Luke 9:28-36 · The Transfiguration
To the Mountain
Luke 9:28-36
Sermon
by Charles Curley
Loading...

 The story of the transfiguration of Jesus often seems like a way-station in Lent - a surprising oasis that catches us off guard after the sun-parched desolation of the temptation in the wilderness. Yet this story of God’s glory poured out on Jesus on the mountain is only a brief respite on the weary way to the cross. We never seem to fully grasp what it is all about, and it is soon forgotten as we journey on through the more familiar pathways of Lent. We, after all, know that Lent is not about glory, Lent is not about life - don’t we? But why is that? Why do we assume that Lent is only about death - and we have to wait for Easter to talk about life? Why do we assume that suffering must come first, so that reward can follow? Why do we insist that there must be no break in the bleak inevitability impelling Jesus to Jerusalem and the cross? In spite of all we believe, here stands the transfiguration in the midst of Lent, like a feast in the middle of a long dry fast.

What happened that day on the mountain, in this story of light and spirit and heroes long since dead? Who knows? I certainly can’t say I understand the transfiguration, even though I have read many scholarly accounts which try to rationalize the transfiguration into something understandable: ... it was a dream, ... a story made up by the disciples after the resurrection, ... a vision, a hallucination, ... and on and on. Not one of these feeble attempts comes close to touching the power of that event. Does it matter that we do not understand? Not even Peter, who was there, understood! The issue is not understanding, or even believing, the issue is transfiguration - of Jesus, of the disciples, and our transfiguration as well! And transfiguration, for us, is something we seldom experience in our lives. And those few times when some mighty change comes upon us, transfigures us, are often not the most welcome times in our lives.

It sometimes seems to me that there is far too much emphasis on belief in the Christian religion - on intellectual assent or emotional commitment. And far too little attention paid to action. Moses went up a mountain and there the glory of the Lord was revealed to him. The purpose of that revelation was not to change Moses, to make him more spiritual, more loving, more sensitive. The purpose of that revelation was to transfigure the way of living of the whole people of God. So it is with Jesus.

It is no more an accident that we read this story in the midst of Lent than it was that the story was recorded in the gospels in the midst of experiences of suffering and prophecies of death. And that is just where the revelation of God’s glory belongs. Jesus did not take a mountaintop vacation to "get away from it all" - to escape, to rest, to be renewed. Jesus was transfigured on the mountain to meet the challenge waiting for him back down in the valley. The transfiguration was not meant to be looked back on nostalgically as a "break" from the suffering of the world, but to be seen as a gift in God’s grace impelling Jesus deeper and deeper into the pain and darkness of a suffering world - until that pain and darkness culminated in the cross.

Peter, James and John could not understand on the mountain that God’s glory was not to be found apart from the suffering world in the valley. Peter wanted to build "booths" to stay on the mountain, to bask in the glory. But the blinding light on the mountaintop was a declaration of the presence of the glory of God in the world. That glory is not something you wait for, hope for, seek for - that glory of God is already present in the midst of a tired, aching world, wherever God’s people do God’s work. The transfiguration is not a vision of the way the world could be, it is a declaration of the way the world already is, when God’s people accept the promise and live out the vision.

Peter wanted to stay on the mountaintop and bask in God’s glory. Jesus knew that God’s glory was not on the mountain, but down in the valley where an epileptic boy waited to be healed, the disciples were arguing about who would be greatest in the kingdom, and Lazarus, Jesus’ friend, was dying. God’s glory was down in the valley where a cross waited on a Friday called Good. This is the glory of God, transfiguring the world.

Some years ago, I took part in the funeral of a minister, who was one year younger than I. In the midst of tears, there was life. He had died in faith, surrounded by a loving congregation brought together by his dying. In the love which that congregation shared with him and his family, far beyond any requirement or expectation, for his last year, there was life. In some way, all of us who lived through his last, hard year, were transfigured. The glory of God is all around us, even on the way to the cross. Peter wanted to stay on the mountain and live in the moment of glory forever, but it could not be. Life moves on, and the way of Jesus moved on to the cross. Moments of transformation are not to be held on to, but are to change you to live on in a different way, even after the light is gone. The question in every transfiguration, every conversion, every burst of enthusiasm, is: does it change us and enable us to live better the lives to which we are called? Believing is only the beginning.

The transfiguration of Jesus is not an oasis, a temporary resting place in the gospels, but a sign of the presence of God’s glory, alive in our world - and it is not by our words, nor by our beliefs that the reality of that glory will be judged in our lives, but by the transfiguration caused in us, our lives and our actions, when we behold the glory of God.   

CSS Publishing Company, From Ashes on to Life, by Charles Curley