Opening Story:
1) The Samurai Warrior and the Zen Master
One day, a Samurai warrior went to a Zen master for instruction. "Please," the huge man asked in a thundering voice that was used to instant obedience, "teach me about heaven and hell."
The master scowled at the swordsman, then broke into mocking laughter. "Me, teach you about heaven and hell? I wouldn't waste a moment trying to instruct the brain of an overweight ignoramus like you! How dare you ask me for such a lofty insight?"
Well, upon hearing these words, the Samurai grew furious. No one could insult him like this and get away with it. Enraged, his face flushed and he drew his sword to chop off the teacher's head. Just as he was about to strike, the master raised his hand and calmly said "That, sir, is hell."
Upon hearing this, the samurai suddenly realized the profound lesson the master had just taught him – that we make our own hell by indulging in anger and resentment. The warrior was so grateful for this teaching that he dropped his sword and fell to his knees in front of the Master, bowing in humility and gratitude. When he looked up, the old man was smiling.
"And that, sir," the teacher noted, "is Heaven.
"You risked your very life to teach me in this way?", the Samurai couldn't help asking the master.
"I figured that there was no other way you would have learnt!", the master calmly explained.
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Fr. Bill Grimm:
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Rev. Richard J. Fairchild
The story is told about :
A man took his new hunting dog on a trial hunt one day. After a while he managed to shoot a duck and it fell in the lake. The dog walked over the water, picked up the duck, and brought it to his master. The man was stunned. He didn't know what to think. He shot another duck and again, it fell into the lake and again the dog walked over the water and brought it back to his master. Hardly daring to believe his eyes, and not wanting to be thought a total fool, he told no-one about it - but the next day he called his neighbour to come shooting with him. As on the previous day he shot a duck and it fell into the lake. The dog walked over the water and got it. His neighbour didn't say a word. Several more ducks got shot that day - and each time the dog walked over the water to retrieve them - and each time the neighbour said nothing and neither did the owner of the dog.
Yes - replied the neighbour - rubbing his chin and thinking a bit - come to think of it I do - your dog
doesn't know how to swim.." The story of the transfiguration of Jesus is a difficult one to
talk about. Many people have difficulty understanding what happened
- the experience is outside of their frame of reference,
- it just doesn't click with them,just as seeing the dog walking on the water didn't really
click with the neighbour in the story I just told.
Michel de Verteuil
General notes
The three apostles experience the glory of Jesus in a wonderful way that will affect for ever their relationship with him (see 2 Peter 1:16-18). When did you, or someone you know, experience glory that until then had been hidden? In Jesus? In the Church community? In a friend or a member of your family? In a bible passage? In nature?
The story is told as a journey with different stages, and as you meditate on it you will find yourself recognizing these stages from your experience.
Text comments
– Verse 1 : To experience the transfiguration the apostles must entrust themselves to Jesus and let him lead them up a very high mountain where they can be alone.
– Verses 2 and 3 : They see not merely Jesus in glory but conversing with his great fore-runners who have been heroes to them.
– Verse 4 : Identify with Peter who would like to remain there forever.
– Verse 5 : Jesus is experienced as beloved Son of God, to be listened to with reverence, but this time through “a voice from the cloud”, a totally inner experience, a “blessed assurance”.
– Verses 6 – 8 : A very tender passage; Jesus gentle with the apostles, helping them to make the transition back to seeing him as he normally is, but now quite different because of the transfiguration experience. Who was Jesus in your life who did this for you?
– Verse 9 : The apostles return to ordinary living, but with a memory so deep that they know they cannot share it with others for the indefinite future.
Scripture comments
“There are three phases of prayer: me and Him; Him and me; just Him.”…Anglican Bishop Stephen Verney
Lord, we thank you that in this season of Lent

up a high mountain where you can be alone with them;
then, in their presence you will be transfigured,
your face shining like the sun
and your clothes becoming as white as the light.
We thank you that not only you, but Moses and Elijah
will appear to them, talking with you.
Surely they will cry out in their joy:
“Lord, it is wonderful for us to be here.
If you wish, we will make three tents,
one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah.”
We pray that you will lead them beyond what they can see and feel;
that a bright cloud will cover them with shadow
and from the cloud a voice may come, saying:
“This is my Son, the beloved; he enjoys my favour, listen to him.”
“The traveller cannot love because love is stasis and travel is motion.” …Derek Walcott
Lord, we are afraid to get close to people,
to let them lead us up a high mountain where we can be alone.
And so they cannot be transformed in our presence
and we cannot hear the voice from the cloud
telling us that they are your sons and daughters, your Beloved,
that they enjoy your favour and that we must listen to them.
We pray for the Church in the world.
Help us that when people fall on their faces before you,
overcome with fear,
we may come up and touch them, and say to them:
“Do not be afraid.”
“We ought not to learn silence from speaking but rather by keeping silent we must learn to speak.” …St Gregory

we see only those who we are called to live with
and we come down from the mountain with them.
Lord, we thank you for those beautiful moments on the mountain,
so deep that as we came down we knew
that we must tell no one about the vision
until the Son of Man had risen from the dead.
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Thomas O’Loughlin
Note
In all three years, the gospel today is that of the Transfiguration (Matthew in A; Mark in B; Luke in C), and there are three themes running through the readings: (1) that God has established a covenant with his people which is realised in his making known to his people the Christ through a ‘voice from heaven’; (2) that the disciples of the Beloved are ‘to listen to his voice’, and listening to the Word is presented as a key theme of Lent; and (3) that just as the Transfiguration strengthened the first disciples for the coming passion of their Lord (Matthew) / Rabbi (Mark) / Master (Luke), so our hearing about it today should strengthen us and make us more responsive to the whole Paschal Mystery which we are preparing to celebrate.

As we continue our Lenten journey towards Easter, we recall today the experience of the first disciples on their journey to the first Easter in Jerusalem. On a high mountain they beheld for a moment the glory of Jesus and heard the Father’s voice saying, ‘This is my Son, the Beloved, he enjoys my favour, listen to him.’ Let us now reflect that, forgiven our sins, we may behold Christ’s glory in this celebration, and let us ask the Spirit to help us hear Christ’s voice in our lives.
Homily Notes
1. This gospel challenges all the easy reductions that we make about Jesus: Jesus the inspiring teacher, Jesus the compassionate preacher, Jesus the friend of the poor. He is all these, but he is also the One who comes from the Father, the One who, we believe, was prepared for by the prophets, the One who stands at the centre of history. The transfiguration calls us to expand our religious horizons.
3. Preaching must not try to ‘explain’ this scene, nor even to ‘expand’ upon it. Rather the scene calls for our minds and imaginations to dwell on it and seek to make its ‘picture’ of the advent of God our own. So give a bit of the background that the first audience would have known, and then let imagination seek greater depths.
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John Litteton
Gospel Reflection
During Lent, while we prepare to commemorate the death and resurrection of Christ and celebrate the everlasting life he shares with us at Easter, we are invited to review our lives in the context of our Christian faith and the teachings of his Church. Also, we are encouraged to repent of our sins and to do penance for them so that we can renew our relationship with Christ. Hence Lent is characterised by prayer, fasting and penance.

Lent is meant to be fundamentally a good experience because the established Lenten practices facilitate our ongoing conversion to the Gospel. So our prayer during Lent needs to be enthusiastically similar to the words spoken by Peter to Jesus during the Transfiguration: ‘Lord, it is wonderful for us to be here’ (Mt 17:4).
Lent offers us a yearly opportunity to undergo conversion from sin. It is only when we abandon sin that we can truly begin the pursuit of authentic happiness and experience the joy of the saints in our lives. Sin alienates us from God and, often, from other people. So it is imperative that we eradicate it from our lives.
Then we are drawn closer to Jesus and that is our purpose here on earth — to become close to Jesus because God made us to know, love and serve him in this world so that we may be happy with him forever in heaven. An appropriate prayer, therefore, is: It is wonderful for us to be here.

Our Lenten motto becomes: It is wonderful for us to be here. In addition, we are encouraged by Jesus’ words: ‘Do not be afraid.’ They remind us that he is in control. Jesus also spoke these words to Peter in the boat when a storm raged all around them. He was teaching them — and us — not to fret but to trust in God’s providence.
A central message of Lent is that, at least metaphorically, we put on sackcloth and ashes, do penance for our sins and seek to make progress in the spiritual life, thereby uniting ourselves with the suffering Christ. By taking such practical steps, we can be sure of pleasing God and growing in true happiness and real joy.
For meditation
Jesus took with him Peter and James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain where they could be alone. (Mt17:1)
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Donal Neary SJ: On the mountain
The hours on the mountain were a huge experience for Peter, James and John, who would always be with him. They saw him in his glory, the beloved son of the Father. There was more to him than meets the eye.Donal Neary SJ: On the mountain

From the mountain, we now return home with a good seed: the seed of the Word of God. The Lord will send rain and that seed will grow. It will grow and it will bear fruit. We thank the Lord for the seed but we also want to thank the sower because you were that sower and you know how to do it/ (Pope Francis, 2014)
Whenever we climb the mountain of the Lord or make any journey with him, we are changed. As every mountain is different, so every moment with him is well worth while!
We receive this word of God and we receive our call to share it. The apostles would spend their lives sharing what they got on the mountain, and how it changed them,
Is there a word or line of scripture that you like and which helps you?
Repeat it to yourself as a prayer.Lord, make me a listener to your word.
Repeat it to yourself as a prayer.Lord, make me a listener to your word.
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From the Connections:
THE WORD:
In today’s Gospel, Peter, James and John witness the extraordinary transformation of Jesus that we know as the “transfiguration.” Matthew’s account (which takes place six days after Jesus’ first prediction of his passion and his first instructions on the call to discipleship) is filled with images from the First Testament: the voice which repeats Isaiah’s “Servant” proclamation, the appearance of Moses and Elijah, the dazzling white garments of Jesus. Matthew’s primary interest is the disciple’s reaction to the event: their awe at this spectacular vision will soon wither into fear at the deeper meaning of the transfiguration — a meaning that they do not yet grasp. As the disciples will later understand, the transfiguration is a powerful sign that the events ahead of them in Jerusalem are indeed the Father’s will.
HOMILY POINTS:
To experience transfiguration is to realize that there exists within each of us the “divinity,” the love of God, that enables us to transforms our lives and the lives of those we love. It is exactly that love — that “divinity” — that Peter, James and John behold in Jesus on the mount of the Transfiguration. The power of that sacred presence shines through us, as well, even when we do not notice it or are unaware that God’s love is in our midst.Peter’s reaction to the Christ of the Transfiguration contrasts sharply with his reaction to the Christ of Good Friday: While totally taken with the transfigured Christ in today’s Gospel, Peter will be too afraid to even acknowledge knowing the condemned Christ on Good Friday morning. Lent calls us to descend Mount Tabor with Jesus and journey with him to Jerusalem to take up our cross with him, so that the divinity we see in the transfigured Jesus may become in us the Easter life of the Risen Christ.
To become the person you once needed
When Sara became ill many years ago, bulimia was not yet a household world. Filled with guilt at her uncontrollable behavior, she was taken to specialist after specialist until someone was able to identify the problem as something much more than teenage rebellion. Slowly she fought her way back from the edge. Sara was surrounded by many loving adults, but no one could understand why she was doing this to herself. She didn't understand it either. Sara fought her disease alone and managed to conquer it.Now happily married, Sara read a story in her local newspaper about a new support group for those suffering from bulimia. Although Sara had not suffered from its symptoms since she was a teenager, she was intrigued by the idea of a support group and went to the meeting. It was a powerful experience. The desperately ill young people there touched her heart. While she felt unable to help them, she cared about them and continued attending the meetings. Other than saying she had bulimia as a girl, Sara revealed little about herself at the meetings; she sat quietly and listened to the stories of others.
As she was about to leave one of the sessions, Sara was stopped by a painfully thin girl who thanked her for coming and told her how much it meant to know her. The girl’s eyes filled with tears. Sara responded with her usual graciousness, but was puzzled. Sara could not recall ever speaking to this girl and did not even know her name.
As she drove home, Sara wondered how she could have forgotten something so important to someone else. She was almost home when it dawned on her.
Her husband, who met her at the front door, was surprised to see that she had been crying.
“Sara, what's wrong?” he asked.
A smile broke through her tears.
“Harry, I've become the person I needed to meet,” she told him and walked into his arms.
[From My Grandfather’s Blessings by Rachel Naomi Remen, M.D.]
The lesson of the Transfiguration is that there exists within each one of us the spirit of God to become the person God calls us to be. It is the same spirit, that same “divinity,” that Peter, James and John behold in Jesus on the mount of the Transfiguration. The power of that sacred presence shines through us, as well, even when we do not notice. Like Sara, we are a blessing to others, simply by being who we are. We become what Archbishop Desmond Tutu calls “agents of transfiguration”: “God places us in the world as God's fellow workers -- agents of transfiguration. We work with God so that injustice is transfigured into justice, so that there will be more compassion and caring, so that there will be more laughter and joy, so that there will be more togetherness in God’s world.”
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ILLUSTRATIONS:From Sermons.com
A brilliant magician was performing on an ocean liner. But every time he did a trick, the Captain's parrot would yell, "It's a trick. He's a phony. That's not magic." Then one evening during a storm, the ship sank while the magician was performing. The parrot and the magician ended up in the same lifeboat. For several days they just glared at each other, neither saying a word to the other. Finally the parrot said, "OK, I give up. What did you do with the ship?"
The parrot couldn't explain that last trick! It was too much to comprehend, even for a smart parrot. Peter said to Jesus, "Rabbi, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters-one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah." Scholars over the years have tried to explain what in the world Peter meant by this suggestion. But, I think trying to find meaning to these words is pointless. It's simply the way Matthew explains: Peter was frightened and he just said the first thing that came to into his head. He simply could not comprehend what was happening.
In life, moments occur that are incomprehensible. The birth of one's own child is one of those moments. The loss of a loved one is one of those moments. September 11 was one of those moments. There are mountaintop and valley moments throughout life. We are never ready for them. They arrive unannounced changing us in irreversible ways. But there is one thing they all have in common. They demand that we be silent and listen. These moments have something to say to us, to teach us.
But too often our response is like that of Peter, babbling absurdities because we cannot understand the significant, the meaningful moment...
