Luke 9:28-36 · The Transfiguration
Eavesdropping On Eternity
Luke 9:28-36
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Have you ever been in a public place and found yourself eavesdropping on a conversation? Perhaps it was at the mall or on a bus or standing in the hall at school. You didn't mean to be nosy, it's just that you were the proper distance away, and you could hear every word.

A few years ago, the Lexington Herald-Leader of Lexington, Kentucky, published a short list called "Classic Conversation Stoppers." If you overheard these phrases, the urge to eavesdrop would be overwhelming:

For example, here's a classic conversation stopper:

"Contagious? Contagious?" I asked the doctor. "Really contagious," he tells me. Now wouldn't that make you want to hear more--or at least move farther back on the bus?

Here's another: "So that's it! As of this morning, I quit my medication! . . . Homicidal tendencies, my foot!" Now we move way back!

And the last guaranteed conversation stopper read like this: "You're sitting in it now." (1)

Not that we would do it deliberately, of course, but sometimes it can be interesting just to tune in on the conversations going on around us.

Peter, John, and James had the most wonderful opportunity imaginable to eavesdrop on a conversation--a conversation featuring the three greatest religious figures who ever lived--Jesus, Moses and Elijah--and they blew it. Can you imagine the things those three towering figures had to talk about? What a great loss that not a word of their conversation was recorded for future believers!

Jesus had gone up on a mountain to pray, to separate himself from his daily routine and the attentions of others. Jesus wasn't a workaholic, and he didn't need to impress anyone with his piety. He simply kept a healthy balance of prayer, work, and relaxation. He knew when he needed a "spiritual refill." So he went up on a mountain and took with him his inner circle of disciples--Peter, John, and James. Luke records in verse 29-31, "As he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and his clothing became as bright as a flash of lightning. Two men, Moses and Elijah, appeared in glorious splendor, talking with Jesus. They spoke about his departure, which he was about to bring to fulfillment at Jerusalem." (NIV)

Wow! Wouldn't you want to be a "fly on the wall" for that conversation? This is one of those times when I wonder why Luke was so dry and factual. Where are the details? How did Jesus' face change? Who needs television shows like "Extreme Makeover" when Jesus can change his very appearance just by the heartfelt intensity of his prayer? When was the last time that you or I communed so fervently with God that our face glowed with joy? Remember that when Moses came down from the mountain after spending time with God, his face glowed so much that he needed to wear a veil. (Exodus 34)

There's a really good reason why we don't have any record of the conversation between Jesus, Moses, and Elijah. It's because Jesus' three closest disciples slept through it. Can you believe it? We read that Peter and the others only woke in time to catch a brief, glorious glimpse of Israel's greatest Lawgiver and its greatest Prophet before they faded from the scene. What an awful time to fall asleep.

It reminds me of a humorous suggestion that newspaper columnist Dave Barry made sometime back. He was suggesting ways of dealing with someone who falls asleep during an important meeting. He says, "Have everybody leave the room, then collect a group of total strangers, from right off the street and have them sit around the sleeping person and stare at him until he wakes up. Then have one of them say to him, in a very somber voice, "˜Bob, your plan is very, very risky, but you've given us no choice but to try it. I only hope, for your sake, that you know what you're getting yourself into.' Then they should file quietly from the room." (2)

I'm sure Peter, James, and John were cursing their little nap right about now. Only Peter's reaction is recorded. In his excitement, he says, "Master, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters--one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah." And Luke, commenting on Peter's reaction, notes, "He did not know what he was saying."

Good old Peter--always putting mouth and foot in gear at the same time. But what was wrong with Peter's reaction? Wouldn't you want to bask in the glory of these great heroes? Wouldn't you want to stay up on that mountain and never come down? The problem is that, in his excitement, Peter is only getting part of the picture. He is missing the full significance of this moment.

Christian sociologist and author Tony Campolo says, "To be a person of faith means three things: You're rooted in the past, you are transformed in the present . . . and you have a glorious vision of the future." (3) And that is the significance of this moment, of Jesus' transfiguration on the mountain.

Faith in God is rooted in the past. Hundreds of years earlier, God had set apart a particular group, the Israelites, to be God's own people, to know God and to follow God's way. Sadly, this proud people became enslaved to the Egyptians and their power-mad Pharaoh. But God raised up Moses, a man from Pharaoh's own household, to lead the Israelites out of slavery. And what was their last act before escaping Egypt? To cover their doorposts with the blood of a perfect lamb, so that the angel of Death might pass them by. Through Moses, God gave the Israelites deliverance. Through Moses, God also gave them the Law. The Law was their life blood, the foundation of their nation.

About 1,000 years after Moses and the Exodus, God sent the prophet Elijah to lead the wayward Israelites back to a covenant relationship with God. He exposed false prophets and confronted self-serving kings. And all the while, Elijah reminded the people of Israel that their God is a jealous God, and that their salvation would only come through Him.

Every Jew knew the importance of Moses and Elijah to their history. They understood that faith is rooted in the past.

Faith is also transformed in the present. It was through Peter's relationship with the living Christ that faith became real.

Only eight days earlier, when confronted with the question of who Jesus really is, Peter declared, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Jesus is the Messiah, the Deliverer, the one who would lead God's people out of oppression again. The one who would restore glory to the nation of Israel. And Peter wanted to be in on that glory. That's why he wanted to stay up on the mountain with Jesus, Moses, and Elijah. Carpe diem--seize the day! Let's just stay here in this glow of glory and forget about the life down below in the valley.

Isn't that a tempting thought? Sometimes, we get settled in a spiritual comfort zone and we don't want to leave it. The sanctuary is so lovely, the worship is so fulfilling. All my Christian friends are here. I get to sing familiar hymns and listen to familiar Bible stories and hang out with people who are just like me. It's all so cozy, it's all so right. Why would I ever want to leave?

This is not to say that we don't need time on the mountain top. Our lives are so stressful that we desperately need this time of fellowship and worship.

After years of working too hard and neglecting her own needs, Nancie Carmichael fell into a deep depression. One day, as she walked by a gorgeous lake, she felt God speaking to her. The surrounding mountains and trees were perfectly reflected in the still waters of the lake. At this moment, God seemed to say to Nancie, "When you are still before Me, you can then reflect Me."

A stressful lifestyle had prevented Nancie from spending time with God. Her inner turmoil reflected her lack of connection to Him. God was reminding her that as she spent time in quiet prayer, her inner life would reflect God's peace and grace too. (4) We understand Peter's impulse to stay on the mountain. We need this time apart with the Master. But Peter was missing the point.

Peter didn't yet understand Christ's vision for the future. He didn't understand that just as Moses ushered in a system of sacrifices that would temporarily cover the people's sins, Jesus will now be the perfect Sacrifice that takes away the sins of the whole world. He didn't understand that Jesus would have to suffer and die. He didn't yet understand that he, too, would suffer and be persecuted for preaching the truth. He didn't understand that Jesus' kingdom was eternal and for all people. He didn't understand that the Messiah came to seek and to save the lost. There's not a lot of glory in that job description. Instead, there is a lot of sacrifice and hard work. Who wants that? Not Peter. Not us. Peter wanted Jesus to stay in glory on the mountain, but God was sending all of them back down into the valley, to preach and teach and heal--and die--for the sake of all those hurting people who are living in a less-than-glorious world.

Many years ago, there lived a pastor named Samuel Shoemaker. Shoemaker had a powerful ministry to the hurting people of his society. He didn't sit inside a cozy church and throw religious platitudes at people. He went to where people needed help, and he gave them help in the name of Christ. You might know that he was instrumental in the establishment of Alcoholics Anonymous, which has helped untold numbers of people escape the chains of addiction.

In his later years, Rev. Shoemaker wrote a poem called, "An Apologia for My Life." It begins like this:

"I stand by the door.
I neither go too far in, nor stay too far out.
The door is the most important door in the world--
It is the door through which [people] walk when they find God."

In his poem Shoemaker says that the greatest thing in life, the only real purpose in life, is to find the door that leads to God. Most people spend their whole lives blindly groping for the door that will usher them into God's presence. Occasionally, a person may find the door, but be afraid to go in. At other times, they go in partially, but become distracted by worldly concerns and turn away. Some people may go all the way in and bask in the presence of God. Shoemaker had dedicated his life to standing just outside the door, so that he could guide all those lost and hurting souls who were searching for a glimpse of God. He ends the poem with these words:

"As for me, I shall take my old accustomed place,
Near enough to God to hear Him, and know He is there,
But not so far from men as not to hear them,
And remember they are there,
too. Where? Outside the door--
Thousands of them, millions of them.
But--more important for me--
One of them, two of them, ten of them,
Whose hands I am intended to put on the latch.
So I shall stand by the door and wait
For those who seek it.
"˜I had rather be a door-keeper . . .'
So I stand by the door."

Peter and James and John were not meant to bask in God's glory. Neither are we. We are meant to be doorkeepers, helping people in to the kingdom of God. We are meant to leave this place and take God's love, and hope, and justice, and truth to all those who are searching and hurting. God's plan of salvation is for all people, in all circumstances, at all times. Have you lead anyone to the door recently? Let's leave here with a commitment to go back down into the valley and share with someone the glory of God.


1. "Classic conversation stoppers," Lexington Herald-Leader, Wednesday, October 6, 1993, p. 25.

2. The Executive Speechwriter Newsletter, Volume 7, Number 5, p. 5.

3. By Tony Campolo in Ten Great Preachers, edited by Bill Turpie (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2000), p. 15.

4. Nancie Carmichael. The Desert Experience (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2001), p. 71.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan