Sunday, March 2, 2014

Sermon for Transfiguration of Our Lord Sunday: Warts and All


Vicar Josiah R. Armstrong

Zion Lutheran Church and St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church

Transfiguration of Our Lord

2 March 2014

 

Warts and All

 

The Gospel of St. Matthew 17.1-9

 

Grace, Mercy, and Peace are yours in the Name of the Triune God. Amen.

 

            Today is Transfiguration of Our Lord Sunday. So, let’s talk about that word, “transfiguration.” I did some digging on a wonderful online worship resource called The Work of the People (workofthepeople.com), and those folks have some really great information to share from the Ancient Greek: The word “transfigure” is an interesting word. It comes from the Greek word metamorpho, which we recognize as the root of the word METAMORPHOSIS, that “thing” which happens to a caterpillar when it becomes a butterfly. It is one of the great wonders of God’s good creation, isn’t it? That small, creepy crawly caterpillar spends a GREAT deal of its time building a small home to hide away in, what we call a “cocoon.” After the cocoon is successfully constructed, the creepy, crawly caterpillar hides itself away until that majestic time of appointment! That time when the caterpillar will emerge as a BEAUTIFUL butterfly! FINALLY, the caterpillar has “sprouted” wings and has come to the world in ALL of its great glory! Pretty incredible, isn’t it?  That word, metamorpho, means, simply, “to transform.” As a verb, it means “to change into another form.” In the case of Jesus in our story from the Gospel, the word metamorpho is used to say “the reality of the outside matches the reality of the inside.”

            Now, we can use science to explain the Metamorphosis of a caterpillar to a butterfly, can’t we? But, we cannot use science to explain the metamorphosis, the transfiguration, of Jesus Christ on the mountaintop. We can’t really use ANYTHING to explain this event. Not even our deepest convictions and intimately studied and known theologies can offer us anything, really. We Lutherans draw from the tradition of the Greek Orthodox when we say, “It’s all part of the great mystery.” Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor, an Episcopal priest, professor at Piedmont College in Georgia, a rural chicken farmer, AND one of the most gifted preachers known to humankind, preached a sermon on today’s Gospel text recently. She says in her sermon, “Most of US [are] laboring under the illusion that our job is to figure out what the story MEANS. I am not sure where we got this idea, but it seems to dominate the way many of us read the Bible.”

            So, this morning, I would like to give you permission, as Barbara gave me permission, to NOT figure it out.

We do not NEED to figure out EXACTLY what happened in the transfiguration of our Lord Jesus Christ on the mountaintop that day.

So, just let it go, folks.

….just let it go.

            We recognize the players: Peter, James, and John watch Jesus, Moses, and Elijah in an indescribable moment of metamorpho. We forget that the SAME THING, whatever that “THING” is, happened to Moses when he came down from Mt. Sinai. In Exodus ch. 34, Moses comes down the mountain, after having received the Ten Commandments from the Lord and the text says that his face “shone” and he didn’t even realize it! Experiencing the FULL glory of God is indescribable, but when God comes into contact with Peter, James, John, and Moses in ALL of God’s glory, they are changed.

Maybe the “transfiguration” of Jesus is ALSO the “transfiguration” of Peter, James, and John? Remember, from the Exodus story, it is MOSES who is changed.

            I think an important ANNOUNCEMENT is being made in this story. I think the announcement has less to do with what Jesus experiences and MORE to do with what WE experience BECAUSE of what Jesus experiences. First, God makes God’s announcement to the disciples. God says to them, “This is My Son, the Beloved; with him I am well pleased; listen to him!” But, the announcement I’m talking about is REVEALED in one very special moment in the text AFTER God makes God’s announcement.

It is such a small part of the story, if we were to blink, we would miss it.

And HERE is the Grand Announcement!

Get Ready for It!

“But Jesus came and touched them.”  

But…Jesus…came…and touched them.

SO WHAT, Jesus touched them!?

But, in the simple touch of Jesus, something is announced and revealed.

            In all of the other Gospel accounts of the Transfiguration, Jesus keeps his distance from Peter, James, and John. Jesus does not touch them. It’s as if the REAL Glory of God would keep Jesus from touching dirty humans. Ya know? Trifling with mere mortals? But, St. Matthew has something important to say. Matthew has something important to announce: Jesus, even in the midst of his GREATEST GLORY, thinks you are WORTH it! Jesus believes, profoundly and deeply, that we are WORTH his touch, EVEN in his MOST GLORIOUS, MAJESTIC, and RADIANT moment! This is our God, folks! Jesus, our God in all of his Glory, moves toward us and touches us in the midst of our confusion, our lack of answers, our awe and wonder…and ESPECIALLY in the midst of our sin and brokenness. In this way, Jesus bring Transfiguration to us, and JUST like caterpillars emerging from their cocoon as butterflies, we are revealed for who we REALLY are, the Beloved children of our God. The way we express this “transfiguration” and this “touch of Jesus” today, is in the waters of the baptismal font. In our baptism, Jesus reaches out and touches us, transfiguring, transforming, us into what we really are. Claiming us as his own forever and ever.

            We struggle with this reality, though. We certainly LIKE the idea of a God who reaches out and saves us. We LIKE that Jesus is a personal God. We LIKE that our necessary transformation begins with the touch of Jesus. But, our world, especially here in America, DISLIKES what Jesus reaches out to touch. We dislike our bodies, don’t we? There is a certain body shaming that happens in our commercials on TV. Age-defying creams and shampoos. NEW DIETS every time you turn around! Our bodies grow older, eventually. They start to let us down in various ways. And then, we tend to sound like the Gnostic community, which Paul fought ALL throughout the New Testament: MY body is gross. I am too big. I am too slow. My loved ones are getting sick and dying. God can’t POSSIBLY LOVE, yes LOVE, my body, because I DON’T love my body. GOOD FOR THE CATERPILLAR, right? That caterpillar gets to transform into this BEAUTIFUL butterfly, but we just get worse and worse with age. (Pause)

            How OFTEN we forget the FACT that God calls ALL of God’s creation GOOD in the Creation story from Genesis. And, people of Zion/St. John’s, God LOVES that Good Creation! EVERY last part of it! YOU are loved for who you are! In the transfiguration story, Jesus does NOT reach out, in all of his Glory, to touch PERFECT bodies. Jesus does NOT reach out to touch bodies that WE consider preferable or good! Jesus reaches out to touch Peter, James, and John JUST as they are. And Jesus CONTINUES to reach out and touch us JUST AS WE ARE, transforming us for his Glory and for his Kingdom, BECAUSE he calls us good.

            So…back to caterpillars and butterflies. You know what else goes through the process of TRANSFORMATION? Bullfrogs. Yes, ugly, slimy, loud, bullfrogs. They begin as tiny tadpoles with tiny little tails and NO legs. THEN, they go through the process of TRANSFORMATION. They become those LARGE, disgusting bullfrogs that croak in our backyard ponds. But, you know what? God calls the Bullfrog GOOD. God thinks the bullfrog is JUST AS good as the butterfly. So, if you are feeling particularly “froggy,” remember that God calls you GOOD. And Jesus reaches out to touch you, yes, WARTS AND ALL.

            When I was a kid, I looked up a GREAT DEAL to my older cousin Tom. He used to lead his younger cousins on wild adventures through the woods. We loved the sense of adventure he instilled in us. He was SO WISE and SO BRAVE and SO STRONG. Wise….right…..

            Well, one day, Tom had the BRILLIANT idea to lead us into the woods to go hunting for frogs! Now, when I say hunting, I mean…hunting. This part of my story is TERRIBLE, so prepare yourselves: Tom taught us to sharpen sticks into pointy spears and then we would hop about near the creek and SPEAR those poor little frogs in the leg. THEN, we would pick them up and put them in a big box. NOW those poor wounded frogs were going to become our pets! When my mom found out, well…she was LESS than pleased. When we saw how upset my mom was, SUDDENLY Tom didn’t look so WISE anymore. Mom DEMANDED that we release them. And we whined and said, “BUT MOM! They’re JUST frogs!”

Just…frogs….

            Mom taught us an important lesson that day. God’s creation is good. God reaches out and touches ALL of God’s good creation. Yes, ALL of it. It does not MATTER what WE find ugly. God calls us good, and that is ENOUGH.

            So, you say you want to be transformed? You are being transformed. Every day. You don’t need to figure out how, why, or when you are being transformed. You can trust that it is happening to you because God says you are GOOD. And because Jesus, even in the midst of all of his glory, reaches out and touches us, making us his own forever.
In the Name of the Father, and of the Son (+), and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

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