there are frauds. Indeed, the best proof of the worth of any matter is that it inspires counterfeits. 

The glory of God comes to us when we are most "fully awake." A list of the half-dozen or more true geniuses of human history would surely include the name of Blaise Pascal -- the seventeenth-century French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist. In his brief 39 years, he made scientific discoveries which are basic to a great amount of our most significant contemporary knowledge. 

But with all his ability in logic and all his commitment to tough-minded scholarship, Pascal found the greatest assurance in his experiences of faith. On the evening of Monday, November 23, 1654, he felt the reality of Jesus Christ in such intensity that he wrote:

God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob.
Not of the Philosophers and Scientists.
Certainty, Certainty, Feeling Joy, Peace.
God of Jesus Christ

He copied on parchment the full witness of his experience and sewed it into the lining of his coat, where it was found by his servant after his death nearly eight years later. For Pascal the greatest reality was not what he discovered in laboratory experiments, but what he found in his communion with God, through Jesus Christ. It was at such a time that he was "fully awake." 

Most of us are too quick to downgrade our faith perceptions. We seem to feel that the things we can touch and handle are the only realities; and we are instinctively skeptical of that which we get by faith. We always say that love is blind; but a thoughtful woman who was very much in love once replied, "No, love isn't blind. Quite the opposite. It has the ability to see some things others cannot see." The same can be said for faith. True faith does not blind us to the realities of life; it simply enables us to grasp and understand some things which are otherwise beyond us. 

The Gospel of Mark has a fascinating contrast in our levels of perception. Mark 5:20 tells us of the miracle Jesus performed for a man who had been violently insane. It says that when people saw and heard what had happened, "everyone was amazed." But in the next chapter, Jesus is in his hometown and the unbelief of the people was such that "he could do no deed of power there," except for a few minor healings. Mark says that Jesus "was amazed at their unbelief" (6:5, 6). The crowds marveled that Jesus could work miracles; Jesus marveled that people could be so possessed of unbelief! The crowds looked upon miracles as out of the ordinary; Jesus thought of unbelief as out of the ordinary. He saw belief and its results as our native state, because he believed that you and I are meant to live "fully awake" to the glory of God. 

It is not that some of us are believers and some are not; it is just that we choose to invest our believing in different places. Someone once noted that Coleridge and Shelley visited Chamonix about the same time. Coleridge proceeded to write his grand hymn in the Vale of Chamonix, in which he described Nature as seeming to take one voice which echoed and re-echoed to the name of God. But Shelley wrote in the visitors' book at Chamonix: "Percy Bysshe Shelley. Atheist." Which man, at that moment, was more "fully awake"? And who, by contrast, had so shut his human perceptions that he missed the glory which was all around him? 

Early in the twentieth century, Henry Van Dyke, the great Presbyterian poet-preacher, described his time as "the Age of Doubt." In the doubting of God, recent generations are probably much like his. We have conditioned ourselves, with a peculiar intellectual prejudice, against seeing the glory of God in daily life. And we are desperately poorer because of it. Keats cried out in one of his memorable lines, "beauty was awake! / Why were ye not awake?" God may well address that question to us. There is glory all around us, magnificently awake; why are we not awake to see it? 

Are there ways that we can help ourselves be more awake to the glory of God? By all means! As surely as we have been conditioned to the sensual, and often to the fearing and the despairing, so we can help condition ourselves to a way of life which is more open to faith -- and thus more likely to receive the vision of the glory of God. 

Spiritually, as well as physically, we are what we eat. Our contemporary society feeds us a constant diet of that which is secular. We have to put forth special effort to find food which will nourish the deepest hungers of our lives.  Part of the secret is frequent attendance at the house of worship. This is no commercial; it is simply a statement of the facts of life. We are bombarded all week long by voices that dull our sensitivity to God and to the eternal; so we need desperately to take advantage of that special time each week when we can concentrate on hearing another voice.

But Sunday worship is not enough. We must also establish some patterns of daily renewal. We need the lift, day after day, which comes through reading the Bible, and through other devotional and inspirational books and magazines. Equally, we need the special strength that comes through those friends with whom we can share both our faith and our struggles. I could wish no better gift, for you and for me, than that we are blessed with a few special friends who are willing to "talk faith." Such persons can do something for us which sometimes not even the most inspirational book can do. 

And in all our searching, let us remember that God is on the side of our quest. We were built for faith, so to speak; it is our native air, and we function best when we breathe it in great drafts. We were not meant to be one-dimensional creatures, who live only by the perceptions of human reason and physical experience. We need to be shaken fully awake, so that we can see the glory of God. God our Father desires such a gladness for us. 

So let us seek God in holy expectation. We may not have a moment on a mount of transfiguration with Moses, Elijah, and Jesus. But on our own little mountain, at home, or in our automobile, we can be with our Lord. And in that moment, we will find ourselves as blessed as were Peter, James, and John, so long ago, when they were "fully awake" to God's glory.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons on the Gospel Readings, Cycle C, by J. Ellsworth Kalas