Luke 9:28-36 · The Transfiguration
Natural Or Supernatural?
Luke 9:28-36
Sermon
by Louis H. Valbracht
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Text: Luke 9:29-31 - And as he was praying, the appearance of his countenance was altered, and his raiment became dazzling white. And behold, two men talked with him, Moses and Elijah, who appeared in glory and spoke of his departure, which he was to accomplish at Jerasalem.

I am sure that there is no one within the sound of my voice who was not vitally aware that a few weeks ago we celebrated Super Sunday. For at least three weeks before that event, every news media, every form of mass communication, had given it top billing. The excitement mounted into an ever-swelling crescendo. The flames of our anticipation had been fanned by a constant reminder that what happened was the greatest event of the year. The implications of the climax of the day were staggering to the imagination. Just in case there is some dull-witted, indifferent, uninformed, unresponsive soul among us, or perhaps some lost explorer who has just gotten back from the long trek through the highlands of Tibet and been out of touch with the world for the last few weeks, I have the excruciating joy of telling you that Super Sunday occurred. This is the Lord's Day on which each year we ascertain whether the AFL or the NFL plays a better brand of football. For millions in the nation, Super Sunday is the culmination of all of their hopes and dreams of the months before.

But then, it's only right that we should be excited. Through the long, pedantic days that we live, we wait for something that is super. We yearn for those brief, fleeting moments when we are raised above the realm of the ordinary into the soul-stirring status of the super; when we can leave, for instance, the humdrum of the neighborhood grocery and push our own cart through the aisles of the supermarket; when we can, at last, leave the hose and the sponge in the garage at home and drive to the super car wash; when we can leave behind the plodding pace of the 600 mile an hour 707 or DC-8 jet and enter the supersonic transport age; when our wash goes from white, bright or light, to super white; when the latest, wide screen, four-hour long, reserved seat, two dollar and seventy-five cent movie goes from a spectacle to a super spectacle.

And so it is only natural that I should speak of the supernatural. I hope you got that play on words - it is only natural that I should speak of the supernatural. This is made even more appropriate by the fact that this is the last Sunday after the Epiphany, and the Gospel usually appointed for this Sunday - as all of the Gospels for the Sundays after Epiphany - deal with miracles.

In the first place, it's rather hard to whip up any excitement over such an event. In this jaded generation, we see miracles every day, like the afternoon when fifty million American homes were tuned in as we sat at home in our relaxicisor chairs and watched the Super Bowl on Super Sunday. Then, too, this miracle-producing generation is always a bit skeptical about any miracles that have not been preceded by human scientific research, technological development and, finally, automated production.

I received a delightful little book from someone at Christmas. It's entitled Children's Letters to God, actual copies of communications with the Almighty that were written by seven or eight year old children. A couple of these are examples of this skeptical outlook. For instance, one little boy writes: "Dear God: Your book has a lot of zip in it. I like science fiction stories. You had very good ideas, and I would like to know where you found them. Your reader, Jimmy." Another young man is even more blunt. He writes: "Dear God: My friend, Arthur, says that you make all the flowers. I don't believe it. Best wishes, Benjamin." Oh, there are a few who believe, but perhaps because of some ulterior motive, such as this girl who writes: "Dear God: My teacher read us the part where all the Jews went through where the water was and were saved. Keep up the good work. I'm Jewish. Love, Paula."

Well, in these years, it's become quite difficult to explain, or to explain away, the miracles. Oh, we come up with some good, reasonable-sounding, everyday explanations, like there's nothing unusual about Jesus changing water into wine. He does that every year. The rain falls, the water falls upon the earth, the grapes grow, and finally, the rain water is transformed into the wine of the grape. Same thing, you see. It just takes a little longer. A perfectly natural explanation for a supernatural event. But then, you run into a scene in a contemporary play in which a drunk is seen sitting at a bar, giggling with alcoholic glee, as he says, "Jesus could change water into wine, and I can sit right here and just by drinking it, change the wine back to water." And so, you will understand the difficulty of explaining, or explaining away, the physical miracles.

So, instead, on Super Sunday, we should take the path of the alternative that is offered to us when we talk about the supernatural. I'm going to speak of another narrative in the Gospel that is offered for this Sunday, one in which we take a real flight into the stratosphere of the supernatural. We are going to talk about the Transfiguration. You all, a moment ago, heard the narrative read. The Lord takes the inner circle of his disciples up into a high mountain. Why? Nothing very practical about that, is there, just climbing a mountain? Maybe he did it as Hillary did Everest, just because it was there. There's nothing you can do on a mountain that you can't do down in a valley, is there? Really? And yet, the Christ of God was foolish enough to take three close friends of his up to a high mountain. What happened there, Matthew could only put down in the stumbling, inarticulate, inadequate words of those who were eyewitnesses: "The countenance of the Lord was enveloped in the light of the sun, blazingly, and the blinding radiance of even his garments was so bright that they were something that the eye could not look upon with any ease."