When parents are trying to teach their very young children basic social skills one of the first big lessons is "Use your words." Instead of grabbing, hitting, screaming, or crying, we teach our children to communicate their needs and desires through the use of words. Instead of snatching a toy away from another child we teach our kids to say "May I please play with that for a while?" Instead of screaming and throwing a tantrum, we teach our children to say, "I'm really mad," or "He was mean to me," or "She hit me!"
The power of our voices, the power of words, is the first power we want our children to tap into. Verbal communication is uniquely human and is a uniquely empowering gift.
Despite all the image-based advances in technology, "The Voice" is still the driving force in electronic developments. Voice power is still the ultimate power. Every new, successful emerging technology - for the past seventy-five years -- knows that voice power means market power.
Remember RCA? RCA famously advertised its first record player, the "Victrola," by showing the family dog with its head cocked in curiosity as it listened to a record player. The advertising tag line was, "His Master's Voice."
The "next best thing" in the past few years has almost always been a voice-based development. We now all routinely talk to our cars...
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Nowadays the cost of a dinner and a movie keeps going up, and a vacation can be especially expensive, but if I really want to go somewhere I just take the change out of my pocket and lay it on the desk. It's like a time machine. Each coin has a year stamped on it, and just thinking about the year helps me travel back in my memory.
1979 is the year my first son was born and the year I started in ministry. 1981 and 1983 are the years my daughter and second son were born. 1988 is the last time the Dodgers won the pennant. 1990 was when I moved to Indiana from Los Angeles. 1994 and 2004 were the years I turned forty and fifty. 2002 was when I moved to Pennsylvania. And it's getting harder to find, but any coin with 1954 is my birth year.
I enjoy laying out the change in my pocket and just glancing at the dates. It's nice to carry these little reminders of important events, good and bad. But they're just one kind of reminder. We carry all sorts of reminders around. One of the most obvious is our date book, which we use to remind us of important events that are not in the past but in the future. We especially need a reminder for Ash Wednesday. It comes in the middle of nowhere. It's not like Christmas or Independence Day that fall on the same dates every year. Ash Wednesday is all over the map, from early February to sometime in March. What usually happens is that we notice someone with a smudge on their forehead and suddenly realize: was that today? Really, it's not very convenient. The least Ash Wednesday could do is fall on a Sunday.
It is an interruption. And it's an unwelcome reminder of an unpleasant fact. Dust we are and to dust we shall return. The grass withers and the flower fades....
IT WAS THERE ALL ALONG
I remember a time when I had misplaced my good pen and I was looking for it everywhere. I looked in drawers. I looked under things, behind things and in things. I looked on the floor, but it was nowhere. And then I found it. I was holding it in my mouth the whole time.
That is the way that life often is. We miss things that have been there the whole time. It is like when I was in college and my wife was on campus the whole year, but I never really saw her. Then one day, I SAW her. She had been there the whole time, but one day I actually saw her in my world. And she has been in my world ever since.
That is the story of the Transfiguration. Jesus showed his disciples a part of the world that had been there all along, but it had not really been a part of their world. They were bewildered, astonished and trembling with fear when they saw and understood that heaven was already here in their world and that Jesus was the King of heaven.
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Fr. Jude Botelho:In the first reading from the Book of Genesis we have the inspiring story of the call of Abraham. At the age of seventy-five, when most aged people have retired or are written off, Abraham sets out on a journey of faith, moving from the familiar, secure and well-ordered routine in his native place to an unknown destination, literally to ‘God knows where’! All he can rely on is the promise of God. In obedience to God’s call he sets off. Abraham is blessed and in turn becomes a blessing to his people. It is never too late to change, to respond to God’s call.
Transformed by love
“Picture an old lamp covered with layers of dust and dirt. How wretched and useless it looks. Then someone comes along, cleans off the layers of dirt, and polishes it until it begins to sparkle, and then lights it. Suddenly the lamp is transformed. It positively glows, radiating light and beauty to every corner of the room. Whereas prior to this it was disfigured with dust and dirt, now it is transfigured with beauty by the light. Yet, it is the same lamp. When an object (or a person) is loved and cared for, it is redeemed, and rendered brighter and worthier.”Flor McCarthy in “New Sundays and Holy Day Liturgies”
Today’s gospel reminds us, first of all, that transformations take place in the context of prayer. Jesus led his disciples up a high mountain, where they could be alone. The mountain, in the Israelite tradition, symbolized the meeting place with God. Moses had witnessed Yahweh on the mountain and each time he encountered Him his face glowed with the presence of God. Jesus was transfigured in their presence and ‘his face shone like the sun and his clothes became as white as light.’ Secondly, Jesus appears transfigured in the context of his relationship with his Father, symbolized by the presence of the cloud and the heavenly voice. The cloud symbolized Yahweh, who in the form of a cloud accompanied the Israelites as they journeyed through the desert to the Promise Land. Thirdly, this transfiguration is not only a blessing and an affirmation for Jesus, proclaimed by the voice from heaven, “This is my Son, the beloved; He enjoys my favour. Listen to him”, but it is also a blessing for the three disciples, who are witnesses of the transfiguration. They have a privileged viewpoint on salvation history as they witness Jesus in conversation with the father-figures of the Law and the prophets, Moses and Elijah. This vision will reassure them when they hear other voices later opposing Jesus, rejecting his mission, and seeking to destroy him. The transfiguration would be only for a moment. But Peter wanted to capture it and prolong it and make it permanent by building tents or tabernacles to contain this experience. We too want the good experiences, the peak moments of life to last forever. We are afraid to let go and move on, we want to be in the past rather than move on to where the Lord wants us to go. But the reality is that we have to come down from the mountain.” Our transfiguration can happen in the strangest of ways when we let Jesus into our lives.
Transfiguration
Van Gogh was not noted for his physical beauty. In fact his face was described by some as being repulsive. Yet as soon as he began to speak about art, his melancholy expression would disappear, his eyes would sparkle, and his features would make a deep impression on those around him. It wasn’t his face any longer; it had become beautiful. It seemed he was breathing in beauty. At times all of us can feel down and depressed, a prey to feelings of failure and worthlessness. But then suddenly something nice happens to us – a friend calls, or we get a letter with some good news in it – and suddenly everything is changed. The truth of course is that nothing has changed. It is just that a spark of joy or hope or love has been kindled in our hearts, and we suddenly see ourselves in a new and better light.
Flor McCarthy in ‘New Sunday & Holy Day Liturgies’
Transfiguration –A change of attitudes?Rabbi Abraham Twersky tells a story about his great-grandfather who was sitting with other rabbinical scholars studying the Talmud when it was decided to take a break for refreshments. One of the groups offered to pay for refreshments, but there was no one who volunteered to go for them. According to Twersky, in his book Generation to Generation, his great-grandfather said, “Just hand me the money, I have a young boy who will be glad to go.” After a rather extended period, he finally returned with the refreshments, and it became obvious to all that the rabbi himself had gone and performed the errand. Noticing their discomfort, the rabbi explained: “I didn’t mislead you at all. You see, many people outgrow their youth and become old men. I have never let the spirit of my youth depart. And as I grew older, I always took along with me that young boy I had been. It was that young boy in me that did the errand.” –Our transformation, our transfiguration begins in our change of attitude.Gerard Fuller in ‘Stories for all Seasons’Finding God on the mountain?
