Wembley Downs Uniting Church
Current Sermons
Dazzling Darkness (Barry Preece) 14.2.2010
Reading: Luke 9:28-36
Barbara Brown Taylor writes and I quote: Those of us who spend a lot of time in church have heard Luke’s story of the transfiguration so often that we may think of it as a public event.According to Luke, it was not a public event. Only three other people were there, which means it was an event not for the many but for the few.

Let us forget for a moment that Luke’s story may not be a factual account of an historical moment. We are not concerned with historicity here. We are concerned with epiphany, which ordinary time and space cannot contain.

But they did see that epiphany, and then they could not see anything anymore, because the cloud swallowed them up. It was still God’s glory, only it was dazzling darkness this time, not dazzling light.
For us, they are opposites. For God, they are the same. (end quote)
I don’t want to stay with this particular approach, but I did want to share briefly the idea of ‘dazzling darkness`.

In my preparation for today I came across a piece I want to share more fully with you. It was written in 2006 by Pastor Nathan Mattox, who now ministers in Morris, Oklahoma. It has the heading:-

Transfiguration Midrash

Mattox says; I wrote this a couple years ago as an exercise to ‘get inside the scripture.’

Later I found out that this practice of ‘fleshing out the details’ of a Biblical story was practiced by Jewish Rabbis in an art called ‘midrash.’ When we give ourselves the opportunity to put into words or (as artists do) on a canvas what our mind sees when we read a scripture, it sometimes illuminates more of the truth of that particular passage in our devotional life. I recommend doing this yourself as a discipline of Lent. (end quote)

I want to share with you the result of his midrash process. Listen carefully for the way he ‘fills out or in his word fleshes out’ the story as we know it from the bible; in the Gospel according to Luke.

Listen to the result of one man’s Midrash on the Gospel. Try and put yourself in the story as the narrator the ‘I’

Transfiguration Mountain

One evening, a week after our master had asked us who we believed he was, we were all slumbering in a grove of trees outside Cesarea Phillippi. The night had the chill of crisp air and I had not yet drifted into sleep. I was still imagining if I would be one that Jesus spoke of when he had said earlier, ‘there are some standing here who will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.’

Lately, I could see that Jesus was beginning to get frustrated about something. He kept telling us that we weren’t getting the point of his stories.

Then, as my eyelids were growing heavier, I heard the Master say out loud, ‘Who will accompany me up the mountain to pray?’ Most of the disciples were asleep, but next to me James snapped out of a dream.
He said to me, ‘Brother John, Am I dreaming? I thought I heard the teacher ask if someone would walk with him up the mountain, and I saw he was wearing a crown made of thorns!?’

‘You’re dreaming,’ I answered, ‘but he did call for us to accompany him up the mountain, let’s go!’

All of us usually argued over who of us would get to accompany the Master on walks alone. I relished the chance to walk at his side.
Peter had been standing against a tree, away from the fire, so he could watch the woods and warn us if we were being approached by intruders.

Jesus, James and I walked down to Peter and Jesus asked him if he wanted to come with us on a hike.

We were camped halfway up the mountain already, so the climb became tedious quickly. We were climbing around large rocks and the ground was not stable. Our feet kept stepping on loose areas and little landslides of rocks and dirt would slide down the mountain in clouds of dust.

Soon we reached the snow. Jesus was walking a few paces ahead of us, and in the moonlight I saw that there were sets of footprints on either side of his! When I looked up, it seemed as though the moonlight had left the rest of the world and all concentrated on him.

Then, I could see that in the light reflected from the Master, the owners of the other footprints had appeared! I could sense, much like you can hear your father’s sneeze in a busy marketplace, but in this same way I could see—I knew that the other footprints belonged to Moses and Elijah! They were speaking with one another, and I could tell by the looks on their faces that Moses and Elijah felt about as proud to be walking with Jesus as we did. I wondered if all the prophets and angels argued, like we did, over who got to accompany our Master different places.

We were all stupefied. Peter seemed to be the most effective at fishing his voice out of his stomach and stammered: ‘Master, it is most fortunate that we have come with you….I, I, I can pitch three tents for you and for Elijah, and for Moses.’

Moses looked at Peter fondly. He understood that we were homeless and on the run with Jesus like he and his followers were homeless and on the run from the Egyptians—with Yahweh on the run with them in a tent of His own. It seemed that the tents were no longer the right idea---but the cloud of our unknowing grew thicker, and actually seemed to materialize around us. (Dazzling Darkness).

From it, I could feel the words surging through my body like I was standing inside a thundercloud and the lightening was entering my ears and grasping my heart. The words confirmed what Peter had exclaimed to the Master’s question a week earlier—

‘Who do you say that I am?’
‘My Son…My Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.’ the voice uttered. ‘Listen to him!’

I could not even turn my head to look at James, but I felt him grab my hand, and through it, I could feel that he was seeing and hearing the same thing. The voice sounded like the sweetest notes from the lyre — and like a person’s dying breath. We were all stuck, hearts pounding, breathing heavily. We began to pray the prayer that our Lord had taught us to pray.

My knees hit the snow, then . . . . I could feel his hand burning me like the electric words that had burned my heart. Jesus said, ‘Get up and do not be afraid.’ It seemed that the cloud evaporated as I took in what I thought was going to be my last breath. I saw Jesus standing in front of us with his hands on our joined hands. The night was dark again, and in the moonlight I saw that a host of footprints were all around us in the snow.

Jesus started back down the mountain, and we quickly followed. He turned his head and said, ‘Tell no one about this vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.’

The questions were popping in my mind like a rabbit darts into her hole. As the rabbit feels safety and contentment in her hole though, the questions seemed to be put to rest as soon as they entered my mind. Peter, though, asked him question after question. He needed to hear from the mouth of our teacher what I felt in my heart.

We were walking with the Saviour!




130 Calais Road, (crnr of Minibah Street)
Wembley Downs, Western Australia.
Phone 08 9245 2882

Ten kilometres northwest of Perth city centre,
set amongst the suburbs of City Beach, Churchlands,
Scarborough, Wembley Downs and Woodlands