This week I took three days away. Then we’ve had family in town. Therefore this is a reprint, word for word (except to correct a few misspellings and impenetrable phrasings), of a Post from a few years ago.
412. The Transfiguration – The Other Great Forgotten Feast
The Holy Transfiguration, August 6, is one of the Great Feasts of the Church – but I’ll bet if you asked Americans “What is the Transfiguration?”, ninety nine out of a hundred would say “Eh?” Or maybe some might think it was the latest super-hero movie. This is our second forgotten Feast.
The first is the Epiphany (I’ve complained about this before – see Post 46), which gets ignored because it comes after our cultural celebrations of Thanksgiving, Shopping, Santa Claus and Bowl Games, and after all that commotion everybody is just wiped out and poor Epiphany gets lost.
The problem with Transfiguration here in the West is that other Christians don’t emphasize it, so people here rarely hear about it. Also it falls while half everybody is out of town or otherwise mentally “on vacation”. The result, at least at Saint Nicholas, Cedarburg, Wisconsin, is that those who come to Transfiguration Liturgy * feel very blessed but usually also pretty lonesome.
- when it’s on a weekday. This year, praise God! it falls on Sunday.
Thus we lose much.
Orthodox theologians have made much of the Transfiguration, and with good reason. Our Lord God and Savior Jesus Christ appears, for the first time, seen in his heavenly Glory! A wonderful awe-inspiring event which is the key to who He truly is, and what He calls us to become – and so much more.
Light! Glory!
Thirty years ago as I moved towards Orthodoxy, it wasn’t that I literally saw light, but the only way I could describe what was happening to me was “moving into the light”.
Maybe one reason why the New Testament and Orthodoxy speak so much of light, of Glory, is because of the light in the deserts of the Near East, and the light of the Mediterranean. One morning on an island in the Aegean, Khouria Dianna and I got up early to see the sunrise. The light seemed to jump out of the sea, over the islands suddenly, the rays of the sun almost palpable.
I’ve wondered if light actually is the Glory of God. Scientifically, light is undefinable. OK, they says it’s “photons”, but nobody really knows what a photon is. (I guess ultimately only God know what anything really is, but that’s another story.) Photons have characteristics of matter, characteristics of energy. Could light from the Big Bang till now be the Glory of God pouring out into our universe? Do we live in the literal light of God every day without thinking about it? “God is light, and in Him there is no darkness at all.” 1 John 1:5
In my mind all these images are tied up together with the Transfiguration. For the chief reason light is a central theme of Orthodoxy is the Glory of Jesus Christ, and the people of God perceiving His Glory, experiencing the Glory, preparing to enter into the Light. In The Life of Moses, Saint Gregory of Nyssa wrote that the purpose of the Christian life is to advance “from glory to glory”. Orthodox churches traditionally face east, toward the rising sun, Christ “the daystar from the east”, as we sing.
Now and then people have seen the uncreated * Light of God: Moses on Mount Sinai, his face so bright after he prayed before the Ark of the Covenant, that to protect the peoples’ eyes he had to veil his face. Elijah taken up in the chariot of fire. Radiant angels at the Resurrection. John in his Revelation saw Christ, his faceshining like the sun, and then the Theotokos clothed in that same Light.
* Theologians distinguish between the uncreated Light of God and the created light of God. I don’t think I understand this. Can someone explain?
- P.S. August 2022. Yes, now I can explain. I was making it too complicated. In the Scriptures, there are three kinds of light. 1) Created light is what we experience every day – natural light. 2) Uncreated light is the literal Light of God, which has no natural explanation, such as seen at the Transfiguration or by Moses on Sinai, or with Abba Joseph and Saint Seraphim (in the next paragraph). 3) There is also “symbolic light”. For example, when Christ said “You are the light of the world”. obviously He did not mean that we should literally shine like a flashlight, but rather that by our words and deeds we should show forth Christ, and give guidance to others, guiding them through the dangers and pitfalls of life.
Abba Joseph right in the desert counseled a novice, “If you wish you can be all flame”, and then as he prayed, hands uplifted, fire rose from his fingertips. Saint Seraphim of Sarov walked by night in the forest, his face too brilliant for his disciple Motovilov to look at, the falling snow illumined by it. The Light has been seen by a few who pray the Jesus Prayer.
