Monday, 2 March 2026

What’s wrong with the world?


I commented last Sunday in worship that the world might change while we are in church. Last weekend I had to rewrite my sermon after I heard the news that bombs were flying about and the world suddenly changed as I heard the ten o clock news. In a world of social media and 24 hour news the events in the world are in our face. Growing up we heard the news once a day.  A generation before, you gathered round the radio. A stark example is families listening to Neville Chamberlain, the Prime Minister on 3 September 1939. Another was the death of Princess Diana in August 1997. I was about to share in my first ever service as a minister that morning. Another was 9/11. That was my first encounter with rolling news on the TV, the planes going into those towers played over and over again. My late Uncle George used to sit watching rolling news for hours. My Aunt would get exasperated - “turn it off George!” she’d yell. 

It’s easy to despair about the events that suddenly unfold around us as we feel helpless. I don’t like the tone coming out of America. “We are knocking the crap out of them” are not words an American President used to say until we had this one.


 I felt the need to pray tonight so as I’m on holiday but still at home until tomorrow as I had to wait for a parcel which should have come on Saturday I went and did  evensong in in our cathedral. It was sung beautifully by the choir of Barnard Castle School including the fab “if you love me” by Thomas Tallis.

Evensong allowed me space to think. Where is God in all this? Psalm 74, which was sung tonight, included a plea to God - “O God, how long shall the adversary reproach? Shall the enemy blaspheme thy name for ever? Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even thy right hand? Pluck it out of thy bosom! “They” want God to deal with the enemy, and I guess that prayer is being prayed by fundamentalists in America, and in Israel and in Iran and in Lebanon tonight. “The enemy” have no name, they are just there to be crushed because we are right and God is on our side. Even on Sunday in worship the music group as an opening song had one which said God “aids us against the enemy.”

We also tonight prayed “give peace in our time o Lord,  because there is none other the fighteth for us, but only thou O God.” And there was a weird reading from 1 Chronicles where the angel wanted to destroy a nation and God says “back off” there’s always grace!

I just wonder whether God is weeping tonight. We never learn. Yes, there are evil regimes in the world but you can’t just decide you’ll drop a bomb on them, can you? Clearly you can! 

In despair it’s so hard to see how we can make a difference in a war torn world which has people caught up in it suddenly in many different countries. What do we do?

We must pray for peace - that’s something we can do. What we can also do is try and make a difference where we are making good relationships and working for justice and respect where we are. It may mean we look at our behaviours and seek renewal from God.

The story is told that the Times at one point early in the 1900s posed this question to several prominent authors: “What’s wrong with the world today?” The well-known author G.K. Chesterton is said to have responded with a one-sentence essay: His witty reply is unnerving and unexpected. But it is also very biblical. We take responsibility. As the old song says “let there be peace on earth, and let it begin with me.”

_Dear Sir,
__I am.
_Yours, G.K. Chesterton.


Sunday, 1 March 2026

Searching for God

Lord, as we journey through March and the days of Lent,

give us the courage to follow you on your road.

When life is hard, give us direction.

When we face turmoil, give us peace.

When there is joy, help us celebrate. You give us life every day. We thank you.

Amen.


The theologian Rev AI says this:

 

Searching for God in a church setting is described as 

a deliberate, heart-felt pursuit rather than a passive experience, often involving active engagement with scripture, worship, and community. It is described as a journey that requires sincerity and the removal of distractions, with the promise that those who truly seek will find Him.  It has to be a wholehearted pursuit: The foundational encouragement is found in Jeremiah 29:13, which states "You will seek me and find me when you search for me with all your heart.”

 

A lot of people begin their search for spiritual meaning when life is hard or it has lots of questions. 

 

So I took my car to the garage for a service the other morning and I’d booked a courtesy carfor the day.

“We’ve only got a manual,” said the man.

That’s fine!” I said.

 

Except it wasn’t fine! I got a little way along the road and the thing stopped and my brain couldn’t work out what to do. The thing I needed to remember was to press the clutch in to change gear. I’ve driven an automatic for the last six years. To be able to move I had to quickly remember what to do I’m different circumstances. A bit scary when you need to do this as you are about to get on the motorway!

 

In life we need so often to dig deep into our resources when things suddenly need us to cope. I think that’s why we need to know the basics of how to live well. Spiritually when we can’t move, we need to remember what we so easily forget. That God loves us. That Jesus is with us. And… that we need to breathe in panic and think. I found shouting at the car “ WHY CANT I GET YOU TO START?”wasn’t helpful! I felt like Basil Fawlty and his car, bashing it with a tree branch giving it a thrashing because it wouldn’t go! May weknow we have the resources in us

to keep moving. And to move may need a search. 