The 17th century English poet, John Donne, tells of a man searching for God. He is convinced that God lives on the top of a mountain at the end of the earth. After a journey of many days, the man arrives at the foot of the mountain and begins to climb it. At the same time God says to the angels: “What can I do to show my people how much I love them?” He decides to descend the mountain and live among the people as one of them. As the man is going up one side of the mountain, God is descending the other side. They don’t see each other because they are on opposite sides of the mountain. On reaching the summit, the man discovers an empty mountaintop. Heartbroken, the man concludes that God does not exist. Despite speculation to the contrary, God does not live on mountaintops, deserts, or at the end of the earth, or even in some heaven, - God dwells among human beings and in the person of Jesus. – Staying on the safety of the mountain is what Peter would prefer. During the transfiguration Peter and his companions got a glimpse of the future glory of Jesus’ resurrection. They want nothing more. However after they come down the mountain they are told by Jesus that the glory they witnessed would be real only after he had gone through suffering and death. We too will share in his glory, only by sharing in his suffering and death.Simon K. in ‘The Sunday Liturgy’Healing Solitude
One Sunday morning in summer when I was twelve, I was waiting for my friend Juanita to come over. We had planned a morning together and she was quite late. I was fretting and complaining and generally making a nuisance of myself. In fact I was becoming rather obnoxious to everyone else in the house. Finally, my father said to me, “Get a book, a blanket and an apple, and get into the car.” I wanted to know why, but he only repeated the order. So I obeyed. My father drove me about eight miles from home to a canyon area, and said, “Now get out. We cannot stand you any longer at home. You aren’t fit to live with us. Just stay out here by yourself today until you understand better how to act. I’ll come back for you this evening.” I got out, frustrated, and defiant and angry. The nerve of him! I thought immediately of walking back home; eight miles was no distance at all for me. Then the thought of meeting my father when I got there took hold, and I changed my mind. I cried and threw the book, apple and blanket over the canyon ledge. I had been dumped and I was furious. But it is hard to keep up a good rebellion cry with no audience and so finally there was nothing to do but face up to the day alone. I sat on the rim kicking up dirt and trying to get control of myself. After a couple of hours as noon approached, I began to get hungry. I located the apple and climbed down to retrieve it- as well as the book and blanket. I climbed back up and as I came over the top I noticed a tree. It was lovely and full. As I spread the blanket and began to eat the apple, I noticed a change of attitude. As I looked through the branches into the sky, a great sense of peace and beauty came upon me. I began to see my behaviour in a new light. I found myself thinking of God. It began to be prayer time; I wanted to be a better person. I just lay there in silence. By the time my father returned I was restored. I was different and he knew it.
William Bausch
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Victim or Victor
Charles Rayburn has been a victim of cerebral palsy since his birth. His only means of communication was an electric typewriter which he strikes with a stylus attached to a band around his head. In spite of his palsy, Charles Rayburn has published 37 articles in national magazines. One of his articles appeared in America magazine and dealt with the Stations of the Cross. Charles Rayburn is a living example of today’s reading about Isaac and Jesus. These three figures and the three readings are tied together by a triple theme –the theme of Sonship, death and deliverance.
- Albert Cylwicki in ‘His Word Resounds’
In today’s gospel the account of the transfiguration gives us some insight into the mystery of Jesus, Son of God, the new Moses to whom we must listen. The transfiguration is an epiphany story. Epiphany stories were common in ancient writings about holy people. This is the earliest epiphany story about Jesus, where the veil is lifted and his apostles were given a glimpse of his future glory. The chief significance of this event was for Jesus himself. It was meant to confirm him in the course he had undertaken. But it also benefited the apostles, and it is this that Mark emphasizes. On the mountain Elijah and Moses appeared to them representing the prophets and the law respectively. Thus Jesus is seen as bringing the law and the prophets to fulfillment. We do not know what exactly happened on that mountain but it seems Jesus had an intense experience of the presence of God. He heard those marvelous words: “You are my beloved son.” On Tabor Jesus felt comforted and affirmed. He knew that the Father was pleased with him and would give him all the strength he would need to face whatever lay ahead. With God on his side he could face anything. At times life could be dark for us and we too need to hear those reassuring words: “You are my son the beloved, my favour rests on you!” People from time to time do affirm us, but their affirmation is conditional. “You are good but you need to change this behaviour…. You are good but only if you live up to my expectations!” Only God affirms us exactly as he affirmed his son Jesus. With him there are no terms and conditions, even if we are sinners and have failed him. We will always remain the well beloved sons and daughters of God. Jean Vanier has set up communities for the mentally handicapped. He tells how in one of these communities there is a man called Pierre who has a mental handicap. One day somebody asked Pierre, “Do you like praying?” “Yes”, he answered. “And what do you do when you pray?” the questionnaire asked. “I listen,” Pierre answered. “And what does God say to you? “He says, “Pierre, you are my beloved son.” Though we know and believe that God loves us, yet from time to time we need his assurance, we need the transfiguration experience. As Jesus began his journey to Jerusalem, he knew what was in store for him. He met with a lot of opposition from the religious leaders and ultimately they would put him to death. Naturally he would recoil from such a harsh experience. He needed to be affirmed and he ascended the mountain in the company of his disciples to pray and commune with His Father about the fearful future. Instead of giving up in fear he ascends the mountain to be closer to God. On that mountain the Father affirmed him. That same Father is waiting for us to come to him to be affirmed as his well beloved sons and daughters. Our problem is that as soon as we run into trouble our faith fails us. We think that God has abandoned us. But if we pray we will realize that God has not abandoned us, He is always with us. Like Jesus on Tabor we too can experience being affirmed by God, we too can be transformed by the power of his spirit, if only we let Him into our lives.
“Pigeon Feathers”
John Updike wrote a short story called “Pigeon Feathers.” It’s about a young boy, David, who begins to have doubts about his faith. One night in bed David is thinking about his problem. Suddenly he decides upon a bold experiment. He takes his hands from under the covers, lifts them above his head, and asks Jesus to touch them. As David waits breathlessly, he thinks he feels something touch his hands; not sure if they have been touched or not. We can all relate to David in this scene. We too experience times when our faith seems to disappear or go behind a cloud. When this happens, we long desperately for a sign that God is real and that Jesus is the Son of God. Or to put it in another way, we long for a sign of Jesus’ glory, like the one Peter, James and John received in today’s gospel.
- Mark Link in ‘Sunday Homilies’
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Fr. Tony Kadavil:
1: “O Lord, open
his eyes so he may see.” There is a mysterious story in 2 Kings that
can help us understand what is happening in the Transfiguration. Israel is at
war with Aram, and Elisha, the man of God, is using his prophetic powers to
reveal the strategic plans of the Aramean army to the Israelites. At first the
King of Aram thinks that one of his officers is playing the spy, but when he
learns the truth, he dispatches troops to go and capture Elisha who is residing
in Dothan. The Aramean troops move in under cover of darkness and surround the
city. In the morning Elisha’s servant is the first to discover that they are
surrounded and fears for his master’s safety. He runs to Elisha and says, “Oh,
my lord, what shall we do?” The prophet answers “Don’t be afraid. Those who are
with us are more than those who are with them.” But who would believe that,
when the surrounding mountainside is covered with advancing enemy troops? So,
Elisha prays, “O Lord, open his eyes so he may see.” Then the Lord opens the
servant’s eyes, and he looks and sees the hills full of horses and chariots of
fire all around Elisha (2 Kings 6:8-23). This vision was all that Elisha’s
disciple needed to reassure him. At the end of the story, not only was the
prophet of God safe, but the invading army was totally humiliated. (Fr.