Eastern saints sometimes radiate light. Western saints tend to have the stigmata, the wounds of Christ, on their bodies. But even in the West… my sixth grade teacher (memory eternal, Mrs. Andrews) told how at her home Baptist church in Alabama, the children used to peek when one of the elders prayed (Protestants are supposed to pray with eyes closed, for some reason), because when he really got into it they could see the light shining around his face.
The source of it all is the light of the Transfiguration.
The Transfiguration of Christ
Matthew 17 begins: “After six days…”. Six days earlier Peter had first confessed, “You are the Christ, the Son of the Living God.” Jesus accepted that title, then immediately told His disciples, to their horror, that He must suffer and die. So the Transfiguration took place in context of these two things: Jesus is Son of God. He must die.
“Six days later He took Peter, James and John with Him to the top of a high mountain by themselves.” Tradition (reflected in our hymns) says it was Mount Tabor, six miles southeast of Nazareth, 1300 feet high. (There’s a parking lot below it today.) Some modern scholars insist it couldn’t have been Tabor. (For myself, I just ignore them. I trust ancient traditions more than most modern scholarship.)
These three were Jesus’ inner circle who knew Him best. This experience apparently was something the other disciples couldn’t handle yet. The Lord reveals His Glory to those who can cope with it – or almost cope with it, as we shall see.
Luke’s account says the Apostles were heavy with sleep. Was it nighttime? or were they just weary from the climb? Or sometimes peoples’ reaction to an encounter with the Holy is sleep. When God appeared to Moses in smoke and fire he fell into a deep sleep, a kind of trance. Genesis 15
And Jesus was transfigured. The Greek word for this is “metamorphosis (μεταμόρφωση)”. It’s the same word we use in English to describe what happens to caterpillars as they turn into butterflies.
“And his face shone like the sun, his clothes white as light.” We can imagine the disciples waking from sleep, rubbing their eyes, thinking “I’m still asleep. I’m dreaming”, thenlooking at each other and realizing they were all seeingthe same thing. This Man with whom they had walked, talked, laughed, shared meals – now transformed, light radiating from Him so they could scarcely bear to look. This is the first theme of the Feast: Peter had been right. Truly this is the Son of God.
And with Him two figures, Moses and Elias/Elijah in the light speaking with Him, Luke says, about His exodus/έξοδος, His exit which He was to make from Jerusalem. This is the second theme: His death.
There’s more: Moses, giver of the Law, and Elijah, first of the great prophets. It’s the whole Jewish tradition, the Law and the Prophets, acknowledging Jesus as Son of God. Moses, said to have been taken into heaven because they could not find his body, and Elijah carried up into heaven in a chariot of fire, the two who had been taken into Glory. (Before Christ, it was believed that most people went down into sheol, hades, the dark place of the dead.) Heaven was proclaiming Jesus as Son of God. It’s the first theme again.
Peter blurted out as usual: “Lord, it’s so good to be here. Let’s make three tents [tabernacles, dwelling places], one for you, one for Moses, one for Elijah.” “Let’s keep this”, so we can see you in Glory anytime we want. No, Peter. It can’t be done. We can’t hang onto anything in life. C.S. Lewis said the one prayer God never grants us is “Encore!” Whatever good thing God gives us will never happen again, at least not just like that. So don’t try to cling to it. Move on. God will give you another good thing in another way. Or if it’s a bad experience, don’t cling to that either, don’t let it overcome you. Move on. God will send you something else that is good.
Some call what happened to the disciples “mountaintop experiences”. Some Christians are forever trying to recreate their “mountaintop” conversion experiences. In their worship they try to work up the original emotions and feelings. Folks, give it up. Move on. Go keep Jesus’ commands. Care for the least of His brethren. Celebrate the Eucharist. That’s where you’ll find Him now.
Before the three disciples would see Him in Glory again, they would have to come down from Tabor, then walk with Him towards a different Hill. And later they all would have their own dying to do, till finally they are where they are now, with Him perpetually in Glory.
But not yet.
