Bloomsbury Central Baptist
Church
Sunday 19 February 2023
Matthew 17.1-9
Exodus 24.12-18
Émile Coué, the French psychologist and pharmacist,
popularised
a famous mantra, and say it with me if you know it:
"Every day, in every way, I'm getting better and better.
Every day,
in every way, I'm getting better and better".
Coué encouraged his patients to repeat this to themselves
twenty times a day,
as part of
his psychoanalytical technique called optimistic autosuggestion.
The idea was that positive reinforcement of optimistic
belief
could have
genuine health benefits.
Strangely enough, at a medical level, he may well have been
onto something;
as the
placebo effect is now well documented:
when
people believe something to be helpful,
they
will often show a measurable improvement.
I tend to think that something like this lies behind
many of the
stories of faith healing that get told,
both
within and beyond Christianity;
people believe that prayer for healing works,
and
so, at least to some extent, it does.
I mean, I’ve never seen someone grow an arm back after being
prayed for,
but I can understand
how people might show improvement
in other,
less tangible, ways after being prayed for.
Interestingly, Coué’s ‘trick’, as he called it,
was
consistent with the idea of social Darwinism,
as popularised
in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
This is an extension of Darwin’s theory of evolution by
natural selection,
where the
biological concept of ‘the survival of the fittest’
becomes a
model for understanding the development of society
and
the individual who lives within it.
Social Darwinism finds its origin with Thomas Huxley,
or
‘Darwin’s bulldog’ as he was sometimes known,
who took Darwin’s theory of the origin of species,
and made it
into a kind of philosophical model
to explain
human society without the need for belief in God.
Huxley, the famous agnostic, almost single-handedly
created the
division between Christianity and evolution
that
comes down to us today,
with many
Christians still believing
that
it is incompatible with their faith
to
accept an old-earth evolutionary understanding
of
the origin of humanity.
He was unwittingly aided and abetted in this by the then
Bishop of Oxford,
Samuel
Wilberforce, whose famous jibe at Huxley,
as
to whether Huxley was descended from an ape
on
his mother's side or his father's side,
did
much to create the animosity between faith and science
that
we still live with today.
Huxley won that debate, replying to Wilberforce
that he
would rather be descended from an ape,
than to be a
man who misused his great talents to suppress debate.
I think, on this and on many other things, Huxley had a
point!
I’m one of those who thinks that evolution by natural
selection
is a
perfectly adequate model for explaining
the
biological adaptation and speciation
that
we can observe in the natural world.
I just don’t see any conflict between it and my faith in God
or my
understanding of the Bible.
But what I don’t
like
is the use
of evolution metaphors for societal and spiritual development.
I simply don’t think it’s true
that every
day, in every way, we’re getting better and better.
Surely the first world war was ample proof
of the
human capacity to descend into hellish madness at the drop of a hat;
and the links between social Darwinism
and the
eugenics programmes of the Third Reich
are
terrifying and deeply chilling.
I have occasionally joked that I do wonder
if the fact
that I was born with no wisdom teeth
might mean
that I am part of the next evolution of humanity,
but it turns out that this is simply a recessive mutation
that arose
about 300,000 years ago.
Or possibly, as some have suggested, Liz!, it is simply
indicative
of the fact
that I have no corresponding wisdom!
So, with all of this in mind, what on earth is going on at
the Transfiguration?
What
strange new humanity is coming into being here?
Our story, told for us today by Matthew,
and drawing
on the similar story from Mark’s gospel (Mk 9.2-8),
describes Jesus and three of his disciples going up a
mountain
to have a
very strange experience indeed.
Listen to Matthew’s words again:
‘And he was
transfigured before them,
and
his face shone like the sun,
and
his clothes became dazzling white.’
As I said, what on earth is going on here?
There are a number of clues in the text to which we need to
pay attention,
if we’re to
begin to get to grips
with what
Matthew is trying to do with this story.
The first thing to realise
is that
this description of Jesus is not unique in the Bible;
rather it is drawing on a long tradition, stretching back
into ancient Judaism,
of visions
of God in human form,
and of
encounters between humans and the divine on mountain tops.
We heard earlier the story of Moses going up the mountain,
to meet God
and receive the tablets of stone
with the
ten commandments written on them.
If we had read on a bit further in the book of Exodus,
we would
have heard that,
‘when Aaron
and all the Israelites saw Moses, the skin of his face was shining…
and Moses
would put the veil on his face again,
until he
went in [back] to speak with him.’ (Exodus
34:30, 35).
It seems that, in
some way, Moses’ encounter with God changed his appearance,
it changed something about the nature
of his being.
We might say that he
was transfigured by his encounter.
