Mark 9:2-13 · The Transfiguration
Driven to Their Knees
Mark 9:2-13
Sermon
by King Duncan
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It’s interesting. In the church, today is the day we celebrate the Transfiguration of Christ. In the world outside, however, this is better known as Valentine’s Day.

Transfiguration Day is by far the more important of the two, but I certainly hope all the men in the church remembered it is Valentine’s Day. You’re in trouble if you didn’t. It’s so important that someone has prepared a list of ways, “How to Tell You Forgot Valentine’s Day.” Here are three of those ways:

  1. Hallmark calls, offering discounts on apology cards.
  2. The kids tell you that Mom “went to bed early” . . . and “locked the door” . . . while you were taking out the trash.
  3. You wake up with a florist’s ad stapled to your forehead. (1)

So, I hope you husbands remembered . . .

This morning we are going to a mountaintop with three of Jesus’ disciples where they have an unforgettable experience.

Speaking of mountaintop experiences, an unknown author tells about a mountaintop experience that was unforgettable for one young man. A group of mountain climbers set out to conquer a high mountain. One of their number was a beginning climber making his first climb.

The climb was a strenuous one, but at last they reached the small plateau at the top of the mountain. Once it was clear that the beginning climber was at the very top, he stood straight up with arms raised and yelled victoriously, “I did it!”

At this point, a strong gust of wind nearly blew him off the mountain. The more experienced climbers had a good laugh at this, then explained to him that when you get to the top of a mountain you never stand straight up, but rather you drop to your knees to avoid being blown off the mountaintop. (2)

That’s a good lesson when it comes to mountaintop experiences—first go to your knees. This morning we are going to deal with history’s most dramatic mountaintop experience—one that quite literally drove three of Jesus’ disciples to their knees.

Chapters 8 and 9 of Mark’s Gospel contain some of the most important events in the New Testament. Chapter 8 begins with the feeding of the four thousand, an extraordinary event, and ends with Peter declaring that Jesus is the Messiah. It also concludes with Jesus predicting his own death.

The disciples were both shocked and confused when Christ said he must suffer and die.  This wasn’t what they thought would happen the day they decided to drop everything to follow Jesus. So at the beginning of chapter 9, when Jesus called his inner circle, his closest friends, Peter, James, and John, to go with him up the mountain, they were ready to go. Perhaps, they thought, in the rarefied air of the mountain their minds would clear.

There was no way the disciples could have prepared for what would take place on the top of that mountain, however. The Bible says on the mountaintop, in the presence of his three disciples, Jesus was “transfigured,” a word from the original Greek metamorphoo which is related to our word metamorphosis and means “to change form.” Christ’s face became as “bright as the sun” according to Matthew 17:2 and “his clothes became dazzling white, such as no one on earth could bleach them” according to Mark 9:3.

As if this weren’t enough, the disciples saw Jesus talking with Moses and Elijah, both of whom had been dead for hundreds of years.  Moses, you will recall, gave the people of Israel the Ten Commandments and led them to the Promised Land.  Elijah was the first prophet of Israel and, at his death, was taken up into heaven in a chariot of fire. These two men represented the Law and the Prophets, the sources of authority in Jewish life.

Peter, who could always be counted on to say something whether appropriate or not, said to Jesus, “Rabbi, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah.” (Mark speculates that Peter did not know what to say, they were so frightened.) All three of the Synoptic Gospels record Peter’s words—which pretty well authenticates that he said them.

Have you ever been so afraid that all you could do was babble? People react in different ways to fear. Some become quite talkative, others morosely silent. Fear brings out the best in some people. Others crack under the strain.

This was not the only time the disciples were fearful in Jesus’ presence. There were many such occasions.

Remember when he walked on the Sea of Galilee to join the disciples in their boat far out on the water. Matthew records that “when the disciples saw him walking on the lake, they were terrified. ‘It’s a ghost,’ they said, and cried out in fear. But Jesus immediately said to them: ‘Take courage! It is I. Don’t be afraid.’”

Later when Jesus appeared to them after his resurrection, Luke explains in his gospel that “they were frightened and terrified because, again, they thought they were seeing a ghost.”

In this same chapter we’re studying today, Mark 9, Jesus tries to tell his disciples for a second time that he must be crucified . . . but after three days he would rise. Mark tells us that they did not understand what he was talking about, “but they were afraid to ask him.”

Gentle Jesus, meek and mild—how could anybody ever be afraid of Jesus? We have so sentimentalized this man from Nazareth that we cannot even imagine grown men being afraid in his presence, but they were.                                

And why not? If he is who we say he is, who could help being fearful in his presence? Here was absolute purity—absolute love. Have you ever been in the presence of someone who was so perfect that they made you uncomfortable? Jesus sometimes had that kind of effect on people.

