Jesus took with him Peter and John and James and
went up the mountain to pray. As he prayed, the aspect of his face was changed
and his clothing became brilliant as lightning. Suddenly there were two men
there talking to him; they were Moses and Elijah
appearing in glory, and they were speaking of his passing which he was to
accomplish in Jerusalem.
Luke 9:28 – 32
There are moments in our lives that are
totally transformative. They are moments of inspiration, realization,
acceptance, unveiling, creativity, or ecstasy. It is at these junctures that we
move from one understanding or perception to another: the change may well be
graduated, or instantaneous. But the effect is the same. The person I was
before this change was effected is in some subtle or less than subtle way made
anew.
Falling in love, seeing your newborn child,
sending your children off to university, becoming a grandparent, losing a
partner and even death itself generates that transition from one state to
another. Our lives are punctuated and perhaps even measured by such
experiences, they may equally be highlights or lowlights, full of pleasure or
pain, self-revealing or disclaiming, gentle or explosive, tragic or comic. It
can lead us to grow and it can lead us to withdraw. It is what we make of that
moment, that experience, that learning that will enable us to truly be
transformed.
The story of the Transfiguration appears
in each of the synoptic Gospels. It is a story
utterly drenched in images, symbols and metaphors. It is an encounter between
man and God (akin to Moses on Mt Sinai), the bridging between heaven and earth,
the present reality with the future expectation. It is not only about what
happens to Jesus, it is about what happens to the disciples who are shaken from
their weariness and most
imperatively, about happens to me when I
am face to face with the glory of God. Thus the transfiguration becomes a
deep, transforming experience for those disciples, for they have seen, but must
now listen (Listen to him) and with
this a revelation of Jesus’ ultimate mission, the breaking open of the kingdom
here on earth with him as the bridge to eternal life. Moses’ and Elijah’s
presence are the assurance that the faithful will be rewarded.
In our neighbours, in our streets and
towns, in places far from our own we encounter the face of God. Not a God of
glory, but most often a God of suffering and hurt, hunger and destitution. If I
am called to anything in this transfiguration story, it is to allow others to
be transformed through my actions, my faith in them, in my compassion – and
allow others to see beyond the “me” and to look into the face of that God of
glory.
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