Mark 9:2-9
2 Corinthians 4:3-6
February 11, 2024
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
For it is the God who said, “Let light shine out of darkness,” who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.
Prayer: Transfiguring God, may we feel and see the power of your presence deep within our hearts. Amen.
There was a young woman at Chapel Hill UCC who came with her parents most every Sunday. But, she never participated in any of our youth events, never went to Faith Formation classes. I invited her to participate in Confirmation, but she always blew me off. She just came to worship when her parents came. Eventually, she graduated from high school and went into nursing school. I soon went on from that church, but shortly after that, I heard that she dropped out of nursing school because she met a man who was a “flat earther.” Which is someone who believes the earth is flat. And, I was like, “What?” And I wondered how she could believe such nonsense and be duped like that.
Do you know people who, despite irrefutable evidence and advice from friends or family, cling to irrational and false beliefs? It is as though there’s a veil over their eyes and minds that prevents them from seeing reality.
I mean we hear of some of these things… like there never was anyone who landed on the moon. It was all a big hoax. One big conspiracy theory. Minds are veiled.
Or, for religious people, some hang on to the idea that God is an old white man in the sky somewhere, with a white beard dressed in a long white robe. Like Michealangelo’s Sistine Chapel painting. Maybe there’s a veil over the eyes if God is understood only in this way?
To be honest, when it comes to God, I guess all of us have a veil over our eyes, don’t you think? I mean none of us has the definitive answer when it comes to understanding the fullness of God.
But, according to Paul, God has enlightened our hearts with an awareness of God’s glory which, remarkably, is seen in Jesus. That is to say, that God came to us in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. I mean everything about him, how he lived and died, what he taught and said, where he laughed and cried,—everything, even how he was transfigured on the mountain—everything about Jesus showed God’s light shining through him.
Now for sure, Jesus’ transfiguration is one of the weirdest stories ever. That’s because we don’t see anything like it in our lives. When we get a story like that, maybe it’s best to dig around for the meaning of the story. To see it more as a parable and less as fact. So, as I dug around, I began to wonder if the story’s message has something to do with seeing God’s light, maybe through the eyes of our hearts.
Because Jesus was just as human as we are—his feet were dirty. His muscles were tired from walking. His robe was dusty. He probably could have used a shower. And yet, Jesus was also filled with the divine. He was the Christ, and he reflected God’s glory in life and on that mountain. God’s light shone through his humanness. His face and clothing lit up so much that it nearly blinded the disciples.
So, I tried to see God’s light through the eyes of my heart shining through our humanity. And it didn’t take long to spot. I saw the glowing faces of Barb, my sister-in-law and her son Jim the groom and Mindy the bride as they got married last week.
I saw it last Thursday at George Heberlig’s funeral. The family had pictures of George on television screen, and several of them were of George babysitting his first granddaughter Erin. Which is significant because one reason George retried at age 57 was because Erin had arrived in the his world. And the heart light from George’s face shone brightly as he held that baby.
So I bet all of us can spot moments like that. In people. In special moments. But, you have to lift the veil. You have to be willing with faith to consider the idea that God’s light is shining everywhere.
So, maybe you might try a simple little exercise this week? Ask God to help you lift the veil and give you new eyes to see. See with your heart where God’s light shines brightly in different situations in your life.
You may see it during Ash Wednesday’s worship in the eyes of someone with a cross smudged on his or her face. You may see it in the face of a dad walking with his child holding hands. I saw it in a now grown Erin comforting her grandmother Janice Heberlig, as Jan said her good-byes to George. Or just look at the faces of your family and friends this evening if you happen to be watching the Super Bowl together. Family time can make you glow. Look in your life. Listen to your life. It doesn’t have to be much, but every once in a while, something so touching, something alive transfigures the human face that makes the heart light shine so bright that it’s almost beyond description. But, you have to lift the veil to see it.
And while we’re at it, maybe we should ask God to help us lift the veil in our understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Because it’s easy to let the ways of the world cloud our minds. It’s easy to think that the truth of God’s good news in Jesus Christ doesn’t apply to the circumstances in our lives. To all people in our world.
I can get so dissuaded by the gods of convenience and instant gratification and self-absorption and ‘my way is the right way’ that I fail to see that the light of God’s saving grace is like the air we breathe. Always around us and within us. Always giving us life. I often fail to really let the truth sink in that it is God’s right and choice to make saving grace available to everyone. And Paul’s constant message was that God was and is justified in making that grace real for anyone choosing to believe it as truth.
So, by looking to Jesus and seeing God in him, I begin the process of lifting the veil that diminishes God’s light. It’s a practiced thing. A work in progress. We work at it on our faith journeys. Faith is a deeply ingrained condition formed through steady habits of worship, disciplined practices of prayer and study, and conversations with others on the faith journey that take shape over long stretches of time. It’s a way of life that acquires its layers developing ever so gradually and often imperceptibly. And, little by little the veil is lifted.
And you never know when it may occur, but at just the right moment, in deep need, with the accumulation of faith practices, the heart light of God’s presence and love will shine brightly from you when someone else needs it most.
Rev. Peter Marty, editor of the Christian Century tells the story of a 44 year old man named Jason who was facing his mother’s death. A well-employed techie, Jason considered faith and religion superfluous to the good life that he lived. When Rev. Marty sat with him in the hospital room, he said that it felt like he was peering into a lost soul—a grown man with no idea of where to turn next, or what to do the with death of his mother. To someone of unbelief, how do you describe the power of faith, the significance of hope, or the meaning of life? How do you realistically acquaint them with the riches or comfort of faith during a 20-minute sit-down? You can’t (Marty, Peter, “Accumulated Faith,” The Christian Century, February 2024, pg. 1).
But, the mystery of God’s power is that in some way, just by being present, God’s heart light shone bright for Jason through Rev. Marty, if Jason was willing to have the veil lifted from his own eyes to see it.
The holiness of God can shine through our humanity. Our lives get transfigured. And God’s heart light can shine bright through us. If we decide to have the veil lifted to see this truth. May it be so. Amen.
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