Too Much for Mortals to Handle
While Peter was still speaking a bright cloud overshadowed them, a cloud such as Moses had seen atop Mount Sinai, a cloud which on the Mount of Olives would take the risen Lord into Heaven. And a voice from the cloud: “This is my beloved Son: in Him I am well pleased. Hear Him.” (I’ve wondered if these last two words were the Father’s way of saying: Peter, hush! Listen to Jesus!)
This was suddenly more than the disciples could take. They fell on their faces, overcome, greatly afraid. The appearance of the Holy, even of angels, usually terrifies people. That’s why at such times they need to be told, “Fear not.” “Do not be afraid.” Some time after this (how long? I don’t think they knew) they felt His hand on their shoulders and heard His familiar voice: “Arise, do not be afraid”. They looked up and saw Jesus only – no light, no one with Him. Though now it was the “real” Jesus again, as they had known Him, they must still have been shaking.
But no. For a moment they had for the first time seen the Real Jesus – Christ our God in His Glory. The Jesus they had known had been the “hidden God”. In our hymns we sing of Christ’s coming to earth “without leaving heaven”, “without leaving His Father’s bosom”. All this time, from the moment of His Conception in the womb of the Virgin, Jesus Christ had been not only on earth but also in heaven. All this time He was not only a Man but also “God from God, Light from Light”. Did you ever wonder why we say those words in the Creed? It’s because of the Transfiguration. For just a moment the veil had been lifted and they had seen Him as he is. But only for a moment. They couldn’t handle any more. Not yet.
As He led them down the mountain He said, “Tell this vision to no one till the Son of Man has risen from the dead.” Why not? For one thing, because it would be like trying to describe blue to a blind man. It’s like trying to describe the Transfiguration or the Resurrection to us who have not seen it. That’s why Orthodox who have mystical experiences rarely tell us about them. There’s no point.
And now for the disciples, for a while,life with Jesus went back to normal. But in another way it did not, for it says, “Now he set his face towards Jerusalem”.
Recalling the Transfiguration
In the Epistle appointed for the Transfiguration 2 Peter 10-19 we find Peter thirty years later, soon before his martyrdom which he knows is coming. As he wrote, he was remembering the Transfiguration and what it meant to him. He wrote “While I am still in this ‘tent’” – surely thinking back to the “tents” he had wanted to build on Mount Tabor and could not. He was a young man then. Now he is older and he understands in a deeper way that even his body is a tent, a temporary dwelling place which he won’t keep forever.
“Before I die”, he means, “I want to remind you [of how] we were eyewitnesses of His majesty. For we received from God the Father Glory and honor when the voice came to Him from the Highest Glory: ‘This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased’. We heard this voice which came from heaven when we were with Him on the holy mountain.”
Peter could never forget. It was the confirmation that he had been right: “You are the Son of the Living God.” He continues, “We have the prophetic word confirmed, which you do well to heed as a light that shines in a dark place till the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts.” The Transfiguration was to him “a light shining in a dark place” – this dark place, this dark confusing world where the darkness of death gets us all and casts its shadow over our hearts and minds long before that. …“till the Day comes”, the great Day of our Lord Jesus Christ, “and the Morning Star rises in your hearts”, Christ the Rising Sun. And we will see for ourselves Christ the true Light.
Even more, the Day when Christ will share His glory with us. He gives us mer human beings, Peter says, “an entrance into heaven”, for He is not only true God but also true Man. Jesus Christ is mankind caught up into the Glory. The Transfiguration is a picture of our future, if we will have it – when, in a way we cannot yet imagine, the light of heaven will shine also from within us.
The Apostle John wrote later, decades after Peter’s death. He also was thinking back to the Transfiguration. In his first Epistle, he wrote those words which we Orthodox so often quote: “What we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as he is.” 1 John 3:2.
Brothers and sisters, we also will be transfigured, we also will be glorified, we also will be “metamorphosized”. Jesus Christ will turn us caterpillars into butterflies. With the Theotokos, whose glorification we will celebrate on August 15, we also are to become gods and goddesses, “more honorable than the cherubim, more glorious beyond compare than the seraphim”. As Saint Athanasios wrote, “God became Man so that man might be god.”
Next Two Weeks: I haven’t even thought about it yet.