Feast of the Transfiguration
As many of you know, I
love the wilderness and mountain climbing.
The feast today has challenged me to examine the question – Why do I
climb mountains?
·
I climb mountains because I like the perspective from
the top. It changes your outlook on the
world.
·
I climb mountains to find solitude with God.
·
I climb mountains because it is hard. My friends and I enjoy the challenge.
·
I climb mountains to encounter nature –it’s beauty and
ruggedness, nature that is raw, unruly and untamed.
·
I climb mountains to know that I am alive - it is not
simulated or fake – it is creation at it’s best.
The Three Mountains of
Scripture
There are 3 Mountains in
scripture related to the Feast today.
Tabor – the Mount of the Transfiguration, Calvary – The Mount of the
Crucifixion and Olivet – the Mount of the Ascension.
·
Tabor shows us the Glory of God, and teaches us that
God comes to touch us.
·
Calvary shows us the Love of God, and teaches us that
God can heal us from our sin.
·
Olivet teaches us the Reality of Heaven, it teaches us
about our final destiny.
Fortunately, we cannot
skip from mountaintop to mountain top, rather we need to descend into the
valleys and then toil our way back to the top of the next peak. Let’s examine the Gospel to see how Jesus
climbs.
How Does Jesus Climb
Mountains?
Jesus took Peter, James
and John and climbed up a high mountain to be alone…
Do not climb alone
The first thing that we
notice in the Gospel today is that Jesus does not climb alone. Climbing alone can be a bad idea, because if
we get into trouble we have no one to help us.
Jesus brings along Peter, James and John to the top of Tabor because he
wants them to experience the fullness of the Father’s Glory together – in
community.
Am I climbing
alone? Time for community
For this reason Christ
established the Church – that we journey together. Who is in my Church? Who
is in the group that I can have those authentic faith-filled discussions with –
my friends who share my faith and challenge me in my journey. Is that my family? Are these my friends?
Where do I find my companions for the journey?
Who do they encounter
on the way? Moses and Elijah
While they are on the way
Jesus, Peter, James and John encounter Moses and Elijah. They are conversing with Christ about the
next mountain that Christ would climb – Calvary.
Moses represents the Law
– that is knowing how to be in relationship with God. Elijah represents the Prophets – Knowing how to act out of our
relationship with God. These two men
show us how to have an authentic relationship with God, and how to live out of
that relationship. It is a kinetic
experience – it is moving and flowing and transforming.
Peter wants to
memorialize this into the tabernacles.
He wants to get caught up in the here and now – yet Jesus reminds him
that it is a journey that we are called to.
Then we encounter the
presence of God the Father.
When I was younger I
climbed Mount Massive, the second highest peak in Colorado. We made it to the top on a windy and cloudy
day. While we were atop the mountain,
looking off to the north west a cloud was blown up and onto the top of the
mountain. We were enshrouded in fog and
the vast vista was cloaked in mystery.
After a minute or two a hole opened up in the sky and the sun shone down
onto the cloud that we were in – atop the mountain and the fog was transformed
into this curtain of dazzling bright white light. It was as if we were trapped inside of a sun beam. Everything was illuminated.
I imagine that this was
the kind of experience that Peter, James and John had when the Father spoke to
them atop Mt. Tabor – they found themselves wrapped in the presence of God the
Father. That presence can be terrifying
because it illuminates the reality of where we are and where we are in our
relationship with God.
Mount Calvary - Sin
separates us from God.
Our sin becomes like a
mountain that divides us from God. Our
sin is why Jesus needs to go from Tabor to Calvary – to die to conquer the
mountain of our Sin. In the Psalm today
the psalmist prays. “The mountains
melt like wax before the LORD, before the LORD of all the earth. The heavens
proclaim his justice, and all peoples see his glory.”, and later on he
prays “Because you, O LORD, are the Most High over all the earth, exalted
far above all gods.”
When we harden our hearts
with sin they become like mountains of rock that block us from the love of God,
and when we choose to sin we make ourselves god in place of God – and yet when
we have the opportunity to experience the Transfiguration like Peter, James and
John the presence of God melts the mountains of our sin and we recognize the
reality of God. This is an experience
of humility.
Jesus comes with a
healing touch to cure our sinfulness
In the depths of their
sin it is Christ who reaches out and touches them. It is a human, a physical interaction that Christ performs to
draw Peter, James and John out of the terror of the moment so that they can
resume the journey with Him.
We experience the
touch of Christ here in this liturgy tonight – He touches our ears when His
word is proclaimed in the Mass. He
touches our hearts when we receive Him in the Holy Eucharist. He calls us to touch others as we go out
into the world this week to live out this Gospel. Take a moment during this Mass and allow Christ to touch you.
Mount Olivet
After Calvary, Christ is
raised from the dead and then leads the Church to Olivet – the Mount of the
Ascension. It is at Mount Olivet that
we learn that Christ takes our Humanity into the fullness of the Divinity. This is expressed in the vision from Daniel
in the first reading today. Here
comes the Son of Man on the clouds of heaven he received dominion, glory, and
kingship. All things enter under the
providence of God – the Truth of who we are, our sin is subjugated and we
enter into life with God for eternity – it is the ultimate goal that we are
created for, and that we strive for.
Why am I Catholic
I am Catholic for many of
the same reasons that I climb mountains –
- I desire a better perspective on life.
- I have fallen in love with the beauty of divinity.
- I thrive on the Challenge to become a better man, a better person.
- I love to work to grow closer to God – In Prayer, in my actions, in my deeds.
- I am Catholic because I love the community – Like Peter, James and John I am not alone, but I have Brothers and Sisters who climb with me.
- I am Catholic because I realize in my encounter with God that He is wild, unruly, untamed. There is a rawness to the reality of God that energizes and inspires me. Like Peter I can say that God is reality and not simulation, and the encounters that I have had with God inspire me to become more connected to Him in His totality.
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