The verses that follow Peter’s mindless babbling are insightful.

Mark tells us, “Then a cloud appeared and covered them.” The Jewish people associated God with a cloud, remembering how God led the ancient Israelites in a cloud through the desert. On the Mount of Transfiguration the voice of God thundered from the cloud: “This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!” At this, according to Matthew 17:1-6, the three disciples “fell on their faces, and were filled with awe.”

Driven to their knees on the mountain . . . If there was any question that there was something different about Jesus, it is dispelled here: Son of man . . . Son of God . . . Savior of the world . . . Immanuel . . . King of Kings . . . Lord of Lords.

All three writers record that God spoke and identified Jesus as His Son and commanded the disciples to “Listen to him!” (Matthew 17:15; Mark 9:7; Luke 9:35). “Suddenly,” Mark says, “when they looked around, they no longer saw anyone with them except Jesus.”

It was a striking experience that the disciples would remember all of their lives. Years later Peter wrote in his second epistle, “For we did not follow cleverly devised stories when we told you about the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ in power, but we were eyewitnesses of his majesty. He received honor and glory from God the Father when the voice came to him from the Majestic Glory . . . We ourselves heard this voice that came from heaven when we were with him on the sacred mountain” (2 Peter 1:16-18).

Can you imagine the impact that this experience had on Peter, James and John? They were kneeling in the presence of the Son of God.

Jon Tal Murphree in his book, Made to be Mastered, tells about the impact that walking on the moon had on two of America’s astronauts. For one of them he says, “Moon walking had been his greatest goal in life, and he labored tirelessly toward achieving that goal.  But once it was attained, he explained, there was no higher goal and he became disillusioned.  He lost his ambition and his drive.  Finally, he suffered an emotional breakdown.”

For another astronaut, however, the moon visit meant something totally different.  In his autobiography, To Rule the Night, James Irwin wrote, “As we flew into space, we had a new sense of ourselves, of the earth and of the nearness to God.  We were outside ordinary reality; I sensed the beginning of some sort of deep change taking place inside of me.”

Irwin continued, “The ultimate effect has been to deepen and strengthen all the religious insight I ever had . . . On the moon the total picture of the power of God and his Son Jesus Christ became abundantly clear to me.” (3)

Who could not be affected by walking on the surface of the moon? And who could not be affected by being in the presence of Christ as his divinity was being made manifest?

The time came for Jesus and his three disciples to come down off the mountain. As Peter, James, and John descended the mountain they pondered the significance of what they had just experienced. My guess is that they walked back down in silence—they were too filled with awe to speak.

The disciples would make their way back into the valley, but a part of them would forever be on that mountain. Their fear had been transformed to faith. The focus of that faith was Christ and Christ alone.

As they came down off the mountain, Jesus instructed them not to tell anyone of their experience. Jesus gave them orders not to tell anyone what they had seen “until the Son of Man had risen from the dead.”

The time would come when they would tell everyone, but the time wasn’t right yet.  Jesus and the disciples still had work to do. That’s why they couldn’t stay on the mountain.

Dwight L. Moody was an American evangelist in the 1800s, and he wrote about meeting a man at one of his meetings who testified that he had “lived on the Mount of Transfiguration” for 5 years. I suppose by that that he meant he had lived in the presence of Jesus for that long.

So Moody asked him, “How many souls have you led to the healing light of Christ?”

The man said, “I don’t know.”

“Have you saved anyone from the pit of despair or the sting of death?” Moody asked him.

“I can’t say that I have,” the man replied.

“Well, that’s not the kind of mountain top experience that makes any difference,” Moody said. “When we get so high that we can’t reach down to other people, there is something wrong.” (4)

Jesus told the three disciples who were with him on the Mount of Transfiguration that they were to keep silence about what they had seen until after he was resurrected from the grave. Then, they were to tell everyone.

And that is where we are today. In our time together this morning we’ve been with Jesus and those three disciples on the mountain top. In our minds and hearts, hopefully we’ve been driven to our knees. Now that we are leaving this place, it is our turn to witness with our lives as well as our speech that we have been in the presence of the transfigured Christ—Son of man . . . Son of God . . . Savior of the world . . . Immanuel . . . God with us . . . King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Amen.


1. Mark’s Musings.

2. Hunter, Brian. Illustrations That Connect: Over 100 Illustrations for preachers, teachers, public speaker, and writers to help you connect with your audience in a powerful and insightful way. Unknown. Kindle Edition.

3. James B. Irwin and William A. Emerson, Jr., Rule the Night: The Discovery Voyage of Astronaut Jim Irwin (Philadelphia: A. J. Holman Co., 1973). Cited in Murphy, (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1984).

4. “Be Ye Transfigured,” Rev. Michael D. Powell, http://www.ashlandmethodist.org/07‑02‑18.html.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan