‘… it is good for us to be here’ (Mark 9:5)
Mark
9:2-10 (Year B: Lent 2)
The transfiguration is a story of how Jesus, accompanied by
three of his disciples, were ‘transfigured’ on the top of a mountain. It was
very definitely a ‘high’ moment. There, on the mountain top, the disciples
along with Jesus were lifted up in light and covered in a divine presence of
the Cloud. Yet, the story continues with
a descent into warning, fear and an expectation of something very ominous. The
Cross is getting near. Fear is not absent from the story. Why, according
to some liturgical cycles, is this passage used in Lent even towards the
beginning of the Lenten journey some 11 days into the 46 day period that Lent
constitutes (from Ash Wednesday to Easter Sunday)?
Jesus ascended the mountain ‘six days’ after the
proclamation of the Messiah in Caesarea Philippi (Mark
8:27). This echoes the six days found in Exodus
24:15-16 when:
For six days the cloud covered the mountain, and on the seventh day
the Lord called to Moses from within the cloud.
The presence of God and the transformation over Moses to be
found in Exodus
33:7-23 has a strong resemblance with the Transfiguration (or metamorphosis in Greek). Further on, in
Exodus 34:30, we are told that Moses’ face shone in the presence of God.
The episode of the Transfiguration comes in the middle of an
intense period of healing, preaching and contestation. Jesus had warned his
disciples, six days before the Transfiguration, that ‘Whoever wants to be my
disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me.’ The
stakes were high and expectations were bounding forward. The disciples needed a
reality check. But, they also needed an uplift during a period of intense
stress and uncertainty. They did not know what was next. They had a sense that
all was not well and that they were in great danger.
There on the top of the mountain they came face to face (in
so far as anyone can in this world) with the Almighty. It was moment of great
fear and great wonder and joy – all in one. Note that Jesus chose not to go to
the top of the mountain on his own. He brought others with him. Each person, on
this mountain, experienced something wonderful and extraordinary. Yet, it was
not an experience of single individuals on their own. It was a shared
experience. The high was experienced with Jesus in the midst of the chosen
disciples. More than that the story tells us that Elijah and Moses were in
their midst. That was an impressive company of persons. Their topic of
conversation (according to Luke
9:30) was about his departure (exodos
in the Greek).
Although the synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke) tell
us that the disciple John was present at the transfiguration there is no direct
and explicit reference to this event in the Gospel associated with John.
However, it could be said with accuracy that the entire Gospel of John is a
meditation on the inner meaning of the Transfiguration. And the essence of this event is captured in John
1:14:
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his
glory, the glory of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of
grace and truth.
The huge significance of Moses and Elijah would not be
missed on the Jewish listeners to the evangelist’s story. Moses was the
dispenser of the law and leader of God’s people. Through his hands came the ten
commandments, the Law and the promises. Elijah was the great prophet who
foretold God’s salvation. Yet, in their midst stood another Prophet in whom God
was well pleased and ready to acknowledge as his only Son. After this ‘when
they looked around, they no longer saw anyone with them except Jesus.’ (v.
36). And this is the point. The stage
has been vacated, so to speak, by Moses and Elijah while Jesus is the messiah,
prophet and leader now. His time has come and so has ours. Elijah had come
already (Mark 9:13) according to Jesus (in the person of John the Baptist).
So, Jesus was and is different.
And this was one of those moments like the baptism in the
Jordan and later on the cross when Jesus’ sonship is proclaimed to those ready
to listen. Listening is what we are invited to do in the story of the
transfiguration. The one consistent message from the Father to us is ‘Listen to
him’. Listen to him in ourselves, in others and in the events and environment
of our lives. The famous German
philosopher, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) once wrote:
Two things fill the mind with ever new and increasing admiration and
awe, the oftener and the more steadily we reflect on them: the starry heavens
above and the moral law within.
We must listen to the voice of reason and of emotion within
us as to discern that ‘moral law’ deep within. As the prophet Jeremiah wrote:
I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts (Jer
31:33)
It is good for us to be here on this mountain. But we cannot
stay there for too long. We must make the descent back and face what we had to
face before we started the climb. However, our hearts have been refreshed and,
perhaps, some baggage was lost or thrown off on the way (in environmentally
friendly disposal bins on the mountain!
We need The Vision
Thing on our journey.
Isaiah
(12:2)wrote:
‘Surely God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid.
The Lord, the Lord himself, is my strength and my
defence; he has become my salvation’
There is something greater than any one of us in our
midst. This is the flame, the cloud, the
bright light that takes us forward and shows us true freedom and joy.
We have 10,000 reasons to be thankful and cheerful no matter
what is going in our lives and those around us. Every now and again there is a
moment that breaks out – not too often perhaps – when we can say ‘I have met
the Lord in the midst of the assembly and I was glad. It is good to be here. It
is good to be alive’. Then, the lyrics
and music of Matt Redman’s “10,000 Reasons (Bless the
Lord)”. might
fit the occasion:
Bless the Lord, O my
soul
O my soul
Worship His holy name
Sing like never before
O my soul
I'll worship Your holy name
O my soul
Worship His holy name
Sing like never before
O my soul
I'll worship Your holy name
With Jesus, Peter, James and John we can sing out from
within current situation. In this moment of transfiguration we can declare in
all honesty what Habakkuk wrote (3:19)
The Sovereign Lord is my strength; he makes my feet like the
feet of a deer, he enables me to tread on the heights.
The psalmist declares (17:34):
My feet you make swift as the deer's; you have made me stand firm on
the heights.
A popular ‘twitterer’ – @frpaddybyrne had the following to
say, recently:
‘Just spent time visiting a
terminally ill lady. “Life’s too short…. Don’t waste time’ (21 Feb 2015)
Indeed life is short and the time remaining to us reduces
every day we wake up. Let’s not waste our time but, rather, seek the company of
fellow pilgrims on this Lenten Journey to freedom.
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