Sunday, March 17, 2019

Jesus’ glorious word sustains us on our walk –Luke 9:28b-36

2nd Sunday of Lent, Year C; Holy Infant parish.


I spoke to someone recently who has decided that for Lent he would look at some of his wedding photos every day. Not because this was an unpleasant penance… our Lenten observances aren’t meant to be as arduous as possible, they’re meant to be things that make us holier. In this case, the idea was that going back and looking at a beautiful beginning was meant to be inspire him to live his marriage vows more ardently.


I’m sure we all have moments from our past that we love to revisit in our memories; moments that we would have loved to freeze-frame when they happened, that we long to have been able to package in a way that we could open them up again and again, and let their fragrance revive us from any spiritual drowsiness we find ourselves in.  There are big, obvious moments like a wedding, maybe your first child’s first smile or, for me, my profession of perpetual vows in Holy Cross, or my ordination; and any number of more unique moments we each cherish.  And going back to those mentally, spiritually is great, but we can’t live there. If the guy I was talking to staring ignoring his wife because he was too busy looking at pictures, his Lenten observance would have failed. What’s amazing about each of those moments, is that they all look forward, prepare us for something totally new, something that we could never have begun to embrace without that amazing moment, but we also could never have gotten to if we hadn’t climbed down from the mountain and dared to walk in the plain.

This Transfiguration moment was one of those for Peter, and I’m sure for James and John too.  I think we can easily underestimate that it must have been one for Jesus too.  Imagine the amazing intimacy of being able to reveal your divine glory to your closest human friends, being able to show in the brilliance of your shining visage the still greater blazing brilliance of the fire of your love.  Imagine being Peter, or James or John, and being lit up by that brilliance of your Lord, your Master, and your friend.  That deep human need to know and be known. It is no wonder that Peter wanted to freeze-frame that moment, to dwell in it.  It’s a natural human instinct; in fact it’s the foundation story of almost every Greek or Roman shrine – some god appeared here, so we built this shrine – and Peter knows his Bible well enough to think of tents as a very appropriate shrine.  But the cloud intervenes.  It overshadowed them and called them to something new; just as the Spirit’s overshadowing of Mary called forth someone new. Peter’s call is not to build tents on a mountain, but a church on earth.  He must climb down, transformed by this experience as truly as Jesus was transfigured, and put that cherished memory at the service of his walk on the plains.  And Jesus has warned them, and will warn them again, that this walk will not be easy.  It will be the kind of walk that is characterized by taking up a cross and following after him.  But, we follow, and we walk, knowing he walks with us, that glorious lover of humanity, and we walk grateful for God’s command to listen to him, for we know he speaks.  And we know that when we walk following our Master’s voice, following his path, he leads us to the glory of the kingdom.

We, like Jesus, have had an experience of being named as God’s chosen son, chosen daughter.  We have been chosen and claimed and adopted by God in baptism.  We hear a voice as amazing as a heavenly one whenever we hear God’s word, and we see the glory of God’s love for us in focused form in the sacraments, and in a more diffuse more still real way in the wonder of all created beauty.  But we don’t cling, we don’t try to freeze-frame. The Mass ends, importantly, with a dismissal, not just with us wandering out. We let ourselves be sent forth; we climb down the mountain to walk with Him. 

Now, I’d like to turn a little more directly to those of you are dismissed to sacramentally carry Christ to the world, those extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion who bring the Eucharist to the sick and homebound. I know that a lot of you sit and take notes, and share something of the homily with those to whom you bring communion. That image, of being sent forth, of walking with Jesus, might not work with them. The reason you’re bringing them communion is precisely because they can’t go out physically.  But, in a very real way, God is inviting them to understand their predicament as walk with Christ. They may very well not be having a glorious mountaintop experience right now.  But they have had one, we all have, and the memory can sustain them, refreshed by the ongoing gift of Jesus’ word, and his body, blood, soul and divinity, fully contained in one small consecrated host.

Praying for others is walk with Christ, is building up the Church on earth. Seeing how one’s sufferings are tied up with the loving sufferings of Christ is walk with Christ, is building up the Church on earth. And we know where walk with Christ leads. It leads us home.

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