2 Peter 1:12-21 · Prophecy of Scripture
Night Vision
2 Peter 1:12-21
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Ever eat breakfast by moonlight?

One of my favorite resurrection phrases in John 20 is this one: early and dark. That's when some of the disciples discovered the greatest event in the history of Planet Earth: Jesus' resurrection from the dead.

Think of how many things we miss in life because we aren't accessible to the world of early and dark. We aren't awake to the early and dark moments of life. It was only those two disciples (Peter and John) and the apostle to the apostles (Mary) who lived the experience of Easter morning because they didn't sleep through the most early and dark experience in their lives.

Maybe as a preparation for Valentine's Day you could try some early and dark experiences, and discover some surprising things. I'll never forget one winter early and dark morning in the Pacific Northwest. A big full moon was out and hung above the western horizon in the early and dark morning sky.

It was beautiful but distinctly strange - to have a bright celestial light shining down on the Sweet family from the west while eating our breakfast cereal. A dreary week of dark wet skies had made sunlight a distant memory, so this moonlit breakfast was the brightest, fullest light we'd seen in days. This moonlight breakfast was a surprising gift in the midst of endless days of darkness.

There are two kinds of people in this world. Those who like to drive at night. And those who hate to drive at night. How many lovers of night driving do we have here? How many haters of night driving do we have here?

Driving in the dark requires two different kinds of vision. First, you need owl eyes. Have you ever noticed that an owl's eyes are also it's ears. The eyes are even shaped like a satellite dish. The owl hears into sight, and has the ability to discern shapes, to tell lighter grey from darker grey, without the benefit of sunlight.

But you also need the ability to keep focused on the road when the bright, blinding lights of an approaching vehicle glare into your face. Night vision isn't just about seeing in the dark. Night Vision is about letting the dark and the light take turns at being the center of your attention.

On this Transfiguration Sunday a clear, unambiguous light seems to shine upon Jesus. For Peter, James, and John, who stood on the mountaintop with Jesus, who witnessed his shining face, who felt the closeness of the bright cloud, who heard the declaration from the divine voice - there could be no question about Jesus' divine identity and power.

And yet almost immediately after this mountaintop experience the disciples return to their bickering ways. With two thousand years of Christian church history for us to lean on it, it's hard to imagine how Peter, James and John couldn't have been as transformed by this moment as Jesus was transfigured by it.

But there were times when these three eyewitness disciples were blinded by the light, not illumined by it. They could neither grasp its majesty, nor see in what direction it was shining. There were times when the transfiguration remained an isolated spotlight, an unconnected mountaintop experience, until after the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension.

It took the gift of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost to regenerate the light of the transfiguration into the life of the new Christian communities. It's only the post-Pentecost Peter, who is now outfitted with true night vision, who can recall and testify to the power of this transfiguration event.

And yet ironically, the testimony in Second Peter It's so much about the miracle he personally witnessed on that mountaintop as it is about the event his faith knows lies in the future. The testimony of 2 Peter is that because of the transfiguration in the past, the faithful can trust in the future. Post-resurrection faith has given the apostles a new kind of vision, faith-vision, the clear sight provided by the Holy Spirit and the faith it enables them to hold.

Here are a couple of Night Vision stories that have deeply touched me recently. You are familiar with one, most likely. The other one is one of those early and dark stories that you miss if you're not awake.

We live in a culture where vision is another name for how to get rich. For some vision has resulted in untold riches. The vision of the Carnegies and Vanderbilts. The vision of a Henry Ford, Howard Hughes, and Sam Walton. The vision of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and Paul Allen.

But for others the vision thing hasn't worked out so well in the world's valuation system. The vision of Joan of Arc got her burned at the stake. The vision of Martin Luther got him excommunicated from the church. The vision of Nelson Mandela got him a half-life in jail. Especially people with Night Vision can easily be dismissed as crazy, unrealistic, ridiculous.

On this Super Bowl Sunday I can't help but lift up the "cock-eyed" Night Vision of one young man named Matt Leinart. Matt Leinart is the USC quarterback. USC is the national champion college football team.

Leinart has one more year of eligibility. But he has brought his team every honor any coach or alumni could dream of. NFL teams started throwing around figures of 14 million or more if he would sign and turn pro.

So what does Leinart do? He announced that he's passing up the millions of dollars, risking injury which would deny him those millions of dollars, and returning for his final year to USC. He's decided to return to school and continue to mooch off mom and dad. T. J. Simers wrote the following excerpt in the Los Angeles Times.

"He's been mooching off us for 21 years; what's one more year?" Bob Leinart said.

Linda and Bob Leinart produced a gifted quarterback who could have left USC with a degree and signed an NFL contract that would have put something like $14 million in the bank under the kid's name.

Last year, Bob said he refinanced his home to pay the $20,000 premium for a $1 million Lloyd's of London policy in the event his son could no longer play football. "That was a killer," Bob said. "Biggest check I've ever written."

Matt gets a $950 stipend as a student athlete, but Bob said, "His rent is something like $750 a month, so we're always there if he needs something."

When it came time to talk NFL, father and son met several times over lunch, which Bob always bought. "Who else?" Bob said.

The week before the final decision, the family went over everything while out for dinner, which Bob bought. And yet, Bob said, "This never came down to money. That's not what this family is about."

For everyone else, of course, it came down to the money. Some folks were so incensed that Matt didn't take the money they took to calling him stupid. And surprisingly, not all these people had degrees from UCLA.

Why did so many people slam Matt Leinart for returning to college? How many of us here this morning aren't certain what we would have done if we were in Matt Leinart's shoes?

What's wrong with us, what's wrong with our vision, when we think something is wrong with this kid?

"Look at all the money he's passing up." "He's crazy." "What if he gets hurt?" "If he has a bad year, look the money he'll lose."

Matt Leinart has a Night Vision that places some things on a higher plane of reference and reverence than money: things like loyalty, community, school spirit, teammates, and not being in any hurry to grow up.

Can our own vision this morning see beyond dollar signs and easy answers?

This is where my second Night Vision story comes in. The most basic of all human instincts is that of self-preservation. It's only natural that we look out for number one, that we do our utmost to insure our own survival.

There are, of course, countless examples of those with bleeding heart myopia to counter such a claim. What is it that forces our hearts and minds and bodies to discount the risk that's right before our eyes, and instead choose to act with reckless compassion.

(I got this story from Wendy Owen; [1]wendyowen@news.oregonian.com.)

Flames Force Decision To Act at Crash Scene The Oregonian, 18 January 2005, A1.

Travis Jackson couldn't believe his eyes. Driving home late one night from work, the 1996 Jeep Cherokee in front of him suddenly veered off State Route 500 in Vancouver [Washington], hit a guardrail, and burst into flames.

He stopped his vehicle, dialed 911, and asked others who had stopped to gawk if anyone had a fire extinguisher.

No one did. And no one came forward to help the driver trapped in the vehicle.

So he rushed to the car, tried to open the driver-side door, but it was too crushed to open. Suddenly Dennis Kinsey stood by his side. A waiter at Ruth Chris' Steakhouse in Portland, Kinsey also was driving home from work. The two of them together started working on the back door.

The people on the sidelines were yelling at them: "Get back. It's going to blow. The flames are getting worse." But Jackson and Kinsey refused to stop trying to open the doors, and eventually got one open enough to pull out the bleeding driver from the vehicle.

As soon as they laid him down at a safe distance from the flaming wreckage, the interior of the vehicle burst into a fireball of flames. No rescue vehicles had yet arrived on the scene. "Without their help," said Jim Flaherty of the Vancouver Fire Department, "the driver would have died."

Jackson's wife was a little upset that her 25-year-old husband had risked his life to save a stranger. "You don't even stop for an old lady with a flat tire," she said she told him. But when reporters visited Jackson at his home, both wife and daughters beamed with pride at their brave husband and father. When asked why he did it, Jackson said simply: "We had a choice to make. We could watch somebody die or do something. We chose to do something."

Everyone here this morning has a choice to make. We can watch someone die. Or we can do something. I am proud of this church for choosing to do something in the tsunami relief fund (rattle off some of the ministries that your church is supporting and for which your church is sacrificing. Better yet, get people in the congregation to tell stories of how your church has Night Vision that conflicts with the vision of the world, and the compassion and justice ministries that tie your church together.


1. wendyowen@news.oregonian.com

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet