2d Sunday of Lent
Feb. 25, 2018
Mark 9: 2-10
Nativity, Washington, D.C.
Is there
anyone here who has not sung “The
Battle Hymn of the Republic”? As you
know, it was inspired by the goals of the Union cause during the Civil War,
viz., the preservation of the United States and the elimination of slavery from
our Union.
You may
be a little less familiar with the 3d stanza of that stirring hymn that’s at
once patriotic and religious. It came to
mind in connection with today’s gospel passage.
That stanza reads:
In the
beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
With a
glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me:As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
While God is marching on.
The half
line about making men (and women) free, even at the cost of one’s death, is of
course a Civil War reference, as is the last line, which associates God with
Union troops on the march.
The Transfiguration (Raphael) |
But of more interest to us
tonite is the reference to transfiguration.
We heard how Jesus was mysteriously transfigured before the eyes of his
apostles Peter, James, and John, and in that glorious state conversed with
Moses and Elijah, the exemplars of the Old Testament Scriptures, the Law and
the Prophets, that Jesus had come to fulfill.
Then a voice from the overshadowing cloud—a sign of the divine
presence—identified Jesus as “my beloved Son” and instructed the 3 overwhelmed
apostles, “Listen to him.”
They have been listening to
him for quite some time already. Unlike
John’s Gospel, in which Jesus’ ministry is framed around 3 Passovers and thus
takes place within just over 2 years (not 3, as we commonly say), Mark offers
no hint about the length of Jesus’ public ministry. His repeated use of the word immediately gives us the impression of a
breathless rush from Jesus’ baptism to his crucifixion and resurrection, all in
perhaps just a few months.
Anyhow, Peter, James, and
John have been listening to Jesus for a while.
In the preceding chapter of Mark, Peter identifies Jesus as the Messiah
(8:27-29), and then Jesus makes the 1st prediction of his approaching passion,
death, and rising (8:31). The apostles
listen, but they don’t understand. They
recognize him as the Messiah, but they don’t understand. You can be sure that when Peter, James, and
John see Jesus with the Old Testament personages who embody the Law and the
Prophets, they don’t understand. And
when God speaks from heaven, “This is my beloved Son,” they don’t understand.
Sure enuf, as they descend
the mountain, Jesus speaks again of his death and resurrection (9:9), and they
don’t understand; “they questioned what rising from the dead meant” (9:10).
In the space of 18 verses,
Jesus has been identified as Messiah and beloved Son of God. To understand, the disciples will have to
continue to listen to him. Jesus has
twice spoken of his passion and resurrection.
To understand, they’ll have to listen to him.
Listening, you know, means more than hearing with
our ears. In one ear and out the other
isn’t listening, right? The apostles are
going to have to learn the lesson that their teacher has been trying to impart
to them. It will be only thru their
experience of his death and resurrection that they’ll finally understand and
become effective witnesses that Jesus is Messiah and beloved Son of God. Only then will they understand that Christ’s
glory—his transfiguration—is the outcome of his fulfilling the Scriptures,
i.e., fulfilling the plan of our salvation laid out by his Father. His glory comes out of his perfect obedience
to God, even when wicked men hate him on account of that obedience and put him
to a horrible death.
But God’s plan can’t be
thwarted. Rather, it transfigures
Jesus—not for a transitory moment as on the mountaintop, but forever in the
life of the resurrection.
And so we come to Julia Ward
Howe’s 3d stanza: he died to make men
and women holy by offering us a share in his own glory, a glory that
transfigures us too when we embrace him—embrace his obedience to his Father,
embrace our own share in his cross, embrace his teaching as completely as we
can. He is the beloved Son. Listen to him, and you will be transformed as
he’s been, made a beloved son or daughter of God, made holy, destined for
resurrection.
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