Grace to you and peace from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
When you go home today, read Matthew 16, the chapter right
before this morning’s Gospel lesson. There’s a wonderful discussion about who
the crowds are saying Jesus is. Some say He is John the Baptist, some say
Elijah, or Jeremiah, or another Old Testament prophet. Then, Jesus turns the
question slightly and asks what the disciples are saying. In the great and bold
statement of faith, Peter confesses Jesus as the Christ, the Son of the living
God (16:16) and Jesus praises this confession as being heaven-sent.
Then Matthew says, “From that time, Jesus began to show His
disciples that He must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things…and be killed.”
Jesus had spoken of it before, of course, but now, when Jesus speaks clearly
and plainly that He must go to Jerusalem and suffer and die at the hands of the
Jewish leaders, Peter stands, and with the same mouth that confessed Jesus as
the Son of God, rebukes Jesus. “This shall never happen to you, Lord!” he said.
Peter doesn’t want Jesus to die. I can understand and sympathize with that
emotion, but he has forgotten that this is what Jesus has come to do: be the
once for all sacrifice for the world’s sins.
That was a week earlier. And, now here they are on the
mountaintop. Just moments before, Peter – along with James and John - had seen
Jesus transfigured, where His appearance became brighter and whiter than
sunshine on fresh snow white. Where Jesus’ divinity had been hidden since His
Bethlehem birth, on the mountain, His glory shone with all of its radiant
brightness. If that’s not enough to stun Peter, James and John, Jesus is joined
on the mountaintop with two of the Old Testament’s great heroes of faith:
Moses, the great lawgiver, and Elijah, the great prophet. Jesus fulfills the
law given through Moses, and is the one foretold by Elijah.
Matthew simply states that Moses and Elijah were talking
with Jesus. Luke, however, gives us the fuller report. Elijah and Moses “spoke
of Jesus’ departure, which He was about to accomplish in Jerusalem.” In other
words, they were speaking about His Passion, that He must suffer at the hands
of the chief priests and scribes, be crucified, and with his death pay the full
wages of sin with his own death.
No, no, no…not that crucifixion talk again, not that death
talk, not that dying at the hands of the leaders. Peter was not ready for Jesus
to go down to the valley of the shadow. If he could delay Jesus, if He could
impede His descent from the holy mountain down to where Jesus’ enemies would be
waiting, then all would be well. Peter has the chance to do something, to step
in, to stop – or at least stall – Jesus from going back down the mountain. Peter’s
not an atheist – he has just confessed Jesus as the Christ, remember? – but he
has go to do something! Our translation says Peter offers to make tents, but
the better translation is tabernacles – think Old Testament tent of worship.
Surely that will be acceptable and pleasing to Jesus. Peter can be a first
century Solomon who builds a tabernacle in which Jesus might dwell along with
Moses and Elijah so that they can all stay up on the mountain and live happily
ever after. No death…no dying…none of that stuff we don’t want to talk about.
The group is suddenly swallowed by a cloud. Throughout the
Scriptures, clouds are symbols of and even manifestations of the glory of God.
Where moments earlier, Jesus face shown with the radiance of His glory, they
are now overwhelmed by an even greater glory. If there is any doubt of what is
taking place, the voice of the Father in heaven shatters the moment. “This is
my beloved son. Listen to Him.”
Those words parallel Jesus’ baptism where the Father spoke
to Jesus, “You are my beloved Son.” The Father’s words re-focus the entire
purpose of Jesus life and ministry. This is God’s own Son, Immanuel, God in
human flesh. He is the very Lamb of God who will take away the sins of the
world. Jesus did not come to dwell in a tent built on top of a mountaintop. His
purpose in ministry wasn’t to hide up in the clouds with two heroes of old and
three disciples in training and live in blissful abandon. Jesus must go down
the Mount of Transfiguration and then up the mountain of Zion, where Jerusalem
sits, where the cross is waiting for Him; He will be arrested; He will be
convicted; He will die abandoned and forsaken by everyone.
We are entering the season of Lent. It is a somber season,
intended to be one of penitential reflection as we consider our own mortality
and our own sinfulness. We will hear Jesus speak of His coming passion. We will
see tensions rise between Him and His enemies and they will plot to kill him.
We will ponder this incredible story of love once again, the perfectly sinless
Son of God who becomes our substitute. The hymns become heavier, both in tone
and in the theology they carry, and we will set aside the use of the word
alleluia. Alleluia is a word of praise and celebration; Lent is not a time for
that word, so we will “bury” it until Easter morning when we will mark it’s own
resurrection with the Easter cry “Christ is risen, He is risen indeed,
Alleluia!”
But we are not there, yet. First, we must listen to Him, and
He says He must go down the mountain into the valley of the shadow. With Jesus
we will descend the Mount of Transfiguration. We will journey with Jesus to the
cross. But more than that, know that Jesus journeys with you as you carry your
own cross this Lententide.
I am always amazed at Jesus’ action. He doesn't rub their
faces in the dirt for dismissing Him and not listening to Him. He touches Peter
and James and John. I imagine it as a firm, but gentle, grip on the arm, the kind
of touch that says both “I love you,” but also gives direction. "Get up
and don't be afraid." He doesn't leave them in their fear to teach them a
lesson. No, He says, "Get up and leave your fears down there." When the disciples lift up their eyes, Luke
says, they saw no one but Jesus only.
Look to Jesus. It’s not as if He’s in a glass case labeled
“Break Glass In Case of Emergency.” Listen to Jesus. He is Christ is the Son of the Living God
who has come into the world to rescue and redeem sinners like you, and like me,
and Peter. Look to Jesus who stood on
the Mount of Transfiguration and prepared to go to the cross for you. Listen to Jesus: "Rise and have no fear."
Lent is fast approaching. Get up my friends. We're going down from this mountain with
Jesus alone, and Jesus is enough. We're going with Him to dark Gethsemane,
darker Calvary, and brighter Easter. When your sins burden you, look up and see
Jesus only. Listen to Him. Amen.
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