Thursday, March 14, 2019

Sunday Gospel Reflection, March 17, 2019: His face changed in appearance and his clothing became dazzling white...


Where do you meet God, and what does God look like?

  In the Book of Genesis, Abram is on his journey to the land promised to him by God when God assures Abram that his descendants will be as numerous as the stars in the sky.  To solidify his covenant with Abram, God has Abram prepare a sacrifice that turns unsettling, to say the least:  a trance falls upon Abram, and a deep, terrifying darkness envelops him.  God then appears in the form of a smoking fire pot and a flaming torch, passing between the animal carcasses on the altar.  God is thus a light in Abram's darkness, remaining mysterious (because of the smoke) but becoming ever clearer as Abram centers himself in God, moving out of himself so as to enter into relationship.  God is Abram's light and his salvation, as Psalm 27 puts it; in God's presence, Abram has no one to fear.

  At the moment of the Transfiguration, in Luke's Gospel, darkness also comes in the form of a cloud, frightening Peter, John and James, obscuring their vision.  But that darkness, coming as it does after they witness the splendor of Jesus' glory and dazzling white garments, is the place from which God speaks to them:  This is my chosen Son; listen to him.  The disciples will not completely understand the Transfiguration at first, and they certainly are not yet ready to accept his passion (and death on a cross), both of which Jesus has already predicted to them, but they are on their way, on that journey, entering as best they can into relationship with the Lord within their limited human understanding. The Philippians will be similarly challenged, hesitating to accept the necessity of the cross, tempted to imitate enemies of the cross of Christ whose end is their destruction.  But Paul reminds them that their citizenship is in heaven; they can only enter fully into relationship with the Lord if they embrace not only his resurrection but also his death.  They must encounter the Lord where he is, not where they want to find him.

  We all live, to some extent, in a cloud; no one fully grasps the Lord in all his ineffable glory.  But the Transfiguration is a promise of the glory to come, the divine light that will shine upon us all.  Every day is a new opportunity to meet God in a way we have not met God previously -- in each other, in the events of our lives, in every thought we have, in every deed we accomplish.  Though we may not understand, we are called to trust, with the faith that we too will one day conform with Christ's glorified body, the ultimate fulfillment of the promise of relationship made with Abram so long, long ago. 

This post is based on Fr. Pat's Scripture class.
Image source: www.wordclouds.com  

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