The Transfiguration of Our Lord
Sunday, February 22, 2009
The Rev. Charles Henrickson

“How the Transfiguration Gives Us the Hope of Glory” (Mark 9:2-9)

Today is the Last Sunday after the Epiphany, the Sunday right before Lent 
begins, which means it is the Sunday in the church year when the Gospel reading 
always is an account of the Transfiguration of Our Lord.  For just as in the 
Gospel narrative, where the Transfiguration event serves as a pivot point in 
Christ’s ministry--from here on out Jesus is heading to the cross--so also the 
church year mirrors this movement, this pivot point, by placing the 
Transfiguration at this juncture of Epiphany and Lent:  Epiphany, the 
manifestation of Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God; Lent, the journey to 
Jerusalem for his Passion, his suffering and death.  Transfiguration is the 
bridge that connects the two.

But this is more than just a matter of literary or liturgical interest.  No, 
the Transfiguration of Our Lord has real relevance for the lives of real people 
today.  And so today I want to tell you “How the Transfiguration Gives Us the 
Hope of Glory.”  To do that, I’ll organize our thoughts under three main 
headings.

First, Moses and Elijah show up.  Now that is something, isn’t it?  Think of 
it:  Moses died some 1400 years earlier.  Elijah did not actually die--he was 
taken up into heaven in chariots of fire--but that was almost 900 years 
earlier.  And now, here they both are!  With Jesus, on the mountain, seen by 
three witnesses, Peter, James, and John.  And Moses and Elijah did not appear 
as just some sort of hologram or hallucination.  No, they were really there, 
actually present.  What does this tell us about life after death, about eternal 
life?  That it’s real!  Death was not the end for Moses and Elijah--death was 
not even there for Elijah in the first place--but instead life, life beyond the 
grave, life in heavenly glory, is the continuing and never-ending reality for 
all of God’s people, Old Testament and New.  That is God’s promise, and it is 
attested to by the presence of these two men of God, Moses and Elijah.

Furthermore, the fact that they are standing there with Jesus, and then after a 
while the disciples look up and see Jesus only, shows that the promise of 
eternal life is connected to and focused in and fulfilled by none other than 
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  Moses and Elijah are there only because of 
Jesus.

And so will you be, my friends!  Death will not be the end for you.  Death will 
not separate you from your Savior.  Just as Moses and Elijah were with Jesus on 
the Mount of Transfiguration, so also you, when you die, you will be with the 
Lord in Paradise.  Life everlasting is in store for you.  That is your hope, 
the hope of glory.

Second, the Transfiguration is a preview of Christ’s resurrection, and thus of 
our own.  Jesus himself was transfigured, his form was changed, his face shone, 
even his clothes became radiant.  Now as the Son of God from eternity, Christ 
always possessed heavenly divine glory.  But when he came in the flesh, during 
the days of his humiliation, Christ Jesus emptied himself and made himself 
nothing, taking the form of a servant.  The glory was put under wraps, if you 
will.  But now, just for this moment, Christ’s glory shines forth, and the 
disciples get a glimpse of it.

This is a preview of Christ’s glorification, beginning with his resurrection.  
For the disciples will see Jesus again in glorified state, when he appears to 
them after rising from the dead.  Our text even says, Jesus “charged them to 
tell no one what they had seen, until the Son of Man had risen from the dead.”  
Thus the Transfiguration points us to Easter and Christ’s resurrection.

And by pointing us to Christ’s resurrection, the Transfiguration also points us 
to our own resurrection.  For you and I were joined to Christ in Holy Baptism.  
There the heavenly Father, who said of Jesus, “This is my beloved Son”--in Holy 
Baptism, the Father takes us as his own dear children, beloved also, adopting 
us by grace and making us co-heirs with Christ of his glory, so that now we 
have an inheritance awaiting us in heaven.  Just as at the Transfiguration 
Christ’s clothes became radiant, intensely white, as no fuller on earth could 
bleach them, so in Holy Baptism you wore a white christening garment, showing 
that you were being clothed with the robe of Christ’s righteousness.  Your 
sins, though they were scarlet, became as white as snow.  No one on earth can 
cleanse you that pure and holy, only God can.  And so, just as Christ’s 
Transfiguration points ahead to his resurrection, so your Baptism, where you 
were joined to Christ--that
 is your Transfiguration and it points ahead to your own resurrection.  This is 
the hope of glory you have right now, baptized child of God, the sure hope of 
the resurrection.  Christ’s Transfiguration is a preview of that glory that 
comes when he rises from the dead.

