11 February 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
The Transfiguration of Our Lord
Vienna, VA
“Listen to Him!”
Text:
Mark 9:2-9; Exodus 34:29-35; 2 Corinthians 3:12–13;
4:1–6
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Rabbi, it is good that we are here.
That may be the understatement of the year! But
indeed it is. It is good to be on that mountain and apart from the world -
apart from the sin, apart from the politics, apart from the hustle and bustle,
apart from the sadness and death, from the struggles, the misunderstandings,
the fighting, the uncertainty. All the stuff we’d
like to escape from in our lives. It is good to be here, with Jesus, in His
glory.
So Peter wants to stay. Of course he does! Who
wouldn’t? Who wants to go back to work or school after
vacation? Who wants to go back to coach after being in First Class? We want to
stay.
And notice . . . Jesus does not rebuke
Peter. Now, let’s be honest: Peter sometimes says stuff that needs
rebuking! He had, in fact, just a week before this, when Jesus told them He
must be crucified, Peter objected - strenuously! And Jesus rebuked him just as
strenuously, saying: Get behind me, Satan (Mark 8:33)! So Jesus is not shy
about rebuking His disciples when it is needed. But He doesn’t. Not
here. Not now. And not because He was too busy talking with Elijah and Moses to
pay attention to Peter. He doesn’t, but because He agrees.
Yes! Peter got it right! Well . . . partially.
Yes, it is good to be here. Yes, Peter should want to stay. And yes, Jesus
wants them to be with Him in His glory. Yes, yes, yes. But
not in tents, and not just for a time. Jesus wants Peter, James, and
John, and all the world, with Him and Elijah and Moses,
in glory, for eternity. That’s what He came to do. And that’s what He
was going to do. He was going to Jerusalem to provide this future for the
world.
For Jesus came to be the
prophet greater than the great Moses. Moses led the people of
Israel out of their slavery in Egypt, but Jesus came to save the world from our
slavery to sin. Moses used a staff of wood to perform the wonders that would
break Pharaoh’s back, but Jesus used a cross of world to crush satan’s head. And while sin and
death kept Moses from completing the final step of the journey into the
Promised Land, sin and death would not stop Jesus. Though He died for the sin
of Moses, and you, and me, and the world, He rose from that death. And rising
from the dead He ascended into heaven. So no sin left unatoned for, no death
left unconquered, no step untaken. The glory and life of the Transfiguration is
now open and available to all.
And that tent thing,
Peter?
You know, Jesus had done that before. When Moses led the people of Israel out
of Egypt, God actually did dwell in a tent with His people. It
was called the Tent of Meeting, or the Tabernacle. That’s where He and His
glory dwelt for the people. Glory that was indicated not just by a cloud that
filled the tent and led the people through the wilderness - though that would
have been enough! But also by that whole Moses’-face-shining-thing we heard
about earlier. That whenever Moses went into the tent to
speak with God, he came out with the skin of his face shining.
Like the shining that was happening in the Transfiguration.
Because you can imagine the arguments or
objections that might have come up when the people were rebelling against Moses
- which they often did! Yeah, Moses. Right. You go into a tent and claim to talk with God - yada,
yada, yada. How do we know you do? How do we know what’s really going on in
there? How do we know you’re telling the truth? Well! . . . that’s
how! His face. Hard to dispute that.
But here’s the thing: despite that, the people
still rebelled and continued to rebel. They didn’t do what God said. They
worshiped the false gods of the nations they encountered. When you read through
the books of Exodus and Numbers you get the impression that all they did was
grumble and complain! God in a tent wasn’t enough. It was important, and
it was significant, but it wasn’t where they could stay. It was, in
fact, pointing to a greater reality, a greater tent, and a greater glory - when
God would dwell in the tent of Jesus’ flesh so that not just one man - or three
- but the world, could see His glory and dwell with Him there forever. That’s
what Jesus had now come to do.
And it would be a victory even greater than
Elijah’s great victory. For just as Jesus came to be the prophet
greater than the great Moses, so He came to be greater than the great Elijah. Elijah
who as a lone man fought the 450 prophets of the false god Baal and the 400
prophets of the false goddess Asherah on Mt. Carmel.
But Jesus, as a lone man, fought all the hoards of
hell on Mt. Calvary. Elijah used an altar of stone, Jesus an altar of wood.
Elijah drenched his sacrifice in water, Jesus was
drenched in His own blood. The fire of God came down and consumed Elijah’s
sacrifice, and the fire of God’s wrath against the sin of the world Jesus was
bearing on the cross consumed Him.
