Mark 9:2-13 · The Transfiguration
Letting Go and New Beginnings
Mark 9:2-9
Sermon
by Richard Gribble
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It had been an exhausting climb up the mountain. The blue sky and the shimmering hot sun were beautiful, but they had made the climb more difficult as sweat trickled down his back and into his eyes. The baggage he carried on the climb was becoming a great hardship; in fact its weight forced him to stop. He could climb no further. Overwhelmed with the task, the weary traveler placed the baggage aside and rested. After easing the baggage to the ground he rested against the side of a tree, allowing the cool and refreshing breeze to blow over him. He heard a bird singing above him and when he looked up he saw the summit, his goal in the distance. Feeling somewhat renewed, he stood erect and, leaving behind his baggage, continued his climb.

As he climbed step-by-step the summit grew closer until he finally reached his goal. He looked about at the panorama before him; the scene was spectacular. He could see verdant valleys, majestic streams, a powerful river, and fertile meadows and fields. Infused with this glorious view he hurried down from the peak to the level where he had left his baggage. He wanted to collect his things and return home.

However, to his surprise his things were strewn across the path in several boxes, a large backpack, and an overstuffed briefcase. He looked into the first box which contained all his memories -- things like awards, report cards from school, and a few sports trophies. No longer sensing a need to rely on these memories, he put the box aside. And, to his great surprise he felt taller and better. Next, he opened the large backpack which contained all the beauty he had collected along his journey -- some beautiful rocks, a photograph of a beautiful rainbow, and, of course, many books from which he had come to know the beauty of the world. These things, too, he put aside, remembering the beauty from the top of the mountain. Again, he felt a spurt of growth and freedom.

Next, he examined the briefcase. It was stuffed with various causes and concerns -- issues and initiatives that had inflamed his spirit and impassioned his actions. Now, for some reason, these things seemed less important. The overstuffed briefcase was, thus, placed with the other discarded items. Now this not-so-young hiker felt more youthful as well as taller! He then examined the rest of the baggage and realized that most of it was no longer needed, save for a small backpack which he removed from the discarded items. The excess baggage he buried in a deep hole along the mountain trail.

Now aware of being rejuvenated, the climber slung the small pack over his shoulder. It contained a hammer, a saw, a few other tools, and a bamboo flute. Again the man ascended to the peak with a spring in his stride. He gazed back at the trail toward all the time-worn baggage he had carried for so long. Turning about, the climber looked toward the valley below, realizing his journey had ended. Now renewed in spirit and with a cool breeze at his back, the climber grabbed the flute, and while playing a merry tune, walked into the valley of his future.1

It took time and the realization that the burden of life was too heavy for the climber to see the need to change, to drop the past and move onto a new future. Today's Gospel Reading presents a very familiar story, one related by all three synoptic writers, the Transfiguration Of Our Lord. Jesus is transformed, changed, externally for a few short moments, but then he returned to his normal appearance. What, however, happened to the apostles, Peter, James, and John, who accompanied him up the mountain? Most assuredly they were changed, not externally and not momentarily. They were transformed internally and permanently to a new relationship with God. The Transfiguration Of Our Lord and its ability to transform the apostles challenges us to see our need to change, drop the past, and look to the brightness of the future.

The Transfiguration was certainly a very important event as it is one of only a few that are related in all three synoptics. Many scripture scholars believe that this event may have actually occurred after the resurrection, but was placed by the evangelists at a time during Jesus' life to convey an important message. The missive, many say, is that the Jesus' disciples must learn to change, adapt, drop the past, and look to the future. Rather than concentrating on what happened to the Lord, the event is best understood by centering on what befell the apostles.

What happened to the apostles? While there was no physical transformation, as far as we know, what they observed must have changed them on the inside. After seeing Jesus in all his radiant glory they would never be able to see him again as a mere man with whom they walked. Certainly they understood Jesus to be their Messiah and Lord, but after seeing Jesus transformed on the mountain there could be no doubt. They had seen his luminous body, observed him in conversation with Moses and Elijah, two great figures of the past, and heard the Father speak from the heavens, "This is my Son, listen to him." Seeing and hearing Jesus in a new light transformed their thinking about him, but it also challenged them to realize that as Jesus changed, so must they if they were to continue as his apostles.

Yes, the lives of the apostles Peter, James, and John, the three of the inner circle who are always present at the most important events in Jesus' life and ministry, were forever altered. They would now have to move in another direction. Whatever baggage the apostles had taken from their past, their lives before their call from Jesus, would have to be changed. Christ was now a new person and so, too, they must become new men. By dropping the baggage they could become transfigured, not in body, but in spirit. As the climber grew taller, so the apostles by dropping the past and taking a new direction would become enlightened. Christ was inviting them to walk a new road. The road was uncertain, but they were asked to have sufficient faith to let go of the past and move forward.