But now, third, that glory must come through the cross.  To say, as our text 
does, “until the Son of Man had risen from the dead,” shows that first he must 
die.  You know, in all of the Gospel accounts of the Transfiguration, we see 
that this event takes place in the close context of Christ first predicting his 
Passion, that is, his suffering and death.  Here in Mark, in the verses 
immediately before our text, it says:  “And he began to teach them that the Son 
of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders and the chief 
priests and the scribes and be killed, and after three days rise again.  And he 
said this plainly.”  And a little after our text, shortly after the 
Transfiguration, Jesus tells them again:  “The Son of Man is going to be 
delivered into the hands of men, and they will kill him.  And when he is 
killed, after three days he will rise.”

Now why is this?  Why must the glory come through the cross?  Because there is 
no other way for Jesus to accomplish his mission, which is to redeem fallen 
mankind--to save you, O sinner, lost forever without forgiveness.  That is why 
Christ came, to do that job which we could not do.  And it would require his 
death to accomplish it.  The wages of sin is death; that is what we have earned 
by our rebellion against God, our mountain of misdeeds, the selfishness and the 
hatred and the lack of love we all manifest on a daily basis.  Now multiply 
that a few billion times over, and you see all the sin that has to be covered 
and atoned for, if sin is to be forgiven and the judgment of death satisfied.  
There was, is, only one way for all that sin and death to be taken care of, 
dealt with once and for all, and that is through the death of Christ, God’s 
Son.  His holy precious blood is of such worth, such infinite value, that when 
he pours out that blood on the
 cross and offers his life as the perfect sacrifice for sin--all of it--that 
that is how there is now a basis for forgiveness:  Christ has objectively 
atoned for all the sins of the whole world.  It’s done, it’s finished, it’s 
taken care of.  Thus, without the cross, there is no hope of glory--there is 
only the prospect of eternal death and damnation.  But with the cross, through 
the cross, there is forgiveness, and with forgiveness--where sin is taken care 
of, there death is taken care of also, and life reigns in its place.

That is why, my friends, that is why, the glory must come through the cross.  
We even portray that in the church’s practice, as now we are about to enter the 
season of Lent.  Today we sing our Alleluias and our Glorias, lots of them, in 
glorious, exuberant praise of God.  But today, being the last Sunday before 
Lent, at the end of this service we will say farewell to Alleluia, for a little 
while, until Easter comes.  Lent is a time for more subdued reflection and 
penitence.  We’re on that journey with Jesus to Jerusalem, and so we put away 
the glistening white and put on the penitential purple--Forty Days of Purple, 
if you will.  We exchange our Alleluias and Glorias for a Kyrie and a Hosanna.  
The glory comes through the cross.

But today we get to blast out with our Alleluias one last time.  It’s still 
Epiphany.  It’s Transfiguration, the climax of the Epiphany season.  From the 
Wise Men and the shining star; to the Baptism of our Lord, where the heavenly 
voice first declared, “You are my beloved Son”; through his preaching, 
teaching, and healing ministry--during this Epiphany season Jesus has been 
manifesting his glory as the Christ, the Son of God.  Now today, on the Mount 
of Transfiguration, Jesus lets it all shine forth.  Yes, ’tis good, Lord, to be 
here.

Why?  Because in the Transfiguration, we are given the hope of glory.  And this 
hope, our sure hope, the hope of glory, will give you the strength you need to 
carry on through all the tough times of life, when we come down from the 
mountain and are going through the plain and perplexing places.

How does the Transfiguration give us this hope of glory?  Today we have seen 
three ways.  First, the presence of Moses and Elijah bears testimony to life 
beyond the grave, a hope focused in and fulfilled by Jesus only.  Secondly, 
Christ’s transfiguration points ahead to his resurrection at Easter, and thus 
to our own resurrection, for we are joined to Jesus in Baptism.  And third, 
this glory comes through the cross, where Christ made atonement for all of our 
sins and suffered death for us, thereby winning the forgiveness and eternal 
life that is our hope of glory.  So it’s time to sing some Alleluias.

Therefore in our hymns we pray Thee,
Grant us, blessed Trinity,
At the last to keep Thine Easter
With Thy faithful saints on high;
There to Thee forever singing
Alleluia joyfully.


Charles Henrickson
4749 Melissa Jo Ln
St. Louis, MO 63128
(314) 845-8811 (home)
(314) 779-8108 (cell)
[email protected]

___________________________________________________________________________

 'CAT 41 Sermons & Devotions' consists of works that are, unless otherwise
  noted, the copyrighted property of the various authors; posting of such
   gives members of this list implied consent for redistribution _with_
    _attribution_ unless otherwise specified by the author, as well as
              for quoting or use in a congregational setting
                      _with_or_without_attribution_.

    Note: This list's default reply is to the *poster*, NOT the list.
    Do *not* reply to the list with your comments, but to the poster.

Subscribe?              Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Unsubscribe?            Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Archive?                <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>

For more information on this or other lists offered by Confess And Teach
For Unity, you can contact the CAT 41 list administrator at:

    Rev. Fr. Eric J. Stefanski <[email protected]>

Reply via email to