So I want to think about two scenarios where God is yearned for. 

 

First, in desperation

 

We may ignore, but we can nowhere evade, the presence of God. The world is crowded with him,. He walks everywhere incognito.” So wrote C S Lewis, who had his own spiritual battles when life was hard especially in bereavement. 

When life suddenly throws us a huge curveball, we reach out for help. Let’s consider Psalm 121. What does the Psalmist say? I look to the hills - where does my help come from? My help comes from the Lord who made heaven and earth. Great change and bold journeys can only be undertaken by looking upward to the mountains. Not just any mountain, more likely Sinai or Horeb – mountains where God is close and gives information or can be perceived. Perhaps all high places were thought closer to God.

Certainly, the psalmist is clear: help comes from God. Deeply reassuring words – God does not sleep or slumber but watches over us in everything, in all our comings and goings, and protects us from falling, or from the sun that is too bright. We are reminded that God does this in part because He is the Creator of heaven and earth. The psalmist does not want us to think about other gods - either those of the ancient world which did not have our best interests at heart, or the other gods of our lives today - those other things we give priority too, rather than let our Creator take care of us.

The Psalm is a strong affirmation that the God who created all that is, even us, will be the one who provides help. Whether the road is easy or tough, God is there. Our help comes from the Lord. This is good and reassuring news that we do not have to do it alone. Such a perspective reminds us that we believe in a God who is all-powerful and all-knowing, an all-encompassing God who will not abandon ship at the first sign of trouble. For God is faithful.

So we remember those who today need the Lord to keep their going out and their coming in especially if life is tough from this time forth and forever more. God’s love can be found on the journey. 

Then secondly I think there are those searching for a new beginning. The spiritual quest is alive in these days. Let’s think about Nicodemus. 

Nicodemus meets Jesus on a rooftop in Jerusalem under cover of darkness. Nicodemus is one of the most powerful people in the Israel of his day. He is credentialed and respected. His identity is carefully curated out of law, privilege, institutional authority, and the opaqueness behind which the elite can hide. His coming in the dark has at least as much to do with his life, as it does with the time of day.

Nicodemus represents every rigid structure of power and exclusion, every institution that operates in the shadows, every system that tells people who belongs and who doesn't, who is worthy and who is not. Is he visiting because Jesus is a celebrity or is there something genuine in his search?

Some scholars believe that Nicodemus coming at night is him sneaking around in the shadows so others don’t see him. Another suggestion is that nighttime was when rabbis got together to wrestle with the tantalising theological questions of their day and he was respecting Jesus as someone with a proposition to listen to.

Jesus gives Nicodemus an offer of a wild and free, unbounded new life in the presence of God. Instead of another aspirational mountain to climb or yet another self-improvement programme, Jesus offers something far more radical inviting him into the light of a life blown open by the Spirit of God a complete make-over; a new start; a re-birth. “You need to be born from above. The wind blows where it chooses. This is what the Spirit does.”

 

And then we get John 3:16, a verse so familiar that we risk no longer hearing it. This is not God's love for the church, or the deserving, or the theologically correct. This is God's love for the whole gloriously complicated, achingly beautiful, deeply broken human family and all of creation.  Don’t we need to hear of that today?

At the end of this encounter, Nicodemus disappears … except he doesn’t. He crops up twice more. In John 7 he speaks up hesitatingly for Jesus on a point of law to the chief priests and Pharisees, and in John 19 he and Joseph of Arimathea ask Pilate for permission to take and care for the body of Christ after the crucifixion.

Has Nicodemus has come into the light? Has he taken a stand? Is he a believer? There’s no definitive answer.

Surely, we must never be afraid to bring your questions to Jesus, but must also be prepared to be changed by the answers. I suggest any church must be ready for people wanting to know more about Jesus. 

And what of us – how will we know God’s love in Jesus this week? Jesus tells us we must be born again. God tells us he is the help. Babies spend a lot of time resting, and more importantly perhaps, absorbing love and being embraced. Moreover, they can't do much. They are almost entirely helpless and powerless. They depend completely on someone else to have all their needs met. They have no resources which are not given to them by another. They also want quite simple things and communicate very simply and clearly to get them, crying out for what they need.

