Posted on 03/15/2014 8:08:53 PM PDT by Salvation
March 16, 2014
Reading 1 Gn 12:1-4a
The LORD said to Abram:
“Go forth from the land of your kinsfolk
and from your father’s house to a land that I will show you.
“I will make of you a great nation,
and I will bless you;
I will make your name great,
so that you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you
and curse those who curse you.
All the communities of the earth
shall find blessing in you.”
Abram went as the LORD directed him.
Responsorial Psalm Ps 33:4-5, 18-19, 20, 22
R/ (22) Lord, let your mercy be on us, as we place our trust in you.
Upright is the word of the LORD,
and all his works are trustworthy.
He loves justice and right;
of the kindness of the LORD the earth is full.
R/ Lord, let your mercy be on us, as we place our trust in you.
See, the eyes of the LORD are upon those who fear him,
upon those who hope for his kindness,
To deliver them from death
and preserve them in spite of famine.
R/ Lord, let your mercy be on us, as we place our trust in you.
Our soul waits for the LORD,
who is our help and our shield.
May your kindness, O LORD, be upon us
who have put our hope in you.
R/ Lord, let your mercy be on us, as we place our trust in you.
reading 2 2 Tim 1:8b-10
Beloved:
Bear your share of hardship for the gospel
with the strength that comes from God.
He saved us and called us to a holy life,
not according to our works
but according to his own design
and the grace bestowed on us in Christ Jesus before time began,
but now made manifest
through the appearance of our savior Christ Jesus,
who destroyed death and brought life and immortality
to light through the gospel.
Gospel Mt 17:1-9
Jesus took Peter, James, and John his brother,
and led them up a high mountain by themselves.
And he was transfigured before them;
his face shone like the sun
and his clothes became white as light.
And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them,
conversing with him.
Then Peter said to Jesus in reply,
“Lord, it is good that we are here.
If you wish, I will make three tents here,
one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”
While he was still speaking, behold,
a bright cloud cast a shadow over them,
then from the cloud came a voice that said,
“This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased;
listen to him.”
When the disciples heard this, they fell prostrate
and were very much afraid.
But Jesus came and touched them, saying,
“Rise, and do not be afraid.”
And when the disciples raised their eyes,
they saw no one else but Jesus alone.
As they were coming down from the mountain,
Jesus charged them,
“Do not tell the vision to anyone
until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.”
The Lord Tests our Love
Pastor’s Column
The Transfiguration—2nd Sunday of Lent-A
March 16, 2014
There are so many life lessons the Lord teaches us at the Transfiguration! Who among us would not like to stay on Mount Tabor with the Lord. Just think for a moment: the Lord is revealed in power and glory: from that mountain, you can see forever! People from our past appear to converse with you; everything is clear, everything is possible! Your emotions are running high. So what does Peter say in response to this experience? “Lord, let’s build some tents for these great religious figures; let’s stay here in this moment. We don’t want to ever leave here!”
Mountains and valleys: when we are having a mountain-top experience, everything seems possible; we can see where we are going; and, most importantly, we feel good about life. But staying on top and always feeling good and having a great view is heaven. On earth we can never stay on the mountain. Instead, the Lord brings us here so that we will have strength when the valley of suffering comes, because suffering purifies us and proves our love. Even Jesus could not stay on the mountain! Jesus had not yet suffered on the cross.
As hard as we might try to achieve heaven on earth, none of us can hold onto it. Instead, first we must go through our own wounds and sufferings, our valleys and darkness, because these are absolutely essential to our future. Indeed, our entire eternity depends on how we deal with the valleys God permits in our lives!
A good example of this from life would be the day of our wedding or an ordination to the priesthood. The vows that the couple makes are so wonderful and ideal: “I promise to be true to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health…” A priest makes similar open-ended idealistic promises to God at this time. We think our love will overcome all obstacles and that the good feelings will last forever. Whether a couple is newly married or a priest is newly ordained, they cannot see what lies ahead, and good feelings usually do not last. Instead, real love and commitment begins when we don’t always feel so good about the choice we made or the partner we are walking through life with; and, sometimes, we even feel this way about the Lord, who will at times seem to disappear or not be listening!
