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Mountain Tops And Plains
Contributed by Mary Erickson on Mar 4, 2019 (message contributor)
Summary: Our mountain-top experiences strengthen and shape our lives on the plain
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March 3, 2019
Hope Lutheran Church
Rev. Mary Erickson
Luke 9:28-36
Mountain Tops and Plains
Friends, may grace and peace be yours in abundance in the knowledge of God and Christ Jesus our Lord.
Today is the last Sunday in the season of Epiphany. This week we’ll enter Lent with Ash Wednesday. Epiphany is an accordion season. The number of Sundays any given year expands or contrasts, depending on when Easter falls. This year, Easter is very late. So we’ve had an extremely long Epiphany season.
The gospel readings in Epiphany reveal Jesus’ identity. Just as the star shone over Bethlehem and lit the way for the wise men to find Jesus, the stories we ponder during Epiphany shed a spotlight on who Jesus is. We hear about his miracles: he turns water into wine, he heals the sick. We hear the wisdom of his preaching.
These illuminations of Jesus reach a dazzling climax in the final Sunday of Epiphany. Today we ponder Jesus’ transfiguration. Jesus takes three of his disciples with him to the top of a mountain. Peter, James and John pray with Jesus on that mountain top. But while they pray, something extraordinary occurs.
Jesus’ appearance completely changes before them. He becomes brilliantly light. And then two pivotal figures from Israel’s past join him: Moses and Elijah.
Both Moses and Elijah had experienced mountain top encounters with God. Moses climbed to the top of Mt. Sinai. And there God gave him the Ten Commandments. Elijah fled to Mt. Horeb during a very challenging time of his ministry. The Queen, Jezebel, wanted him dead. Elijah escaped to Horeb a defeated and dejected man. But God appeared to him in a “still small voice.” Elijah’s spirits were revived.
Now these two men are meeting with Jesus on the mountain top.
Peter, James and John found themselves in just such a thin place. As their friend Jesus was transfigured before their eyes, they beheld that he was more than just a man. Jesus was divine, he was God-with-us. They saw Jesus for who he really is. In Jesus, the divine presence has come among us.
They were in a thin place. Jesus’ divinity was revealed to them in all his glory and power. That mountain was a thin place.
Peter, James, and John were quite literally having a mountain-top experience. We use that phrase figuratively. A mountain-top experience is a peak spiritual moment in life. It’s an incident along our faith journey that leaves a deep, lasting impression on us. It’s transformational.
A mountain-top experience may be a place or it could be an experience. We can feel that awe-inspiring moment when we see a wonder of nature, like the Grand Canyon. I remember one time in particular when I felt this. I was in seminary in St. Paul and I had a big paper to write. It called for an all-nighter at the local Perkins restaurant! It was just about this time of year, late winter. I finally left Perkins at about 2:30 or 3:00 in the early morning hours. I drove home, and as I got out of my car, I looked up. The sky was absolutely ablaze with the Northern Lights! The entire sky, from one horizon to the other, was filled with shimmering, undulating lights. It took my breath away. I’d never seen the Northern Lights so prominent before, nor have I since. I didn’t want the moment to end, but the frigid night air finally urged me inside.
A mountain-top experience can also be an event, like singing Silent Night on Christmas Eve surrounded by the flickering light of a hundred candles. Or at Bible Camp on a warm summer’s evening, singing songs around a blazing campfire and listening to a touching message shared by your counselor. A mountain-top experience could be something very personal, like a spiritual dream or a vision revealed only to you. Whatever the experience, it stops us in our tracks and we see the world differently.
There’s something about a mountain. Mountain air is different than what we breathe down here. At that altitude, the air is thin. I remember one time when I was in the Black Hills. The Black Hills aren’t nearly as high as the Rockies, but they’re higher than here! I was running to catch up with some other people. But then it hit me – WHAM! Not enough oxygen! I bent over double and panted like I’d just finished sprinting a hundred-yard dash.
Mountain-top experiences have a similar effect. Peter, James and John found themselves responding oddly. In that thin place, the air was rarified. They were simply overwhelmed by the revelation of this thin place they’d entered. They were in a stupor, all groggy. In his woozy state, Peter suggested that he build some booths – small shacks – for Jesus and his heavenly guests.