March 2, 2025
Exodus
34.29-35; Luke 9.28-43a
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I usually don’t preach the Last Sunday of Epiphany.
I
am often returning from vacation around this time of the year.
This
year, of course, I took a longer break, which I definitely needed.
It
was good to have some time to travel, to visit other places and other churches.
It
was good to read more than I usually do (I read 18 books during my sabbatical).
I
also finished a new book of poems, this one being another project with Marjorie
Schlossman.
But
as good as all of that was, it’s also good to get back.
And
it’s good to be here today, on this last Sunday of Epiphany.
Way
back on January 6 (doesn’t that seem like lifetime ago already?) we began this
season with the Magi visiting the child Jesus
In
that event, we had a mysterious star.
Then,
on January 12th, we commemorated the Baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by
John the Baptist.
The
following Sunday, January 19, we commemorated the Wedding Feast at Cana, in
which Jesus turned all that purification water into fine wine.
Now
we end the Epiphany season on another glorious high note.
First,
today, we get this reading from the Torah—from the Hebrew scriptures—about
Moses’ encounter with the glory of God on Mount Sinai.
The
glory of God, we find, is so powerful that it has a kind of residual effect on
those who encounter it.
For
Moses, in our reading from Exodus, after encountering the glory of God, “the skin of his face was shining.”
Then,
in our reading from the Gospel today, we find a similar event.
We
find another encounter with the Glory of God on a mountaintop: the Transfiguration.
I
realize that I have preached a lot about the Transfiguration in my 21 years as
a priest.
It’s
an event I have explored so often in sermons and in scripture study and in my
own prayer life.
Why
is that?
Because
it really is an important event in scripture and in our lives as Christians.
In
fact, it is such an important event that we actually celebrate it twice in our Church Year.
We
celebrate today of course, the Last Sunday of Epiphany—the last Sunday before
Lent begins.
And
we celebrate it again on August 6.
Personally,
I truly appreciate that we celebrate it on this Sunday before Lent begins.
I’m
happy that we go into the season of Lent with this vision fresh in our minds.
I
am happy that we enter Lent with the glory of God shining on the skin of our
faces.
There
is no better way to enter this season.
The
events of Moses’ encounter with God and the Transfiguration is what will
sustain us and hold us and nourish us through these next forty days.
This
Transfiguration and the glory that we see revealed on the Mount was certainly one
of the defining events in Jesus’s life.
And
in ours too, as followers of Jesus.
For
us, the glory we witness on Mount Tabor is the glory that awaits us in God’s
Presence.
It
is the glory we see whenever we encounter God in our lives.
On
Mount Tabor, we have seen the veil temporarily lifted that separates this world
from God’s world.
And
it is a glory that is almost too much for Jesus’ followers to comprehend.
It
is this glory that we glimpse today that sustains us.
It
strengthens us for what we are about to participate in our following of Jesus.
Because
following Jesus always involves this glory that we encounter on the mount.
Following
Jesus means recognizing in him the fulfillment of the Law (which is represented
by the presence of Moses on the mount in today’s Gospel reading) and the
fulfillment of the prophecies of the Hebrew scriptures (represented by Elijah’s
presence on the mount)
There
is no doubt, as we enter the season of Lent, that the one we follow is not just
another great teacher or leader.
The
one we follow is the Messiah, the Christ, the anointed One, the one promised to
us in the prophecies, the one who embodies the Law given to Moses.
This
is important to recognize and hold close as we enter Lent.
Because
following Jesus also means following him down off the mountain and onto the
path that lead to another hill-top—Golgotha.
It
means following Jesus from the glory of the mount all the way to the darkness
and defeat of the cross.
And,
of course, to the eternal glory beyond the cross as well.
But
we’re getting ahead of ourselves.
For
now, we are here.
For
now, we are encountering the glory of this moment.
For
now we come down off the mountain with Jesus and his privileged three
followers.
And
we are struggling to make sense of this event.
We
are struggling to make sense of this moment of glory.
What
do we do when we encounter the glory of God?
