Put yourself in the Holy Land
- 2,000 years ago as we can in our imagination and as we read the passage from
Luke 9: 29-36 from the lectionary for this week. Imagine that you are one of
Jesus' leading disciples. He calls you apart from your colleagues to go with
him on what turns out to be a great adventure. You start walking, happily
chatting, and following him toward the high country. At the start, you figure,
this is one more time when Jesus needs to get away from the crowds - to rest
and refresh and restore his spiritual strength. You, too, are ready for a rest.
When Jesus leads you to the
destination, you recognise it as a holy place of your faith-set apart for
connection with the greatest meaning life has to offer - a place to encounter
God. You begin to think that maybe this is not going to be an ordinary retreat,
even by Jesus' standards. Suddenly you see Jesus changed - his face has changed
and has become dazzling white. You are not sure what to make of this. But you
know something extraordinary has happened.
Then, you are startled again
to see the two most honoured leaders of your faith, Moses and Elijah, long
dead, standing there beside Jesus. You do not know what to think or do. Your
friend Peter suggests setting up dwellings so they could stay there
permanently. But before anything else can happens, you hear the voice of
God-"This is my Son, my Chosen ; listen to
him!" Now you know the purpose of
this adventure. Here is the answer to what you should do.
It is clear that you are not
to look to Moses and Elijah-not to look back to the old, but to reach forward
to the new, listening to this beloved one of God, this Jesus and listening to
him only. Then, it is time to go back down the mountain and return to the
others. They will be the same, but for you everything is different. God has
done a new thing. Everything in your life is transfigured - transformed -
changed - to a new reality of God.
It is meant to be easy for
us, as followers of Jesus, to put ourselves in the place of James or John or
Peter. We go through the same kind of adventure in our daily lives; we recognise
the same Lord. And we hear the same message from God: "This is my Son, my Chosen ; listen to him!"
We too have our
"mountain tops." Each of us needs places and times set apart for us
to take a good spiritual breath. Often this can happen in the midst of worship
or Bible study or prayer groups or whenever we gather with fellow believers or
even as we share an experience with God’s creation. The "mountain
tops" of our lives are also represented by times when we are alone with
only silence around us-not with a radio blaring or a television yakking or a
computer clicking. This is our personal prayer time and time for meditation and
reflection - being still so we know God for what God is, specifically, in our
lives. If you have ever sat upon the mountain top or in the bush and watched
and listened as the new day dawned in all its glory will now what I am
referring to.
All of us though, too, gain
recognition and insight into God when we go to these mountain tops set aside as
holy places and holy times for us to focus on God. In the stillness of our
quiet and solitude as we watch and wait we learn to see and hear what our God
says and does and how God moves us. The presence of God can astonish us in the
beauty of creation and the generosity of the love we are surrounded by.

However, we too must come
down from our "mountain tops," knowing what is possible for us in
every part of our lives. We can count on the amazing power of God to
transfigure and transform and change what is old into what is new-what is
ordinary into the extra-ordinary, into what can be.
The truth of the Gospel affirms
that each and every one of us - even if we are lost, blind, misguided, self-centred,
and arrogant - can really be transformed into God's beloved children and his
faithful disciples. God can transform our sadness and frustration and despair
into joy and hope. God can transform our apathy and lack of concern for God's
commandments into an active love that brings God's kingdom more closely into
being. God can transform our weakness and fear into courage and strength. God
can transform our earthy, broken humanity into faithful members of the Body of
Christ.
We live our lives at the base
of the mountain. If we have heard the transforming word of God we will continue
to listen to Jesus our Lord and we will pray continually the collect connected
with today's Gospel.
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