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It’s difficult to imagine this gospel scene when Jesus took Peter, James, and John up a mountain and was transfigured in front of them. There’s nothing in our experience of seeing someone glow in dazzling white clothes brighter than any white we can imagine. Nor have we had visions of two people who lived long ago appearing in front of us like Moses and Elijah did with Jesus. Probably we would be terrified as the three apostles were - and maybe even wonder if we were losing our minds.
It gets even stranger when the three apostles hear a voice from a cloud telling them to listen to “my beloved Son.” At that point, they find themselves left alone with the same Jesus they have always known. Obviously, the experience is something the apostles couldn’t have understood with their minds, at least not before his resurrection from the dead. Before this scene, the apostles - as well as pretty much everyone else Jesus was meeting - were trying to figure out just who he was. He appeared human to them in every other way except for the incredible miracles he was performing. How could a human do those things? The Transfiguration probably left the impression that although Jesus was more than just an incredible human being, the apostles still didn’t fully understand who he was.
Questions of the Week
When you think of Jesus, do you think of him more as a human or as divine? How so?
If you were one of the apostles at the Transfiguration, what do you think you would have been thinking or feeling? How would it change how you thought of Jesus?