Munacci) (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
2: “Lord, give me the
grace for transformation.” The word transfiguration means a change in
form or appearance. Biologists call it metamorphosis (derived from the Greek
word metamorphoomai used in Matthew’s Gospel), to
describe the change that occurs when a caterpillar becomes a butterfly.
(Holo-metabolism, also called complete metamorphism,
is a form of insect development which includes four life stages – as an embryo or egg, a larva, a pupa and an imago or adult). As children, we might
have curiously watched the process of the caterpillar turning into a chrysalis
and then bursting into a beautiful Monarch butterfly. Fr. Anthony De Mello
tells the story of such a metamorphosis in the prayer life of an old man.
“I was a revolutionary when I was young, and all my prayer to God was: ‘Lord,
give me the grace to change the world.’ As I approached middle age and realized
that half of my life was gone without changing a single soul, I changed my
prayer to: ‘Lord, give me the grace to change all those who come in contact
with me; just my family and friends and I shall be satisfied.’ Now that I am
old and my days are numbered, I have begun to see how foolish I have been. My
one prayer now is: ’Lord, give me the grace to change myself.’ If I had
prayed for this right from the start, I should not have wasted my life.” (Fr.
Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
3: Metamorphosis
of a Grub into a Dragonfly: You will recall from 7th-grade science
class that metamorphosis is the process by which a caterpillar becomes a
butterfly and a tadpole becomes a frog. It’s a gradual change on the inside that
produces a total transformation on the outside. Holo-metabolism, also called
complete metamorphism,
is a form of insect development which includes four life stages – as an embryo or egg, a larva, a pupa and an imago or adult. At the bottom of
a pond some little grub worms or nymphs (larvae of dragonflies) are
crawling around in the mud. They wonder what happens to their members who climb
up the stem of the water lily and never come back. They agree among themselves
that the next one who is called to the surface will come back and tell them
what happened. The next grub worm (nymph) that finds itself drawn to the
surface by nature, crawls out on a lily leaf and emerges from
its last molting skin as a beautiful adult dragonfly. It has
been dark and murky down below, but the dragonfly sees
that everything is bright and sunny in the upper world.
Suddenly something begins to happen. The transformed grub spreads out two
huge, beautiful, colored wings and flies back and forth across the pond to
convey the glad tiding of its transfiguration to its friends. It can see
the other grubs in the pond below, but they can’t see him. He also
realizes that he cannot dive into the pond to convey the glad tidings
of his great transformation. This metamorphosis is nothing in
comparison to the glorious transformation awaiting us after our death. 1) https://youtu.be/-Hc5BYGQrP8 b
2) https://youtu.be/0C21zranBUw
4. Lenten
penance: There is a story of a father trying to explain Lent to his
ten-year-old son. At one point, the father said, “You ought to give up
something for Lent, something you will really miss, like candy.” The boy
thought for a moment, then asked, “What are you giving up, Father?” “I’m giving
up liquor,” the father replied. “But before dinner you were drinking
something,” the boy protested. “Yes, but that was only sherry,” said the
father. “I gave up hard liquor.” To which the boy replied, “Well then, I think
I’ll give up hard candy.”
5. “I have decided to
give up drinking for Lent:” An Irishman moves into a tiny hamlet in
County Kerry, walks into the pub and promptly orders three beers. The bartender
raises his eyebrows, but serves the man three beers, which he drinks quietly at
a table, alone and orders three more. As this continued every day the bartender
asked him politely, “The folks around here are wondering why you always order
three beers?” “It’s odd, isn’t it?” the man replies, “You see, I have two
brothers, and one went to America, and the other to Australia. We promised each
other that we would always order an extra two beers whenever we drank.” Then, one
day, the man comes in and orders only two beers. As this continued
for several days, the bartender approached him with tears in his eyes and said,
“Folks around here, me first of all, want to offer condolences to you for the
death of your brother. You know-the two beers and all…” The man ponders this
for a moment and then replies with a broad smile, “You’ll be happy to know that
my two brothers are alive and well. It’s just that I, myself, have decided to
give up drinking for Lent.”
6. “Don’t worry about
me, Lord.” A certain missionary on a study trip to the Holy Land was
visiting Jaffa (Joppa) where Peter was residing when he baptized Cornelius
(Acts 10). The breath-taking beauty of this small seaside town was such that it
inspired the missionary to come up with this joke: At the Transfiguration Peter
offered to build three tents, one for Jesus, one for Moses and one for Elijah.
Jesus said, “And what about you, Peter?” And Peter replies, “Don’t worry about
me Lord, I got a better place in Jaffa.”
21- Additional
anecdotes
1) “You don’t really
know how it works, do you, Mom?” A little boy asked his mother,
“Marriage makes you have babies, doesn’t it, Mom?” The mother reluctantly
answered her son, “Well, not exactly. Just because you are married does not
mean that you have a baby.” The boy continued his inquiry: “Then how do you
have babies?” His mother, not very enthusiastic about continuing, answered,
“It’s kind of hard to explain.” The boy paused and thought for a moment. He
then moved closer to Mom, looked her right in eye, and carefully said, “You
don’t really know how it works, do you, Mom?” Believe it or not, today’s Gospel
passage on theophany on a mountain is one of those “What does that mean, and
how am I supposed to explain that?” sort of passages. It’s difficult because,
as the little boy told his mother, we “don’t really know how it works.” And
when you don’t know how something works, it’s hard to explain. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
2) Baby
powder and Christian transformation: You might remember comedian Yakov
Smirnoff. When he first came to the United States from Russia, he was not
prepared for the incredible variety of instant products available in American
grocery stores. He says, “On my first shopping trip, I saw powdered milk; you
just add water, and you get milk. Then I saw powdered orange juice; you just
add water, and you get orange juice. And then I saw baby powder, and I thought
to myself, ‘What a country!’” Smirnoff was joking, but we make these
assumptions about Christian Transformation—that people change instantly from
sinners to saints. Catholics call it transformation through repentance and
renewal of life, deriving strength through the word of God and the Sacraments
to cooperate with God’s grace for doing acts of charity. Some other Christian
denominations call it Sanctification of the believer. Whatever
you call it, most denominations expect some quick fix for sin. According to this
belief, when someone gives his or her life to Christ, accepting Him as Lord and
personal Savior, and confesses his or her sins to Him, there an immediate,
substantive, in-depth, miraculous change in habits, attitudes, and character.
