Luke 9:28-36 · The Transfiguration
I've Been To The Mountain
Luke 9:28-36
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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When I first came to Memphis, I visited downtown -- Mid-America Mall. I wanted to see the sculpture commemorating Martin Luther King -- the sculpture entitled "I've been to the Mountain."

I must confess that I've never felt too good about that piece of art. It doesn't excite me. Maybe that's my dullness. Maybe my imaginative and visual senses are not cultivated enough. But Martin Luther King's speech is unforgettable. As was the rule for King, he took images from Scripture. "I've been to the Mountain", he said -- and that was enough to go on -- even if it meant death. Listen to the conclusion of that speech.

"Well, I don't know what will happen now. We've got some difficult days ahead. But it doesn't matter with me now. Because I've been to the mountain top. And I don't mind. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has his place. But I'm not concerned about that now. I just want to do God's will. And He's allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I've looked over. And I've seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people will get to the promised land. And I'm happy tonight. I'm not worried about anything. I'm not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord."

The images are so Biblical, so integral to the Christian faith.

The mountain was the place in the Old and New Testaments where great things happened. It was the place of theophany. Moses on Mt. Sinai, Elijah on Mt. Carmel, and Jesus here on the Mount of Transfiguration, were places of what biblical scholars call theophanies. If you want to appear erradite during the next week, tell your friends that you have been studying some of the theophanies of the Bible. Any story where God appears is a theophany. It is a picture, a revelation, an experience of God. So, this story that we read for our Scripture lesson today is a theophany -- the story of the appearance of God.

But I want us to look at the Transfiguration not as something we aspire to in a dramatic theophany, but what it says to us for our ordinary times, and in our ongoing walk with the Lord.

I.

First of all, note this: Communion with God always transfigures. That's almost the first thing our scripture lesson says. Listen to the 29th verse again: "And while he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and his clothes became dazzling white.

Communion with God always transfigures.

Nicholas Bergaev, philosopher-theologian, says that "It is when a man is aware of his personal relationship with God that transformation really begins." And then he makes this amazing claim. "The meaning of the coming of Christ into the world lies in a real transformation of human nature...in Christianity, the central idea is that of transfiguration, not justification." (Freedom and the Spirit, p. 176).

I'm not sure that you can pit the one against the other -- or make it an either-or situation: justification or transfiguration. I do think he's right, though, in suggesting that we have not given transfiguration a big enough place in our understanding of the Christian experience. Communion with God always transfigures. That means, Friends, that prayer is more than petition. It's more than simply begging God to do something for us. It's being with God, sharing our life with God, opening ourselves to receive the fullness of God's Spirit, to allow God to do in us what He wishes to do -- to bring us to wholeness, to what Paul called the fullness of stature in Christ Jesus, and what he prayed for on another occasion, "that we might be filled with all the fullness of God."

Communion with God always transfigures.

I may have told you the story of our daughter, Kim. She worked for a year in an internship as a Hospital Chaplain. One day she was visiting an old woman named Mary. Mary had cancer, and was hospitalized for a long time. Kim visited her on a regular basis and they got to be friends. One day, Kim went to see her and realized that this was probably it. Mary was not going to live very long. So she sat down beside her and began to talk to her, then she began to pray for her. She stroked her head and prayed, and then moved into silent prayer -- just simply holding Mary's hand and stroking her head. Kim tells in an almost embarrassed way how something happened in the midst of that. All of a sudden, she found herself singing to Mary. She was singing a children's lullaby that Jerry and I used to sing to her and to our other children when they were little. We would call the child's name like this: "Kimberly, Kimberly, Oh how I love Kimberly." So, Kim was doing that with Mary -- calling Mary's name in song, and adding "Oh how I love Mary."

Then, all of a sudden, Kim became aware of a presence in the room. She was embarrassed to look around, because she felt it might be her supervisor, or another Chaplain, and they would have seen her and heard her singing a children's lullaby to this dying woman. She looked around to face whomever it might be that had caught her in the act, only to discover that no one was there. Then, Kim concluded, "but someone was there. Christ was there."