Our relationship with God is not just good times. No, he makes it very clear that we will be given our own share of crosses to bear and dark times to endure. We at Saint Edward have gone through a lot of changes lately; a new building, the retirement of a music director we had for 34 years and an inevitable change to how the music sounds, and now a tragic murder and shooting that has affected so many of us who love the people involved.
Yet these are the times that prove our commitment to each other. The goal of a Christian is not to be a self-seeker, but to remain committed to the Lord and each other, not just in the good times when everything goes the way we want, but in the tough times that prove our love.
Father Gary
Posted by Dr. Scott Hahn on 03.14.14 |
Readings:
Genesis 12:1-4
Psalm 33:4-5,18-20, 22
2 Timothy 1:8-10
Matthew 17:1-9
Today’s Gospel portrays Jesus as a new and greater Moses.
Moses also took three companions up a mountain and on the seventh day was overshadowed by the shining cloud of God’s presence. He too spoke with God and his face and clothing were made radiant in the encounter (see Exodus 24,34).
But in today’s Lenten Liturgy, the Church wants us to look back past Moses. Indeed, we are asked to contemplate what today’s Epistle calls God’s “design…from before time began.”
With his promises to Abram in today’s First Reading, God formed the people through whom He would reveal himself and bestow His blessings on all humanity.
He later elevated these promises to eternal covenants and changed Abram’s name to Abraham, promising that he would be father of a host nations (see Genesis 17:5). In remembrance of His covenant with Abraham he raised up Moses (see Exodus 2:24; 3:8), and later swore an everlasting kingdom to David ‘s sons (see Jeremiah 33:26).
In Jesus’ transfiguration today, He is revealed as the One through whom God fulfills his divine plan from of old.
Not only a new Moses, Jesus is also the “beloved son” promised to Abraham and again to David (see Genesis 22:15-18; Psalm 2:7; Matthew 1:1).
Moses foretold a prophet like him to whom Israel would listen (see Deuteronomy 18:15,18) and Isaiah foretold an anointed servant in whom God would be well-pleased (see Isaiah 42:1). Jesus is this prophet and this servant, as the Voice on the mountain tells us today.
By faith we have been made children of the covenant with Abraham (see Galatians 3:7-9; Acts 3:25). He calls us, too, to a holy life, to follow His Son to the heavenly homeland He has promised. We know, as we sing in today’s Psalm, that we who hope in Him will be delivered from death.
So like our father in faith, we go forth as the Lord directs us: “Listen to Him!”
(Raphael)
"This is my beloved Son with whom I am well pleased."
Sunday Word: http://usccb.org/bible/readings/031614.cfm
Gen 12: 1 – 4a
2 Tm 1: 8b – 10
Mt. 17: 1-19
Mountain top moments in our lives are more occasional than they are the norm. Those big celebrations: our first communion or confirmation, graduation from high school or college, a wedding day, ordination, the birth of a child, the baptism of that child, a trip overseas, your first grandchild, a 90th birthday party. In the ebb and flow of everyday life, these moments stand out for us as highlights. Family members and friends come together to celebrate these significant events; we have pictures of them, we talk about them to others, and they are meant to be joyful times. When the “party” is over, we may feel sad wishing it could just go on a little longer but sooner or later we know we have to get back to our routine.
Our Gospel this second Sunday of Lent presents a mysterious mountain top moment for Jesus and three of his inner circle confidants: Peter, James and John. It would be great to know what these three disciples of Jesus were thinking as he took them up the mountain. Maybe Jesus just wanted to get away, far away, from the crowds. Maybe he wanted to share some personal secret with these three that he could not trust the others with. Or maybe they recalled that their scriptures reminded told them that a mountain top was always a place of meeting between God and the leaders of his people. It was the place for Moses to receive the Commandments from God and other times when a high place was the scene of an encounter between God and his people. The great Temple of Jerusalem was built high in order to be seen by all.
But, on this mountaintop they were about to have an experience with Jesus that was intended to strengthen them for the future. The passion and suffering of Jesus was on the horizon and he knew their faith in him would be greatly tested and those of the other Apostles. They needed a morale booster, some indelible experience that would reveal more to them in the midst of Jesus’ suffering. The cross was not the end but the beginning of God’s eternal plan and they would be the direct messengers of that good news to the world.
Peter in particular had recently proclaimed the truth about Jesus, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” But, they and we as well, needed to know that the glory Jesus would bring was going to be won at a price – the price of our sinfulness which opened up the floodgates of God’s forgiveness and mercy for all humankind. The Cross loomed soon and the resurrection would put the exclamation point at the end of that sentence.
As Moses and Elijah appear with Jesus, who was now mysteriously transformed, they endorse all that Jesus said and did. That he was the fulfillment of the original covenant given by God through Moses on another mountain, Sinai. That Jesus was in the line and the fulfilled promise of the great prophets of Israel and Elijah, the greatest of those prophets who had railed against idolatry, now comes to affirm this truth.
Yet, in all this shining glory, Peter offers hospitality: “Lord, it is good that we are here . . . I will make three tents here.” Peter, like most of us want those mountain top experiences to last forever, or at least to go on longer than planned. Just show me the good stuff don’t tell me anything sad. “What’s the minimum I have to do?”
In this radiant splendor, they see the divine nature of Jesus so why not just take our time and enjoy this for a while. In short, I think we would all rather take the easy way out. In this present time of technological wonders, why not just hook in to high speed everything and get instant results.
But, as we know, life isn’t that way nor was it going to be for Jesus and his intimate followers. Nor can it be for us who walk the Christian journey. Our daily life is a back and forth from cross to resurrection so what sustains us?
Like these three intimates of Jesus, it must be the voice of the Father speaking to us about his own son: “Listen to him.” Where and how does Jesus speak to us? In his Word of the Scriptures, in our prayer, in the sacraments of the Church, in the suffering of others, in your children and your spouse, in the people we serve, in those times when we struggle with confusion about our faith, in the tough and disappointing moments when Christ stands with us. Basically, not on the mountain only but in the valley where we live. These three disciples did not descend that mountain alone.
Our first reading reminds us that Abram was called from his comfortable senior living to now fulfill a new mission for God. Like him we are called to be faithful.
Mountain top experiences are important for our lives. In our gathering for the Eucharist, we need the beauty of holy Mass with an inspiring environment, carefully prepared music, a great homily, faith filled participation of the assembly, kind and compassionate fellow parishioners who are serious about their faith and inspire us, the generous service of others and “ah – hah” moments in prayer. All this is good but we can’t, nor are meant, to stay there.
God comes down from the mountain to meet us. As we journey through this Lent toward the glory of Easter, let’s look for the Lord who walks with us and calls us to hear his voice.
O God, who have commanded us
to listen to your beloved Son,
be pleased, we pray,
to nourish us inwardly by your word,
that, with spiritual sight made pure
we may rejoice to behold your glory.
(Collect of Sunday)
"The Transfiguration of Christ" by Giovanni Bellini (c. 1487)
A Scriptural Reflection on the Readings for Sunday, March 16, 2014 | Carl E. Olson
Readings:
• Gen 12:1-4a
• Ps 33:4-5, 18-19, 20, 22
• 2 Tim 1:8b-10
• Mt 17:1-9
“Life is short; death is certain,” wrote Blessed John Henry Newman, “and the world to come is everlasting.” It is a fitting introduction to today’s readings, for together they form a powerful discourse about the life, death, and eternity.
There are several rich, if subtle, connections to be found between the reading from Genesis, which describes God’s covenant with Abram, the reading from St. Paul’s second letter to the young Timothy, and the Gospel reading, which recounts the Transfiguration on the mountain. The three that I’ll highlight here can be summarized as calling, blessing, and anticipating. And while these three are always essential to the Christian walk, they have perhaps an even greater force of meaning during the Lenten season.
Calling: The first words of God to Abram (or at the least the first words recorded) are a call to faith and action: “Go forth from the land of your kinfolk…” In a culture in which one’s extended family was the core of one’s social and religious life, this was a call to a completely new life. It required immense trust, especially since Abram would likely never return to see his father’s household and his homeland. But the promises of blessing were just as immense: “I will make you a great nation, and will bless you…” This blessing, of course, was presented in material, temporal terms; there was not yet an understanding of blessings in the afterlife. And so Abram anticipated blessings of a temporal sort: land, a great name, offspring, and far-reaching renown.
Blessing: Paul’s words to his spiritual son, Timothy, could also be applied to Paul’s spiritual father, Abraham, who was saved and called to a holy life, not according to his works, but according to God’s design. And, conversely, God’s words to Abram could also be applied in a certain—but far more profound—sense to the Son of God: he was called to go forth and enter “a land”, that is, first-century Israel. And he became Incarnate so that he would be a blessing to “all the communities of the earth”, and would build a great nation, the Church (cf. 1 Pet 2:9). By taking on flesh and becoming man, Paul notes, God’s grace was “made manifest”. Our savior Christ Jesus, having entered a fallen and sinful land, would destroy death and bring everlasting life.
Anticipating: While in the desert, Moses the lawgiver had taken Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu with him up the mountain to see God (Ex 24:9ff). Elijah the prophet had also been in the presence of God on the mountain (1 Kng 19:8ff). Yet despite having close communion with God, both men experienced rejection at the hands of their own people. Jesus, in taking Peter, James, and John up Mount Tabor, was calling them to a deeper discipleship, to a clearer (and unsettling) understanding of Jesus’ identity and calling, and their own identity and calling. They were blessed, but their blessing came by the way of the cross, for the cross is the doorway to communion with God.
Pope Benedict XVI, in his 2011 Lenten Address, wrote, “The Cross of Christ, the ‘word of the Cross’, manifests God's saving power (cf. 1Cor 1: 18), that is given to raise men and women anew and bring them salvation: it is love in its most extreme form.” The Transfiguration was a foretaste of the power and glory of God; it was a grace meant to shine in the dark night that enveloped the apostles following the crucifixion. It would remind them of their calling, make real their blessing, and keep alive their anticipation.
“The Gospel of the Transfiguration of the Lord,” writes the Holy Father, “puts before our eyes the glory of Christ, which anticipates the resurrection and announces the divinization of man. … He desires to hand down to us, each day, a Word that penetrates the depths of our spirit, where we discern good from evil (cf. Heb 4:12), reinforcing our will to follow the Lord.”
(This "Opening the Word" column originally appeared in the March 20, 2011, edition of Our Sunday Visitor newspaper.)
Listen and Learn | ||
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Second Sunday of Lent
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Matthew 17:1-9 Six days later, Jesus took with him Peter and James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain, by themselves. And he was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white. Suddenly there appeared to them Moses and Elijah, talking with him. Then Peter said to Jesus, "Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah." While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said, "This is my beloved Son; with him I am well pleased; listen to him!" When the disciples heard this, they fell to the ground and were overcome by fear. But Jesus came and touched them, saying, "Get up and do not be afraid." And when they looked up, they saw no one except Jesus himself alone. As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, "Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead." Introductory Prayer: I come before you, Lord, a sinner in awe of your great love and mercy. I believe in you, and I put you at the center of my life. I humbly put all that I am before you and, like the apostles, recognize my littleness before your grandeur. With the help of the Blessed Mother’s intercession, I place this meditation in your hands, trusting that you will give me the graces that I need most. Petition: Lord, teach me how to listen to your voice. 1. Unexpected Graces:Peter, James and John are privileged to go with Jesus atop the mountain where he is transfigured before them. What a splendid sight it was: Jesus conversing with Moses and Elijah before their very eyes. They are beside themselves and are in awe at what unfolds. This is the way Christ is with each of us. When we least expect it, he gives us a wonderful dose of his grace to strengthen us in our walk with him. This privilege, however, isn’t simply for us to look at and admire; it is a call to respond to his invitation of love. Jesus was calling these three apostles to a deeper level of love and trust in him; he is doing so with us, too. 2. Listen to Him:At this sight, the apostles are awestruck and don’t know what to say. Peter feels compelled to say something, although it seems he really didn’t know what he was saying. The question is: Why did he feel as if he had to say something? Often in the spiritual life, we can struggle with the temptation to say too much. In this Gospel passage we hear the portentous words of the Father: “This is my son with whom I am well pleased. Listen to him!” Christ is calling us to listen attentively to his words and not to feel compelled to have to say something. He is looking for a response in action more than in words. 