All of these things are challenging and counter-cultural for us. We seek to be independent and in control, we do anything to avoid feeling powerless, and sometimes we can't even identify our deepest needs to ourselves, let alone ask for them to be met. Yet, over and over again in scripture, this is what God demands for us.

In the Hebrew Bible, our Old Testament, to not understand who provides for you is idolatrous; to be faithful is to know that everything comes from God. And when Jesus says we need to be born again, this is the total vulnerability that is required to really follow Him and truly accept God's love. We need to be prepared to be still and just accept love. 

We need to acknowledge that we are powerless. And we need to cry out, with confidence that we will be heard in our need.

Remember the old story and how we get it wrong so often…

 

A storm descends on a small town, and the downpour soon turns into a flood. As the waters rise, the local preacher kneels in prayer on the church porch, surrounded by water. By and by, one of the townsfolk comes up the street in a canoe.

"Better get in, Preacher. The waters are rising fast."

"No," says the preacher. "I have faith in the Lord. He will save me."

Still the waters rise. Now the preacher is up on the balcony, wringing his hands in supplication, when another guy zips up in a motorboat.

"Come on, Preacher. We need to get you out of here. The levee's gonna break any minute."

Once again, the preacher is unmoved. "I shall remain. The Lord will see me through."

After a while the levee breaks, and the flood rushes over the church until only the steeple remains above water. The preacher is up there, clinging to the cross, when a helicopter descends out of the clouds, and a state trooper calls down to him through a megaphone.

"Grab the ladder, Preacher. This is your last chance."

Once again, the preacher insists the Lord will deliver him.

And, predictably, he drowns.

A pious man, the preacher goes to heaven. After a while he gets an interview with God, and he asks the Almighty, "Lord, I had unwavering faith in you. Why didn't you deliver me from that flood?"

God shakes his head. "What did you want from me? I sent you two boats and a helicopter."

 

To return to my prayer:

 

Lord, as we journey through March and the days of Lent,

give us the courage to follow you on your road.

When life is hard, give us direction.

When we face turmoil, give us peace.

When there is joy, help us celebrate. You give us life every day. We thank you.

Amen.


Saturday, 21 February 2026

The first Sunday of Lent - Temptation

What do we do with Lent?

Some people give things up in this season like chocolate or Facebook. I love this joke. You need to know your 80’s pop to get it! Just heard the devastating news that Rick Astley’s given me up for lent. He said he never would.

We began Lent with Ash Wednesday the other day. The collect of the day begins, “Almighty and everlasting God, you hate nothing you have made and forgive the sins of all who are penitent.” We are God’s beloved children, God’s creatures, even if we’ve been created from the dust of the earth.


Psalm 51, the Psalm written by King David seeking forgiveness from God after Nathan the prophet had confronted him about being a very naughty boy, going after someone else’s wife is the Psalm set for Ash Wednesday. David asks God to create in him a clean heart. The word used for create in the plea is the same Hebrew word used to describe God creating the world in Genesis. Only God can create the sort of new beginning David craves in the prayer. 

 

I am reminded that the prayer asks God to blot out our offences. When we used to use ink at school and the bottle spilt, we would use blotting paper to clean up the mess. I had a steward when I was a lay pastor at Markyate chapel in Hertfordshire from 1991 to 1994 called Frank Pearce. Frank had a vestry prayer I remember “Lord, we thank you for your servant, Ian, now blot him out.” 

 

Not only do we pray for a blotting out of our offences but also a blotting out of our selfish agendas, pride, and ignorance. Lent reminds us of our place. That our life is simply to serve God and follow him faithfully and that we need to return to God urgently.

 

What needs blotting out today? When I look at the world tonight there is much. And maybe we need to help that process. Pope Leo says about this Lent, "I would like to invite you to a very practical and frequently unappreciated form of abstinence: that of refraining from words that offend and hurt our neighbour. Let us begin by disarming our language, avoiding harsh words and rash judgement, refraining from slander and speaking ill of those who are not present and cannot defend themselves. Instead, let us strive to measure our words and cultivate kindness and respect in our families, among our friends, at work, on social media, in political debates, in the media and in Christian communities. In this way, words of hatred will give way to words of hope and peace."      

 

We blot out what is not good and we are marked as God’s people. Let us be marked not for sorrow. And let us be marked not for shame.

 

 

 

Let us be marked not for false humility or for thinking we are less

than we are but for claiming what God can do within the dust, within the dirt, within the stuff of which the world is made. That’s where Lent begins.

