Luke 9:28-36 · The Transfiguration
What We Have Is A Communication Problem
Luke 9:28-36
Sermon
by King Duncan
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A woman dialed the number of what she thought was the local record shop. A man answered. She asked, "Do you have 10 little fingers and 10 little toes in Alabama?" The man had no idea she was talking about a song. He said, "No, but I do have a wife and 15 kids in Louisiana."

She asked, "Is that a record?" He said, "I don't know if it is a record or not, but it sure is above average." (1)

One of the favorite devices of comedians is that of garbled communication.  An Italian gentleman was trying to learn English. He asked an American friend, "What is a polar bear?" His friend replied that a polar bear lived up North. The Italian asked, "But what does this polar bear do?" "Well," replied the American, "He sits on a cake of ice and eats fish."

"Oh, no," said the Italian, "I will not do it." His befuddled American friend then asked, "What won't you do?" The Italian said, "I have just been asked to be a polar bear at a funeral."

WE LAUGH, BUT COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS ARE A PART OF LIFE. Indeed, they are a most annoying part of life. Of course, sometimes the results ARE humorous. For example, there is a column of household hints carried in many newspapers called ASK HELOISE. Sometime back Heloise wrote about one of her columns.  "Don't assume you're always going to be understood," she says. She goes on to tell about a column she wrote in which she said that one should put a cup of liquid in the cavity of a turkey when roasting it. Believe it or not someone wrote her that "the turkey tasted great, but the plastic cup melted." Now she is very careful to say: "POUR a cup of liquid in the cavity of a turkey."

Some problems in communication are humorous; some are tragic. Go back in history with me. The year is 1812. James Madison is our president. Great Britain has several maritime laws on its books that are interfering with U.S. commerce. U. S. anger over these laws is so great that the United States declares war. Later we learn these laws were actually repealed by Great Britain the day before war was declared. But the U.S. had no way of knowing,. because there was no speedy means of communicating that message.  To make matters worse, after two years of fighting, on Christmas Eve, 1814, British and American negotiators concluded the Treaty of Ghent to end the war. 

Unfortunately there was no way to contact troops in the field. Two weeks later, the British attacked New Orleans, which was defended by a mixed bag of American regulars and volunteers commanded by General Andrew Jackson. The British suffered two thousand casualties and total defeat. The Americans had only a hundred casualties and complete victory, one of their few in the war. The reason the war started after the main grievance had been settled and continued after the peace treaty had been signed was communications. The only way for news to travel was by sea, and the fastest sailing ship could cross the Atlantic in two weeks, but three weeks was more normal and four weeks not unusual, so when the British attacked New Orleans, the peace treaty was still at sea. (2)

How many times has it been said, "What we have here is a communications problem?" Peter Drucker, often called the "Father of American Management," claims that 60 percent of all management problems are a result of faulty communications. A leading marriage counselor says that at least half of all divorces result from faulty communications between spouses. And criminologists tell us that upwards of 90 percent of all criminals have difficulty communicating with other people. (3)

SOMETIMES THE PEOPLE CLOSEST TO US ARE THE HARDEST ONES WITH WHICH TO COMMUNICATE.

Isn't that your experience? That's because all kinds of emotions can get in the way when we are trying to communicate with those we love. Let me introduce you to a term that you may not be familiar with. It is called "gaslighting" ” a phrase coined from the Alfred Hitchcock thriller GASLIGHT, in which the husband convinces his wife that she's going mad. See if this dialogue sounds familiar.

"She seems like a nice girl," Mother says thoughtfully.

But Brian chooses to read something else into her statement. "You sound as if you don't approve," he says.

Now at this point Mother neither approves not disapproves. In all fairness she doesn't know the girl well enough to judge. But Brian has his own doubts about Lisa. He's really not sure he wants to date her again, and he would like to use his mother's judgment to get off the hook. He wants to hear, in her nonjudgmental statement, his own doubts ” and indeed, those doubts are so strong that he does manage to hear them, or to convince himself that he does.

His mother, seeing that Brian has come to a decision about Lisa, says tentatively, "Perhaps she isn't the right girl for you?"

In turn, finally getting the feedback he's fishing for, Brian defuses his own guilt by attacking his mother's judgment. "You never like any of the girls I bring home!"

"Now that's just not true..." says his mother and a family argument is off and running. What Brian has managed is a form of scapegoating. By reading a nonexistent metasignal of disapproval into his mother's voice, he has been able to make a decision without taking the blame for it. A fast mental shuffle has convinced him of his mother's incongruity on the subject of Lisa.

It's a handy way of lessening his own feelings of guilt, and in truth no harm is done by it unless his mother is conned into believing that she initiated Brian's break with Lisa. "Did I really sound that disapproving?" she may ask herself later, and be troubled by the possibility that she can't control her own inner emotions ” even when she's not aware of them.