3. Get up. Be Not Afraid:When his Transfiguration is over, Jesus gets the three apostles up. This experience of Christ was beyond them. Yet Christ is educating them as to his true nature, his divine nature. They don’t have to be able to explain it or understand it fully; they need to act in faith. This is what we are called to do: act in faith. There is no time for us to be afraid of what the future will bring. We must get up out of our comfort zones and our attitudes, listen to Christ, and do as he says in faith. There is so much for us to do and so little time in which to do it. We need to make use of every instant to learn from the Lord himself through prayer and the sacraments and to make a real difference in the world by bringing more souls to know, love and live for Christ. Conversation with Christ: Lord Jesus, thank you for revealing yourself to me and for showing me how to listen to God and do his will faithfully. I know that I can frustrate you, putting my two cents in and talking when I should be listening to you. I need to continue to learn how to listen more attentively to you. Please help me to be open and docile to you and your loving messages for me. Resolution: In my prayer time today I will dedicate myself to listening to the Lord. |
March 16, 2014
Second Sunday of Lent
Genesis 12:1-4a
http://usccb.org/bible/readings/031614.cfm
It is easy to think that God is distant, uncaring, comfortably sitting in the sky somewhere, and ignoring us. We have a lot of problems and if we were omnipotent, that’s probably how we would treat humanity and everybody else. Total, absolute power sounds like a quick way to establish permanent, perfectly comfortable vacation away from all the noise, evils and “issues” that take up so much of our time. After Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit, God could have condemned humanity to reap the harvest of its own sin. He could have left us to our own devices or even annihilated us. But he didn’t. Instead, he tracked down a guy named Abraham and calls him to do something unusual—to believe.
On this Second Sunday of Lent, the Lectionary provides us with a second snapshot of salvation history. The Sunday Old Testament readings for Lent follow a chronological progression. In the first week, we hear of Adam and Eve, in the second, Abraham, then Moses and David, then finally the prophets Ezekiel and Isaiah. In this way, the Lectionary takes us by the hand for a whirlwind tour of humanity’s creation, fall, and promised redemption, which will be brought about by Jesus during Holy Week. This chronological telling of Salvation History will be recapitulated in the many readings of the Easter Vigil.
Here in Genesis 12, God launches his rescue mission to fallen humanity. Adam and Eve sinned; Noah’s generation sinned; the people after the Flood sinned. Our ancestors established a rather consistent track record. God now initiates a more drastic—and yet more subtle—plan of action. He puts in a call to Abraham, who lived in Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq) and later in Haran (in modern Turkey). This is the beginning of the story of salvation, God’s intervention in history. In fact, when St. Stephen offers his defense to the Sanhedrin, he starts the retelling of salvation history with the call of Abraham (Acts 7:3). The Lord invites Abraham on a mission. He calls him to leave his homeland and family and go to a place where he has never been in order to initiate God’s rescue plan for humanity. Abraham plays a key role as the father of the Chosen People and the Father of Faith. His “yes” to God begins the story of Israel, within which Jesus will appear to bring salvation to the whole world.
When calling Abraham to leave, the Lord offers him three main promises: a great name, land and worldwide blessing (“to all the families of the earth”). The “great name” promise might sound like a promise of fame or wealth, but what God is offering to Abraham is a royal dynasty, that kings will come from his line of descendants (cf. Gen 17:6). This promise will be fulfilled in the reign of David and his dynasty. The promise of land points to the special land of Canaan which God set aside for the people of Israel. The promise of land points back to the Garden of Eden, forward to the Temple, and ultimately to a sharing in God’s own rest—that permanent vacation I mentioned. Lastly, God promises that he will use Abraham to bless all the families of the earth—not just his own descendants, but everybody, both Jew and Gentile. This promise will reach fulfillment in the spread of the Gospel message: that God offers salvation to all through his son Jesus, that the path to God’s rest, the ultimate Promised Land, is now open to anyone willing to repent and believe.