I was interested in reading again the commentary on this that is presented by the scholars. "No use," they said, "trying to interpret this. No use trying to explain it. No use trying to make it analogous with some other event or narrative in the Gospel. It is unique. It stands alone." Christ is seen talking with Elijah and Moses. These men, representatives of the Law and theProphets: Moses, bringer of the Ten Commandments; Elijah the first of the great prophets. The Law, the prophecy, and between them in radiant light, the gospel in human form in the person of the Christ, the only-begotten Son of God.

Peter was in a kind of stunned trance, and finally, he whispers, "It is good, Lord, that we are here. Let's stay here. Let's build three shrines, one for you, and one for Moses, and one for Elijah, and let us just stay here and worship." Yes, this was Peter speaking, good, old, hardheaded, practical, down-to-earth Peter. No monkey business with him. Good businessman. Leading fisherman. Big man in the community. One of the officers of the Fishermen's Association at Capernium. He didn't lease his boats. None of that shoddy business for him. He was a capitalist. He owned his own boats, and he got his own profit. And yet, this same, down-to-earth Peter said: "Let's stay here. Let's stay here on the mountain, far from the fish, the nets, the boats, and the business."

Impractical? You bet your sweet life! A delve, perhaps, into the supernatural? Well, maybe. But Peter said it later, as he wrote in his epistle: "Do you think we were making up cunningly devised fables when we told you about the power of the coming of Jesus Christ? We saw these things with our own eyes. We were with him on the holy mountain. We saw the majesty. We saw heaven touch earth. We saw the glory of human life that was always a possibility. We saw that life here in this world could be touched with the radiance of a heavenly and a divine light."

Well, that's the Transfiguration, and let's face it, to read this narrative to this people, in this culture, in this day in history is like reading a page out of Alice in Wonderland, Mother Goose, or Hans Christian Andersen. We have about as much relationship to all of this as we have to Robin Hood, or Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, or King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. "This," we say, "is not down-to-earth, practical religion. This doesn't show us the way to peace, poise, prosperity and practical living." No, it doesn't. It doesn't at all. It just brings the light of heaven into these dull, lusterless, monotonous, stupid, groveling, boring lives of ours. Just the light of heaven! That can't be very practical, can it? But then you bring up the old accusation: "But this is supernaturalism in religion, and that's outmoded. We want none of it. Intellectually, historically, practically, we are all beyond that." Peter didn't think so. I don't think so, either. Again, the trouble, dear friends, is with us, not with the stars.

How did it happen, this split cosmos, this two-storied universe, this divided world, this natural world in which we must live with our number twelves planted solidly on its ground, and this supernatural, dreamlike, fairy tale world with which we, as modern thinkers, can have no truck? Take a brief look at history. In ancient times, everything that happened was regarded as the result of personal causation. Either God or Satan, angels or demons, men or women did everything that was done. Nobody had yet dreamed of what we call "natural law," a vast system of law-abiding procedures by which we explain everything that happens in the universe. In the Bible, incidentally, there is no word that can be translated "nature" in the sense in which we constantly use the word to mean "universal, law-abiding order." Your teachers are teaching your children, day in, day out, using that word nature, and it never existed in those years or in the Bible in any way.

Of course, men came to recognize that there were certain ways that things usually happened, just as children know that if they throw a stone up, it comes back again to earth, and they would be indeed surprised if they threw it up and it didn't return. But anything like a law of gravitation, the ancients never dreamed of. Miracles, to them, didn't involve any broken laws. There were no laws to break. Miracles to them were simply happenings that were unusual or unfamiliar or surprising. And so, if the sun stood still at the order of Joshua, or a man walked upon water, or changed water into wine, that was amazingly out of the ordinary, but there were no laws broken.

And turn from that world view to ours, and what a difference! First, in Greek philosophy, a general idea of the cosmic order was developed, and then science came, making cosmic order a matter of specific laws, mathematically stated, controlling everything from molecules to stars. And so, the natural order grew and grew, invading realm after realm, even into realms like psychology and sociology, until religion, often fighting fiercely against the advance of science and the expansion of the natural order, invented a new word - oh, the tragedy of it - they invented a new word, "supernatural, supernatural!" That word had never been needed before, but now religion thought it was necessary. What happened was, however, that more and more, as the natural order expanded, the supernatural, as religion conceived of it, dwindled. Consider thunderstorms, for instance. Luther said that reading the first Chapter of John was the best way to frighten away the demons and stop a thunderstorm - imagine, this is Martin Luther - because, you see, everyone thought that the Devil caused thunderstorms in Luther's day. Christians started out putting bells in their church towers, not to call the faithful to worship, but to frighten away the demons. And so, all over Europe, you find old bells inscribed with such mottos as Ad Fugandos demones to frighten away demons.