 

Secondly, Lent is a time to be driven to think about who we are. What’s the most desolate place you’ve ever been to? Imagine being stuck there for forty long days with nothing. In the biblical narrative, the desert is a stark, barren wilderness that serves as a place of isolation, intense spiritual testing, and preparation. Full of Hostility: It is described as rough, dangerous, and "outside the bounds of society," often associated with wild animals and symbolic of spiritual battlefields.


Full of Silence: The initial deafening silence of the desert serves to silence the "noise and hyperactivity" of everyday life, compelling the individual to listen only to the voice of God.


A lack of essential needs: By removing all provision, the desert forces the core question of what is truly essential highlighting the struggle between physical appetites (bread) and spiritual sustenance (the Word of God).


Jesus is famished—he’s exhausted, worn out, beat up from the weather and the loneliness and the effort it takes to just stay alive in such barrenness.


He’s not at his best; he’s not bursting with physical or spiritual or any other sort of strength.


And this is when the temptations hit Jesus.


Now, I suspect that if the tempter had caught him on a good day, Jesus would have had all sorts of answers of his own to the devil’s three challenges—to the temptations—he was given. He might have told wonderful parables or asked clever and insightful questions right back at him—and put the devil on the spot. But strength and energy and ideas were all gone.


However we think of the devil, the figure’s presence in the Gospel personifies the vulnerability of human life and life in relation to God.


No one, not even God’s anointed agent, is free from having their identity and loyalty tested.’


The tempter came to him and said, ‘If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread.’


Jesus answered, ‘It is written: “Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.”’


The first temptation is for Jesus to use his authority as the Son of God to meet his personal needs and desires. Later in his ministry, the same test of self-preservation comes up during the crucifixion as he is tempted to come down from the cross.


The implication, which Jesus rejects, is that he has been abandoned by God and needs to take care of himself.


The second temptation appears at first glance to be a strange challenge.


Then the devil took him to the holy city and set him on the highest point of the temple. If you are the Son of God,’ he said, ‘throw yourself down. For it is written:


‘“He will command his angels concerning you,

and they will lift you up in their hands,

so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.”’


Jesus answered him, ‘It is also written: “Do not put the Lord your God to the test.”’


On the surface, jumping from the pinnacle of the temple is merely an awe-inducing spectacle but it would require God to act to save Jesus. The angels are not some celestial rescue squad to prove God’s presence.


The location of this temptation matters. To set it at the Temple is to try to corrupt the place where human frailty comes for forgiveness and redemption. It is to test God ... to break the trust that brought the Son of God to earth in the first place.


Remember that each temptation is predicated on the unsettling premise that Jesus didn’t truly believe he was who God had told him he was.


When did he do that? Well, at his baptism, of course. As soon as Jesus was baptized, he came up out of the water. At that moment heaven was opened. Jesus saw the Spirit of God coming down on him like a dove. A voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, and I love him. I am very pleased with him.” 


Each temptation carries with it the continued undercurrent: are you sure you know who you are?


Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their splendour. 9 ‘All this I will give you,’ he said, ‘if you will bow down and worship me.’


Jesus said to him, ‘Away from me, Satan! For it is written: “Worship the Lord your God and serve him only.”’


This third temptation would require the Son of God to publicly acknowledge the devil as the holder of all power and the ruler of the earth. None of this was in the devil’s gift - the temptation, like the others, was built on a lie.


What kind of a Saviour could Jesus have been if he had given way at this point. In truth, the only authority Jesus would recognise was God’s.


As Douglas Hare says in his commentary on Matthew, in all three temptations Jesus is challenged to treat God as less than God.


He says: “We may not be tempted to turn stones into bread, but we are constantly tempted to mistrust God’s readiness to empower us to face our trials. None of us is likely to put God to the test by leaping from a cliff, but we are frequently tempted to question God when things go wrong.


We forget the sure promise, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness”.


Pagan idolatry is no more a temptation for us than it was for Jesus, but compromise with the ways of the world is a continuing seduction. It is indeed difficult for us to worship and serve God only.”


The truth of the story is that Jesus resisted temptation because he knew who he truly was. We can have the same confidence.


Look at what happens: Jesus does not say one word of his own. Instead, he quotes scripture in a simple and straightforward way that is quite unlike how he uses the Bible almost everywhere else in the Gospels. 


Jesus has no words, no resistance, no strength of his own—he’s simply holding on to the Father, and letting the Father’s words, and the Father’s mind, come through him. 


Jesus’ response to the tempter is not a victory of personal, spiritual strength in some sort of holy temptation-lifting Olympics. Instead, his victory is the gift of grace that comes from surrender. 


Doubtless his time in the wilderness gave Jesus a stronger and more disciplined relationship with the Father. But it also gave him something else, something more, something we see emerging in this story of his temptations.


His time in the wilderness gave Jesus the insight and the courage to surrender, and so to depend not on his own best efforts, but on an emptiness that can only be filled by the Father.


Someone once wrote “If every copy of the Bible were destroyed, and we had only the single page which tells the story of Jesus’ temptation in the wilderness, it would be enough.”

 

This is our hope and prayer. That this story is always enough. And that it gives us the courage to face our own temptations, to spend time in our own wildernesses, knowing that Jesus is at our side, trusting that he will never leave us or forsake us. And in hard times may angels attend to us.

So may God give us grace to observe Lent faithfully.


Sunday, 15 February 2026

Transfiguration in February


There are in life those people who want to make you notice them because they are important. When a certain American President was in his first term I vowed I wouldn’t keep mentioning him. It’s even harder not to mention him in his second term which still has three long years to go. He wants to build an arc de Trump which will tower over every other building in Washington DC and he’ll be remembered as the greatest President the country has ever had. It happens in churches too…

 

We were in Durham Cathedral a week yesterday to hear the choir sing the Messiah. In the cathedral there is the cathedra, the seat of the Bishop. 16 large steps go up to it and it’s almost three metres above the ground. It was designed by Bishop Thomas Hatfield, who was Bishop of Durham from 1345 to 1381. There’s a story that the Bishop wanted it to be the highest throne in Christendom, so he sent two monks toRome to measure the Popes throne there so he could build it higher! The thing was to meant to inspire awe in people. The Bishop of Durham looking down from on high on his clergy and his people, was to be seen as someone worthy of glory and honour. 

 

Today Jesus most positively invites us to notice him and see his glory

 

It’s quite a story Luke tells. In it there are mountains, clouds, mysterious voices from clouds, dazzling white clothes... 

How easy it can be though, when one is quite familiar with a story, for it to lose some of its wonder.

 

We used to sing of it in Sunday School:

 

Looking upward every day,
Sunshine on our faces;
Pressing onward every day
Toward the heavenly places;

And…with actions! 

 

Climb, climb up sunshine mountain, (Pretend to climb in air.)

Heavenly breezes blow. (Wave hands in front of body.)

Climb, climb up sunshine mountain, (Pretend to climb.)

Faces all aglow. (Stick out palms under chin.)

Turn, turn from sin and doubting, (Turn head.)

Look to God on high. (Point up and look.)

Climb, climb up sunshine mountain, (Pretend to climb.)

You and I.




For just one moment, the disciples gain a glimpse of the glory of the Kingdom of Heaven; no wonder they ‘kept silent and in those days told no one any of the things they had seen’. Jesus’ face changes, and his whole being seems to radiate a blinding light. The Orthodox church calls this ‘uncreated light’ that is, not a worldly phenomenon at all, but as a result of a direct encounter with God, which alters and transfigures the whole of creation.I like the OED’s clear definition of transfiguration; as a ‘complete change of form or appearance into a more beautiful or spiritual state’.

 

So, what relevance might this amazing transfiguration story have for us in 2026?

 

I wonder if any of us can remember having had a ‘transfiguration moment’?

Perhaps we were tired or fed up, and something just happened that stopped us in our tracks andtransformed our way of thinking and feeling.

 

These transfiguration moments, which lift us out of ourselves and give us a glimpse of something ‘other’ - even an aspect of God - are precious – and so easily passed by unnoticed. I firmly believe that God wants to change and transform us into the people he created us to be... and perhaps by prayerfully reflecting on these glimpses, we are taking small steps in thatdirection. Rowan Williams writes in a reflection on the icon of the transfiguration, that ‘looking at Jesus seriously changes things; if we do not want to be changed, it is better not to look too hard or too long’. Powerful words.

On Good Friday in 1520, prominent Italian painter and architect Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino (better known as simply “Raphael”) died at the age of 37. He left behind a large body of work including paintings, altarpieces, sculptures, sketches… and one unfinished oil painting on wood, titled theTransfiguration.

Raphael, busy with other commissions, had worked on the transfiguration for four years—but he died prematurely before it could be completed. The work was finished by Raphael’s student Giulio Romano after the artist’s funeral. There is a noticeable difference in the fine details of the top and bottom, probably because the hand of the Master had been stilled.

