2-14-21 Grace-Benson & Vail Sermon

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Mark 9:2-9 Sermon. February 14, 2021. Grace-Benson and Grace-Vail Often we wonder what to do with the lows in life, but it’s just as important to know how to handle the highs. When a husband and wife get away for a weekend and really enjoy each other and connect closely, what should they do? Call the babysitter and say, “We’re not coming back, we’re having too much fun?” Of course not. When a math student has a lesson really click and make sense, should they stay on that lesson forever? No, it’s time to move on to the next. When a song moves you inside and out; do you only listen to that one song all the time? No, it’ll get old quickly. God provides such a wealth of pleasurable experiences not so that we get stuck on any one, but that we’d appreciate the highs, but also learn to appreciate the ordinary and even low moments of life. Few people have ever experienced a life-high quite like the mountaintop experience of Peter, James, and John with Jesus. So, what’s the value of mountaintop experiences with God? Moments of deep connection and insight between you and God. Should you just stay there and expect God always and perpetually to provide a feeling of closeness and insight? Or are you to learn from the mountaintop experience, but also be willing to descend into the valley of ordinary life? We can learn from the story. This event happened six days after Jesus had taught his disciples that he needed to go to Jerusalem to suffer, and be killed, and then rise again. The disciples had a challenge; Jesus at times did miraculous things, walked on water, healed illness; it sure looked like he was the son of God. But then most of the time he appeared so ordinarily human. Eating with them, getting tired and sleeping. And saying things like, “I am going to be killed.” If they weren’t careful, they could’ve forgotten Jesus’ true identity as God. To help remind them who he was, Jesus strategically selected moments to reveal his true identity as God. For this occasion he selected only 3 to be with him. He led Peter, James, and John up a mountain where they could be alone; no passerby-ers would interrupt what he was about to show them. The anticipation must have been building as they ascended, what’s going to happen at the top of the mountain? But whatever they imagined, what they saw exceeded expectations. “There he was transfigured in front of them. His clothes became radiant, dazzling white, whiter than anyone on earth could bleach them.” Jesus was transfigured. His true identity was put in front of the human eyes of 3 disciples. They saw the purity, the holiness. They were glimpsing what human life was always meant to be. When you see a white bleached piece of clothing, you say, “that’s clean. That’s not stained, not dirty, not worn.” That’s what we were meant to be. That’s what Jesus came to be as our substitute, to give us that kind of brilliance. They saw the stunning brilliance; and it was too much for their eyes to really take in. Too much glory, too much light. It overwhelmed their sensory systems like staring right into the direct sun would do to you. All of that radiance, but still Jesus even at that moment, remained human. He was and is the only person who can radiate that amount of glory. He’s the only person perfectly aligned in relation to the divine.


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