That experience became a theophany. In communion with God, transfiguration took place. Mary opened her eyes, smiled at Kim, and said "Thank you, oh thank you."

Don't miss it. Communion with God always transfigures.

II.

Now move in only a slightly different direction. It's easy to miss the glory of God, even with the promise of a theophany. There is a line about Peter, James, and John, who accompanied Jesus to the Mount which is richly suggestive. Let's read verse 32: "Now Peter and his companions were weighed down with sleep; but since they had stayed awake, they saw his glory and the two men who stood with Him."

That's the New Revised Standard Version. Barclay translates it in this fashion: "Peter and his friends were heavy with sleep. When they were fully awake they saw his glory..."

The suggestion is there. It's easy to miss the glory of God, even with the promise of a theophany, even when God is acting all around us, we may be dull to God's presence. We have to be fully awake to experience God's glory.

Peter and the others almost missed it. But thank God they didn't. Let me read you Peter's testimony, which came much later. He recorded it in his Second Epistle. Listen to II Peter 1: verses 16, 17: "For we did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we had been eyewitnesses of his majesty. For he received honor and glory from God the Father when that voice was conveyed to him by the Majestic Glory, saying, "This is my Son, my Beloved, with whom I am well pleased."

You see, what happened there on the Mount of Transfiguration convinced them of the full impact of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection.

Aren't we glad Peter didn't miss all of that, but he might have. "When they were fully awake, they saw his glory."

Do you see it? It's easy to miss God's glory. Mental and spiritual lethargy will do it -- will cause us to miss God's glory. I can't remember a single personal experience of awareness of God that came when I was not seeking or struggling; seeking or struggling, or wrestling. Some months ago, I preached a sermon on temptation. Mary Elizabeth Thomas sent me an Andy Capp cartoon after I had preached that sermon. Andy Capp slips out of his house in the dark and heads down to the neighborhood bar. When he comes in he sees a woman there -- and he says to himself, "Oh.....Flo," and then he sort of turns his back and walks away. Then he says in the next frame, "You mustn't tempt me, Miss, I'm a married man." Then he addresses the bartender, "Right, Jack." "Right, Andy," the bartender responds. Then he says to the bartender, "Tell her I'll be in the Rose and Crown tomorrow night, Jack."

In the concluding frame, the bartender muses, "When that bloke walks away from temptation, he likes to leave a forwarding address."

Mental and spiritual lethargy will cause us to miss the glory of God. It's not likely that the glory of God is going to come to us when we are at ease, when we are not thinking things out, and working through issues and concerns. So there are things that will cause us to miss the glory of God. Mental and spiritual lethargy are among them.

The other side of that coin is that there are also things that keep us awake to God's glorious presence. A sense of sin will do it. A sense of sin will keep us awake to God's glorious presence. We talked about this in our sermon two weeks ago. You remember the story of the sinful woman who washed Jesus' feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair? The host for that dinner with Jesus, Simon the Pharisee, missed the whole impact of Jesus because he had no sense of sin. The woman who interrupted the party experienced the full impact of his grace because she was deeply aware of her sin, repentant to her core, and thus open to receive God's grace.

Rural Howe tells a story that speaks to us here:

"A little girl, 8 years old, had been disciplined by her mother and told she could not spend the weekend with a friend. Angry, the child stomped out of the room and went upstairs. There she found a new dress that her mother was going to wear to a party that night, and nearby some scissors her mother had been using. The girl picked up the scissors and proceeded to mutilate the dress. When the mother discovered what had happened, she threw herself on the bed and wept. After a while, the little girl came to her Mother who was still crying on the bed. The daughter stood some distance from the bed and said, "Mother." No reply. She stepped closer and said again, "Mother, Mother." No reply. She came closer and implored, "Mother, please...please take me back!" (Man's Need and God's Action)

It's only when we are pained by the fact that we are separated -- separated from Christ by our sin -- it's only when that sense of sin is vividly alive in us, that we can stay awake to God's glorious presence. So, a sense of sin will keep us awake to God's glorious presence.

Also, a sense of need will do it....knowing that we can't make it by ourselves. That will keep us awake to God's glorious presence.

