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| On Kilimanjaro |
Has anyone here ever climbed a
mountain? Hiked up a mountain?
Mountains are wonderful, spectacular
places. We've all seen, I'll imagine, some great pictures of a jubilant hiker
at the top of the mountain - usually looking elated, with arms victoriously
outreaching. They have a mystique about
them: everything is clear at the top of the mountain... there's clarity of sight - both physical and
metaphorical - from the top. It's a place to aspire to, isn't it: the mountain
top experience is as good as it gets!
Everyone, therefore, wants to go to the
mountaintop, don't they? And then, naturally, to stay there! Why on earth would
one want to go through the valley - that place of shadows and darkness - when
one has been to the mountaintop!
So how exciting must it have been for
Peter and James and John to have their friend Jesus say: let's go up there. So
off - and up - they go.
And they've got it all figured out,
don't they? They're following Jesus - always a good way to plan a journey. And
they are in a group, in the daytime, which is safer and wise. They're on a bit
of a spiritual retreat - they've been QUITE busy of late, so some downtime
sounds ideal.
And WOW. What a mountaintop experience
they have! The transfiguration happens. They see Jesus in a way that is
exhilarating and energising and just all-round FANTASTIC!
It's no wonder that Peter blurts out
the "WOOHOO! Let's STAY here!"
But of course, as we know, the
mountaintop is only part of our life's journey. We're not *meant* to stay
there. But, we are invited to carry the memories we have, and take the lessons
that we've learned, as we continue. Because coming down the mountain safely is
just as important as going up. Ask any
climber or hiker.
Getting up a mountain is hard work.
There's training and skills and safety precautions that need to be learned and
honed before you start. There's nothing at the top of a mountain - if you want
food or water, you've had to plan ahead and carry it up with you (quite
literally weighing you down). You've got thinner air up there, and colder
temperatures - it's a rough and at times painful environment our bodies just
aren't designed to stay in for long periods. And, hikers will tell you, the
'up' part is only half the journey - the goal includes coming down safely. The
mountaintop is never the intended final destination - it's not a comfy tourist
attraction.
A trek up a mountain is a challenge. It's a long-time commitment of physical,
emotional, and spiritual training: and
so it's actually NOT for everyone.
And that's okay. Because if it WAS
meant for everyone, then it would be common. Every-day. Normal. It would cease
to be the mountain-top experience that it is. Because the mystery and
special-ness of it would be gone.
A mountaintop is meant to be special,
and talked about for its rarity and mystery and powerful journey. It's meant to
be a highlight in our lives, something to speak about and share and delight in;
at times of ordinaryness, and especially at times of journeying through the
valley, when we enter the shadows of our life. Especially when the world feels
darkest, we cling to our mountaintop moments to sustain us and carry us
through.
Even in the Gospel, the witness of the
transfiguration was not meant for everyone to see. The truth that was revealed
to Peter and James and John was meant to be theirs - and theirs alone - for
some time. It was long after they had come down from the mountain top - both
physically and spiritually - and long after they had journeyed in the valley -
again both physically and spiritually - that they had the space and place to
share the good news of the transfigured Christ revealed to them, by God, in the
person of Jesus.
This is part of the message that the
apostles shared in their darkest times, after the death of Jesus; these were
the moments that helped them to believe and trust in the good news of the risen
Christ - and to share that message with the world, for ages to come.
And what wonders they are able to
share, what fantastic learnings they have from their journey. What fantastic
opportunity for us to learn from their mountain top experience, too.
Firstly, we're invited to make sure
we're following the right person. The apostles followed Jesus up the mountain;
they learned from him. With Jesus, the emphasis will always be on compassion
and mercy: if we're not acting from Christian love, we're not following Jesus.
We are also reminded to look for the
unexpected amidst the ordinary. We never know when the brilliant and blinding
glory of God will be revealed to us! It may not look like a dazzling white
robe, or the presence of Old Testament heroes standing in our midst: but
miracles are in front of us all the time.
We can do our best to be intentional in
how we talk about and to God: Peter blurts out his building project intentions,
and even the evangelist points out how this was not a well-thought out
statement: "He did not know what to say, for they were terrified." Let's
know that even when we do have those well-intentioned but OOOPS moments, that
God's correction to us will be to be gentle with ourselves, and to learn from
it, and move forward being more intentionally faithful.
We are invited to keep our focus on the
divine - Peter doesn't say "let's build three houses, one for each of you,
PLUS a house for us" - he says - let's get you wonderful folks cared for.
We're invited to listen to the voice of
God as it surrounds us. I love the image of the cloud: we see clouds, we can be
engulfed by them, but we cannot capture or direct them. God's voice is like that.
And it directs us to listen to Jesus. May we open our ears to hear, and orient
our lives to act in loving service to Him..
We're reminded of the profoundly loving
reality of God, who confers (not for the first time, nor for the last) that
Jesus is the Beloved. The Son of God. And knowing that as children of God, we
are also recipients of a love so beautiful that words cannot describe it.
We're also told that after this
spectacular event, the apostles saw the ordinary world again, we hear there was
no one with them anymore "But Only Jesus." Because - Jesus is enough.
Jesus is all that we need. Jesus is more than we deserve: but by the grace of
God, we are gifted with access to Jesus.
And that, my friends, is the
mountaintop experience for us all. Jesus is real: Jesus is God: Jesus is our
strength. Together, we come to the elation of seeing and knowing Jesus, and
this is what we carry with us. This is how we look at the world in a new way.
This is how we carry the good news into the world, knowing that it was carried
to us by the past, privileged to carry it forward to the future.
Thanks be to God for the mountaintops -
both physical and spiritual - where God's radiance lightens our world.

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