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TRANSFIGURATION
SUNDAY
Preached on 19th February 2012
We’ve heard two
readings today - one from Mark that tells of Jesus being
Transfigured and secondly from Pau who speaks of the glory of
Christ. There are two themes I would like to draw from these
readings.
2 Corinthians
states “the light of the knowledge of the Glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ.” Earlier Paul writes of the “glory of the gospel of
Christ.” These quotes from Paul address the theme of light and I
intend to relate it back to the Transfiguration.
The
Transfiguration takes place on Mount Tabor.
Mountains are a
constant theme within the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament:
Abraham goes to sacrifice Isaac on top of a mountain and Moses
receives the law on Mount Sinai.
But there is even
more to it than this. Elijah and Moses appear next to Jesus, the
prophet and the law giver. The old law of Judaism is to be replaced
with a new covenant with God.
His clothes even
become “dazzling white” – it is an impressive spectacle - the
disciples are left in awe.
Christ is seen in
a new light with God exclaiming “this is my Son, the beloved; listen
to him”. As 2 Corinthians reads “let light shine out of darkness”
(repeat) “let light shine out of darkness”
It is the
symbolism of light that I would like us to focus on this morning
And we will do so
by addressing two areas or points
Firstly is Jesus
merely an old prophet who has little relevance to the chaotic world
we today find ourselves in?
Secondly are
there aspects within our lives where we come to see Jesus in a new
light?
Firstly was Jesus
merely a prophet for his place and time?
According to the
gospel accounts the disciples were always seeing Jesus in a new
light. The transfiguration was not unique. An example of this is
not far from the story we are focussing on, for only a few verses
before Jesus tells his disciples that he will go through “great
suffering” and even die - imagine.
The man they
believe to be the Jewish Messiah is going to suffer the death of a
common criminal!
He preaches of
righteousness and purity yet dines with tax collectors and
prostitutes.
He insists on the
importance of upholding the Jewish Law yet criticises the men that
are supposed to be the upholders of this law.
The Gospel
accounts constantly give a new realisation of who Jesus is. Jesus
is forever appearing in a new light.
And it doesn’t
stop with the gospels - throughout the centuries Jesus is seen in a
new light.
Jurgen Moltmann
was a firefighter at Dresden and then a POW in Scotland and
Nottinghamshire during and after the Second World War. On viewing
images of the Nazi’s crimes against the Jews, he began to see that
God suffers with us, not one that looks down from the sky but one
that is here on earth, bearing our burdens and sharing our
suffering.
Moltmann came to
see more clearly that as the word was made flesh God suffered as
Christ on the cross
30 years later in
1974 he wrote that Jesus is one who “suffers with us... and gives
(us) consolation in (our) helpless suffering”
Four decades ago
this was controversial but seeing Jesus in this new light has come
to be deemed one of the greatest contributions to theology of the
twentieth century in identifying with a new kind of hope within the
message of the cross.
Also this new
light can relate to the “glory of the gospel of Christ” that Paul
writes about.
What is this
glory then? Is it the glory of royalty and riches?
We might think so
when we consider the dazzling nature of the transfiguration.
But is this
really the kind of glory which Paul talks about? Surely not
The overall
evidence of Jesus from the gospel accounts is far removed from such
splendour.
He wears the
normal clothes of his day. He appears on a donkey not a horse. He
doesn’t seek to overthrow the Roman oppressor but the hypocrisy and
injustice of society. He doesn’t ask for people to bow down before
him, instead he washes the feet of his disciple Peter. He preaches
solidarity with the poor and building a kingdom that is not based on
individualism but community that looks to our neighbour in need.
Ultimately he dies the death of a criminal.
That is the real
glory of Jesus
That is the new
light that comes through Jesus as the Christ.
And what of this
new light in our own lives? In our own world?
When we find that
things fit into place, when we come to see that the way to peace and
fulfilment is the way of the cross then the new light is with us.
When we choose
right over wrong and truth over lies the new light is with us.
When we live for
others and not ourselves the new light is with us.
So it is that we
come to recognise all sorts of opportunities and possibilities in
our own lives and our own world.
I began by asking
two questions.
Firstly is Jesus
merely an old prophet that has little relevance to the chaotic world
we find ourselves in today?
Secondly are
there aspects within our lives where we come to see Jesus in a new
light?
Well Jesus
throughout the Gospels and since is often seen in a variety of new
ways, they often go against our initial thoughts of who he is and
what he comes to mean.
Over the last
century (as in previous centuries) he became the liberator for so
many
for Martin Luther
King and the civil rights movement
for Desmond Tutu
and the anti apartheid movement
for many in the
former Easter Bloc countries especially through the Roman Catholic
Church in Poland as they overthrew the darkness of Soviet Communism
Because the world
is forever changing, new light can be shed on any given situation.
Because we are
evolving human beings open to change we can see things in a new
light
When we encounter
the glory of Christ, seeing Jesus in a new light, we overcome
whatever darkness there is in our lives.
When we encounter
the glory of Christ, seeing Jesus in a new light, we can find new
ways to help our neighbour in distress.
On this
particular Sunday we are thinking about the Transfiguration of Jesus
on Mount Tabor. It’s an incident that displays who Jesus is but it
also shows us what Jesus can come to mean in our present lives.
This is so because we all can see him in a variety of different
lights no matter what life throws at us.
David Thompson
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