I remember the time frame in my life when I didn't want anyone to know how weak and limited I was. I could have never admitted failure. But I also remember vividly those times I have been willing to admit my need; when I have turned to professional counselors for help, and the Grace of God came in a healing way. A sense of need will keep us awake to God's glorious presence.

Rufus Jones was one of the great spiritual giants of this century -- a Quaker, a great champion of the inner-life. He went through a long period of illness -- illness of body and mind. A friend of his, Violet Hodgkins, gave him a parable. She said to him, "Isn't it strange how one has to learn to lie like a starfish on the beach, high and dry and cutoff from all renewing while the tide rises and falls just out of reach. That's the most tantalizing part. And then at long last...the real Spring-tide comes and floats even one's tired-out starfish of a body out into the full-flood of life again. Only those who know the deadly weariness of the beach can quite understand the living joy of the ocean when we get back to it once more!" (Elizabeth Vining, FRIENDS OF LIFE, p. 153).

That will always do it -- our sense of need will keep us open to God's glorious presence and power. Look back over your own life. When have you been most aware of God's glorious presence? In a letter I received just this week, a mother told me how vividly aware she and her husband were to God's glorious presence a few weeks ago when we baptized their baby.

Interestingly, during the same week, a letter came from an unmarried woman who wrote four pages telling me her story about how God has come to her in a vivid and special way during her pregnancy -- the struggle with the question of abortion because the child would have no father, her deep need for support and acceptance in an ugly world that is quick to cast stones. Her witness of commitment to God and awareness of God's presence in the midst of aching need moved me to tears.

God comes to us in our joy and celebrations, but isn't it true that nothing else keeps us aware of God's glorious presence quite like our sense of need. That will always do it -- our sense of need will keep us open to God's glorious presence and power.

III.

Now, a final suggested learning for us. Not in our theophanies, but for our ordinary times and in our ongoing walk with the Lord. If there is any transfiguring of us in our communion with God, it will be visible in our life and others will observe it. Get that. If there is any transfiguring, any transformation of us in our communion with God, it will be visible in our life, and others will observe it.

You've seen it, as I have -- what the Bible refers to as "the beauty of holiness." It happens in the opposite kind of way -- as someone has put it, "The Devil writes his mark upon people's faces. The world and the flesh do so. Go into the streets and look at the people that you meet. Care, envy, grasping, gripping avarice, discontent, unrest...and many other prints of black fingers are plain enough on many a face. And on the other hand, if a man or woman get into their hearts the refining influence of God's grace and love by living near the Master, very soon the beauty of expression which is born of consecration and unselfishness...the tenderness caught from Jesus, will not be lacking; and some eyes that look upon them will recognize the family-likeness." (Maclaren, The Gospel of Luke, p. 288).

Here it is in a story, told by my friend, Don Shelby, a Methodist minister out in Santa Monica, California. A colleague of his was the son of missionary parents. When the boy was 12, his parents went back to their mission station in India, and left one boy with his grandmother to raise, expecting that it would not be too long before arrangements could be made for them to be reunited.

But it so happened that they left for India on the eve of the Second World War, so that the family was separated for 8 long years. They could not get together. But on the boy's 20th birthday, they finally were reunited. It happened like this.

After a 3 months trip by ship across the South Atlantic and around the Cape of South America in California, the parents sent a telegram back east to their son, who was now in college. The telegram said his parents were now in the United States and were getting on a train, and would be in the town on a certain day, at a certain time, and would their son be there to meet them. The son said, "I'll never forget it." He wrote this: "It was almost dark when the train finally pulled into the station, and Mother and Dad were the only ones who got off. I could barely see them in the haze, and they couldn't really see me. We embraced in semi-darkness. Then Mother took my hand, and we went into the waiting room where there was more light. With tears running down her cheeks, she looked at me. She kept looking at my face, long and hard, staring at me. Then she turned to my dad, calling him by name: "Arnett!" she cried, "he's gone and looked like you! He looks just like you!"

What glory! -- to move in our relationship to Christ to that point that we will look like Him. That's what happens in transfigurations.

Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam