Tag Archives: transfiguration

NAGASAKI DAY: Transfiguration, a poem by Martha Keys Barker

Behold Nagasaki, Hiroshima
their mountains splendid with atomic fire
their peoples transfigured
by atomic blast,
their survivors
writhing in the valley
begging some splendid Christ
to touch and make whole.

Behold the radiant Bomb:
defying the law
Behold, and be struck dumb
by unspeakable terror.

Feast of Disfiguration borne not of the mountain’s vision
but of dumb demons refusing to see in other—
sister and brother
seeing only
enemy
building always walls
to keep the other out . . .

“Now there are only two ways to walk:
Toward the radiance of the transfigured Christ
or the radiance of the Bomb.”……
towards the radiance that glorifies,
or the radiance that vaporizes.

“This day I set before you life and death, a blessing and a curse:
Choose this day
whom you will serve.”

(Thanks to Pax Christi Florida for sending this poem.)

LENT 2012: Reflection for the Second Sunday of Lent, March 4, 2012

by Megan McKenna, Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

Genesis 22:1-2, 9, 10-13, 15-18 | Romans 8:31-34 | Mark 9:2-10

The TransfigurationThe thought of God testing us is terrifying. To be singled out, to have our mettle and our hearts laid bare is awful. We will see what we will not sacrifice, not trust to God, not hand over. Abraham was a friend to God, and God wanted all of Abraham: his child, his future, his name, his trust, even in the face of impossible demands that seem to destroy his dreams and contradict even God’s earlier promises. Nothing is spared, nothing left to Abraham. And Abraham obeys.

Lent calls us to listen, to obey and to offer in sacrifice all we are and have. And, in that obedience, others will see through us to the glory of God.

Peter, James and John are privileged to pray with Jesus, to go off alone together. They catch a glimpse of glory and want the world to go away. They want to settle down and put up tents. But their plans are abruptly interrupted; instead they are told to listen — to listen to God’s beloved child. To listen is to obey like Abraham, like Jesus handing over life to God. Obeying transfigures our lives and radically alters the future. Abraham was given a nation and an unbelievable future. Jesus was given back life, glory and power.

God does not spare the beloved child, and we are not spared either. In baptism we are given the same privileged relationship with God that Jesus experienced, but that relationship does not protect us from suffering. It calls us to sacrifice, to walk toward God, to get close to divinity. And that closeness is pain. Glory shines through us, but the Spirit does not penetrate flesh easily — there is too much resistance, too much fear. Jesus suffered violence unjustly, as one poor and innocent.

Aligned with God as friends, we must make friends with the poor, the innocent, and all those who suffer unjustly. It is there that the glory shines through most clearly. Today we are tested but privileged to be intimate with God as beloved friends and children. We will need to remember the glory that seeps into our flesh.

This reflection was written by Megan McKenna in the reflection booklet, Rend Your Heart: A Lenten Journal for Peacemakers, 1988. This year’s reflection booklet is by Pax Christi USA Teacher of Peace Colleen Kelly, From Ashes to Resurrection, Dust to New Life, and is available as a download for purchase from the Pax Christi USA website. For more reflections and resources for Lent 2012, click here

LENT 2012: Reflection for the Second Sunday of Lent, March 4

by Megan McKenna, Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

Genesis 22:1-2, 9, 10-13, 15-18 | Romans 8:31-34 | Mark 9:2-10

The TransfigurationThe thought of God testing us is terrifying. To be singled out, to have our mettle and our hearts laid bare is awful. We will see what we will not sacrifice, not trust to God, not hand over. Abraham was a friend to God, and God wanted all of Abraham: his child, his future, his name, his trust, even in the face of impossible demands that seem to destroy his dreams and contradict even God’s earlier promises. Nothing is spared, nothing left to Abraham. And Abraham obeys.

Lent calls us to listen, to obey and to offer in sacrifice all we are and have. And, in that obedience, others will see through us to the glory of God.

Peter, James and John are privileged to pray with Jesus, to go off alone together. They catch a glimpse of glory and want the world to go away. They want to settle down and put up tents. But their plans are abruptly interrupted; instead they are told to listen — to listen to God’s beloved child. To listen is to obey like Abraham, like Jesus handing over life to God. Obeying transfigures our lives and radically alters the future. Abraham was given a nation and an unbelievable future. Jesus was given back life, glory and power.

God does not spare the beloved child, and we are not spared either. In baptism we are given the same privileged relationship with God that Jesus experienced, but that relationship does not protect us from suffering. It calls us to sacrifice, to walk toward God, to get close to divinity. And that closeness is pain. Glory shines through us, but the Spirit does not penetrate flesh easily — there is too much resistance, too much fear. Jesus suffered violence unjustly, as one poor and innocent.

Aligned with God as friends, we must make friends with the poor, the innocent, and all those who suffer unjustly. It is there that the glory shines through most clearly. Today we are tested but privileged to be intimate with God as beloved friends and children. We will need to remember the glory that seeps into our flesh.

This reflection was written by Megan McKenna in the reflection booklet, Rend Your Heart: A Lenten Journal for Peacemakers, 1988. This year’s reflection booklet is by Pax Christi USA Teacher of Peace Colleen Kelly, From Ashes to Resurrection, Dust to New Life, and is available as a download for purchase from the Pax Christi USA website. For more reflections and resources for Lent 2012, click here

LENT 2011: Reflection for the Second Sunday of Lent

by Jim Dinn

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Genesis 12:1-4 | 2 Timothy 1:8-10 | Matthew 17:1-9

Jesus in the transfiguration account seems to the modern believer like the Jesus we encounter in the Gospel of John. It is as if his human nature becomes transparent, glowing with incandescence, revealing his divinity. Interestingly, however, Peter is depicted as totally comfortable with the radiant Jesus. In fact, he finds the touch and presence of Jesus a reassurance after the bright cloud and authoritative voice from heaven. The cloud and voice were clearly divine manifestations for Peter and he is terrified of them. The radiance of Jesus is no more than Peter expects in one who fulfills the law and the prophets, who is the long-awaited Anointed One.

Transfiguration SundayPeter is prepared to honor and extend the religious experience with dwellings for Moses, Elijah and Jesus. Left to his impulses, Peter might have established visible shrines to memorialize this transcendent event. It is an impulse which modern devotion can scarcely resist. We tend to return in pilgrimage to places where divine power or holiness has been previously manifested. We erect a shrine for every vision.

But the more central truth for us is that our God is not attached to real estate. The divine cloud of God’s presence hovers no longer over a holy mountain or sacred temple. Rather, it hovers over us as it hovered over Peter, to affirm the larger truth that we are the temple of the new order. In us dwells the eternal God. Over us God speaks of pleasure, not only at our baptism but in our life: “This is my beloved daughter, my beloved son in whom I am well pleased.”

A priest friend recently shared a recollection at the funeral Mass for his father. He recalled how his father would take him as a boy to the local hot dog stand. The only funds were the coins in his father’s pocket, and often there were not enough for the father to buy a hot dog for himself. But he would buy a hot dog and a chocolate milk for his son. Then he would sit beaming with delight, relishing the boy’s enjoyment. “And now looking back,” the priest reflected, “I realize how in those moments my father showed me the face of God. He gave me a glimpse of how God must take delight to see children enjoying creation.”

The transfiguration Gospel catches us off-guard each year. It seems out of place in Lent, especially so early in the season. The ashes are still streaked on our forehead; we have barely entered the desert. It’s like having recess during the first period of the school day. We haven’t earned it.

Maybe that’s precisely the point–God’s generosity having nothing to do with our merits. We don’t earn or achieve our transfiguration. It is God’s gratuitous undertaking. The selection from 2 Timothy reminds us: “God has saved us and has called us to a holy life, not because of any merit of ours…”

The call to a holy life reverberates with special force since the Second Vatican Council.  It was typical in recent generations to feel that only a select minority were called to holiness. Sanctity was widely associated with clergy and religious. And a heavily hierarchical presentation of the Catholic Church made most members feel like second class citizens.

The Dogmatic Constitution on the Church is emphatic and unequivocal in its extensive section, “The Universal Call to Holiness.” “The forms and tasks of life are many but there is one holiness, which is cultivated by all who are led by God’s spirit… Accordingly, all Christians, in the conditions, duties and circumstances of their lives and through all these, will grow constantly in holiness if they receive all things with faith from God’s hand and cooperate with the divine will, making manifest in their ordinary work the love which God has loved the world.” (#41)

We should place ourselves in the transfiguration scene this Lent, seeing with Peter the bright cloud overshadowing us and hearing the voice affirming our adoption and God’s delight in us. For we are the ones today that God invites to be transfigured, to be transformed and made holy. We are the ones who must live our baptismal faith commitment, not just in the rare and heady mountaintop experience, but in the daily valley experience of meeting others’ needs and trying to heal a broken world.

This reflection is from Crossroads to Easter: Lenten Reflections, 1999 by Jim Dinn, former staff member at Pax Christi USA.

  • For more Lenten resources, click here.
  • To read the reflections from this year’s Lenten booklet by Angie O’Gorman, click here.