Matthew 17:1-9
(message shared with the people of Friendship Church, February 6, 2005)
In Tucson, Arizona, they have laws limiting the brightness of street lights at night. These regulations exist to avoid interfering with what astronomers call “good seeing” at a nearby telescope.
Maybe that was why Jesus took Peter, James, and John to the top of a mountain, as we’re told about in today’s Bible lesson. Jesus may have wanted to give these three key followers, the ones He had chosen to be the leaders of His leadership group, “good seeing,” a clear vision of Who He is. The account of what happened that day also shows us Who Jesus can be for every one of us.
And, what Peter, James, and John saw was spectacular! While standing there on top of that mountain, Jesus was “transfigured...and His face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white.” Then, two Old Testament figures showed up. One was Moses, the one to whom God had given the Ten Commandments and who had been Israel’s leader out of Egypt, through the wilderness, about 1500 years before the birth of Jesus. The other was Elijah, a prophet whose ministry began about 870 years before Jesus was born and came to an end when God sent a chariot to taxi him to heaven. The two of them represent the two great strains of Old Testament tradition, the law and the prophets. It's these that hundreds of years before Jesus came on the scene, bore witness to His coming. Now, in a moment of fulfillment, Jesus stood talking with Moses and Elijah, the center of human history and of all our best hopes.
You can imagine that Peter and the others were impressed by the amazing sight of the transfigured Jesus, along with these important Old Testament people!
Peter was so impressed, in fact, that he spoke up, foot firmly in mouth as almost always was the case with him, and said, “Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings here, one for You, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”
That word translated as dwellings could mean everything from huts to temples. I think it’s safe to bet that Peter was thinking in grander terms at that moment. He wanted to build three religious shrines.
It didn’t take long for his suggestion to be unceremoniously vetoed. A bright cloud came down from heaven and from it, a voice--the Voice--said, “This is My Son, the Beloved; with Him I am well pleased; listen to Him!”
This command to listen to Jesus would have hit Peter rather pointedly. Just six days before, Peter had confessed his belief that Jesus was the Son, or the very reflection, of God, on earth to be our Savior and King. Jesus applauded Peter's answer. But then He told Peter and the others that He was to be crucified in Jerusalem and rise again on the third day after His death. The very mention of such a possibility had been repulsive to Peter. "This will never happen to You, Lord," Peter tried to tell Jesus. But Jesus, angered by this well-intentioned attempt to thwart Him in His mission of dying and rising for us, turned to Peter and said, "Get behind Me, Satan." "Listen," Jesus was telling Peter, "to what I'm saying; not what you want Me to say!"
Now, on the mount of Transfiguration, Peter shut up and, along with the other two disciples, fell to the ground, terrified.
Jesus went to them and He touched them and He told them, “Get up. Don’t be afraid.” As the three lifted themselves off the ground and tentatively looked, they discovered that, Moses, Elijah, the cloud, and the dazzling brightness were gone. Only Jesus remained. The same was true for those disciples as is true for us: When life frightens us or jolts us or throws us or hurts us, the only reliable helper guaranteed to be there is the compassionate God we know through Jesus Christ!
So, what was the point? There were many points, I suppose. But I want to zero in on just a few this morning. Point number one clearly was that Jesus is God the Son, in the flesh, come to earth with the full approval of God the Father.
Point number two is seen in God’s implicit rejection of Peter’s proposal to build three shrines. This past summer, you know, my wife’s mom took her to the Mediterranean. Among their stops was Rome and the Vatican. I was interested in her impressions of this place with its grand basilica and priceless works of Christian art. I shouldn’t have been surprised by her reaction, but I was. Like virtually every person I have ever known to go there, my wife said that she had been totally turned off by all the money spent on a religious shrine and wondered whether God is really glorified by it all.
Be that as it may, we know that God isn’t necessarily glorified by buildings, icons, symbols, rituals, or much-recited, scarcely-meant words. The Bible says that we, followers of Jesus, are His temples. In other places, it says that we’re to be living stones built on the cornerstone of Jesus Christ.
Too often, our religious stuff may be nothing more than monuments to our own egos and supposed piety. But the God we know through Jesus Christ doesn’t build His kingdom with brick and mortar. He builds it in the lives of those who turn from sin and follow Jesus. That, I’m sure, is one reason that God cut Peter off when he offered to start a construction project.
A third point that I think the disciples were to take from their experience on the mountaintop is perhaps, the most important one. It can be seen in that simple, moving moment when Jesus approached the frightened disciples, touched them, and told them to get up and not be afraid. The God we meet in Jesus Christ wants us to let Him into our lives. He wants us to welcome Him into all that we say and do and are each day. Jesus can do wonderful things when we do that.
The late E. Stanley Jones was a missionary, evangelist, and author. In one of his books, he tells the story of a man known to be, “the biggest grouch in Trenton.” One day, this man called someone he knew in another town and said, “All Trenton’s different---everybody’s different this morning since that meeting in the high school last night where we heard [the evangelist]. Of course, only I may be different, but all Trenton seems different.”
When we let God into our lives, everything is different. We have a different relationship with God and so can build different relationships with those around us. We can face life with hope and openness. We live in the confidence that our sins, which would otherwise earn us eternal separation from God, have been forgiven and that God will help us resist temptation in this world and that in eternity, living directly in the presence of God, sin will have no more power to mar our characters or our lives. We can be like the backwoods Christian I’ve mentioned before who could say, “I ain’t what I want to be and I ain’t what I’m gonna be. But I thank God, I ain’t what I was!” “If anyone is in Christ,” Paul writes in the New Testament, “there is a new creation; everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new.” God wants us to let Him into our lives so that we can be made new.
But I think there’s another reason God wants us to let Him into our lives. A pastor was driving along a country road, came to a corner, and saw an elderly woman walking along with a heavy load in her arms. He stopped beside her, rolled down his window, explained that he was the pastor of a neighboring church, and offered the woman a ride. She recognized him and said that she would love a ride. She climbed into the front seat and closed the door. As they pulled away, the pastor asked her, “Why don’t you put that load in the back seat?” “Oh, it’s kind enough of you to give me a ride. I can still carry this, though,” she said. They rode in silence for a time and then the pastor said, “Thank you for giving me an inspiration for my next Sunday message.” “How did I do that?” the woman wondered. “Well, I think our relationship with God is a lot like you and that heavy package you’re still holding in your arms. We trust God to get us through life, but not to help carry the burdens.”
I could almost write a book about all the times I thought for sure my personal life or even the life of this wonderful congregation were going to go bust. But each time that happens, I’ve learned the importance of letting the God we know through Jesus in. Our burdens become lighter and He shows us what to do, if we only let Him.
The God Who came to this world and touched the frightened disciples on the mountain, Who went to a cross and rose from a grave, wants to come to you this morning and each day of your life. He wants to help you carry your burdens. He wants to be your chief counselor, the One you turn to even when the whole world seems to have turned away. This week, why not make this your prayer at the beginning of each day?: “Lord Jesus, all day long, show me when I’m wrong. Affirm me when I’m right. Help me to make good decisions. Make me an agent of Your love. Today, I choose to let You into every moment of my life.”
And then, like the disciples becalmed by Jesus on the mountain, face your day with confidence!
Great post! Many times the mountain top experience gets explained in relation to how close we may feel to Christ at times(mountain top i.e. like high in the spirit) I like this explaination much better.
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