“And he was transfigured
before them, and his clothes became dazzling white, such as no fuller on earth
could bleach them.” From the Gospel according to Mark, chapter 9, verse 3.
In the name of God, Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. Amen.
“And he was transfigured before them.” We
commemorate the Transfiguration twice a year, on the last Sunday after
Epiphany, and on August 6. Some saints get double mention, usually on the day
of their deaths, and also on the day or days their relics were discovered or
moved. Double commemorations like these are meant to emphasize the importance
of the event or person concerned. And so it is with the Transfiguration. It
occurs at the end of Epiphanytide as a summing up of what has been revealed in
this season: Jesus as the divine and human Son of his Father, and the
relationship of the Father and the Son with the Holy Spirit. We can also
understand it as a transition to Lent, and a foreshadowing of the Resurrection,
which is definitely another transfiguration and an even greater revelation of
the nature of Jesus. And Transfiguration occurs again in August, close to the
end of the church year in the Orthodox calendar, and just before the
celebration on August 15 of the Falling Asleep of the Mother of God. The
proximity of the two feasts is not accidental; it emphasizes, again, who Jesus
is and keeps before us the role of his Mother in the history of salvation. His
Mother shares, in effect, in her Son’s transfiguration.
“And his clothes became dazzling white,
such as no fuller on earth could bleach them.” Light is often associated with
divinity. In our time, accustomed as we are to bright, steady light whenever
and wherever we want it, we are perhaps too used to it. We can turn night into
day, and we have so much light in our cities at night that we can’t see the
stars. We can banish darkness. And so perhaps we don’t realize how stunning
light can be, and what a powerful symbol it is for God. Peter and James and
John, however, are dazzled by the very bright light of the Transfiguration,
brighter than any light they had seen. This is no ordinary light; our Orthodox
friends call it “the light of Mount Tabor,” or “the uncreated light,” which is
nothing less than the divine radiance. And they soon see what this light is revealing
to them: the presence of Jesus with the prophets Moses and Elijah.
But this is only the beginning of the
revelation. Peter says, “Let us make three tents, one for you, one for Moses,
and one for Elijah.” This tells us that, at this moment, Peter understands
Jesus to be of the same rank, or on the same level, as the prophets. He seems
to have forgotten that he, back in chapter 8, had proclaimed Jesus to be the
Messiah. The other disciples at that point compared Jesus to Elijah, or John
the Baptist, or other prophets whom they don’t name. They were not ready to see
Jesus as Messiah, except Peter.
It is conventional for preachers to say at
this point, the tent-building proposal, that this is another example of Peter’s
basically well-intentioned but somewhat clueless reaction to what is really
going on. After all, Mark the Evangelist immediately says, “He did not know
what to say, for they were terrified.” I’m skeptical of Mark’s comment, since
Peter has just said, “It is good for us to be here!” That doesn’t sound like
terror, or cluelessness, to me. I suspect, and this is my own speculation of course, that
Mark thinks that the disciples ought to be terrified, and so he says that they
are. But the disciples themselves say no such thing. Perhaps the Evangelist
would have been terrified. I think that something else is going on here. Peter
is not clueless. Peter and the others are sufficiently mature
spiritually, that they are capable of seeing the divine light, and the prophets
too. They have been helped by Jesus to be open to the reality of God, by
teaching, miracles, and example, so that when Jesus takes them up the mountain,
they are ready for the next step.
A few times already in Mark’s Gospel,
demons have recognized Jesus as the Holy One of God, or the Son of God. But now
God himself announces Jesus’s sonship, in the cloud that overshadows Jesus and
the disciples. I’ve been thinking about this “cloud” and what it represents. Of
course, it probably is a real cloud; mountains make their own weather, and they
are frequently obscured by clouds. The cloud can also describe the state of
mind of the disciples; they are in a new situation, and so they may be experiencing a certain darkness, after
the experience of the Transfiguration, which may have blinded them momentarily,
as those of us who come from wintry places remember being dazzled, perhaps
blinded, by sunlight on snow.
“And from the cloud there came a voice,
‘This is my Son, the Beloved; listen to him.’” We recall the words of God to
Jesus at his baptism, when he says, “You are my Son, the Beloved. With you I am
well pleased.” Then, only Jesus hears it. Now, Peter, James, and John hear it. Before
this point, demons had proclaimed the Sonship of Jesus; now God himself says
it, again, so that not only Jesus can hear it, but his closest disciples as
well. It is interesting to think about why God let the demons know this before
the disciples; I’m not going to speculate about this now, but it is worth
keeping in mind that humans are not the only creatures in the universe capable
of perceiving the reality of God.
“Suddenly, when they looked around, they
saw no one with them any more, but only Jesus.” Jesus, in other words, is more
than a prophet. They are not on the same level as he is. The disciples don’t
see them, because they don’t need to, because their understanding of Jesus has
gone beyond them. Peter has already understood that Jesus is the Messiah; now
they all realize that Jesus is more than the Messiah, more than the Anointed
One. Prophecy, and the coming of the Messiah, are only steps on the way to a
full understanding of the ministry of Jesus, the Son, the Beloved.
There is still more. “As they were coming
down the mountain, he ordered them to tell no one about what they had seen,
until after the Son of Man had risen from the dead.” Jesus is telling them that
there is more to discipleship than dazzling visions. Only after Jesus rises
from the dead will they have a full understanding of what the vision really
means. They are to keep it a secret, until the right time. The right time is
after the Resurrection. The purpose of the vision is to prepare the disciples
for what is to come, to strengthen them and to give them confidence in the dark
days to come. The light of the Transfiguration will always be there, even when
the disciples can’t see it. If they can recall it, keep it in mind,
they will see their way through all the way to the Resurrection.
And so we will see our way through to the
Resurrection, strengthened by the faith that has been handed down to us, faith
founded in the experiences of the disciples, who saw the transfigured Lord and
heard the voice of his Father. The light of the Transfiguration continues to
shine, no matter how dark the cloud is on the mountaintop. That light will lead
us through Lent and Holy Week, to the Resurrection and beyond. That light leads
us to the mountaintop, where we will hear the voice of the Father, when he
says, “This is my Son, the Beloved; listen to him!”
In the name of God, Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. Amen. (2.II.15.Adv.)

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