The Transfiguration of Our Lord
Texts: Luke 9:28-36;
2 Cor. 3:12-4:2; Ex 34:29-35
VISIONING SALVATION FROM OUR
VIOLENCE
Transfiguration is becoming one of my favorite days in the church year,
alongside of Christmas
and Easter. Sound a bit crazy? Well, I think that this story does
intend to give the disciples and us
a glimpse of the resurrected Jesus before the horror of the cross.
Here, in our church year cycle, it
comes the Sunday before the beginning of Lent, our journey to the
cross, so that we might
glimpse the glory of Easter before undertaking the Lenten journey of
repentance.
But this story also contains aspects that are, in some ways, even more
direct than the Easter story
for the eyes of faith. For there is a sense, I think, in which God is
trying to show us and tell us
something that even Moses and Elijah failed to show us and tell us.
There on the mountain of
transfiguration, with Moses and Elijah, at Jesus' side, God transforms
Jesus' appearance and
says, "Listen to him!"
Our Old Testament Lesson just last Sunday contains verses quoted by
Jesus that play a big role in
the Gospels. You might remember that it was Isaiah narrating to us his
call story. There's the
awesome picture of the seraphim singing like thunder, "Holy, holy, holy
is the LORD of hosts;
the whole earth is full of God's glory." And when God calls Isaiah to
service, he answers, "Here
am I, send me!" Is that what Jesus and the Gospels quote for us? No,
it's the strange words that
come immediately afterwards:
And he said, "Go and say to this people:
'Keep listening, but do not comprehend;
keep looking, but do not understand.' Make the mind of this people
dull, and stop
their ears, and shut their eyes, so that they may not look with their
eyes, and listen
with their ears, and comprehend with their minds, and turn and be
healed." Then I
said, "How long, O Lord?" And he said: "Until cities lie waste without
inhabitant,
and houses without people, and the land is utterly desolate...."
(Isaiah 6:9-11)
Why would God say something like that? Here is my proposal to you this
morning of what it is
that God is so desperate for us to see and hear from Jesus: God sent
Jesus to save us from our
violence, from the terrible things we do to hurt and kill one another,
and to help us to meet the
true God who never is about violence but is always about
life-transforming love and forgiveness.
But we remain blind and deaf to this message so much so that it
typically takes the times when
our cities and land lie in waste and destruction for us to begin to see
and hear. There on the
mountain of transfiguration, before the journey to the cross, the
disciples and us catch a glimpse
of the glory of Jesus and hear God beseech us to listen to him. Do we
see? Do we hear even
now?
Here's a little of what I mean in the figures of Elijah and Moses.
Elijah was the great prophet at
the time of the early kings of Israel who worked miracles of healing
and feeding during droughts.
His greatest victory, it seems, is the one he won over the four hundred
priests of the false god
Baal. Do you remember that story? The priests of Baal . . . [tell story]
But the story doesn't end quite yet. Here's the end: in 1 Kings 18:40:
"Elijah said to them, 'Seize
the prophets of Baal; do not let one of them escape.' Then they seized
the four hundred prophets;
and Elijah brought them down to the Wadi Kishon, and killed them
there." Is that the God we are
supposed to see and hear on the mountain of transfiguration, a god of
slaughter and punishment?
Will it take yet another time of our cities and land laying waste for
us to see and hear?
Or how about Moses and the people of Israel? Today's First Lesson is
about Moses going up on
Mount Sinai to meet God. When he comes back down the mountain, his face
is so bright that he
needs to veil it. This was the second time he came down. Do you
remember what happened the
first time? While Moses had been up on the mountain receiving the Ten
Commandments and
sealing God's loving covenant with God's people, they had been
worshiping a golden calf. So
Moses came down the mountain and here's what happened: "Moses said to
them, 'Thus says the
LORD, the God of Israel, "Put your sword on your side, each of you! Go
back and forth from
gate to gate throughout the camp, and each of you kill your brother,
your friend, and your
neighbor."' The sons of Levi did as Moses commanded, and about three
thousand of the people
fell on that day." (Exodus 32:27-28) Is that the God we are supposed to
see and hear on the
mountain of Jesus' transfiguration, a god of slaughter and punishment?
Will it take yet another
time of our cities and land laying waste for us to see and hear?
In preparation for Holy Communion -- as we celebrate with 14 of our
young people this
morning, who have completed some communion education -- in that
preparation we talk about
the Passover meal which Jesus was celebrating the night before his
death, when he transformed
that meal into something else, the Sacrament of Holy Communion. I
typically don't go into much
detail about the Passover with the younger children, which is why we
still have communion
education for our fifth graders, even though some have taken their
first communion. By the time
they are fifth graders, they are a little older and more ready to hear
about the slaughter of all the
first born children -- although I'm not sure we are ever old enough to
hear that story if we really
let it sink in, if we truly hear it and see it for what it is.
We can hear it and see it truly, perhaps, in one of the modern day
stories that has truly gripped
me. It is the Public TV show of a couple years ago, called God
on Trial, which we viewed and
discussed in the Sunday adult class a year ago. The setting of the
story is one of the most hellish
places ever of human cruelty, a Jewish barracks in the Nazi death-camp
of Auschwitz. God's
people, in that terrible setting, are asking why God has apparently
abandoned them, so they put
God to the trial, so to speak. Near the end, a learned Rabbi of wide
reputation finally breaks his
silence and speaks. The traditionalist Jews expect him to defend God.
But, instead he begins to
ask even more troubling questions about their history, the Passover
included. "How did the Lord
God, Adonai, bring us out of Egypt?" he asks. Plagues; and he recites
the first nine plagues.
"Finally," he continues, "God struck down the first born, from the heir
of Pharaoh to the slave at
the mill. He slew them all. Did he slay Pharaoh? No. Pharaoh was the
one who said "No" to
Adonai but God let him live and slew the children. All the children.
Did the mothers of Egypt
think that Adonai was just?" Another Jewish scholar answers, "But
Adonai is our God." To
which the learned rabbi replies: "Did God not make the Egyptians. Did
he not make their rivers
and their crops grow? If not Adonai, then who? Some other god? And what
did he make them
for? To punish them? To starve, to frighten, and to slaughter them? The
people of Egypt, what
was it like when Adonai turned against them? It was like this."
And before we point to Moses and Elijah in contrast to us Christians,
we'd better ask ourselves
which God we Christians have followed after so many centuries of our
cities and land being laid
waste. Auschwitz is at the heart of supposedly Christian Europe.
On this Transfiguration Sunday we are once again allowed to glimpse the
Easter glory of Jesus
before our Lenten journey. But it is the same glory we are invited to
see, hear, and taste each time
we are invited to this Table, as seven of our young people are this
morning to partake fully for
the first time. And we are met by the God who sent Jesus into this
world that we might finally see
and hear: that God is a God of mercy, forgiveness, love, and life --
not punishment and killing
and death. This God has sent the Son into the world not to punish it,
but to take on our
punishment, our violence, on the cross, and to show it to be no much
for God's power of life,
God's power to transform our lives to that of peace, of Holy Communion,
through forgiveness
and love. May we come to the table and truly see without the veil. May
we taste and drink in
God's salvation. Amen
Paul J. Nuechterlein
Delivered at Prince of Peace Lutheran,
Portage, MI, February 14, 2010