Can we go to Church as if we are going to the grocery store to get Powdered
Christian? The truth is that Disciples of Christ are not born by
adding water to Christian powder. There is no such powder, and
disciples of Jesus Christ are not instantly born. They are slowly raised through
many trials, suffering, and temptations and by their active cooperation with
the grace of God, expressed through works of charity. (Adapted from James Emery
White, Rethinking the Church, by Baker). (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
3) Edmund Hillary’s
mountain-top experience on Mount Everest. The seniors among us
certainly recall that amazing story 67 years ago, May 29, 1953. A New Zealand
beekeeper named Edmund Hillary and a Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norgay, were the
first ever to reach Everest’s summit. Here was a mountain – unreachable,
tantalizing, fearsome, deadly – that had defeated 15 previous expeditions. Some
of the planet’s strongest climbers had perished on its slopes. For many,
Everest represented the last of the earth’s great challenges. The North Pole
had been reached in 1909; the South Pole in 1911. But Everest, often called the
Third Pole, had defied all human efforts – reaching its summit seemed beyond
mere mortals. Now success! And heightening the impact even further was the
delicious coincidence of their arrival just before the coronation of Queen
Elizabeth II and the dramatic announcement of their triumph on the morning of
the coronation. It was literally a “mountaintop experience.” The mountaintop
experience of which we read in today’s Gospel a moment ago has Jesus and His
three closest Apostles – Peter, James, and John – going up on a high mountain
where they experience the miraculous Transfiguration undergone by Jesus, making
His Heavenly glory visible to His disciples. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
4) “I just want you
to know that I love you.” Did you hear the story about an inattentive,
workaholic husband who suddenly decided to surprise his wife with a night to
remember? He went down to the department store and bought her the expensive
dress she had been admiring. He bought her a large bottle of perfume to go with
it. He ordered tickets to the Broadway play she had been wanting to see and
made reservations at their favorite restaurant. On his way home he stopped by
the florist and bought two dozen red roses which he carried home under his arm.
Upon arriving home, he exploded through the door, hugged his wife
affectionately and told her what he had done. “I just want you to know that I
love you; I appreciate you; I adore you.” Instead of melting in the man’s arms
his wife started screaming at the top of her voice. “This has been the worst
day of my life,” she said. “It was awful at the office. We lost our biggest
account; co-workers were obnoxious; clients were unreasonable. I came home to
find the kids had broken my favorite lamp; the babysitter is quitting; and the
water heater is out; and now surprise of surprises, my normally sober husband
comes home drunk!” When today’s Gospel starts talking about a Transfiguration
with radiant faces and glowing garments and visitors from the dead, we become more
than a little suspicious. What is going on here? All along the question
remains: Are we willing to let ourselves be engulfed in mystery, inspired by
glory, transformed by encounters of a Divine kind? That’s what the
Transfiguration of Jesus is all about. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
5) The new Prioress
is turning monastic life into “one big party.” A most unusual protest
took place in a convent in New Jersey. Four nuns locked themselves in a tiny
second floor infirmary and took a vow of “near silence.” They were protesting
new rules established by their new prioress, Mother Theresa Hewitt. It seems
that Mother Theresa had introduced television, secular videos, recorded music,
bright lights, and (horror of horrors) daily “sweets” into the convent. The
sweets consisted of a tin of candy which was passed around each day and each
nun was supposed to indulge. In the words of one of the protesting nuns (who
were among the younger nuns in the order, by the way) the new prioress was
turning monastic life into “one big party.” In order to express their revulsion
at these ungodly changes, the four sisters locked themselves away. We can
sympathize. There is much in our brave new world from which I would like to
withdraw. I can sympathize with Simon Peter who wanted to build three booths
and stay on the mountaintop of the Transfiguration in the presence of Jesus,
Moses, and Elijah. Unfortunately, he was not given that option, and neither are
we. We must live in this world of strident, discordant noise. There is no
retreat. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
6) Movie preview: You
go into the movie theatre, find a seat that’s suitable. You find a place for
your coat, sit down, and get ready to watch the movie. The house lights dim;
the speakers crackle as the dust and scratches on the soundtrack are translated
into static, and an image appears on the screen. It is not the film you came to
see. It is the preview of coming attractions, a brief glimpse of the highlights
of a film opening soon. The moviemakers and theater owners hope the preview
will pique your interest enough to make you want to come back and see the whole
film. On the Mount of the Transfiguration, Peter, James and John, the inner
circle of Jesus’ disciples, were given a preview of coming attractions. Today’s
Gospel gives us a splendid preview of Jesus radiant in Divine glory, his mortal
nature brilliantly, though not permanently, transfigured; a dazzling preview of
His Divinity, unalloyed and perfectly pure, shining in glory like the very sun.
This was a “sneak preview, “ in other words, of Easter and of His final coming
in Glory to take us Home, the triumphant climax of the epic love story between
God and humanity. (Fr. Tony)
7) “I had an hour of
glory on a windswept hill.” Dr. William Stidger once told of a lovely
little 90-year-old lady named Mrs. Sampson. Mrs. Sampson was frail, feeble,
even sickly. But Dr. Stidger said that when he was discouraged, he always went
to visit Mrs. Sampson. She had a radiant spirit that was contagious. One day he
asked this 90-year-young woman, “What is the secret of your power? What keeps
you happy, contented and cheerful through your sickness?” She answered with a
line from a poem, “I had an hour of glory on a windswept hill.” Bill Stidger
said, recounting this experience, “I knew she had been in touch with God and
that was the whole reason for her cheerfulness.” Listen again to her words: “an
hour of glory on a windswept hill.” It sounds very much like the experience
Peter, James and John had on the Mount of Transfiguration. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
8) “What did you do
with the ship?” A brilliant magician was performing on an ocean liner.
But every time he did a trick, the Captain’s parrot would yell, “It’s a trick.
He’s a phony. That’s not magic.” Then one evening during a storm, the ship sank
while the magician was performing. The parrot and the magician ended up in the
same lifeboat. For several days they just glared at each other, neither saying
a word to the other. Finally, the parrot said, “OK, I give up. What did you do
with the ship?” The parrot couldn’t explain that last trick! It was too much to
comprehend, even for a smart parrot. Peter was like that parrot after
witnessing the Transfiguration scene. He said to Jesus, “Rabbi, it is good
for us to be here. Let us put up three tents-one for you, one for Moses, and
one for Elijah.” (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
9) The
Mountain Top. John A. Redhead, Jr. tells of a father and son who have a
really good relationship. Among their many good times together, one stood out
above all the rest: It was a hike up a particular mountain where they seemed to
reach the height of a beautiful friendship. After they returned home, there
came a day when things did not seem to run as smoothly. The father rebuked the
son, and the son spoke sharply in return. An hour later, the air had cleared.
“Dad,” said the son, “whenever it starts to get like that again, let’s one of
us say ‘The Mountain Top.’” So, it was agreed. In a few weeks another
misunderstanding occurred. The boy was sent to his room in tears. After a
while, the father decided to go up and see the boy. He was still angry until he
saw a piece of paper pinned to the door. The boy had penciled three words in
large letters: “The Mountain Top.” That symbol was powerful enough to restore
the relationship of father and son. (Harry Emerson Fosdick, Riverside
Sermons (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1958).) Come with me to the
mountain. It is there that relationships can be made right. Come with me to the
mountain. See who Jesus is. See what, by his grace, you and I can yet become.