But just as with Moses, Elijah and his victory
weren’t enough. In fact, Elijah’s victory hardened the evil queen in her sin so
that she threatened to kill Elijah, so that Elijah ran away. No glowing face, no glory, just: It’s no use God. You might as well kill me, for I’m a
failure as a prophet.
But the victory wasn’t for Elijah to win or lose
- this was God’s fight. And what happened with Elijah and all those false
prophets on Mt. Carmel was just a small skirmish in the upcoming war. A war
Jesus would win. Though He looked like a failure of epic proportions
when He was taken down from the cross and laid in the tomb lifeless and dead.
That just led to His even more epic victory when He rose from that tomb
alive and full of a life that could never end. That’s what Jesus had now come
to do.
So Jesus does not rebuke Peter. Yes, this what Jesus had come to do. But at the same time, Peter
(and the others) still have a lot to learn. And how
they would learn that is by what the voice said, the voice of God the Father,
which came out of the cloud: This is my beloved Son; listen to him.
Listen to Him. Because this is what He has been telling you, and
teaching you, and showing you. So instead of saying no and rebuking Him, listen
to him. And in case there was any question of who God was talking
about, who they should listen to, looking around, they no longer saw anyone with them but Jesus only. Listen
to him. You want to stay here, you want to be with Jesus in His glory, listen
to Him. He will tell you, He will teach you, He will show you, how.
Good advice for us today as well. Listen to
Him. (1.) Listen (2.) to Him.
First of all, listen. That seems to
be a lost art in our world today. With the rise of technology and social media
and the internet, there are a lot of people talking, and saying all
kinds of things, but it doesn’t seem like a whole lot of listening. And who
we do listen to, are they worth listening to? Are they putting up a tent
for a glory that isn’t going to last? Or are they leading us to the glory of
eternity? Which leads us to the second point . . .
Listen to Him. Jesus is the
one telling us maybe not what we want to hear, but what we need
to hear. The truth of who we are, hopelessly sinful and unclean; but also the
truth of who He is, the one who came to give us life
and hope. To give to some glory in this world
and life, but to provide for all the glory of eternity. So while you may or may not have the first (glory now), you can
have the second (glory for eternity). Which is
greater.
So listen to Him. Instead of
telling God who you are, your self-constructed identity, that I’m a this person or a that person, listen
to Him. That who you are is a fallen sinner, but after you’ve been
baptized, a child of God. You inherited sin when you were conceived, but that
sin has been washed away by Jesus’ blood, when you were born anew, born from
above. So the sin that would bar you from glory can bar you no longer. That’s
who you are. Listen to Him.
And instead of telling God what you have to do to
get along in this world and life, that I just have to do this or have to
do that, that God just doesn’t get it and that following His Word doesn’t
work, listen to Him. That sinning, that following your own
wisdom, your own desires, your I know what
best for me, isn’t going to get you what you want or where you want to go.
The Bible is filled with such stories. Listen to Him. Listen to
Him whose Word gives life and freedom and forgiveness and glory.
And instead of telling God what you need, like He
doesn’t know, listen to Him. Listen to Him who
knows you better than you know yourself. Listen to Him who says This is My Body, This is My Blood, given and shed
for you. Take and eat and drink. Food for your journey to
eternal glory. Food to strengthen you. Food for life.
Listen to Him! Listen, for if you want
life, if you want to be in glory, if you want to stay in that life and
glory, He is the only way. Everything else is a tent and glory that will not
last. But Jesus wants so much more for you than that. So He came down
from heaven and was laid in a manger, and in the same way He comes down from
His Transfiguration to die and be laid in a tomb. For you.
All for you. That you who will one day also be laid in
a tomb, will rise with Him to glory. With not just
Moses and Elijah, but all the faithful, in that glory that has no end.
It’s good to get a glimpse of that, to know where
we’re going. When life gets rough. When it seems like
a tent would be a step up! When we get trampled on by others.
When life doesn’t seem worth living. At just such
times, it is good to know where we are going and how to get there. That as we
will again remember this Lenten season that we are about to enter on Wednesday,
Ash Wednesday: only through the cross comes the glory, only through repentance
comes forgiveness, only through death comes life. So listen
to Him who said from the cross: it is finished; who says to you
now: all is forgiven; and who will say to you on the Last Day: welcome
home. Those are words worth listening to.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.