Sermon Matthew 17:1-9
February 26, 2017 Transfiguration
Jesus, Shine in Us
Some of you may have heard me say this week say that I
really don’t like preaching about Jesus’ transfiguration. And you may have
wondered, “What’s got in to her?”
It’s not that I don’t appreciate the story of Jesus on the
mountain with Moses and Elijah. Nor do I refute the story of Peter’s desire to
build tents for the three and stay awhile. I do not have a problem with
shimmering glory or dazzling whites either. But, I want to think and preach
differently today. Listen to this sentence-I’ll read it twice.
The power of the divine mystery in which our
faith seems to totter with the practical and pragmatic action of faith keeps us
at odds with what we can let go and to what we can hold on.
You see this is a Sunday that we sing the contemporary song
(if we think songs from the 80’s is contemporary) Shine Jesus Shine.
We get all caught up in the mountain top experience.
We learn about how we cannot stay on the mountain.
We hear that life is lived in the valley and on the plains.
It’s almost as if we hear this incredible powerful story of
God’s ability to transform and we miss
the whole point.
We take a story of mystery and power and reduce into a moral
lesson.
We chastise Peter once again for ‘not getting it’.
We pride ourselves in being able to understand the story.
We praise God for all our own moments of being on that
mountain where we had our all time ‘mountain top’ experience and we ‘got it’.
We preachers preach about how those moments nourish us to
get us down the mountain to be able to do the work of God in the world.
It all sounds so wonderful and uplifting.
But, I struggle with all those ways in which we tell this
story
because there’s a part of me that doesn’t believe that.
I don’t think we can reduce God to a moral lesson.
I think as preachers we do that because We DON’T understand the mystery.
I’d rather discover the power of God to transform.
God was there on the mountain with six figures-Peter, James,
John, Jesus, Elijah and Moses. We discover the miracle of the story is that: God
spoke. Jesus reached out and touched. The disciples changed.
We are moving into the season of Lent.
It makes sense that we have this story of Jesus the Sunday
before we open our hearts to God for examination.
We move into Lent every year with a bit of trepidation.
We wonder how much navel gazing God will demand of us as we
learn about ourselves. We are a bit afraid of what we might discover.
We don’t necessarily like this season.
We’d prefer to be in Advent in that hopeful waiting for the
baby to appear.
Yet, in Lent we are in a hopeful waiting to witness God’s
power at work to bring life to death and death to life.
In this season, God is at work within us.
God is in the transformation business.
God is in the change business.
God will not let us stay the way we are.
God is forever at work drawing us near and shining within
us.
Karoline Lewis says, “The
transfiguration is the threshold moment between what was and what is to come.
You get a glimpse of what could be, when actually it was there all along.” This
transfiguration story is an ongoing story of God’s power to change us and move
us.
It is not a morality story but a miracle story.
One way God’s power changes us is into salvation.
God speaks. Our salvation
story is the mystery of God incarnate present with us to engage us into a life
lived through mercy, justice and humbly walking with God.
Salvation is God’s grabbing us and not letting go. It’s the
part of our life where we turn in every which way to wonder who God is and why
God is. And then in a moment in which we cannot explain God becomes fully
present shining in us.
Like Peter, we are full of questions and full of a need for
explanation and reason.
Like Peter, we need to hold on to what we know and we are
afraid to let go of what we do not know.
We need God to show us and have it make sense. Part of
confirmation that matters to me most is the freedom to ask questions. For we
find our faith is not about answers but is all in our questions. In the truth of
seeking God, we God is revealed in us.
The glory of God’s incarnation, God’s transformation of our
relationship with God is one we cannot fully explain. We are continuously drawn
to God in our desire for God.
We are on a path of being awakened to the joy of salvation
as we enter and engage in those moments where we catch a glimpse of the Divine.
The mountain figuratively
is where we catch that glimpse and it changes us forever.
Another way God changes us is through God’s presence.
Christmas is the celebration of our faith that God came to live among us in
Jesus the Christ. Jesus reaches out
and touches. Lent is the time we move to allow the work of Christ to be
fully present in us.
It is a time of transformation.
It is a time of change of who we are. And that friends can
be exciting.
Yet, change can also
bring grief.
Because as we look to
life in the possibility of becoming new, we must let go of some of the ways
which have become familiar to us.
Sometimes we need to be in a place we do not wish to be. In
this place God is mightily at work. God’s presence in us stirs us, comforts us,
and provides for us. We look to one another and realize we are the body of
Christ transformed as a community built up together with the foundation of God’s
love for us.
This power of the presence of Jesus begins to shine even
brighter within us.
And then the thought of change is an anticipation of joy
rather than sorrow.
Imagine what God can do over the next several weeks as we
open our hearts in new ways!
Finally, God’s transformation moves us into action. We, the disciples are changed.
This year on Ash Wednesday when we recognize our messy lives
and messy world and our mortality we will say to God we are ready.
We are ready to know we are finite. We are ready to know
this life is but a moment.
We are ready to know that in God’s hands dust lives.
And in the power of God all things are possible.
We will embrace the mystery of our salvation.
We sense the presence of Jesus with us always.
We will be changed.
We can and will become the change agents God wants for this
world.
We will receive courage where we were once afraid.
We will receive joy where we once had sorrow.
We will show mercy where we once had anger.
We will work for justice where we once had apathy.
Because we have seen his glory. We can say, ‘Jesus, shine us’; even sing it in that 80’s version.
In dazzling glory Jesus resides in us.
And we can and will be transformed. Always transforming and
drawing nearer and nearer to God. Amen.
Resources: Feasting on the Word; Working Preacher Karoline Lewis
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