Do you ever watch sport on television?
It doesn’t really
matter which sport –
football, rugby, athletics, gymnastics,
cycling, ice-skating –
whatever it is you enjoy,
the
point I’m about to make is the same.
What we see on
television is just the tip of the iceberg, the pinnacle of the
sport.
They show you the very best athletes at the peak of their
game.
What they don’t show you is the endless hours of
practice every single one of those athletes puts in,
often
training at unearthly hours of the morning to fit in with the day’s
work, grinding along,
day after day after day,
getting
injured,
recovering,
plodding on.
And then, every
once in awhile, realising how much they’ve improved,
how much
they are “getting it”.
Suddenly, all the hard work has
paid off –
they’ve been selected for their team, or their
club, or even their country!
Or perhaps they’re finding a
certain aspect of the skill easy that six months before they could
barely do.
A glimpse of the glory of what they’ve been
working so hard for.
Perhaps you’ve taken a sport fairly
seriously in your time, so you know what I’m talking about.
But
even if you haven’t, isn’t it the same with our Christian lives,
too?
We plod on, dutifully using what John Wesley called “The
means of grace”,
that is, the Sacrament,
public
worship,
the Scriptures,
prayer and so on,
and yet
nothing seems to happen.
Sometimes it feels as though our
relationship with God is all down to us, not to God,
and doubts
set in.
But then, just sometimes, God breaks in and we
get a glimpse of his glory.
I know that has happened to
me, and I hope it has happened to you.
In our
readings today, various people get glimpses of God’s
glory.
Firstly, Moses and the Israelites.
Moses is spending time in the mountains with God.
This
passage is set shortly after that infamous episode with the golden
calf,
and I think the authors are trying to emphasize that it
is God, Yahweh, who is in charge,
not Moses, not a golden calf,
nor anybody else.
So Moses’ face shines when he has
been in God’s presence,
as he is speaking with God’s
authority.
The Israelites caught a glimpse of God’s
glory.
And we are told that Moses did, too;
he was
allowed to see just the tiniest shadow of the back of God –
as
though God had a human form, but then, he was told,
he couldn’t
see the face of God as he wouldn’t live through the experience.
Nobody can, nobody except Jesus.
We can only come
to God through Jesus;
more of that in a minute.
The
Israelites could only see God’s glory reflected in Moses’ face,
and it scared them.
Moses, who hadn’t at all realised
anything was different,
had to put a veil over his face while
he was among them, so as not to scare them.
The New
Testament reading set for today, which we didn’t read,
points
out that Moses was able to take the veil off, eventually, because the
glory faded.
Moses was back among the people, involved in
the every-day tasks of running the Exodus,
and gradually the
glimpse of glory that he had had,
and that he had passed on to
the Israelites,
faded.
Okay, fast-forward
several hundred years to the time of Christ.
This time, it is
Jesus who is going up the mountain and he asks his friends James,
Peter and John to go with him.
I don't know whether Jesus knew
what was going to happen,
only that it was going to be
something rather different and special,
and he wanted some
moral support!
And so the four friends go up the mountain –
and
suddenly things get rather confused for a time,
and when it
stops being confused,
there is Jesus in shining white robes
talking to Moses and Elijah.
Peter, of course,
babbles on about building shelters,
but more to reassure
himself that he exists, I think, than for any other reason.
And
then the voice from heaven saying "This is my Son,
listen to Him".
In other words, Jesus is more
important than either Moses or Elijah, who were the two main people,
apart from God, in the Jewish faith.
To good Jews, as James,
Peter and John were, this must have almost felt like blasphemy.
No
wonder Jesus told them to keep their big mouths shut until the time
was right,
or he'd have been stoned for a blasphemer
forthwith.
Peter, for one, remembered this momentous day
until the end of his life.
Years and years later, he –
or
someone writing in his name –
was to write:
"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."
For
Peter, James and John, it was to be proof that Jesus is the
Messiah, and through all the turbulent times that followed they must
have held on to the memory of that tremendous day, when they saw a
glimpse of God’s glory in Jesus.
But they, too,
had to come down from the mountainside and carry on,
and
immediately they are confronted with a crisis:
a child who has
been brought to the disciples for healing, but nothing has happened.