Once in Boston, when a comet hung over the city, Increase Mather, the great preacher of the Puritan age in this country, fairly paralyzed his congregation by pointing out the comet and saying: "The Lord has fired His beacons in the heavens among the stars of God. This fearful sight is still within view. God is about to set His warning piece in heaven off." That is supernaturalism! I need not multiply the instances. From that old, split cosmos, split into upstairs and downstairs - how it has grown! - with the upstairs once in a while invading the downstairs, we come to our modern world, and what a change, a staggering change. It still affects the thought and life of every one of us. In our time, we have seen, for instance, changes taking place in Russia over-night. Only recently, the peasants in Russia, when they wanted a fertile field, would call the priest and have him sprinkle the field with holy water. Now the peasant uses scientific agriculture in the rotation of crops.

By this time you're saying, "Well, why fuss about it? The change has been all clear gain. Who wants to go back to the old supernaturalism?" To which I answer, "Nobody in his right senses does." But think whatchange this world view has made in our view of God. God, as he was popularly imagined, inhabited the supernatural. He made himself real to men by supernatural invasions of the world. Once in a while, he went downstairs. When, therefore, the supernatural dwindled, as man's knowledge and discovery stretched further and further, expanding what he called the natural realm, as that expanded, the supernatural dwindled. And for many of those impressed by natural law, their impulse was to take God to the frontiers of the universe and bow him out. As Staley, one of the great astronomers, has said, "We no longer need the God hypothesis to explain the universe."

For many today, the natural order is everything, fills everything, and explains everything. Oh, the sheer nonsense, the ignorant stupidity of splitting up the universe. God lives up there in the supernatural. We live here in the down-to-earth, the practical, the real, the natural. Poppycock! This is a universe, and, as the word implies, a unity. Either everything is natural, or everything is supernatural. Where does the one begin and the other end? Is a growing field of waving corn natural or supernatural? Note another change that has been brought about by our modern science, new world view. Under the old supernaturalism in religion, it was regarded - religion was - as a way of gaining special favors from on high. And so, people stood in the natural and cried to the supernatural for some gift to be sent downstairs to them.

Many Christians still hold this picture of the world - or shall we say they half hold it? - thinking and acting one way in the world and another way in church. They pray for rain, but like the shrewd old Maine farmer, they don't think it's likely to get any with that west wind blowing. They pray against plague and pestilence, but they're very glad that they have quarantines and sanitation and antibiotics and inoculations that they can really depend upon. Like Russian peasants, they find that crop rotations and proper fertilization is more effective than the holy water - but they kind of hate giving up the holy water. So, they stand in the natural, and they feel rather silly, as we all feel silly, don't we, crying for favors up to the supernatural?

What is really silly is this stupid picture of the split cosmos. This is one world. It is one spiritual system throughout, and we never get what we want until we fulfill the conditions for getting it. If we want physical results, we have to fulfill physical conditions. If we want spiritual results, we have to fulfill spiritual conditions. This is a real world in which we live, and it is at once both stern and magnificent.

The Transfiguration? The message is plain. Three, solid, practical men stood on top of a mountain, a solid, real, natural mountain of good, hard earth and rock. But they found that life on that mountain could be bathed in the glory of heaven. How seldom we use that word today, except in church - glory, the light of heaven. It was shining. It was shining from a very real flesh and blood person, a man who came from his mother's womb, just as you and I, a man who lived and walked the dusty roads of history, just as you and I - the Christ of God. And that same glory of heaven can shine at every human face and life, if we will only let it. In hard, practical terms, this is the only real way we can escape the boredom, the horrible defeating monotony of our materialistic, our natural existence, to live close to this mountain and, whenever possible, to live on top of it.

There are only two ways to conceive of God in our day. "God," said Paley, the astronomer, for one, "God is like a watchmaker. The world is His watch. He made it and mechanically it runs on. Once in a while, He tinkers with it, fixes it up as best suits His own purposes, so that the strongest evidence of Christianity's truth is this divine intervention in miracles." In other words, the only way we can prove the existence of God is when He comes down and tinkers with a watch.

Now, turn to the other view of Wordsworth, for instance:

... I have feltA presence that disturbs me with the joyOf elevated thoughts; a sense sublimeOf something far more deeply interfused,Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,And the round ocean and the living air,And the blue sky, and in the mind of man;A motion and a spirit, that impelsAll thinking things, all objects of all thought,And rolls through all things.

Does anybody want to go from that back to the watchmaker God? No, this is one world. This is one cosmos, God's world throughout, with its law-abiding regularities, with its amazing artistries, whose evolution to ever and ever higher structures, whose creation of personality, whose endless possibilities of spiritual growth and social progress indicate that it's a spiritual system. God is here, right here, not an occasional visitor from the supernatural. He's not a visitor to the world - he's the soul of it, the basis of its life, its undergirding purpose, its indwelling friend, its eternal goal. Life with him, through him, in him is truly - Super Sunday or not- life on the mountain.

Yes, a good, hard, practical, down-to-earth Peter saw the glory of it, the majesty. You and I can, too.

C.S.S. Publishing Co., EXIT: INTERSTATE 0, by Louis H. Valbracht