The scriptures are filled with examples of people who were asked on faith alone to begin anew, to take a different path, possibly a less-traveled road. The prophet Isaiah considered himself unworthy of his call by God. He lamented, "Woe is me! I am lost, for I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips." Isaiah worried that his sin disqualified him from his role, but a Seraph was sent to purge his lips. Thus, in the end he was able to say, "Here am I; send me!" (Isaiah 6:5, 8). Thus, Isaiah was called to forget the past, even his perceived unworthiness, to go forward, and to proclaim God's message. Similarly Hosea was asked to take a very different road, to marry a prostitute, Gomer, and raise children with her as a sign of the faithlessness of Israel. Despite the challenge, Hosea did as the Lord commanded. He left the past behind and moved onto his new mission, as dictated by God. Amos, a shepherd, was also called to prophesy to Israel, a task which required redirection of his life. Again, like Isaiah and Hosea, he summoned the courage and faith necessary and followed the Lord's call.

Leaving the past and moving to a new future is an integral part of the salvation history story in the New Testament as well. Many would say that the story of the annunciation best demonstrates one's willingness to accept change and move forward. Like most all Jewish maidens it is certain that Mary had future plans, probably rather ordinary and mundane in many ways. But then, in almost the time to wink one's eye, she received the invitation that would change her life and bring salvation history to its apex. Mary willingly said, "Yes," to God's invitation, extended by the Angel Gabriel. Her great fiat necessitated a total change in direction. Whatever Mary had planned had to be canceled and an uncertain future journey initiated. Mary accepted God's invitation, confident that if she would place her trust in him things would be fine. The past was left behind and God's plan for the salvation of humankind entered into its climatic stage.

The New Testament presents other important examples of new beginnings that necessitated a change in direction and dropping the past. The call of the apostles itself forced new ways and new beginnings. Somehow these men, simple, unlearned working men from all we can tell, had the courage to immediately drop all and follow a new path in life, a new direction that was uncertain. Yet, they answered the call and became the Lord's inner circle of friends. We recall as well the new direction Jesus asked of the woman caught in adultery (John 8:2-11). The Lord turned the tables on the woman's accusers, forcing them to scatter. But in the end Jesus tells her, "Go your way, and from now on do not sin again." The woman could only start again by dropping the baggage of her past life and moving in a new direction.

The uncertainty of new beginnings, fresh starts in life, raises fear among many people. We cling to the past as a source of strength. It might not be all we want it to be, but what we have we know. Our sense of security is lost if we move out from our level of comfortableness. What we do not realize, however, is that past events many times can become a ball and chain around our leg that impedes our movement forward. We are so weighed down, as was the climber, that we cannot attain the summit that we seek in our lives. We are too burdened; the past will not release us. The end result is that we become prisoners of the past. We are chained and stifled, but this is by our own choice. No one has imprisoned us, save ourselves. Thus, the only release is when we let go of the past. When the climber was able to "let go" of the past -- that is to his memories, his beauties, and his causes and concerns -- then he was free to play music and move into the future. Similarly, the prophets of old and the woman caught in adultery were able to move forward only after they dropped their baggage, lightened their loads, and moved in a new direction.

Dropping our baggage, letting go of the past, and moving in new directions is never easy and thus we will need assistance along the way. The help we need must come from within, but it is generated from the outside, namely through faith. Only through complete trust in God can we let go and move into our future. A little story demonstrates the faith we must possess. There was a group of world-renown botanists in the Amazon rainforest looking for rare and possible uncatalogued forms of plant life. The leader of the expedition was searching a deep canyon with his binoculars and spotted a flower he had never seen. He was very excited but wondered how someone could get down the steep canyon. The team decided that the only way was to have a member lowered over the side on a rope. As the botanists were talking, a young boy happened upon the scene. Seeing an opportunity, the leader told the young man, "I'll give you twenty bucks if you will go over the side of this cliff on a rope and obtain a rare flower for us." The boy looked the situation over and replied, "I'll do it, but wait one minute." The boy left and promptly returned with an older man. The boy said, "Now, I will go over the side and get that flower for you, but only if this man holds the rope. He is my father." Who do we trust when we are challenged to drop the past and move in a new direction? Do we trust others, our father, or our God in heaven? Only you can answer!


1. Paraphrased from Brian Cavanagh, T.O.R., "Peak Experience," in The Sower's Seeds (New York: Paulist Press, 2004), pp. 29-30.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons On The Gospel Readings: Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, And Epiphany, New Beginnings in Christ, by Richard Gribble