In this version of the story, Jesus sounds almost cross –
well,
you can’t blame him, can you?
He was probably tired
after being on the mountain,
and rather wanting a quiet supper
and his bed,
and now the disciples were all talking at once,
explaining how they’d tried to cast out this demon,
and the
boy’s father is adding to the confusion, and yadda, yadda,
yadda…..
Basically, back to normal!
We know
from other accounts of this story that afterwards Jesus tells the
disciples that they can only cast out that sort of demon with prayer
and possibly fasting.
So it seems that
glimpses of God’s glory are very rare, and the normal gritty,
hum-drum, everyday life is the norm.
And that’s as it
should be.
You can’t live on a mountain-top all the
time, you’d get altitude sickness!
If you were on
holiday all the time, you wouldn’t appreciate the rest and
relaxation that being on holiday brings.
It’s not much
fun waking up and knowing you have no work to go to and, when you get
up, the big excitement of the day will be deciding what to have for
supper!
We are never quite sure where God is in all of
this.
But God is there.
Those
very special glimpses of his glory, such as Moses saw,
such as
Peter, James and John saw, are just that:
special.
They
happen maybe once or twice in a lifetime, if that.
But God
is there, acting, working in our lives, even if we don’t always
recognise Him.
There are a couple of stories about this,
which you may or may not have heard. In the first, two men are
talking in the pub, and the first is telling of an adventure he’s
recently had in North Africa. He got lost in the desert, and ran out
of water, and quite thought his last hour had come, so he prayed out
loud to God to come and save him.
“And what did God do?”
asked his friend, realising that something must have happened as
there he was, large as life and twice as natural, in the pub enjoying
his pint.
“Oh,” said the first man, “God didn’t need to
do anything, as just then a caravan came along, and I was able to go
on with them to safety.”
The second story tells of
the time there was a big flood, and people had to climb up on to the
roofs of their houses to escape.
One person – let’s make it
a woman this time, as we had a man in the last story, but it doesn’t
really matter – one woman thought this was a remarkable opportunity
to demonstrate, so she thought, God’s power, so she prayed “Dear
Lord, please come and save me.”
Just then, someone came
past in a rowing-boat and said “Climb in, we’ll take you to
safety!”
“Oh, no thank you,” said our friend, “I’ve
prayed for God to save me, so I’ll just wait for Him to do
so.”
And she carried on praying, “Dear Lord, please
save me!”
Then along came the police in a motor-launch,
and called for her to jump in, but she sent them away, too, and
continued to pray “Dear Lord, please save me!”
Finally,
a Coastguard helicopter came and sent down someone on a rope to him,
but she still refused,
claiming that she was relying on God to
save her.
And half an hour later, she was swept away and
drowned.
So, because she was a Christian, as you can
imagine, she ended up in Heaven,
and the first thing she did
when he got there
was go to to the Throne of Grace, and say to
God,
“What do you mean by letting me down like this?
I
prayed and prayed for you to rescue me, and you didn’t!”
“My
dear child,” said God, “I sent you two boats and a helicopter
–
what more did you want?”
When we pray for
someone to be healed, quite often we want to see God intervening
spectacularly, like the disciples expected to see with the boy with a
demon from today’s reading.
After all, if you think of
it, there’s a limit to what medicine can do.
When
you have an operation, the surgeons can cut you open and do what
needs to be done inside you, and then they can stitch you up again –
but they can’t make that cut heal up!
They can, of
course, do all sorts of things to encourage it to heal –
they
can’t actually make the flesh grow back together again.
That
has to be left to natural processes –
or is it God?
I
believe God is involved in healing, whether it is by direct,
supernatural intervention,
or, more usually, through the normal
processes of one’s immune system,
aided by medical or
surgical intervention when necessary.
But those glimpses
of glory that I started with –
when you realise that you are
making progress in your chosen sport or hobby, or perhaps when you
are out there competing –
I believe those times, too, are from
God.
I think, then, that what I want to leave with
you today is this:
as we go into Lent,
which is a time
when we are apt to think about God, and our relationship with Him,
perhaps a little more deeply than at other times of the year,
let’s be on the lookout for touches of God in our everyday
lives.
They don’t have to be spectacular, they probably
won’t be.
But each of them is a little glimpse of
glory. Amen.
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