The Feast of the Transfiguration 2009
A sermon preached by the Right Reverend David Hope
former Bishop of London and Archbishop of York
'Peter said to Jesus, Master it is good for us to be here' (Lk: 9.33)
One of the high points - quite literally too - of any pilgrimage to the
Holy Land, is the visit to Mount Tabor, the Mount of Transfiguration.
It's actually quite a hair raising journey, as having abandoned the bus
and queued quite some time, you are crammed into an altogether smaller
taxi and begin the corkscrew like journey to the top of the mountain.
And then having survived numerous z bends and near misses with taxis coming
the other way you finally arrive at the top of the mountain - and what
a mountain top experience it is! As in Peter's words to Jesus you can
hardly restrain yourself from saying - ' it is good Lord to be here'.
For there you are with Jesus on the mountain top - the lovely basilica
church - the breathtaking views - and in spite of the thronging crowds
it is still possible to find a quiet place to savour the stillness of
the cool air and there to 'be' - to contemplate and to reflect on the
extraordinary vision which the disciples experienced as Jesus is transfigured
before their very eyes.
For a moment the veil is lifted and He who but a few days before had
been warning them of His forthcoming betrayal, suffering and death is
now standing before them gleaming and glistening - His whole body suffused
with the divine light of God's glory - just as Moses' face had shone on
Sinai. Here truly in this moment, the Old Covenant of God's grace and
mercy is fulfilled and transformed in the person of Jesus Christ - the
Mediator of the New Covenant - that same Covenant celebrated this very
night and every time we 'do this' in remembrance of Him.
'Peter said to Jesus, Master it is good for us to be here'
So what then does this Feast of the Transfiguration have to say to us
today - a Feast it has to be said celebrated with much more solemnity
in the Eastern Church than the Western, and where it has been so celebrated
for far longer too. And maybe that gives us something of a clue as to
both an understanding and the relevance of this day.
One of the things I have tended to do over the years and experiencing
all manner of church services is to apply what I call the 'transfiguration
test'. In other words does this act of worship in which I am now participating
enable me to experience something of the wonder, the splendour, the mystery,
and the glory of the eternal and everlasting God - the God who in Christ
shines out in glory on the holy mount? Can I in all honesty say at the
conclusion of the service in those words of Peter to Jesus - 'Lord it
is good to be here' - and yes of course there have been such transfigurative
and transformative occasions and moments in worship, but all too often
I must confess that I have thought to myself quite the contrary - 'Its
good Lord to get out of here'.
Of course we cannot be on a high all the time, but that does not mean
to say that the prime object in the worship that we offer is that those
present might be able to experience some glimpse of God's glory. All too
often worship - it's just the usual service - turns out to be the most
unusual service with the emphasis more on the somewhat more banal attempts
to mirror the distractions of the world of entertainment than to reflect
the compelling attractions of the sheer beauty and wonder of heaven. We
may well ask where has all the mystery gone?
For one thing our worship is altogether too wordy; where is the silence
of the mountain top - that silence which is not borne of the vicar loosing
his way, but rather a silence which enables us simply to 'be' in the presence
of the great mystery in our midst - that silence in which we contemplate
in the words of the ancient Eastern Liturgy 'Rank on rank the host of
heaven, Spreads its vanguard on the way, As the Light of Light descendeth
From the realms of endless day' - a silence in which already we hear on
the distant ear the sound of the song of heaven to which we are invited
to join our earthly voices with angels and archangels and the whole company
of heaven in the praise of the Triune God.
Today's feast then is a challenge to us and to the whole church about
the nature and style of our worship not that it be so conformed to the
ways of this world but rather that it be both transforming and transformative
so that we and all who participate may be caught up and the worship itself
in the words of the Puritan poet John Milton, that it 'may with sweetness,
through mine ear, dissolve me into ecstasies, and bring all heaven before
mine eyes'.
'Peter said to Jesus, Master it is good for us to be here'.
The gospel tells us that Jesus' face glistened and gleamed with the divine
light of God's glory, and here surely is a further dimension of the Transfiguration
for today's church and the priority for its mission, namely that we turn
our attention out and away from ourselves and the pettiness and irrelevance
of so many of our time-wasting agendas to the addressing of the needs
of the world and its people. It was the great fourth/fifth century archbishop
of Constantinople John Chrysostom who once wrote 'God has no need of golden
vessels but of golden hearts'. So the question is how is it possible for
those of us transformed in and through the liturgy of this night might
be the more enabled to effect that fullness of life and living which Christ
wills for all - Christ's glistening and gleaming face reflected in the
glistening and gleaming faces of all humanity ? And no it's not about
the social gospel, but it is about the social dimension of the Gospel
which we neglect at our peril.
After all that was one of the great strengths of the Catholic Movement
in the nineteenth century - liturgy and life were inseparably interconnected
- such was and continues to be the 'incarnational' principle on which
the movement was founded and grounded - the very dignity of each and every
person made in the image and likeness of God. People living in the most
squalid of situations and circumstances were not only given a vision of
God's beauty in worship - they experienced at the same time the actuality,
the reality, of better living conditions, a better quality of life -lives
changed, transformed through the advocacy and sheer slog of both priests
and people. That priority for mission - that 'bias to the poor' as it
has been called, yet remains not only in our own land but throughout the
world, and we cannot rest until that glistening and gleaming face of the
transfigured Christ is reflected in glistening and gleaming faces everywhere.
And a third and final consideration is that in almost every representation
of this days feast and not least in the icons of the eastern Churches
- the beams of God's glory extend over the whole of the mountain top and
beyond - a sign that the whole earth is to be caught up in the process
of transformation and redemption. Such is the very basis of our commitment
to the ensuring of the sustainability of that which in creation God has
entrusted to us as 'Priests for Creation'.
The vision of the mountain top swathed in the light of the divine presence
is a recalling of that first morning of creation, when, pristine and perfect,
God looked upon all that he had made and 'behold it was very good'. The
responsibility which is ours today is not simply a jumping on the latest
environmental band wagon. The care for creation springs from the very
heart of God and the nature of our relationship with the Creator who has
not given it to us to lord it over the created order to pillage and to
plunder, but has entrusted all that He has made to us as responsible stewards
who will see to it that the delicate and precarious balance of life on
earth and throughout the cosmos is not only maintained but also further
sustained. What a terrible reproach it is for us that today also marks
one of humankind's worst atrocities - the destruction wrought by the atom
bomb of Hiroshima - the black destruction and devastation in utter contrast
to the light and life which God in Christ wills for His world.
'Peter said to Jesus, "Master it is good for us to be here".'
So then this much neglected celebration of the Transfiguration in the
Western church generally, turns out to be both central and crucial in
directing us to the very heart of the mission entrusted to the church
in every age, namely the transformation in Jesus Christ of the world and
its peoples.
For here on the mountain top the disciples Peter and James and John are
given a glimpse of that glory which is yet to be revealed in us, in the
church and in the world - the glory which amidst all the sufferings of
this present time gives us hope not just for the future but for this present
- for here this very night in and through the celebration of these holy
and sacred mysteries you and I are invited to participate in this 'sacred
banquet wherein Christ is received, the memorial of His passion renewed,
the soul filled with grace and a pledge of future glory is given us'.
In the Eucharistic presence of the glorified Lord then, with Peter, we
can surely restrain ourselves no longer but simply yet profoundly and
overwhelmingly respond - 'Lord. It is good that we are here'.
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