Luke 9:37-45 · The Healing of a Boy With an Evil Spirit
I Saw the Light
Luke 9:28-43
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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In February of 1971, a man named Edwin Robinson from Falmouth, Maine sharply jack-knifed his tractor-trailer to avoid hitting a car sliding across the roadway. As a result of severe head trauma caused by the accident, Robinson lost both his vision and his hearing.

On June 4, 1980, 62-yearold Robinson was unexpectedly struck by a bolt of lightning. After lying stunned and unconscious for about 20 minutes, he woke to find both his sight and hearing restored![1]

Sounds like the apostle Paul, doesn’t it? Except in opposite! In the story of Paul’s conversion in Acts 22, Paul was on the road to persecute a group of Christians near Damascus, when right about noon, a bright light flashed around him. He fell to the ground and heard the voice of the Lord, the voice of Jesus challenging his mission. At the time, Paul was blinded by that light, only to have his vision restored and healed by Christian disciple Ananias. From there, Paul’s life was changed. Paul went on to become the greatest missionary in the history of Christianity.

In the time of the Exodus,we learn that Moses’ face shone with the light of God as he returned from Mount Sinai with the stone tablets containing God’s commandments in his hands.

In 18th century England, John Wesley’s ministry and mission resulted from his certainty that he had been saved by God from a fiery death and later reborn of the Spirit’s fire.

From the beginning of time, humans have been fascinated, influenced, and moved to great change and innovation from their experiences with light. Whether in the field of optics, physics, botany, or in the science of laser therapy, we have only begun to tap the edges of our knowledge about the amazing power of light. The more we learn about light, the more we are awed by its raw energy and immense, insatiable power-punch.

Today, we try to harness aspects of that power for good. Light is used frequently in medicine. We know that light can heal the winter blues or what we call Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD). Light treatments can improve autoimmune disorders, such as psoriasis and acne. Blue light can even kill antibiotic resistant Staph infections, heal wounds, and stimulate cell repair. We use laser light to operate on sensitive areas of the eyes and even the brain.[2]

Light is the power behind photosynthesis. It produces Vitamin D and endorphins in humans and animals. It even reduces pain and reduces the effects of cancer on the very cellular level. There is no doubt that light is one of the greatest powers, if not the greatest power, on earth.

Light has the power both to destroy and heal.

So, when we look at our scripture for today and imagine the brilliant white light surrounding Jesus in what we now call the “transfiguration,” we both kneel and tremble at what this meant to those present, at what this means for us still today.

Because this light was no ordinary light. This was God-provoked Light, THE light of God, the same light that no doubt surrounded Jesus during his baptism, the same light that surrounded the face of Moses, the same light that shone for the first time over the waters of Creation when God’s Spirit breathed and voiced the “words,” “Let there be Light!”

God’s presence in scripture and in our lives is often signaled by bright, brilliant, unquenchable light.

Jesus, in fact, tells us in scripture that He IS the Light come into the world, equating him and his mission with God’s own self.

So it’s an easy clue when we read the scripture about the “transfiguration” that God is present in a real and present way in the person of Jesus on the mountain that day surrounded by holy, brilliant, white light. Past, present, and future come together in that moment when Jesus’ identity is confirmed once again by the holy voice of God.

But Jesus wasn’t the only one “transfigured” that day. The hearts and lives of those disciples present would never be the same. If they didn’t understand earlier the kind of “messiah” Jesus was to be, they certainly moved closer this time. In fact, the very reason they wanted to build “little huts” known in Judaism as “sukkah” was to honor Jesus with a tabernacle very similar to the one God “traveled” in during the times of the early kings.

But Jesus, nor God, can be contained in a box, least of all the ones of our making. God is so much bigger than that. And therefore, so is Jesus.

But what were they to do with that experience? They weren’t sure. This was something so far out of their comprehension that they almost seemed confused by the encounter, wanting to do something, not being sure what.

They were in a sense blinded by the light, stunned by the transfiguration they saw in their master and messiah, dumbstruck by the realization that their God was there in front of them very real and present in the person of Jesus.

Everyone present that day was literally God-struck by what they experienced on that mountain. Though tired from the day’s journey, every one of their senses was suddenly and rudely awakened by that phenomenal light-show, and its resulting revelation.

In what we call the transfiguration, God makes a bold statement about who Jesus is, about his mission, his identity, and the power that he could wield. It’s no mistake that immediately upon descending the mountain, Jesus begins to heal, cast out spirits, confront the very powers of shadow and darkness with his overpowering light, the light that now would surround and fill him no matter where he went.

We live in a strange world that we mostly don’t understand. We tend to trust only in what we can see, hear, feel, and experience in the world. And yet, we know in the depths of our hearts that there is so much more out there, so much more that lies beyond the realm of our experience and knowledge.

The transfiguration if nothing else is a confirmation of that knowledge –that the Creator of the Universe is so vast, so large, so brilliant, so powerful that we are putty in the palms of His hands.

And yet God’s gentle Spirit guides us, loves us, teaches us, and seeks to redeem us again, and again, and again.

Today, on this transfiguration Sunday, may your hearts be stunned by the immensity of God’s grace. May you find God’s goodness and mercy hard to grasp. May your life be changed and your vision brightened by the truth that is in Jesus.

For HE is the Light –the Light that came into the world to both judge and heal, change and yet create. May his everlasting Light be in you that you might shine with the light of God wherever you go and whatever you do.


[1] “Bolt of Lightning Restores Man’s Sight,” St. Louis Dispatch, June 7, 1980, weirduniverse.net/blog/comments/lightning_cures_blindness_and_deafness.

[2]“Light as Medicine?” Science Daily, October 22, 2013, https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/10/131022102227.htm. See also Traci Pederson, “The Healing Powers of Light Therapy, Spirituality and Health, https://www.spiritualityhealth.com/blogs/spirituality-health/2015/01/26/traci-pedersen-healing-powers-light-therapy. For more in the history of light therapy from ancient times, see “The Healing Use of Light and Color,” Healthcare Design Magazine, February 1, 2008, https://healthcaredesignmagazine.com/architecture/healing-use-light-and-color/.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., by Lori Wagner