How
do we process it?
How
do we make sense of glory?
I
don’t know if we can make sense of it.
But
what we can do it is embody it.
What
we can do it open ourselves to this glory of God.
Because
it is a glory that is given to each of us, no matter who we are.
Each
of us—no matter who we are—carry within us that transfiguring glory of God—of
the God who appeared to Moses, of the God whose glory descending upon Jesus on
Mount Tabor, of the God who is our God as well, who loves us and knows us and
is well-pleased with each of us.
And
that is what we take away from our encounter with the vision on the mount of
the Transfiguration.
It
would be nice to stay here, basking the glory of this event.
It
would be nice to stay put and not come down off the mountain.
Because
once we come off the mountain, we must face some unpleasant things.
For
the followers of Jesus, they must endure their own betrayal of Jesus, they must
endure the fact that their betrayal contributes to Jesus’ torture and murder.
In
our lives, we must come down from the mountain and face our own issues.
We
must face a country in daily chaos.
We
must face a lack of empathy and compassion in our society and in our government.
We
must face a world in which tyrants are celebrated and dictators emulated.
We
face a Church that is trying hard to respond to that chaos, to the forces of
darkness that seem, at times, to prevail.
We
must come down and face whatever issues we are wrestling with our lives—issues
that seem in many ways to detract from the glory that we have just witnessed.
And
as we come down and face those things, it is amazing how quickly the vision of
God’s glory vanishes from our minds.
In
that one moment, when all seemed clear, when all seemed to have come together,
we find in the next instant that everything is topsy-turvy again.
And
that’s this crazy thing we call life.
It
often works this way.
We
find that we can’t cling to these glorious, wonderful events that happen.
But
what we can do is carry them deep in our hearts.
What
we can do it not let that glory of God that dwells within us and shines
brightly on the skin of our faces to die away.
And
if we recognize that, if we embrace that, we find that somewhere down that road
away from the mount, it will still be there, borne deep within us.
Somewhere,
when we need it the most, that comforting presence of the God of glory we
encountered on the mountain will well up within us and sustain us when we need
sustaining and shine brightly on our faces.
Of
course, the stickler about this is that it is not something WE can control.
We
can’t make it happen.
We
can’t conjure that glorious experience whenever we want it.
It
happens on its own.
It
happens in God’s own time.
It
happens when it is needed the most.
And
when it does, it truly does sustain.
In
these next forty days, we will need to be sustained by the glory we encounter
today.
In
this upcoming season, we will be encountering a somewhat more dour side of
spirituality.
On
Wednesday, we will have ashes smeared on our foreheads as a reminder that we
will all one day die.
We,
in this upcoming Lenten season, will face the fact that we truly do have limitations.
We
will remember and repent of the wrongdoings we have done in this life—to God,
to others and to ourselves.
And
we will fast.
Some
of us will fast from certain physical foods or drink.
Some
of us will abstain from certain practices.
Some
of us will struggle to use this upcoming season to break certain dependences
we’ve had on things and people.
And
in this season, we will hear in our scripture readings and participate in our
liturgies the continuing journey away from the amazing mountain-top experience
toward the humiliation of the cross of Golgotha.
In
those moments, we will need to find an inner sustenance.
In
those moments, we will truly see how far we have journeyed away from the mount
of Transfiguration.
We
will, at times, no doubt, feel as though we are far separated from the glory of
God.
It
will not seem that this glory will be shining on the skin of our faces.
But,
then, on Easter morning—there again, that glory will be revealed to us once
again and it will all fall into place once more.
So,
let us begin our Lenten season with our faces still aglow with this encounter
with God.
Let
us go knowing that no matter what will happen—betrayal, physical and emotional
pain, even death—we know that what ultimately wins out is the glorious light of
God’s loving presence in our life.
Let
us go from here carrying that glory within us, without detachment.
Let
us go from here transfigured with Jesus—changed by this encounter with God’s glory
so that we can reflect and spread this glory even in the midst of whatever may
come to us in the days that are to come.
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