But it’s not just
Moses on the mountain that lies behind
Matthew’s story of the
transfiguration of Jesus.
In Daniel’s vision
of heaven, he describes how,
‘thrones were set in place,
and an Ancient One took his throne,
his
clothing was white as snow, and the hair of his head like pure wool;
his
throne was fiery flames, and its wheels were burning fire.’ (Daniel 7:9).
The use of the colour white
here is very deliberate,
and is
often used in the Bible to indicate righteousness.
So for example the
book of Acts
tells the story of the ascension of
Jesus in similar terms,
with two angels in white robes
standing beside the disciples:
‘when he had
said this, as they were watching, he was lifted up,
and a cloud
took him out of their sight.
While he was going and they were gazing up toward heaven,
suddenly
two men in white robes stood by them.’ (1:9-10).
And Earlier in Matthew’s gospel itself, in chapter 13,
we can read
the promise that
‘the
righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father.’ (13:43).
And Matthew’s version of the resurrection story
is told in
similarly dramatic and apocalyptic tones:
‘After the sabbath, as the first day of the week was
dawning,
Mary
Magdalene and the other Mary went to see the tomb.
And suddenly there was a great earthquake;
for an
angel of the Lord, descending from heaven,
came and
rolled back the stone and sat on it.
His appearance was like lightning, and his clothing white as
snow.’ (28:1-3).
And in the book of Revelation,
we have
several descriptions
both
of the divine-human figure called the Son of Man,
and
of those who follow him,
all wearing
white shining clothes which indicate their righteousness.
Just listen to these few sentences:
‘His head and his hair were white as white wool, white as
snow;
his eyes
were like a flame of fire,
… and his
face was like the sun shining with full force.’ (1.14, 16)
‘If you conquer, you will be clothed like them in white
robes,
and I will
not blot your name out of the book of life. (3.5)
‘Around the throne are twenty-four thrones,
and seated
on the thrones are twenty-four elders,
dressed in
white robes, with golden crowns on their heads.’ (4.4)
‘After this I looked, and there was a great multitude that
no one could count,
from every
nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages,
standing
before the throne and before the Lamb, robed in white.’ (7.9)
‘These are they who have come out of the great ordeal;
they have
washed their robes
and made
them white in the blood of the Lamb.’ (7.14)
‘And the armies of heaven, wearing fine linen, white and
pure,
were
following him on white horses.’ (19.14).
My point here is that Matthew is not writing in a vacuum.
From Exodus, to Daniel,
to the
Jesus tradition, to the apocalyptic literature,
the story he gives us of the transfiguration of Jesus
is part of
a wider literary tradition of humanity transfigured
through
encounter with the divine.
Or, to put it another way, when people meet with God,
something profound
and tangible changes within them.
Now, don’t hear me wrong here;
I don’t
think that Jesus was, or even is,
the next
evolution of humanity.
His transfiguration is not some kind of fusion
of the
physical and the spiritual
resulting
in an ability to exist on a higher plane
than
the rest of us mere mortals.
Neither is it a mystical experience for us to seek to
emulate
in some
quest for enlightenment or esoteric knowledge.
That way lies heresy, I’m afraid.
But nonetheless I do think that there is a new humanity
coming into
being in Christ,
and it is revealed at his transfiguration.
Paul, I think ,was onto this when he described Jesus as the
new, or second, Adam.
Listen to
how he puts it in his letter to the Romans:
‘Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man,
and death
came through sin,
and so
death spread to all because all have sinned …
much more surely will those who receive the abundance of
grace
and the
free gift of righteousness
exercise
dominion in life through the one man, Jesus Christ.
Therefore just as one man's trespass led to condemnation for
all,
so one
man's act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all.
For just as by the one man's disobedience the many were made
sinners,
so by the
one man's obedience the many will be made righteous.’
(Romans
5:12, 17-19).
Paul places Jesus in contrast with Adam,
the
symbolic first human from the book of Genesis.
Humanity came into being through Adam,
and the new
humanity comes into being through the new Adam,
the
Son of Man, the Messiah who was transfigured
in
the presence of his disciples
on
the mountaintop in Matthew’s story.
But hear this, and hear it clearly:
it is not
about evolution, it’s about transfiguration.
The new humanity does not arise by natural forces,
red in
tooth and claw (as Tennyson put it),
from the
redundant carcass of the old humanity.
It does not out-compete its predecessor,
nor does it
vanquish it by might and right.
Rather, the new humanity arises by grace and through love.
It emerges
in the midst of our sinful fallen state
as a gift
from God that transfigures our lives and our world.
God, in Christ, is transfiguring humanity.
A new way of being human has come into being in Christ,
and it has
the capacity to utterly transform our way of being in the world.
