In today’s Gospel, Jesus takes
Peter, James and John to Mount Tabor,
where they witness Jesus conversing with
Moses and Elijah and see Him transfigured in His glory. Paul tells us in today’s
second reading, Phil. 3: 17-4:1, that “our
citizenship is in heaven, and from it we also await a savior, the Lord Jesus
Christ. He will change our lowly body to conform with his glorified body by the
power that enables him also to bring all things into subjection to himself.” The
transfiguration is testament to the truth of Jesus’ promises to us. We can be as sure of our citizenship in
heaven and our own transfiguration as Abraham was assured that his descendants
would be as numerous as the stars in the sky and that God would give him the
land that he promised (today’s first reading, Gen 15: 5-12 and 17-18). Our transfiguration into Christ begins with
our Baptism, is sealed by our Confirmation, and enacted in the events of our
lives as we put on the Lord Jesus Christ by our love, our forgiveness, our
compassion, our being in right relationship with others or striving to be
so. Like Jesus, who learned obedience
from what He suffered (Heb 5:8), so, too do we.
In our sufferings we learn to call upon the Lord in truth, to recognize
our dependence upon the Lord, as Dismis did on the cross, to surrender to the
Lord as Jesus surrendered to His Father for the redemption of the world. Our
own redemption, won for us by Jesus on the cross, also needs our acceptance and
our surrendering our wills to the will of our Father. It needs us to be
thirsting for our holiness and wholeness, as Jesus’ thirsted on the cross. It
needs us to take each other into our “homes,” to care for one another, as John cared
for Mary and Mary cared for John, as Jesus requested from the cross. Caring for
and about each other transfigures our beings into the being of Christ,
glorifies us and God, and subjects us to the will of our Father.
No comments:
Post a Comment