Luke 21:5-19
Isaiah 65:17-25
February 19, 2023
Rev. Fa Lane
“Come up to me on the mountain, and wait there.”
For any confirmands listening today, I challenge you to identify the hymns that I refer to in my sermon. I’ll talk to you later. For the rest of us, you know that Moses and Joshua, his assistant, were really excited that they were being instructed to come up the mountain. This was a big deal! They were selected from all the Israelites, invited to traverse this chasm between the human environment and the holy realm, to be in God’s presence. The Bible describes them as going into “the glory of the Lord that had settled on Mount Sinai.” This invitation to holiness is what we sing about in the hymn “Jesus Calls Us O’er the Tumult” (#171). Henri Nouwen, revered spiritual leader, was convinced that “prayer is not so much based on our desire for God as on God’s desire for us.” So we get invited to have an encounter with God.
We understand that the language of the ancient world uses the idea of “ascending” to represent the leaving our human context and aspiring to God-consciousness, leaving our human ways and living a more holy life, speaking with more loving words, acting with more patience and generosity, being more like Christ. Perhaps the spiritual transfiguration of prayer results in God’s presence in our actions and attitudes rather than a changed physical appearance.
Prayer: Lord, may we approach you, as going up on a holy mountain. Whenever we pray, rather than ask you to fix things or change other people, may our prayer be that we are changed for the better. Enable us to live more synchronous holy lives based in Your love and serving as Jesus served wherever there is need. O Holy Spirit, be present with us in worship today. Amen.
For most people of the ancient world, being in God’s presence was actually something to fear, if one saw God’s face it was believed they would die because you couldn’t be in the presence of that kind of power and not yield to such a superior Source.
Moses was called into God’s presence twice. He waited at the top of the mountain for the cloud with God’s glory to settle on it. It was after 6 days of waiting that God then called Moses into the cloud, into God’s presence.
When I read this account from Exodus I thought of that picture of a dog with a biscuit on her nose. God tells Moses to “Come Up to me” and “wait there’.
Did you notice that Moses in turn tells the elders of the tribe “wait here for us.” Waiting is such a hard thing to do, especially when you want God to answer your prayers. Heck we get impatient with simple things like at the grocery store.
Think about it, it takes weeks to months for plants to mature and produce vegetables and fruits. Someone brings those harvested crops to the market. We pick out those yummy carrots or strawberries and apples in less than 5 minutes. But we get impatient when there are long lines or only 2 or 3 lanes open.
I confess that impatience shows up in my prayer time some mornings. I peek at the clock and think “Uh, God, I’ve got 5 more minutes till I have to go to work, can we get this done? It takes me a while to get out of my own way. Am I alone in this? Can you relate, thinking, “I don’t have enough time to pray.”?
Let’s look at the ‘hike’ that Moses and also Jesus and his friends, embarked on up a mountain. I see them as getting away from human concerns and getting closer to God. I noticed that there is no mention of taking along provisions. I mean, Moses knew he was going to be gone for awhile; he told the men who were at the plateau with him to stay there so people could bring complaints and arguments to them while Moses was gone.
Likewise, there’s no mention of the disciples sitting down to eat with Jesus on this mountain. Its not like they’d taken a picnic lunch or fishes and loaves. They’d been in Caesarea Philippi, on the Mediterranean Sea and he simply “led them up a high mountain, by themselves.”
So, God calls us away sometimes, maybe mid-workday and we’re to leave things behind to spend time with God. God invites you -and me to come “Just As I Am” (#207). In the Matthew narrative, it was after they were with Jesus that he led them up a high mountain by themselves for an encounter they wouldn’t forget! Imagine getting up from your desk to have an encounter with God like that.
Jesus in this story was transfigured, his face shone and his clothes became dazzling. To be transfigured is to have a change in appearance: a glorifying, spiritual change. The voice of God spoke a blessing over Jesus, “this is my son, the Beloved.” and the voice gave a directive: “Listen to him.” So, when Jesus call us, we are to follow him, follow him wherever he may go. (Ok, that’s not a church hymn).
The scriptures make it sound so easy to just pull away from whatever you’re doing and spend time in prayer. But we all know it’s not easy to steal away to Jesus (#599). However, it’s important that we do so. Jesus see our troubles, our bruises, our grief and coos to us an invitation. Softly and tenderly Jesus is calling, come home.(#449) Come up to me and be with me.
Especially during Lent, there is value in waiting with Jesus, knowing the end of the story, but being in the ‘not yet’ space. I’m trying to imagine a sequestered prayer time with Jesus during Lent and experiencing a spiritual change that feels “glorious.” Remember, we’re praying for ’God change us.’ So, my prayer is “Transfigure me so I shine with Your love, O God.” Change me so I have insight and courage to make a difference for families in need. Change me so I stop wasting time and money on frivolous things. Change me with the spirit to stand up, speak truth and lead with humility.
First, that would require that I not go into my prayer time with my ’honey-do list’ of requests. Oh Lord, please heal so-n-so; please help so-n-so find a better job; please provide peace to the people of such-n-such city or country. Rather, Oh Lord, break open my heart. Open my eyes, my ears to see and hear what you see and hear.
It also requires that I stop what I’m doing…texting; emails, reading, munching on breakfast. Prayer invites us to get in the zone with God then wait…but my mind goes over all over the place! “Oh I gotta send a reminder to someone; mmm, let me text this idea real quick so it’s off my plate…”
So, instead of being drawn away to a sweet hour of prayer (#505) that calls me from a world of care, I’ve cluttered up my mind with tasks of this world. Rather than purifying my thoughts to ascend the mountain to be with God, I’ve brought along all this baggage from my human thinking that hinders me.
We have to be intentional to have an encounter with God and not let the usual things hold us back. As we head into Lent, we’re provided a 40-day opportunity to clear out the muddiness of our minds. We’re given 6 weeks to be transformed, to establish some new habits of clean living, purifying our bodies, excavating our old attitudes, re-thinking how we respond to certain situations. Henri Nouwen explains, “The invitation to a life of prayer is the invitation to live in the midst of this world without being caught in the net of wounds and needs.”
When God calls us out of our ordinary day and whispers “Come up to me on the mountain; and wait,” may we do just that. The early fathers and mothers in the faith would spend time in their monastery cells in prayer doing the penitential work of confessing sins, repenting of them and finding forgiveness.
Amma Syncletica, one of the Desert Mothers, used the image of a mother hen tending to her eggs when describing the importance of sitting still in one’s cell (waiting). She used the nest as a metaphor for our prayer time and the eggs as a metaphor for the virtues we are cultivating through prayer: patience, truth, generosity, humility, etc. If the mother hen leaves her eggs to wander about, the eggs will grow cold and never hatch.
May our prayers cultivate the virtues that would have us see the poor and homeless that walk the alleys and streets of Etown. May an encounter with Jesus give us a directive that helps the world be a safer place for LGBTQ people. We might encounter the Holy One when we to sit with someone for a few minutes, and that conversation transfigures both of us, giving us new insight.
God can be present with us on a mission team trip, or hiking or joining a social justice rally, a prayer circle, or a study group. The invitation has been extended to encounter God: “Come up to me on the mountain, and wait there."
God of making
and unmaking,
Of tearing down
And re-creating,
You are my home
and habitation,
My refuge
And place of dwelling.
In your hollows
I am re-formed,
Given welcome
And benediction,
Beckoned to rest
And rise again,
made ready
and sent forth.
- Jan Richardson, Night Visions, 1998. Wanton Gospeller Press. Orlando, FL
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