Sunday, February 10, 2013

Three Booths (Transfiguration C)



Three Booths
Last Sunday after Epiphany (Year C)
10 February 2013 8:00 a.m. Said and 10:00 Sung Eucharist 
Trinity Parish Episcopal Church, Ashland Oregon


Dear God, let us not accept that judgment, that this is all we are. 
Enlighten our minds, inflame our hearts with the desire to change—
With the hope and faith that we all can change.
Take  away our hearts of stone and give us hearts of flesh. Amen.
(Dorothy Day Prayer for Change, July-August, 1972)

The Hebrew Scripture lesson today is about Moses going to the Holy Mountain and returning with the brightness of God still on him.  In today’s Epistle, Paul uses this story about Moses’ glory to argue for flexible legal and liturgical practice within the Church he planted in Corinth.  The Gospel is Luke’s telling of how Jesus is transformed and surrounded by glorious brightness before his close disciples’ eyes.

In the Church’s calendar, today is the last Sunday before Lent, called Transfiguration Sunday on account of the Gospel Reading.  We are vested in white rather than Ordinary Time Green in honor of the white brightness that shone from Jesus on Mt. Tabor. 

The epiphany to Peter and his companions stretches his mind a bit beyond what he is ready to receive.  His reaction reveals his misunderstanding. Seeing the two great icons of the Jewish tradition before him alongside Jesus—Moses for the Law and Elijah for the Prophets, he calls Jesus “Rabbi” and says it is a good thing that these figures have come to endorse the authority of Jesus.  He suggests that he build three Succoth—temporary shelters or booths—in their honor.  

Succoth (tabernacles, or booths) were set up for the duration of the major harvest festival.  They stood for the tents of Israel during the 40 years of wandering in the desert while being fed on the Manna, the bread from Heaven, and symbolized human reliance on God, an appropriate sentiment for a harvest festival.  

The prophet Zechariah had said that when the Messiah came, all the nations of the earth would go in pilgrimage to Jerusalem during the Succoth Festival and build such Booths as commanded by Moses.  God would punish any nation not doing by withholding the rain and sending drought, the punishment that Elijah had famously brought on King Ahab for three years (Zech 14:16-18; Exod 23:16; 34:22; 2 Kings 17).  

Seeing Jesus, Moses, and Elijah, Peter wants to build small shrines commemorating the event that showed that Jesus was yet another great figure in the history of the religion of the Jews, perhaps even the Messiah who would force all Gentiles to become Jews by invoking Elijah’s curse of drought.  But the narrator comments, “He didn’t know what he was saying. He was scared witless, after all.” 
 
The glory of God shining forth from the face of Jesus is a revolutionary fact:  it challenges Peter's assumptions.  He confuses things, and thinks somehow that Jesus is getting his authority or endorsement from the appearance of the ancient prophets.  

“Let’s build three booths.”  This is Peter’s way of saying, “I know what’s going on here.  I understand.”  It tames the untamable.  Like Homer Simpson being quietly told a universally known truism he clearly had not gotten, Peter replies by saying, “I knew that.”   
We are creatures of habit who embrace our coziness with the familiar.  Even here in Ashland where we say we like and desire change, we find ourselves grasping at times for straws from our past experience to categorize and tame the truly revolutionary we encounter. 
Old vs. new, stability vs. change--this was the theme of a couple of somewhat contradictory sayings that Jesus gave when asked about changes he had made in the practices of John the Baptist:    
“No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for the patch will pull away from the garment, making the tear worse.  Neither do people pour new wine into old wineskins. If they do, the skins will burst; the wine will run out and the wineskins will be ruined. No, they pour new wine into new wineskins, and both are preserved.” (Matthew 9:16-17)
The point is that new departures require totally new frameworks, and that Jesus’ ministry had to follow its own rules, not John the Baptist’s.  The Reign of God is like new wine, still fermenting and bubbling.  It needs to be put into freshly made wineskins that are still flexible and expandable rather than in old, used, and increasingly brittle ones, which tend to crack and burst under the pressure of the fermentation.     
The Reign of God, as new and uncontrollable as new wine, when it encounters the old is also like a patch.  New things must be accommodated to the context into which they will be placed, or great damage can be caused.  An unshrunk cloth used as a patch would tear up old, previously shrunk clothing the first time the patched garment is washed.  But as Luke’s version of the parable tells us (5:36), such accommodation cannot be allowed to destroy the integrity of the new reality: we cannot tear up the new garment in order to patch up an old, because then both the old and the new are ruined.
The Transfiguration totally flummoxes Peter, since he is still in “old think.”   But in a way it is an accommodation to his way of viewing things, and the result is “three booths.”   
But God intervenes, and sets things straight.  A light-filled cloud appears and covers everything. A voice identifies Jesus as the first thing, the real item. ‘This is my Son, the Beloved; listen to what he says!’   The cloud disappears, and all that remains is Jesus himself.  Moses and Elijah are not longer around.   Only new wine in new skin remains, no more old garment in need of a patch. 
The transfiguration is a moment of sudden clarity for the disciples that they don’t fully “get” until after the resurrection: that the “glory of God is shining in the face of Jesus,” that, “Christ is the image of God” (2 Cor. 3:18), and that, in the words of John’s Gospel, “Whoever has seen [Jesus] has seen the Father.” 

