Saturday 24 February 2024

2nd Sunday of Lent Year B 2024

From the desolate desert of deception, this Sunday we scale the top of Tabor to witness Christ’s Transfiguration. It is like spanning the two extreme ends of human experiences. Christ showed us that from the depths of deception we can scale the heights of heaven.

The context for this event is important. Firstly, the three Synoptic Gospels carry this narrative. It happened after Peter’s Confession that Jesus is the Messiah that was followed by Jesus predicting His own passion to come. Jesus’ inner circle of Peter, James and John were brought up to the mountain and there in their presence, He is transfigured. Secondly, as Jesus was resolutely making His way to Jerusalem, this episode was an encouragement to the Disciples. Enveloped by the cloud, the three heard a voice that affirmed once again that Jesus is the Son of God and they were commanded to listen to Him. The matter to consider is that woven into discipleship are both a price and a prize.

The 1st Reading does suggest a heavy price to be paid for discipleship. Abraham was asked to sacrifice his only son. God’s demands feel as if He will always ask for more than we are prepared to give. But that is not the case. God does not ask what He Himself is not able to deliver. Central to Abraham’s experience is faith that God Himself will supply. Isaac symbolises what was dearest to Abraham—his continuity and God asked that Abraham trust Him with his most precious treasure. Abraham becomes the father of faith because he was prepared to trust in God’s providence. The subsequent sacrifice of the ram symbolises God’s greatest Providence. God modelled the way of trust by giving up His only Son to be the ultimate sacrifice.

Even if discipleship is often thought of as a call to action, it is truly a journey of faith. Ultimately it is a journey to the Resurrection. Perhaps, we can better understand this from the perspective of those who are journeying to join the Catholic faith. Why? We who have been baptised long ago might have lost the sense of wonder because our vision is a bit more blurred and our attitude more blasé.

Why do people seek baptism? Does it confer on them material benefits? Maybe. Is there more to material gain in conversion? The answer to the question why the Elect choose to join the Church is Eternal Life. We are baptised into eternal life. The Transfiguration is therefore a Resurrection experience of the disciples. Peter, James and John caught a glimpse of the prize at the end of their discipleship.

As a journey to eternity, discipleship does not settled on what is passing, important though that may be. This is perhaps one of the challenges we face in a consumer society. We may have been promised heaven here on earth. The “Great Reset” proposed at the World Economic Forum operates from a space of responsibility for creation and our common home is noble but it might hide within its philosophy a promise of “eternity” which this temporal and transient world cannot support.

We are not meant to live forever here. For example, the eradication of hunger, diseases and injustice is not eternity because eternal life is premised on death. We need to pass through death before reaching the Resurrection. While discipleship is exercised in the world, still its objective is eternity. The Transfiguration is therefore a kind of foretaste of what is to come.

Any mountain experience is exhilarating. It is wonderful to be able to witness glory but it is a different matter altogether to follow it. In the end, after all the firework display has died off, all that remained was Christ alone. Continuing the journey to Jerusalem, He will go to His death. The glory of the Transfiguration passes through the summit of Calvary.

As Christ was preparing the disciples for His Passover, so during this period of enlightenment, our Elect too are reminded of the price of discipleship. They are not alone. We who have been baptised must count that cost too. We also have to follow Christ and keep our faith until the Resurrection.

The culmination of our faith journey is the Resurrection. Speaking of this reality can feel like a meaningless exercise because it describes an experience that is so out of this world. How do we desire something that we cannot really put a finger on? And moreover, we are continuously promised “eternity on earth”. What may be helpful is the Greek word for the experience of the Apostles. In Greek, Transfiguration is “metemorphothe” or in science, we know the process as “metamorphosis”. Remember how an ugly caterpillar morphs into a dead chrysalis (pupa) before it transforms into a beautiful butterfly.

Our cosmetic industry is basically mimicking for humanity what metamorphosis does for the insect kingdom. We all want to be beautiful and we are prepared to go to great lengths to beautify ourselves when in fact discipleship is the process whereby the beautification of the soul takes place. If physical beauty is our objective, then the Resurrection is the ultimate spiritual goal of the transformation that we desire.

In summary, the Transfiguration is an important symbol of the Resurrection; a foretaste of what is to come. The part of the Eucharistic Prayer III used in a funeral Mass reflects this reality. “…When from the earth He will raise up in the flesh those who have died and transform our lowly body after the pattern of His own glorious Body”. Placed early in Lent, the Transfiguration reminds searchers and believers not to lose sight of the Resurrection, no matter how good life can be here, for eternity is truly the prize we win after paying the price of discipleship.