2 Peter 1:12-21 · Prophecy of Scripture
The Need for Transfiguration
2 Peter 1:12-21
Sermon
by Hubert Beck
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Who has not felt the need for transfiguration? Who has not felt the Cinderella in them needing to be transformed from a deprived stepsister to a beautiful princess? Who has not felt so drab, so hum-drum, so dull, so boring even to one’s own self that one could hardly stand it? In moments like that - and for some people a good part of their life seems to be spent like that! - we feel that we simply must get beyond ourselves. We want to feel transfigured at least, to feel bright and cheery and extraordinary and unique and charming and interesting so that we may gain a new sense of self-importance.

The world offers a variety of ways to do that, for it knows how to play off of feelings like that. Music has a way of transporting us out of our every-day world into another kind of world. Contemporary music with its driving rhythms and its compelling pulsations of sound is often accused of this as though it were demonic, but classical music of the most traditional sort can also draw people up and transform them in all kinds of ways. Literature and drama are vehicles for doing the same thing - to take people outside of the realities of the moment and to lift them up into another dimension, transforming them from simple readers in a living room into heroes and heroines of the highest order, or changing mere spectators at a play to charming masters and mistresses of their own fate. Such transformations are not seen as evil disguises of reality, but rather as mountaintop experiences that enable one to live better when one returns to the valley.

Not all transformations are quite as innocent, though. It seems almost universal to have at the disposal of societies alcoholic beverages or drugs of various sorts designed to either forget life as it is daily experienced or to transform it into vividly colorful fantasies. Some think of these "trips" as explorations of other, more transcendental worlds. But the more such artificial stimulants toward such visions are used, the more aware we become that they are "playing with fire," endangering the physical and mental welfare of those who use them. When alcoholism has become one of the most prevalent forms of debilitation in society one has to conclude that the need for transforming that which is experienced in daily living has become an obsession rather than a past-time, and it is an alarming sign of our times.

One by no means exhausts the ways of transforming life with such a brief catalogue, however. Wealth will supposedly drive out the demons of poverty, and prestige will supposedly transform Cinderella into a princess. But somehow every effort like this only breeds the need for new transformations and never seems to satisfy the deep inner needs of our humanity.

In the end, every effort at transformation proves to be delusionary, diverting our attention from the realities that surround us rather than transforming the reality itself. What we need is something to change reality, not to change our perception of it.

The text set before us this morning speaks of a transformation experienced by Peter, James and John that set their world upside down. The story of what Peter says he personally saw as an eyewitness is told in the Gospel today. It is a story that contains many of the elements that are consistently mentioned throughout the Bible in what are known as "theophanies," revelations of God himself. The mountain, for example, cannot help but remind us of the First Lesson for today where Moses is given a vision of God’s presence on Mount Sinai. The glory that surrounds them is spoken of in terms familiar to appearances of God. The glory is accompanied by a cloud, another typical way of speaking of the presence of God. All this is related to and envelops Christ, himself, in the story, and he became white as light, which may not be too far from the idea of the "devouring life" we hear about as another sign of God’s presence in the First Lesson. All these signs are typical of the presence of God in other stories and are quite evidently meant to reinforce the words that come from the cloud, "This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him." In Christ himself the revelation of God is made perfect. All the signs surround him and superimpose themselves on him so that he and they are inter-connected. The words and the signs all mark Christ out as the Son of God, and are plainly designed to become the basis of such a confession.

That is why Peter writes, "We did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of his majesty. For when he received honor and glory from God the Father and the voice was borne to him by the Majestic Glory, ‘This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased,’ we heard this voice borne from heaven, for we were with him on the holy mountain." No wonder they spoke of the "prophetic word made more sure." Would you not have felt compelled to confess the Christ as God’s Son under circumstances like this?

One wonders just what may have gone through their minds as these three men experienced this, though. They were, after all, quite surely convinced by now that he was somebody very special and unique. Were they quite ready to receive the full impact of this kind of vision, though? Any doubts they may have entertained before this as to who it was they travelled the roads of Palestine with were surely dispelled by now. They knew full well that they had been keeping company with the divine. What other kind of response is possible in such moments of recognition than to fall on one’s face and be filled with awe?!