The clues are all there for us in Matthew’s text,
which as we
have seen is rich with the resonance of ancient stories,
telling of God’s journey with humans
from their
very beginning
to this
crucial, decisive moment of transfiguration.
The mystical moment on the mountain occurs,
we are told
in the first verse of our story, on the ‘sixth day’.
The echo of the creation story from Genesis
is too
strong to ignore here.
According to the ancient myth,
God created
humanity on the sixth day,
before
resting on the seventh.
And in Matthew’s story,
the new
humanity is brought into being on the sixth day.
Then, the transfigured Jesus is seen talking with Moses and
Elijah,
whose
symbolic presence speak of the law and prophets,
fulfilled
in the presence and person of the transfigured Son of Man.
The whole of human history is here in this story,
contained
and completed in this moment,
and the
whole story of human attempts to encounter God
is
reflected in the glory shining from the face of Jesus:
from
creation itself and the first Adam,
to
Elijah the prince of prophets,
to
Moses the giver of the Law.
It all comes down, for Matthew, to this one moment on the
mountaintop
with Jesus
and his three disciples.
Like the narrowest point in the egg-timer of history
the past
funnels to the future through this one moment of transfiguration.
And so the new humanity is born.
The second Adam is transfigured from base human flesh,
in the
company of history, and baffled disciples.
And it’s not about genetics, it’s about inheritance; which
is very different.
It’s about
covenant not country.
And any nation, tribe, or people
who claim
exclusive or privileged access
to
the revelation of God in Christ
are missing
the point of the transfiguration.
From God Bless America,
to God Save
the King,
to
One Nation under Allah,
God will not be so constrained.
Because God’s people are all people,
they are
humanity transfigured.
And all we need to do to see it, and to see our own place
within it,
is to open
our eyes, look to the mountain,
and see the
moment of glory reflected in the face of Jesus.
Paul’s vision of Christ on the road to Damascus
opened his
eyes to the one who appeared to him as
‘a light
from heaven, brighter than the sun,
shining
around [him] and [his] companions.’ (Acts 26.13)
And what Paul realised in this moment of his personal transfiguration,
as his eyes
were blinded to his old life, and opened to his new one,
what that God was not confined to one people,
and that
the call of God goes way beyond the ‘chosen nation’ of the Jews
to
encompass all the nations of the Gentiles as well.
And so Christianity as we know it was born,
as Paul set
off on his journeys to change the world.
And I think that brings us to today,
to a gospel
with no barriers, no exclusions,
it brings
us to the freely given love of God
extended to people of every nation,
from
all tribes and peoples and languages,
of
all genders, ethnicities, backgrounds, and sexualities.
This is the new humanity that comes into being in Christ.
We’re it! We are the new humanity,
and we
don’t worship a parochial God who exists to serve us and those like us;
neither do
we follow a partisan God
who
is defined over and against the wisdom of science.
Honestly, I have had it with ‘little Christianity’:
‘Me and my Christian mates, we’re the only
ones that are right,
and the rest of the world is wrong
and going to Hell’
Blow that for a game of soldiers!
That’s not
what it’s about.
God is so much bigger than that.
In Christ,
God is revealed as so much bigger than that.
The disciples didn’t really get it;
they
decided that they were going to try and build some little huts
for Jesus,
and Moses, and Elijah to live in.
The human response to this vision
of the
whole of history coming down to this one person,
is ‘I know!
Let’s build him a house so he can live with us, with his mates!’
We constantly take the big God, and we make him into the
little God:
our God,
the God who goes with us, and stays with us,
and dwells
with us, and proves that we’re right and everybody else is wrong.
This is not what it’s about.
It’s not
about God of this nation, or that nation,
or
this people, or that people,
or
this denomination, or that denomination,
or
this religion, or that religion.
This is not God over creation,
it is God
in creation, transforming it from within.
This is not a philosophy of gradual optimistic self
improvement,
we don’t become
the new humanity
by just mutually encouraging ourselves,
by singing our happy mantra songs
(or whatever it is that we have a tendency
to do
in
our various Christian traditions).
This is a gospel of the radical transformation of humanity
without
which there is no hope.
Because this is the transfiguration of humanity
reflected
in the glory of transfiguration of the Son of Man.
This is us, we are humanity transfigured.
And so are they!
And our task is to proclaim the truth
that there is
a much bigger, wiser, more gracious,
more loving
God than any of us have ever grasped.
That it is our calling,
and it is
our only hope.
That is the gospel of Jesus Christ,
and we should
live it.
This is Christ transfigured for our sake,
and for the
sake of the world.
1 comment:
Amen indeed. Absolutely fabulous. Both exciting and scary. Exciting because of the wonderful possibilities. Scary for some because of the same range of possibilities.
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