Even in its unfinished state, Raphael considered the transfiguration to be his greatest masterpiece. He was so proud of it, in fact, that it was prominently displayed behind his deathbed.

Two scenes from the Gospel of Matthew aredepicted in Raphael’sTransfiguration:

At the top, Christ has climbed Mount Tabor with the Apostles, and there he is transfigured—appearing in his glorified body, flanked by Moses (representing the Law) and Elijah (representing the Prophets).
But in the lower part of the painting,the Apostles are struggling to heal a sick child. Only when the transfigured Christ appears in their midst is the child healed.

The original painting is now housed in the Vatican Museum.

 

We need those looking up moments in order to survive life in all its complexity. 

 



They offer us opportunities for transformation and fresh insight. 

And now I am preaching probably more to myself than to anyone else – but the vital bit is what happens after. Do we just return home to our lives, maybe thinking ‘that was a nice day’ and not giving it another thought in all our busy-ness, or do we make a conscious decision to maintain and nurture any tiny insight or change that might have come about in us? One happened to me in Durham Cathedral. I know the exact date  Friday 19 January 2007. I was having a bad time. I was fed up. Everything in church was my fault. The letters weren’t nice. I sat there and I know exactly where I sat to this day and I told God I’d had enough. Of church that is! And God in the vastness and history of that place sorted my head and told me however bad it seems he’s bigger and to look for his glory when I’m getting tired of what’s around me. 

 

We need to create looking up moments in church don’t we? 

My learning to be a Superintendent course at Cliff College despite landing on my bottom, was very good. The highlight was being taken out of the ordinary superintendent groups because the Bridge Circuit is different as I don’t do the governance bit, and to be put with the other different Superintendent Darren Middleton who is Superintendent of the Coracle Circuit in the South West Peninsula District (that’s Devon and Cornwall) - it’s a circuit of new expressions of church. Darren is a minister and also a hairdresser and he’s opened a salon in Plymouth

He says Hairdressing is the perfect tool to engage the wider community. The salon is a place where people come from all backgrounds and places to have some personal time that is solely for themselves. A space is given to each client to be themselves and talk, or not! Part of the service that a hairdresser gives is to listen. 

The salon experience is a holistic one - pampering for the hair, nurturing for the soul. I didn’t realise just how compatible sermons and scissors are but in fact, in reality, they are synonymous. Especially if one considers a sermon something that is lived in the community and not just spoken from a pulpit.

My hope is to give this experience to people who need it but can’t afford it; those who cannot go to a salon for whatever reason - the homeless and the outsider, the refugee, those suffering with mental illness and those who just need to be loved and given space to be…” 

He was an absolute joy to chat to. I said to him “ you love it don’t you?”  He’s providing up moments for people day after day after day. Bit different to what I get “got any plans for the weekend? “



Of course, most of these transfigurational glimpses occur in the mundane, ordinary, everyday situations, hence being so easy to miss. But it would be exhausting and unsustainable to always live on the mountaintop, constantly being dazzled by revelations and dramatic experiences.

 

It is not God’s desire that we live on the mountaintops. We only ascend to the heights to catch a broader vision of the earthly surroundings below. But we don’t live there. We don’t tarry there. The streams begin in the uplands, but these streams quickly descend to gladden the valleys below.


But we can surely be sustained and equipped by the fruits of our glimpses and transfigurational moments, if we are willing. We are to take our transfiguration moments—our God moments—with us, to remind us why we are on this journey, especially when things are difficult. Like Peter, James, and John, we may not always understand what we have witnessed, but we know that we are loved and called by the God who shares them with us. 


Peter later wrote this in his second letter: “For we did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we had been eyewitnesses of his majesty. For he received honour and glory from God the Father when that voice was conveyed to him by the Majestic Glory, saying, 

“This is my Son, my Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.” We ourselves heard this voice come from heaven, while we were with him on the holy mountain. So we have the prophetic message more fully confirmed. You will do well to be attentive to this as to a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts. First of all you must understand this, that no prophecy of scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation, because no prophecy ever came by human will, but men and women moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God.

As we prepare to enter Lent, the story of Jesus requires us to take the brilliance of the Transfiguration into our own journeys. 

May we be given the courage to be transformed, so that we can bear the light and mystery of God to others, setting the whole world aglow as 2 Peter declares: “a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises” in our hearts. Let us look up and see his glory is still around and let us look down and around to share it where we are.