This self-doubt, if the procedure happens often enough, can turn into a subtle form of what Julius and Barbara Fast in their book, TALKING BETWEEN THE LINES, call gaslighting. Gaslighting can be done unconsciously when it occurs between two people and one constantly puts his own anxiety on the other. If the other allows herself to fall into the role, she will eventually come to believe that she is the anxious one, the upset one, the nervous one, and, in extreme cases, the crazy one. (4)

Does anybody recognize a pattern here from their own family? Gaslighting takes place between parents and teens, between spouses and in almost any significant relationship. It's more than simple misunderstanding. It stresses how complicated communication really is. Which brings us to our main concern for the day.

DID YOU KNOW THAT GOD HAS A COMMUNICATION PROBLEM? God has a problem communicating with you and me and the rest of humanity. God wants us to grow to spiritual maturity. God wants to surround us with love. And yet God does not want to overwhelm our freedom to choose for ourselves.

Back in 1992 the newspapers carried the story of a Christian radio station in Texas, KIJN-AM, that wanted to reach more people with its message. The owners decided to increase the station's wattage from 250 watts to 5,000 watts of power. Some glitch in their increased wattage, however, caused them to be broadcast not just over the radio, but also over local telephones in the area. Nearby residents were quite baffled to hear sermons coming in over their telephone lines. Talk about a Higher Power!

God could overwhelm us with His message for us, if God were of such a mind, but then we would not live by faith. We would live without the burden of uncertainty. In such a world we would remain spiritual adolescents. Thus God communicates from a distance through subtle, sometimes indirect ways.

First, God communicated through a people ” the people of Israel. The people of Israel gave the world a sacred document ” the Hebrew Bible. But still humanity didn't get it. So God went one step farther. In an act of supreme communication, God invaded space and time in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. John put it this way, "The Word became flesh and dwelled among us." Christ is the Word of God made human. That is always the best way to make a point, isn't it? Surround it with flesh. Help us to see it with the mind's eye. That is why I always include stories in my sermons. We can grasp abstract points much better when they are presented in a story, a picture.

Thus we come to our text for the day. Jesus and three of his disciples had gone to a mountain to pray. The weary disciples had fallen asleep. As Jesus prayed, though, his countenance and even the robe he was wearing began to glow until it was a dazzling white. And two men, Moses the law-giver and Elijah the prophet, suddenly appeared and were talking with him. Waking from their sleep the disciples beheld Christ's glory and Peter blurted out, "Master, it is well that we are here; let us make three booths, one for you and one for Moses and one for Elijah." As he said this, a cloud came and overshadowed them. The disciples were afraid as they entered the cloud. And a voice came out of the cloud, saying, "This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to him!" This is God's word to us this day concerning Jesus: "This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to him!" Listen to him! That is the great need at the heart of all humanity ” to listen to the words of Christ.

It has been fashionable in recent times to speak of our society as being a post-Christian society. Rubbish! We are still a pre-Christian society. We have never really listened to Christ's words. We have never really taken him at his word and trusted that his way is The Way to Truth and to Life. Even today his voice is a still, small voice amid the noise of our time. But to those who will trust, Christ still speaks ” words of counsel, words of forgiveness, words of hope. But only to those who listen.

Few captives in war ever suffered more than Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale, a heroic survivor of 2,714 days as a POW in Vietnam. On one occasion, the North Vietnamese handcuffed Stockdale's hands behind his back, locked his legs in heavy irons, and dragged him from his dark prison cell to sit in an unshaded courtyard so other prisoners could see what happened to anybody who refused to cooperate.

According to the Navy's official report of the episode, Stockdale remained in that position for three days. Since he had not been in the sun for a long time, he soon felt weak, but the guards would not let him sleep. He was beaten repeatedly. After one beating, Stockdale heard a sweet sound. It was the sound of a towel snapping. But this towel wasn't making a random noise. In every episode of captivity in recent American history, POWs and hostages have been sustained by ingeniously improvised lifelines of communication. In Vietnam, a clever tap code, in which the number of sequence of taps spelled out letters of the alphabet, became the prisoners' chief means of communication. What James Stockdale heard sitting out in that prison courtyard that day was a towel snapping out in prison code the letters GBUJS. It was a message he would never forget: "God Bless You Jim Stockdale." (5) He will tell you today that it was that simple act of communication that kept him going.

In quiet, subtle, almost indiscernible ways, Christ is speaking to each of us. "God bless you," he is saying. "You can make it." Or he may be counseling us to make a change in our lives. The important thing is that we listen ” listen to Christ. "This is my Son," said the voice from the cloud, "My Chosen; listen to him!"


1. Marvin T. Suitt, Oakdale Baptist Church, Madison Heights, VA

2. Lloyd Dobyns and Clare Crawford-Mason, QUALITY OR ELSE, (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1991).

3. John C. Maxwell, BE A PEOPLE PERSON, (USA: Victor Books, 1989).

4. (New York: The Viking Press, 1979).

5. Dr. Julius Segal, WINNING LIFE'S TOUGHEST BATTLES (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1986).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan