There is
this story in the Bible – part of the Jesus Saga, which has become known as the
Transfiguration.
Here it
is in a nutshell: Jesus grabs a couple of his friends and they head up a
mountain to pray. While they are there Jesus starts to glow and suddenly there
are two other people there – Moses and Elijah and the three of them talk. Then
Moses and Elijah fade away leaving Jesus alone with the three disciples. They
want to stay. They want to erect some sort of monument. But Jesus tells them it
is time to head to Jerusalem and perhaps death.
There is
so much going on with this brief story – even if we completely ignore the
radioactively glowing Jesus in the centre of the room.
As Jesus
life unfolds this is a major turning point in the stories told about him
because it separates the before and after in such a concrete way.
You can
look at this a number of ways, before this moment Jesus was perhaps a little
closed in terms of revealing his identity… he always put off questions and
said, I’m not great, God is great. But here he is revealed as somehow special.
Secondly,
before this moment Jesus was always focused on the here and now, healing and
teaching, going walkabout through Israel. All of a sudden he turns his eyes
towards Jerusalem, to be poetic like the Gospel writer Luke. Now he starts
talking about his death, and what will come of that.
Thirdly,
Jesus came to reform religion. He has some new ideas… and appearing with Moses
and Elijah makes him the third in a series of reformers: Moses changed the
faith when he led the people to the Promised Land and established them as a
nation instead of a wandering people. Elijah represents the prophets and the
way Judaism changed when it became more of an established religion with
religious leaders. Now there is Jesus, who has come to change it again…
See, this
episode, as it is written, has a very important task of changing the focus of
Jesus life. It is, one in a series of four episodes: the birth story, the
baptism story, the transfiguration, the death… Each of these is meant to
illustrate how Jesus was exceptional.
Moments
of change – moments of transformation – and moments that happen to all of us.
This is
the fourth, and most important reason the story is told: it is about us.
Transfiguration
is what happens at those crucial moments in life when everything changes. We
might not be up on a mountain, but think about the birth of a child, or
graduating from college, getting fired and having to reinvent ourselves… there
are these moments when change is forced upon us and we all of a sudden face the
future with certainty and clarity of understanding.
This is
what I am discovering more and more as I read stories from the Bible and think
about why someone wrote them down. What is it about this story that is meant to
be passed on and is important for us? Because there is always a reason, always
a connecting point that illustrates some great wisdom which would make our
lives better.
This is
something I wish I knew before now – we are not going to stay the same… life
changes us. Life moulds us into something different at crucial moments and we
are no longer the same person.
Too often
we are like the disciples, wanting to hold on to the past even in the face of
obvious evidence that things need to be different. Too often we have change
swirling around us and try desperately to hold on to the past with the
delusional belief that everything should stay the same.
The story
of Jesus is the story of a man who accepted that God leads in different
directions and in each moment accepted that and moved on faithfully into the
future. From Carpenter, to Preacher, To Martyr.
Hopefully
life has a nicer ending for us, but we still need to accept that
transfiguration is possible, and when the moment is right, embrace what God is
calling you to be.
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