10) The Church of
Transfiguration: The traditional site for the Transfiguration is Mount
Tabor, a high mountain in the north country of Israel. Over the years, the
Church has gone where Peter could not go, and we have built what he could not
build. Helena, mother of Constantine, built a sanctuary on the top of Mount
Tabor in 326 A.D. By the end of the sixth century, three churches stood on the
mountaintop, one each for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah. More shrines were built
there over the next 400 years, and Saladin destroyed them all in 1187. A
fortress built in 1212 was destroyed by the end of the thirteenth century. The
summit was abandoned for another six hundred years, until a Greek Orthodox
community built a monastery there. Sometime later, the Franciscans built a
Latin basilica on the highest point of the summit, where they now maintain
worship services and a website. The site can be reached at http://www.christusrex.org/www1/ofm/san/tab00mn/html)
(Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
11) “Then you can
imagine how humble and awkward I feel in yours.” Winston Churchill
knew the difference between celebrities and heroes. In the summer of 1941,
Sergeant James Allen Ward was awarded the Victoria Cross for climbing out onto
the wing of his Wellington bomber at 13,000 feet above ground to extinguish a
fire in the starboard engine. Secured only by a rope around his waist, he
managed to smother the fire and return along the wing to the aircraft’s cabin.
Churchill, an admirer as well as a performer of swashbuckling exploits,
summoned the shy New Zealander to 10 Downing Street. Ward, struck dumb with awe
in Churchill’s presence, was unable to answer the Prime Minister’s questions.
Churchill surveyed the unhappy hero with some compassion. “You must feel very
humble and awkward in my presence,” he said, “Yes, Sir,” managed Ward. “Then
you can imagine how humble and awkward I feel in yours,” returned Churchill.
[Max Anders, Jesus (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers,
1995), p. 24.] Churchill knew he was in the presence of a real hero. So did the
disciples. In fact, they knew they were in the presence of Someone whose
significance went beyond celebrity, even beyond heroic. He was their Lord,
their Master, their King. If we are wise, Jesus will be our Lord, our Master,
our King. If we are wise, Christ will be our Hero, too. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
12) “Let me build
three booths here” Do you remember how President Reagan insisted he
had done the right thing after he visited the cemetery in Bitburg, West
Germany, despite the fact that it contained the bodies of at least twenty-nine
Nazi SS soldiers, and later, as if to offset the visit to Bitburg, made a
pilgrimage to one of the concentration camps? His argument, supporting his
contention that he had done a good deed, was based on what he learned about the
manner in which the German people actually make pilgrimages to some of the
death camps to keep alive the terrible memory in adults and make children
realize how awful those camps were. Graphic and gruesome photographs and news
stories of the atrocities, uncovered after the Allies liberated them, are
posted in prominent places so no one will ever forget. “Let me build three
booths here” was Peter’s way of marking the spot of Jesus’
Transfiguration so no one would ever forget. v
13) The shepherd’s
pipe once played by Moses: John Killinger tells the legend about “the
simple shepherd’s pipe once played by Moses when he kept his father-in-law’s
flocks. When the pipe was discovered, many years after Moses’ death, it was
decided that it should be put on display for the benefit of his admirers. But
it looked far too common for such an important purpose, so someone suggested
that it be embellished by an artist. A few centuries later, when the pipe was
given a new home in an upscale museum, a committee said it needed improving yet
again. So, another artist was employed to overlay it in fine gold and silver
filigree. The result, in the end, was a breath-taking piece of art, a marvelous
sight indeed. It was so beautiful, in fact, that no one ever noticed that it
was no longer capable of the clear, seductive notes once played upon it by
Moses.” [God, the Devil, and Harry Potter (New York: Thomas Dunne,
2002), 162-3]. How do we tell what voices to listen to, whose advice to take,
what directives are important, and what we should just let fall on deaf ears?
In today’s Gospel text, the Divine Voice from the enshrouding Cloud offered
Peter, James, and John simple, straightforward words: “This is my Beloved Son,
listen to him.” (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
14) Into Thin
Air: A few years ago, a book was published that described a different
kind of mountaintop experience. It was Jon Krakauer’s book Into Thin
Air. It was his description of a disastrous expedition in which he took
part – a climb up Mount Everest. Mount Everest is the highest point on earth,
rising 29,029 feet above sea level. Hundreds of people have died trying to
scale its slopes. On May 10, 1996, climbers from three different expeditions
attempting to reach the summit of Everest found themselves in a traffic jam as
they approached the final ascent. An unexpected storm suddenly came up,
claiming the lives of eight of the climbers. Jon Krakauer was in one of those
three groups. The title of his book, Into Thin Air, comes partially
from an experience he had on top of the mountain. As he was beginning his slow
descent back down the mountain, Krakauer became concerned about his oxygen
supply. He was going to stop and rest for a few moments while he waited on
others who were still making it to the top. So he asked Andy Harris, a guide
with another team with whom he had become close friends, to turn down his
oxygen supply, so as to conserve it for the trip back. Harris turned the knob
on the back of his pack, and Krakauer sat, to wait for the rest of his team.
There atop Everest, Krakauer says he had this moment of absolute clarity as he gazed
out over the craggy peaks of the Himalayan Mountains. After a difficult journey
up, he felt in control for the first time on the trip. And then . . . his
oxygen ran out. You see, his friend Andy Harris had turned the knob in the
wrong direction: he hadn’t turned it down, he’d turned it up. The moment of
absolute clarity that Krakauer experienced was the result of an oversupply of
oxygen‑rich air. His feeling of control was an illusion. [Jon Krakauer, Into
Thin Air (Villard Books, 1997)]. That moment of terror for Jon
Krakauer is comparable to what Peter, James and John felt as the mountain on
which they stood suddenly became enveloped by a Cloud, and they heard a Voice
from that Cloud. They were terrified. Jesus said to them, as he often had to
say to them, “Don’t be afraid.” (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
15) “I
just want to hold on to the ball as long as I can.” Some of you who
are baseball fans, remember former major league catcher and TV personality Joe
Garagiola. Garagiola is a great storyteller. He tells a story about baseball
legend Stan Musial. Musial came to the plate in a critical game. The opposing
pitcher in the game was young and nervous. Garagiola was catching, and he
called for a fastball to be pitched to Musial. The pitcher shook his head. He
didn’t want to throw that pitch. Joe signaled for a curve, and again the
pitcher shook him off. Then he signaled for a change-up. Still the pitcher hesitated.
Garagiola went out to the mound to talk to his young pitcher. He said, “I’ve
called for every pitch in the book; what do you want to throw?” “Nothing,” was
the pitcher’s reply. “I just want to hold on to the ball as long as I can.”
Well, who can blame him? Musial was a legendary hitter. And that’s the way many
of us are living — holding on as long as we can to our grudges, holding onto
our resentments, holding onto our fears. Why? Because we’re afraid to let go.
Listen, friend. Jesus is here today, and he is saying to you, “Don’t be
afraid.” Don’t be afraid. Listen to his voice. This day can mean the
beginning of a new you. (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
16) Missing
the point: Once upon a time, a man took his new hunting dog on a trial
hunt. After a while, he managed to shoot a duck and it fell into the lake. The
dog walked on the water, picked up the duck and brought it to his master. The
man was stunned. He didn’t know what to think. He shot another duck and again
it fell into the lake and, again, the dog walked on the water and brought it
back to him. What a fantastic dog – he can walk on water and get nothing but
his paws wet. The next day he asked his neighbor to go hunting with him so that
he could show off his hunting dog, but he didn’t tell his neighbor anything
about the dog’s ability to walk on water. As on the previous day, he shot a
duck and it fell into the lake. The dog walked on the water and got it. His
neighbor didn’t say a word. Several more ducks were shot that day and each time
the dog walked over the water to retrieve them and each time the neighbor said
nothing and neither did the owner of the dog. Finally, unable to contain
himself any longer, the owner asked his neighbor, “Have you noticed anything
strange, anything different about my dog?” “Yes,” replied the neighbor, “Your
dog doesn’t know how to swim.” The neighbor missed the point completely. He
couldn’t see the wonder of a dog that could walk on water; he could only see
that the dog didn’t do what other hunting dogs had to do to retrieve ducks –
that is to swim. The disciple, Peter, was good at missing the point at the
theophany of Transfiguration as is clear from his declaration: “I will
make three tents here, one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah.” (Fr.
Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
17) The
Transfiguration: Rabbi Abraham Twersky tells a story about his
great-grandfather who was sitting with other rabbinical scholars studying the
Talmud when it was decided to take a break for refreshments. One of the groups
offered to pay for the refreshments, but there was no one who volunteered to go
for them. According to Twersky, in his book Generation to Generation, his great-grandfather
said, “Just hand me the money, I have a young boy who will be glad to go.”
After a rather extended period, he finally returned with the refreshments, and
it became obvious to all that the rabbi himself had gone and performed the
errand. Noticing their discomfort, the rabbi explained: “I didn’t mislead you
at all. You see, many people outgrow their youth and become old men. I have
never let the spirit of my youth depart. And as I grew older, I always took
along with me that young boy I had been. It was that young boy in me that did
the errand. “ (Gerard Fuller in Stories for all Seasons). (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
18) Film:
Phenomenon –Transforming Light: In the film, George Malley is a
simple, pleasant, and popular man who lives in a small town where he fixes cars
and experiments in growing vegetables in his garden. He turns 37 and after his
birthday celebration, he is knocked unconscious by a bright light in the sky
that falls towards him and explodes. When he comes to, he has been transformed.
His I.Q has soared, and he develops telekinetic powers. He begins to speed-read
and is able to translate for the local doctor when he is treating a non-English
speaking patient. The townspeople are puzzled because George has always been so
ordinary. A scientist interviews and tests him. George is apprehended by the
FBI who are suspicious about his amazing knowledge and contacts. Meanwhile, his
friends support him; so does Lace, a furniture maker with two small children
whom George begins to court. Eventually his physical condition deteriorates,
and the FBI keeps him in custody in a hospital. He escapes and returns to Lace,
and we discover the reasons for his extraordinary intelligence before he dies.
Lace mourns for George. A year later the whole town and his friends gather to
celebrate his birthday as his memory and spirit live on. (Peter Malone in
‘Lights, Camera… Faith!’) As we journey in life, may we be transformed by
touches of His presence! (Fr. Botelho). (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
19) Finding
God on the mountain? The 17th century English poet, John Donne, tells
of a man searching for God. He is convinced that God lives on the top of a
mountain at the end of the earth. After a journey of many days, the man arrives
at the foot of the mountain and begins to climb it. At the same time God says
to the angels: “What can I do to show My people how much I love them?” He
decides to descend the mountain and live among the people as one of them. As
the man is going up one side of the mountain, God is descending the other side.
They don’t see each other because they are on opposite sides of the mountain.
On reaching the summit, the man discovers an empty mountaintop. Heartbroken,
the man concludes that God does not exist. Despite speculation to the contrary,
God does not live exclusively on mountaintops, in deserts, or at the end of the
earth, or even in some Heaven, – God dwells among and within human beings and
in the Person of Jesus. – Staying on in the safety of the mountain is what
Peter would prefer. During the Transfiguration, Peter and his companions get a
glimpse of the future glory of Jesus’ Resurrection. They want nothing more. However,
after they come down the mountain, they are told by Jesus that the glory they
witnessed would be real only after he had gone through suffering and death. We
too will share in his glory, only by sharing in his suffering and death. (Simon
K. in The Sunday Liturgy; quoted by Fr. Botelho). (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
20) IT’S BETTER
HIGHER UP!” There is a story told of a certain woman who was always bright,
cheerful and optimistic, even though she was confined to her room because of
illness. She lived in an attic apartment on the fifth floor of an old, rundown
building. A friend visiting her one day brought along another woman – a person
of great wealth. Since there was no elevator, the two ladies began the long
climb upward. When they reached the second floor, the well-to-do woman
commented, “What a dark and filthy place!” Her friend replied, “It’s
better higher up.” When they reached the third landing, the remark was
made, “Things look even worse
here.” Again, the reply, “It’s better higher up.” The two women
finally reached the attic level, where they found the bedridden saint of God. A
smile on her face radiated the joy that filled her heart. Although the room was
clean and flowers were set on the windowsill, the wealthy visitor could not get
over the stark surroundings in which this woman lived. She blurted out, “It must be very difficult for you to
be here like this!” Without a moment’s hesitation the shut-in, pointing
towards heaven, responded, “IT’S
BETTER HIGHER UP.” (Fr. Lakra). (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)
v
21) Transfiguration
of a dreamer: Elizabeth Sherill, a veteran writer who suffers from an
arthritic neck, writes about an eventful meeting that she and her husband,
John, had with Berendina Maazel, an 81-year old widow who
needs a motorized wheelchair to move more than few steps (cf. “Berendina’s
Dream” in Guideposts magazine, February 2005, p.10-12). At the
age of 17, during the German occupation of Holland where she was born,
Berendina became ill with a strange malady that left her in complete agony.
Totally paralyzed for six months, she almost died in a looted ward where her
father, a doctor,
worked. Later diagnosed as rheumatoid arthritis,
her vicious illness would never allow her to have a single hour free of pain,
for all her life. A gifted artist, Berendina is a tiny, bone-thin woman with a
ravaged face, a crooked spine and terribly twisted hands. But there is a beauty
about her, some quality that Elizabeth couldn’t define. When she asked
Berendina, “How did you ever keep going?” The latter answered, “By hanging onto
my dreams!” Her father told her that when God plants a dream, he also provides
the strength to reach for it. Indeed, Berendina did not allow her malady to
stifle her dreams. She did fulfill her dreams to go to art school, to work in
her chosen field of stage design, to travel, and to get married. While recuperating
at Los Angeles Orthopedic Surgery from yet another surgery, Berendina requested
an aide to wheel her to meet the other patients. When she was brought to the
children’s wing and saw the youngsters in wheelchairs, God gave her the biggest
dream of all. The dream: to help provide the resources for handicapped children
that had not been available for her. She fulfills this dream by painting and
100 % of the proceeds from her paintings benefit the work with children.
Elizabeth’s final narrative seems to be a modern day Transfiguration account.
“Berendina’s studio is at the rear of the house, about as far as she can walk.
Night had fallen while we talked, but when we entered the studio it was like
stepping into the sunlight. Radiant landscapes, vibrant flowers, soaring birds!
What was the special feeling in that room? Joy, certainly. Beauty. Wellness –
not a hint that the painter of these canvases had ever suffered a moment’s ill health.
Yes, the room was alive! Alive like the woman who for 64 years has looked
through pain to her dreams.” The Transfiguration account (Mt 17:1-9) proclaimed
in the liturgical assembly on the Second Sunday of Lent is meant to illumine
the Lenten spiritual journey of the Church toward the Easter glory. (Lectio
Divina) (Fr. Tony) (http://frtonyshomilies.com/)