Luke 9:28-43
March 2, 2025 Transfiguration
Eight days earlier than this event of transfiguration,
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Transfiguration James Janknegt |
Jesus was telling his disciples that he would
undergo great suffering at the hands
of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed.
He
also said he would be raised after all that,
but I’m sure that’s not what stuck in the minds of Peter
and the rest of the disciples.
I’m
sure all that Peter and the other disciples heard
was that the mission of Jesus would end in failure.
That their leader would be arrested and killed that he would
suffer.
That everything they were working for would not come to pass.
That they would be humiliated.
That everything was going to turn out bad.
If
a CEO gave that kind of talk:
Your leader will be arrested, suffer and be killed -- and rise
again.
lots of investors and workers would jump ship and
that company would soon be bankrupt.
If I gave that kind of talk in front of a congregation,
you all would wonder what was wrong with me
and what was the point of going on.
Maybe Peter
and the rest of the disciples
were having some of those thoughts and
conversations among
themselves. Wondering why they were
doing this
if their leader was going to be arrested
and killed.
Maybe
they even thought of leaving Jesus and
abandoning
the whole thing before they were taken
down with it.
But
, in the middle of this swirling anxiety and doubt,
eight days later, Jesus brings his three
closest disciples
up to the mountain to pray with him.
Probably a typical afternoon event for them.
But
while they were up there, it says Jesus is transformed.
He is turned into a bright light, his clothes and his whole being.
And there with him are two old testament prophets,
Elijah and Moses. How they knew it was them,
I don’t know, but some how they knew.
Wow. It must have been awesome.
It is good to be here.
Peter briefly entertains the notion that they
should just stay up there.
He offers to build three tents for Elijah, Moses, and Jesus.
And they could all just escape up the mountain.
But it also said that he didn’t know what he was talking about.
He knew that Jesus doesn’t offer an escape.
Jesus didn’t say, follow me to a place of safety and assurance.
Jesus said, take up your cross, and follow me.
Peter knew
that Jesus ministry
was not on the top of the mountain,
Jesus
ministry is down in the deep valleys.
And just to
prove this, Jesus and the story takes
us down the mountain again.
And the disciples encounter a boy
with a demon that the disciples could not
expel. Back to the difficulties.
The disciples went back to the swirling anxiety
and doubt, and back to the uncomfortable situations.
But I feel
sure that the disciples did
not feel the same as before they went up there.
The
transfiguration was a gift for those disciples.
For
a brief moment, on the way to the crucifixion in Jerusalem,
God
gave the disciples a vision.
A vision of hope and glory and promise.
A vision of purity and love and resurrection,
to help them go on with the difficult task of following Jesus.
Today, these kind of visions might not be held
in such high regard. If someone said they saw
a vision of Jesus glowing white with Moses
and Elijah, we might tell them they were
mentally ill.
But we still rely on visions to help us through hard times.
Our visions today are maybe a little more pragmatic.
Today,
God still gives us brief visions.,
Today, we still get visions of God’s kingdom on earth
to help us get through the hard times we experience.
And those visions keep us going in times of doubt.
We get visions of kindness, community, sacrifice, and joy.
We see people helping other people, welcoming
others, standing up for others.
We see people who are in desperate situations,
coming back to rejoin life and the world.
We see people standing up for justice,
even at great sacrifice to themselves.
We see peace where there was war,
joy where there was sadness, hope where there was defeat,
life where there was death.
These are our mountaintop moments.
These are our visions.
Martin Luther King jr. said later in the years to follow,
when he lost hope, he would remember the march on Selma.
Or the passing of the civil rights act.
Those were visions for him.
When my friend struggled in her difficult
nursing job, she said she would look at her graduation
pictures and remember her naive ambition,
and her desire to help people,
she would remember the hope she felt at that moment,
and it would get her through those hard times.
That was her vision.
My internship congregation was in an
inner city congregation in Milwaukee
in a very challenging neighborhood.
And it was a struggle to get a choir together,
But they did and it was a mix of older, white
congregation members and younger,
black neighborhood people.
And they sang at their first worship service while I was there.
And it wasn’t technically the best, but it was
very moving to know what had gone into it
and what it took to get everyone together. It was beautiful.
And the pastor, who was inspiration to so many,
got up to preach and he said, this day with this choir
will keep me going for years to come.
That was a vision for him.
And when I wonder what I’m doing here,
I remember that day that one of the
residents of Chimney Cove came over
to show us the note that told the residents
that the order to evict them had been rescinded.
That is a vision for me.
That was a moment that gave me clarity about what
I was doing here and what this
congregation could do in the community.
The world can be a confusing and messy place.
And it seems to be getting more confusing
and more messy at a rapid pace lately.
It’s a world of swirling anxiety and doubt.
It is a world full of controversy, full of sadness,
illness, full of uncertainty, and darkness.
It is a world full of crucifixion.
But God gives us these moments of clarity,
these moments of certainty, and hope,
and brilliant, blinding light.
And we can go back to them again and again.
They get us through the difficult moments.
This
Wednesday is Ash Wednesday,
the beginning of Lent.
It always follows Transfiguration.
Lent is the time in the church when
We walk with Jesus to his fate at the cross.
When we look right at that
at that confusing and messy, anxiety-filled
world of crucifixions we live in,
and we contemplate our role in it.
We reflect on our sin and the sin of the world
and we repent and work to change.
And this is also a time when we need to hold
onto our visions.
Those tastes of beauty, hope, certainty and light.
Like Peter and James and John got on that mountaintop.
We need to hold onto those moments that tell us
what the Transfiguration of this world could be like.
We hold, with faith, onto the fact that on the other
side of crucifixion there is resurrection.