Nor is it any wonder that they ask, as we are told, to build three places there for Jesus, Moses and Elijah (remember how closely the latter two also were connected to God ... Moses being buried by God in an unknown site and Elijah being taken to God in a fiery chariot). It was not only a sacred site, but a place at which the disciples longed to remain. Why should they want to return to the plain when the very presence of God was so openly visible to them on the mountain? Here the veil of fallen reality was drawn back to show the glory of the transcendent presence that far surpassed the limitations of our everyday existence. When even the slightest peephole is opened so that people can see the glory of the eternal, the time-bound seems so common by comparison that one just doesn’t want to return to it. Here on the mount Peter, James and John had caught only the briefest of such visions, but it was enough to tie them to the mountain for as long as possible.

Jesus denies them such a privilege, though. They must immediately set their feet back to the valley again. To have seen Jesus in his transfigured moment before them is to have seen beyond what their eyes could ordinarily discern of him, to be sure - but they still had him! The glory that was clearly seen had disappeared, as had Moses and Elijah, but Jesus, himself, was still with them. The one who had been glorified remained, and thus, hidden though it may have been, the glory itself remained in the presence of the person of Jesus. They must keep their eyes on him, their ears fastened to his instruction ("listen to him," the voice had told them!), their lives fastened to his life. Then the glory, hidden though it may have been, would remain among them.

Moreover, the glory was to come to the climax of the cross. Not only was the glory revealed for the sake of the disciples, but also for Jesus, the final steps were now being set out upon. As though the Father had given approval of all that had led to this moment and now commissioned him for the completion of the path, the vision was the beginning of the end for Jesus. He takes the disciples back to the valley and determinedly turns his steps toward the ultimate end of his coming into the world. It was to be a most difficult journey, one that would bring sweat as drops of blood from his brow, agonized cries of loneliness from his lips, tortured death to his body. This final strengthening and ultimate assurance that he had set his course properly is to be his power for the way now set before him.

So also is it to be the abiding vision by which the faith of the disciples which would be so sorely tested would he sustained. That is what makes the words of the Gospel so difficult to understand as Jesus warns them, coming down from the mountain, "Tell no one the vision, until the Son of man is raised from the dead." One would think that a major reason for coming down from the mountain would be to share this revelation of God’s glory with the other disciples who were not privileged to be present. They, too, needed this preparation for the ordeal ahead. But to them such a glimpse of glory is denied, even by word of mouth, until after the ultimate glory of his Resurrection is shared among them all.

Perhaps we can already here learn something, though. Revelations like this are few and far between. From even the very select ones of Christ only three are privileged to see the transfiguration. That was not only a privilege to them, but also the responsibility placed upon them to be the strength of those less privileged in the trying days of the week or two that lay ahead, leading ultimately to Jesus’ crucifixion.

For these who had not seen the vision, though, there was still present among them the one who had carried the vision on the mount! Jesus remained among them and they saw him as they had always seen him - not through the eyes of the transfiguration, but with the same eyes that still were drawn to his authority, his strength, his wisdom, his uniqueness even while left with the old and still unanswered questions about just exactly who he was and what he understood as his mission.

Shortly after this account Matthew tells us that Jesus told them plainly that their journey to Jerusalem was being made so that he might be "delivered into the hands of men, and they will kill him, and he will be raised on the third day." (Matthew 17:22, 23) This distresses all of them greatly, of course. We are not told that Peter, James and John, even with this heavenly revelation still dancing in their heads, are immune to this distress. "How could one so recently gloried by the Father ever be taken by men and killed?" they must have asked among themselves. "Surely one so close to the Father as we have known him to be is immune to the whims of men," they must have surmised. And so perhaps more even than the other disciples their dismay must have grown as they watched the rapidly disintegrating safety of their Master give way to full scale rejection by the people. One can understand Peter and John’s concern about following Jesus into the courtyard where his judgment was taking place. They had seen him glorified, and now they saw him humiliated and scorned and rejected.

Do you remember how several weeks ago we already mentioned Jesus’ statement that "Now is the Son of man glorified"? We pointed out then that this assertion was made at the last supper just before he is taken prisoner and crucified. (John 13:31) Here we see the glory of the Lord on the Mount of Transfiguration being borne in the everyday body of Jesus of Nazareth on the way that will lead to the cross. There, indeed, he will be glorified as on another hill the sins of the world will weigh down the Son of man until life is crushed out of him. He makes plain in going this way, though, that "the ruler of this world ... has no power over me; but I do as the Father commanded me, so that the world may know that I love the Father." (John 14:30, 31) The glory of God is revealed in the humble obedience of a Son who can bear the eternal glory to the mountain that holds our attention on this day and can also bear the sins of humankind on another mountain that shall hold our attention not many weeks from now. In this way the love of God takes up the sins of the world, nailing them to the cross of Jesus, and the transfiguration of the entire world begins to take shape and form.

Remember how we started the thoughts of this sermon? We asked, "Who has not felt the need for transfiguration? Who has not felt the Cinderella in them needing to be transformed from a deprived stepsister to a beautiful princess?" Implicit in the question was the promise of some sort of an intention to tell how this could all take place. Instead of keeping that implied promise, though, our attention has strangely been drawn from our own transformation to another one who was transfigured and transformed. It was not Peter, James and John who were transfigured on that mountain. It was Jesus. He was set before them as the key to transformation of all life. They had not gone to the mountain expecting anything extraordinary when suddenly their whole world changed - which affected them in turn.

Perhaps all too often we expect transformation from within, as though if we get into the right setting or surround ourselves with the proper environment and people or think differently or take the right dosage of whatever is supposed to transform us, the transformation will arise from within us.

Jesus himself is not spoken of as requesting the transfiguration, nor is he spoken of as doing anything to "bring it about." It was the gift of the Father, although signs are present in the text that Jesus knew what would happen and had his disciples along precisely to witness the moment. But it was a gift from the outside, the work of the Father, and not merely an inner experience or a change moving from inside out. The disciples saw what God gave to his Son and through him to those who were with him. It was, as Peter describes it in our text, "a lamp shining in a dark place" to which we would all do well to lift our eyes "until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts." Peter remembers it as an early vision of that for which we all look, "the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." The power of Jesus’ coming in glory was revealed there already, and thus the transformation of Peter took place not from within himself, but by the glory of the Lord revealed to him in Christ. One who has seen such glory can never forget it ... nor can one ever be the same again once it has been seen!

Peter explicitly says he writes this to communicate the glory of that vision to others. When we read the text and ponder over it we ever so briefly leave our time and place here to stand on the mountaintop with him and see with him the glory of the Lord in Jesus, to be strengthened thereby in our confession of faith, to be swerved and drawn in our ordinary path of life into the way of the Lord. Sharing it among ourselves is to be lifted out of who we are for just a bit in order to be the see-ers of the glory, to set our eyes again on the Christ, to have our lives transformed by the presence of Christ. He who claimed us in baptism and feeds us on his body and blood comes among us. Not from within us, but from among us the transfiguration arises! It is a revelation outside of us that changes us!

For all that, is the simple ordinariness of this moment still confusing? Does it seem difficult from here in the valley to fully grasp the glory revealed on the mountain? It surely is, and that is why the disciples wanted to stay. But Jesus told them that it was not to be so. They who had seen the glory of the Lord in this extraordinary moment must now learn to see the extraordinary in every moment. They must go with him again to the plain where they would keep their eyes fixed on him, remembering the glory that had enveloped and affirmed him. But in remembering the glory of the mountaintop they were now to see it in the everyday man of Nazareth who was to be crucified, dead and buried. In him and in the ordinariness of a man like us in all things save sin was to be seen the glory of the Lord! Only momentarily are the mountaintops experienced, but the challenge is to see him and his glory in the daily way of life where things so often seem dull and every-day and common-place.

We may have various experiences we could call mountaintop experiences. Perhaps in a beautiful sunset, a glorious strain of music, the satisfying tiredness of a hard day’s work well done, the uplifting friendship of a favorite person, our eyes may be opened to see the glory of the Lord, to know the wonder of his love, to feel the nearness of his presence. All these everyday things can transform an ordinary moment into something extraordinary, and we may find ourselves transported to a mountaintop that will make it easier travelling in the valley.

None of them have the same power, though, that an encounter with the Christ transfigured on the mount can have. It is in him that God has chosen to confront us with his special refreshing and renewing and transforming presence. Through him God’s fullest revelation is made available to us and the glory of the Lord is communicated to our lives. By his presence our life is changed from a hopeless and tear-filled drudgery into a sparkling carriage carrying us to the palace of the king!

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Stay In The Son-shine, by Hubert Beck