Abraham’s response to God’s grand promises and call is very simple, but it changes the course of human history: he obeys. The passage says, “Abraham went as the Lord directed him” (Gen 12:4 NAB). His straightforward response reveals what true faith looks like. Faith is not an emotion, nor is it some complex philosophy. Rather, it is a trust in God that bears fruit in obedience. St. Paul talks about the “obedience of faith” (Rom 1:5). Abraham demonstrates what this looks like by simply obeying God’s calling. Abraham is the father of all who have faith, all who trust in God for salvation, all who believe in the Gospel of his son Jesus (Romans 4). St. Paul says, “those who are of faith are blessed along with Abraham, the man of faith” (Gal 3:9). We get to enter into the worldwide blessing promised to Abraham by believing. Faith is the doorway into God’s blessing.
Abraham’s choice to obey God, to heed his call, to leave his comfort zone and follow God offers us a stirring example. God’s calling on our lives might not be as earth shattering or history altering as Abraham’s call, yet we can respond with the same faith and generosity that he did. In addition, Abraham’s call shows us that while we might think we’re the ones searching for God, it is actually he that is searching for us. He initiates the relationship. As part of his invitation to Abraham, he includes promises. His fidelity to these promises, demonstrated through the history of Israel and the life of Jesus, encourages us that we have a God who remembers and is trustworthy. We can respond to his call with a well-founded hope of entering into that rest which He enjoys.
Jesus takes His closest friends up a mountain to pray, an action packed with meaning for Jews. Why?
Gospel (Read Mt 17:1-9)
The meaning of today’s Gospel reading is greatly enriched if we understand the context in which it appears, both within Matthew’s Gospel and the larger story of salvation history. Time spent on this will bear good fruit.
In Matthew 16, after Peter’s confession of Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God, the apostles get a nasty shock. Jesus tells them that He is destined for suffering and death. When Peter resists, Jesus sharply rebukes him (“Get behind Me, Satan!” in 16:23) for thinking as men do about suffering, not as God does. To men, this kind of suffering for the powerful Son of God would mean weakness, impotence, and failure. Jesus wants to teach the apostles that His suffering and death will be the path to glory. He has even more disturbing news, too. “If any man would come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow Me” (16:24). A call to discipleship is a call out of self to follow Jesus, to share His sufferings, no matter what the cost. As disturbing as all this might be, Jesus assures the apostles that suffering and death won’t be the end. “Truly, I say to you, there are some standing here who will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom” (16:28).
Six days after this conversation, “Jesus took with Him Peter, James, and John his brother, and led them up a high mountain by themselves” (17:1). Thus begins the episode in today’s reading, when these three apostles see Jesus as they have never seen Him before—radiating divine light and talking with Moses and Elijah, the only men in the Old Testament ever to talk with God on a mountain. Interestingly, there were prophecies about the “reappearance” of both these men in the Scriptures (see Deut. 18:15; Malachi 4:5). The apostles received a privileged revelation of Jesus’ divinity within His humanity, because both His face (divinity) and His garments (humanity) “shone like the sun.” Here was the fulfillment of Jesus prophecy that “some standing here” would behold the glory of the Son of Man in His kingdom. Here, too, was the proof that whatever suffering lay ahead for Jesus, it did not come out of weakness. It was suffering He freely chose.
This revelation came in the context of a foundational event in Israel’s history—God’s covenant with His people on Mt. Sinai after their exodus from slavery in Egypt. There He gave Moses and the people the Ten Commandments (or “Ten Words,” as they were often called in Israel), and He came down on the mountain and spoke to the people out of a fiery cloud of smoke. His Voice terrified them so much that Moses had to reassure them: “Do not fear, for God has come…that the fear of Him may be before your eyes, that you may not sin” (Ex. 20:20). Why was sinning to be avoided? It was a bondage worse than slavery in Egypt. The “Ten Words” were a path out of sin for the people. The fireworks on Mt. Sinai were a severe mercy to them, as Moses explained so well. Later, Moses took three friends up the mountain with him to commune with God. Moses spent so much time conversing with God in the fiery cloud that his face shone with light when he returned to the camp below.