The Transfiguration in the story wipes away the conflict between old and new.  That is what the 2 Corinthians passage is about:  as we look upon the glory of God shining in the face of Jesus, we ourselves are transformed, and more able to accept and embrace the new.   He rhetorically contrasts this with the fading glory on the face of Moses coming down from the Mountain.  But we must not read the 2 Corinthians passage in an anti-Semitic or supercessionist way, in which the whole, complete, and pure Christian revelation is seen as replacing the partial, benighted, and wrong-headed Jewish one. Paul wrote this passage as a Jew, and his contrast is not between Judaism and Christianity, but rather two competing Jewish visions of Law and Grace.

Paul tops his argument by using a very un-Jewish image.  To describe the effect of Christ’s glory on Christians, he uses the pagan myth of metamorphosis, or shape changing.  Not found in the Hebrew scriptures, it is a standard in the paganism of Paul’s Gentile:  Zeus shifting shapes into swans, or bulls, or young men; the Olympian Gods changing human beings in the myths into constellations, flowers, trees, or even just echoes.

Paul ironically transforms the image of transformation by describing a metamorphosis totally at odds with the sudden, in-all-directions shape-shifting of the Olympian myths.  His metamorphosis is gradual but marked transfromation that goes toward a single point—the glory surrounding Jesus, the resurrected Lord's own image.  He writes, “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another.” 
What Paul calls the glory around Jesus is what today’s Gospel reading is about:  This steady, unchanging standard of brightness is what is revealed momentarily in the story.  Jesus’ transfiguration is not a metamorphosis or transformation.  It is a brief glimpse of the true hidden state of affairs. 

Peter mistook the revelation of Jesus’ true glory as a fading transitory shifting of appearances—that is what the three booths are about.   Peter is an old wineskin here, about to burst under the pressure of this new and unprecedented experience.  But seeing the glory and hearing the voice, he is transformed.  He is transfigured.  And by the time the resurrection comes, he is ready for the astounding realization of who Jesus actually was.

Sisters and brothers.  We do not like change, we don’t like to be stretched.  Even if we tell ourselves we do like these things, it is only to the point of where our comfort level lies.  And truly new wine in old wineskins is decidedly not comfortable. 

It is easy to lose heart.  It is easy to think “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks.”  But the miracle and mystery of our faith is this—we can change because God can change us.  We can cast aside old ways of thinking, feeling, and being.  We can forget about the three booths.   It is part of our faith--in the Apostles’ Creed we affirm that we believe in “the Holy Spirit, the Holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting.”    Belief in any of these things makes no sense at all if you don’t believe that God is at work transforming us, and that as a result, we shall be changed. 

Such change is sometimes hard, so hard that at times we do not know whether we will be able to bear it.  At other times it feels like taking off a heavy winter coat in the summer heat.   But no matter how hard or easy, it goes on.  And it is not a shape-shifting that turns us into something alien, something that is "not us."  When Paul says this turns us into "the image of Christ" he is not saying it removes our individuality.  It is a transformation into our true selves, the individual people God intended when He created each of us.  



As we sang as we entered today, in Charles Wesley’s words--

Finish then, thy new creation,
Pure and spotless let us be;
Let us see they great salvation perfectly restored in Thee:
Changed from glory into glory,
'Till in heaven we take our place.
'Till we cast our crowns before thee,
Lost in wonder, love, and praise.  

It is not just in heaven when all of God's creation is done that this happens.  As we are transformed here and now, quickly or slowly, we begin to cast off the three booths.  It makes us look around us in amazement of the tokens of God's love all about us and then gaze all the more, "lost in wonder, love, and praise," on the author and pioneer of it all. 

As we look upon Christ's glory, may God so work with us all and help us to embrace the changes he is bringing about in us. 

In the name of God, Amen. 

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