1Six days later, Jesus took with him Peter and James and his brother John
and led them up a high mountain by themselves. 2And he was transfigured
before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became
dazzling white. 3Suddenly there appeared to them Moses and Elijah,
talking with him. 4Then Peter said to Jesus, "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." 5While he was still speaking,
suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice
said, "This is my Son, my Beloved; with him I am well pleased; listen to
him!" 6When the disciples heard this, they fell to the ground and were
overcome by fear. 7But Jesus came and touched them, saying "Get up and
do not be afraid." 8And when they looked up, they saw no one except
Jesus himself alone. 9As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus
ordered them, "Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man
has been raised from the dead."
Step 1--Initial Diagnosis: Bathing (in glory)
On the pre-Easter mountain top, the disciples bathe in the light of the
divine glory, and yet remain in the dark concerning the identity and
mission of Jesus. For them, the glory is all they can see and its allure
is captivating. They are not alone. We also try to escape from the
ugliness of world and from the continual humiliation our daily
responsibilities force upon us. Basically we just want to sit down and
enjoy a perpetual vacation, sunbathing on the mountain, comfortably
enjoying the light of the glory. Even in the church, the theology of
glory seems more appealing, more captivating, than the theology of the
cross.
Step 2--Advanced Diagnosis: Blinded
Peter, in his theology-of-glory-vision, has trouble distinguishing Jesus'
preaching from that of Elijah and Moses. He does not yet recognize that
with Jesus, something radically new is taking place between God and
humanity. He wants to make nice tents for everyone who seems glorious,
not appreciating that the glory of God, as preached by Moses and Elijah's
legal-covenant, would, with its intense demands, rightfully kill him and
anyone else whom it exposes. We also, who are blinded by the multitude
of demands and confused by the persuasive voices which surround us,
misconceive God's glory as a beautiful image we someday might attain.
This image of glory is of our own making, however. It is shallow and
self-serving; and ultimately, offers little help, nor hope, for real
glory.
Step 3--Final Diagnosis: Burned
How frightening it is when the illusions we nurse are torn away, and
God's glory descends upon us with crushing power! God's glory has no
shimmering beauty for people who live by the Law and worship
prescriptions for "success," religious or otherwise. This glory is a
consuming fire. For those who live by their ability to perform for him,
God is finally an inferno of demanding wrath. The disciples cower down
on their knees, because the Boss of glory has visited, and he has found
out they're way behind in their covenantal obligations, and the glory of
God will ultimately burn (consume) them.
Step 4--Initial Prognosis: Brightened
What they need -- what we need -- is someone to stand between us and the
Boss.
So, how about the Boss-Man, the Son of Man, the Beloved? When we are
weighed down by the infernal glory of God and struggling under God's
legal-covenantal demands, someone touches us lovingly and says "Get up
and do not be afraid." This is the Lord, who has placed himself in the
line of fire for us. He is willing to be burned in order to be our
shield. And his merciful touch wins out over the consuming hand of fire.
Still, that was his vision that he had to bring all along -- as the voice
echoes the words at his baptism, as his path from baptism to glory is
meant to bring us all along.
Step 5--Advanced Prognosis: Listening
Listen to Jesus! To listen to him is to have faith, and having faith
transforms us with freedom in the midst of consuming glories. God has
entered a world full of competing claims and voices, and has given us the
voice of One we can trust. In our dying and rising with him, the Law has
lost its power to kill us. We need not listen to new-sounding versions
of the deadly old prescription. Trusting Jesus' vision, we no longer
seek glorious works or visions. We live fearlessly in Jesus' vision now
and always -- the glory in the cross which only faith can grasp.
Step 6--Final Prognosis: Visioning
Now we are free to come down off the mountain and do his work. Dying to
ourselves and rising with Christ, we need no longer fear losing our glory
through servanthood. For we also have a vision that is now clear and
uncluttered. We become instruments of Jesus' life-giving voice and
touch. Trusting that no glorious law can impede us, and no doubt getting
crucified in the process, we nonetheless embody Jesus' freedom in the
world. We walk with the unglorified, fellow strugglers, telling them the
name and the story of the Lord who loves them beyond all hope. Where we
go in faith and love, his radiant Lordship over all becomes reality
today. What a vision! What a Lord!