None of this history was lost on Peter. Why does he suggest building three tents (or “booths”)? Luke’s Gospel tells us that Moses and Elijah were talking to Jesus about His departure (“exodus” in Greek). The people of Israel remembered their exodus out of Egypt, as well as the giving of the Law on Sinai, in the Feast of Tabernacles (or “Booths”): “You shall dwell in booths (tents) for seven days…that your generations may know that I made the people of Israel dwell in booths when I brought them out of the land of Egypt; I am the LORD your God” (Lev. 23:42-43). No wonder that when Peter heard of Jesus’ exodus, he wanted to build tents and preserve this moment a little longer!
Jesus’ new exodus was not a departure from Jerusalem, however, nor was it to be restricted to the people of Israel. He was to defeat God’s enemy, Satan (not Pharaoh), to lead all men out of bondage to sin (which is the bondage to self) and death, and to take them on a journey to their true home, Heaven. God’s Voice from the cloud declared, “This is My Beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to Him.” Jesus is the New Moses, as well as the new Law. God’s “Ten Words” become His One Word: Jesus. We only hear God the Father speak twice in the whole New Testament, at Jesus’ baptism and here. Both times He speaks only of Jesus. God, the Father, says to us: “Listen to Him” on this journey home. Mary, His Mother, as she did at Cana, says to us: “Do whatever He tells you” on this journey home.
When the apostles heard God speaking from the cloud, they were frightened and fell to the ground, always an appropriate response to God’s Voice. Jesus touched them and said, “Rise, and do not be afraid.” They had been told of the suffering that lay ahead, both for Jesus and themselves. They had seen the glory that lay ahead, too, a glory they were destined to share, just as Moses and Elijah did. They were humbled and brought low, but Jesus called them, with His touch, to begin their journey with Him without fear. Their own transfiguration had begun.
Possible response: Lord, help me this Lent to see that the glory Your suffering gained is meant for me, too—both the suffering and the glory. I often try to get one without the other.
First Reading (Read Gn 12:1-4a)
We might expect the Old Testament reading to be from the Book of Exodus, since the Transfiguration draws so heavily upon that history. Instead, we go all the way back to Genesis, to the first “exodus” of God’s people. When God called Abram, He said, “Go forth from the land of your kinsfolk and from your father’s house to a land I will show you.” This is the first conversion in salvation history. On the strength of God’s promise, Abram had to pack up his family and leave for a place he didn’t know. This kind of leave-taking, or “exodus,” is always at the heart of conversion. To make our journey home to heaven, we must always leave something behind for something better. In this, Abram is our “father in faith.” God’s promise to him was to bless “all the communities of the earth” through him, and that blessing comes through his descendant, Jesus, Who leads all nations back to God.
Possible response: Lord, are you asking me today to “go forth,” letting go of something and holding on only to You? Please help me to trust You as Abram did.
Psalm (Read Ps 33:4-5, 18-19, 20, 22)
The psalm continues a theme of deliverance, of God’s promise to preserve all those who are will to obey His Voice: “See, the eyes of the LORD are upon those who fear Him, upon those who hope for His kindness, to deliver them from death and preserve them in spite of famine.” As we absorb the lessons from these passages and desire to answer Jesus’ call to rise and leave ourselves, to follow Him without fear, we will want to sing this song as we go: “LORD, let Your mercy be on us, as we place our trust in You.”
Possible response: The psalm is, itself, a response to our other readings. Read it again prayerfully to make it your own.
Second Reading (Read 2 Tim 1:8b-10)
In the epistle, St. Paul is writing to Timothy, who was the bishop of the Church in Ephesus. See how he combines both the truths that Jesus wanted to teach the apostles in Matthew 16-17. He exhorts Timothy to “bear your share of hardship for the Gospel with the strength that comes from God.” There is no avoidance of suffering for followers of Jesus. However, St. Paul assures Timothy that God has a plan to lead us to glory (as revealed in the Transfiguration), a plan that existed “before time began.” Yes, there will be hardship, but, in Christ Jesus, we know there is also victory over death, “life and immortality.”
Possible response: Lord, you have loved me from “before time began.” Why do I worry so much?
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