While this
deepening of faith as a result of a single event is often associated with
events for young people, it is not exclusively an experience of youth. Adults have had similar faith-deepening
experiences at a range of events.
·
Dr. Billy Graham’s missions in the 1950s, 1960s, and
1970s had a profound effect on many people who are still active in churches in
Australia today.
·
At a very different point on the theological spectrum,
the visits to Australia of Bishop Jack Spong in more recent decades have also
challenged many people in the churches to take their faith much more seriously.
·
For those who’ve had an opportunity to travel overseas,
visits to communities of Christian renewal such as Taizé or Iona have also had
such an impact.
·
With the ecumenical movement, our growing opportunities
to experience the worship and spirituality of other churches have been such a
transforming experience for many. To
give a personal example, my own experiences as a student of the awe and wonder
of Episcopalian, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox worship had a profoundly
positive effect on the development of my own faith. Without these experiences, I really doubt if
my Christian faith would have survived my undergraduate years. (Actually, when some of my “evangelical”
friends ask me to talk about my “conversion experience” or when I was “born
again”, I tell them about a Catholic Mass I attended during my first semester as
an undergraduate. They’re usually more
worried about the state of my soul after I tell them this story than they were
before. … I can live with that.)
Such events
of a profound deepening of faith are often called “mountaintop
experiences”. And in this phrase is a
link with today’s gospel lesson.
And now, we’ll have our readings from
scripture.
Exodus 34: 29 - 35
Luke 9: 28 – 36
“Down from
the Mountaintop? ... Up from the Mountaintop? ... Out from the Mountaintop?”
Let us
pray.
May the
words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable in your
sight, O Lord our strength and our redeemer.
Amen.
Jesus took
the core group of his disciples: Peter, James, and John; up a mountain to
pray. In the experience of the
disciples, a dazzling light began to shine.
They saw two great figures of Jewish history . . . Moses, the liberator
and law-giver, and Elijah, the greatest of the prophets ... appearing, and
speaking with Jesus. A thick, almost
smoky, cloud enveloped them all.
Peter was
focused on the experience: ... the light ... the smoke ... the big-time
historical heroes. He was so impressed
by the whole experience that he wanted to make the experience a permanent
thing: “Lord, it is good for us to be
here.” It had the implication of “Do we
really have to go back home?” He suggested building shelters for them, so
as to encourage Moses, Elijah, and (presumably) Jesus to hang around with the
disciples up there on the mountain for ever.
But:
·
Moses and Elijah vanished into the cloud;
·
the cloud faded away;
·
the lighting began to be more, well, normal; and
·
Jesus led the disciples off the mountain
Peter’s
suggestion about building shelters to make the “mountaintop experience”
permanent may resonate with our own reactions to our closer experiences of
God’s reality.
But in any
event, Jesus led the disciples down from the mountaintop. … Or was that up from the mountaintop? …
Or perhaps that could have been out from
the mountaintop?
“Down from
the Mountaintop?”
Jesus led the
three down from the mountaintop. He led
them back into the real world with all its struggles. Christ today challenges us to bring the light
of his presence into all the difficulties of life. There are many who resist this challenge to
come down from the mountaintop:
·
Some resist coming “down from the mountaintop” because
they have a very mystical, otherworldly faith and they do not want the secular
world to interfere with the way they experience their faith. They want to keep their faith “pure” and
“uncontaminated” by worldly concerns.
·
Others resist coming “down from the mountaintop” because
they don’t want their faith to interfere with the way they live their lives in
the world. They don’t want their faith
to overly influence how they behave when they earn their living ... or when
they spend their money ... or when they vote.
They have a “firewall” between their life as a worshipper and their life
in the world of work and the wider community.
It’s far too inconvenient, they believe, if our faith was allowed to
impact on such things as our attitudes toward race, or economics, or human
rights, or business ethics.
Both groups
resist the challenge to come down from the mountaintop.
Jesus still
led his disciples down from the mountaintop, bringing the fruits of their
encounter with God into the struggles of everyday life. He calls us to come “down from the
mountaintop” as well.
“Up from the
Mountaintop?”
The danger
also existed for the disciples, that the dramatic experience on the mountain
would become the big thing, instead of the reality of God that lay behind
it. So Jesus challenged the disciples to
look up from the mountaintop and to realise the main thing was:
·
not the dazzling light;
·
not the smoky cloud;
·
not the presence of big-time historical heroes;
but God who
lay behind it all
Jesus also
challenges us to look “up from the mountaintop”; away from the “special
effects” of the faith to God’s main plot.
“Out from
the Mountaintop?”
It could all
have been terribly in-group up there on the mountaintop. There were just the six of them up there:
Jesus, Moses, Elijah, Peter, James, and John.
The six of them could have become a nice, tight, little ‘holy
club”. A group of six people was smaller
than most families were in those days.
It would have been cozy, very cozy … far too cozy.
In the scriptures,
the story of faith is also the story of the expansion of God’s community from
smaller to larger circles of people:
·
from a solitary individual to a family,
·
from a single family to a nation,
·
and, in the New Testament. from a lone nation to two
great world-wide religions.
And now, I
believe, this expansion still continues:
·
from two closely-related religions to all humanity and
even to all life.
We are living
in a time when many Christians - and many other people of faith - are being
challenged to come to grips with an expanded view of the scope of God’s love
and concern. I strongly believe that it
is God who is challenging us to this broader view.
Just as Jesus
challenged the disciples to look wider than the cozy little circle of six,
Jesus challenges us to ensure that our transforming, faith-deepening,
experiences expand, rather than contract, the scope of our concern, to reach
“out from the mountaintop”.
Down from
the Mountaintop?
Up from the Mountaintop?
Out from the Mountaintop?
On the
mountain, Jesus shared a moment of profound significance with his
disciples. We have such opportunities as
well. As with the disciples Jesus
continually challenges us:
·
to come down from the mountaintop;
·
to look up from the mountaintop; and
·
to reach out from the mountaintop.
Thanks be to
God. Amen.
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