"This is my beloved Son . . . listen to him"
The Word: https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/030126.cfm
For after he had told the disciples of his coming Death,
on the holy mountain he manifested to them his glory,
to show, even by the testimony of the law and the prophets,
that the Passion leads to the glory of the Resurrection.
(from the preface for Mass)
Last Sunday our Gospel took us into the desert with Jesus where he confronted the power of evil face to face and resisted that dark power thereby establishing the ultimate purpose of his mission; to reclaim his creation and rescue us from sin and death. To conquer sin and death on behalf of all humanity.
This Sunday, we find
ourselves on a mountain top. A very
different scene takes place as Christ is transfigured, significantly changed in
appearance before the eyes of three select disciples: Peter, James and John.
Their reaction is
understandable. Impulsive but sincere
Peter blurts out: “Let’s stay here. In fact, we’ll construct three tents for everyone.”
Such enthusiasm is admirable, but Peter and the other Apostles are just
overwhelmed by what they see.
Here Jesus reveals
his divinity and his link to the law and the prophets which foretold of the
coming of the Savior. Yet this drama began centuries before with the call of
Abram in the desert, our first reading from Genesis. Abram, later Abraham, is an old man when he
is called by God to leave his “father’s house” and move out into a new land
with merely a promise from God that he would be blessed significantly. To bless
and to be a blessing in this context is a promise of partnership, a friendship
with God That blessing we see fulfilled in Jesus and he confirms this before
his three disciples. But for all it is faith that is the guide for Abram. It is faith that here is presented as our
guide through life as well. Abram put
his trust in God although God revealed very little of what he wanted Abram to
do despite the odds that were against both he and Sarah his elderly wife.
On that mountain, for
Peter, James and John, it was a call to believe in wht they saw. Jesus knew
well the dark days of his passion and death were approaching. That his trusted men would be faced with
shock, disillusion, fear, confusion, and despair. For the chosen three Apostles, that mountain
top experience was meant to strengthen them and to assure them that what may
have been seen as a tragic end to a glorious beginning, was not the end at
all. It was the divine stamp of approval
on all that Jesus was about to do. Only
by faith could they believe and hold on to that truth.
St.
Thomas Aquinas put it this way:
Peter
was the one who loved Jesus the most. John was the one who Jesus loved the
most, and James would be the first among them to give his life for Christ.
It indeed makes
sense.
The focus was not on
them so much as it clearly was on Jesus transfigured before them. Christ affirmed that he was the word made
flesh; that although the disciples had only experienced the Jesus of history,
they now are blessed to see the Jesus of faith and the divine connection with
Old and New Testaments that Christ fulfilled in his mission.
This second Sunday of
our Lenten journey brings us face to face, then, with a moment of our own
faith. Can I hold on to my belief
despite what may appear before me as a life of doubt? That is, Jesus is not
only a human being. His nature is both
human and divine; that his mission is beyond this world and that he has come in
the line of the prophets as the sign of God’s new Covenant, originally established
through Abram (our first reading from Genesis) and Moses as the final fulfilment
of that sacred Law.
For three Jews to
witness such an event it would have all come together in a profound way. God has fulfilled his promise to Israel and
to all of humanity. This is God’s answer
to our sinful disobedience which estranged us from God. (Recall last Sunday’s
story of Adam and Eve from Genesis 2).
Now, in Christ, his future passion, death and resurrection, a new and
eternal Covenant is established between God and humanity. Still, why not build
three tents? Why not hold on to this
glory?
In the end, the grace
of God, his blessing as it were, is given to us all so that we may listen more
attentively to recognize the voice of God in our own moments of change or
transfiguration. Isn’t that the desert
we walk this Lent? To discover that we
are blessed with mercy from God and that this Lent is always a time for us to
stop talking and to listen to God that we may be changed. As St. Paul reminded
us: “we walk by faith and not by sight.” (2 Cor 5:7)
At this time in Lent,
let’s maybe pause for a moment. Ask
yourself how things are for you in your spiritual life. Do I still talk too
much in prayer before God? Can I take
some time and add more silence in my life, turn to the Lord in a time of
prayer, ask him to reveal himself to you, and to simply listen to his
response. Do I hear what the Lord is
calling me to at this time in my life?
Add more silence in
your life this Lent. Create an atmosphere which is less distracting and more
attentive to God’s presence in prayer, in charitable service, in the
sacraments, in compassion for another, at a time when we include another
without judgement and recognize their human dignity, in the sacred Word of God,
in the Holy Eucharist, in spiritual reading, in a tough time. All these are
moments of encounter with Christ, but do I hear him? It may not be a shining
face, a voice from clouds above or even at a mountain top moment. How, when or
where God will speak to us we will never know if we are not paying attention or
wrapped in our own preconceived perception of holiness or self - righteousness.
Peter, James and John
are more like us than we may admit. They
needed to learn and to be formed in the Gospel truth of who Jesus was and who
he remains, but they eventually made the grade.
They learned to listen to him.
At Mass we hear his
Word, and we encounter his living presence in the Eucharist - are we changed by
him? Let's pray this Lent teaches us to
listen more and talk less that by his grace we may be changed for Easter resurrection. The Word and the Cross is our hope.