High mountains, dark valleys

If there’s one disadvantage to knowing Bible stories, it’s that they don’t always surprise us anymore.

Yesterday at Telkwa CRC we were talking about Jesus’ transfiguration – this incredible, mountaintop experience that confirms for the disciples Jesus’ authorityTransfiguration and glory.  That Jesus’ clothes become dazzling white and that Moses and Elijah show up to spend time with the Lord is all pretty amazing and must have boosted the disciples’ faith as well as encouraged Jesus.  But what happens next is equally amazing, even though we easily miss it every time.

If you can, pretend you’ve never read this story before.  Call to mind that just before Jesus and the disciples ascend the mountain, Peter confesses that Jesus is the Messiah (even though he has little idea what that means) and Jesus promises that people around Him will surely not taste death before they see that the Kingdom of God has come with power.”  Now here is Jesus on the mountain, His divinity and mission confirmed by His Father.  If we didn’t already know what happens next, we might think the next logical step would be for Moses and Elijah to escort Jesus into the heavenly realms where He visibly reigns for all earth to see.  From there Jesus fires down photon torpedoes on the hypocritical religious leaders of the day and nukes the detested Romans!  Yay!  The End.

If we didn’t already know the story, that might be one way we’d guess it would go.  I think the way it indeed ends is actually even more amazing: Jesus returns down the mountain with the disciples.  Jesus remains with the disciples.

Had Jesus actually been given the choice to return to heaven or stay with the disciples, He would have chosen to stay.  Jesus insists on being “on the way” with His friends and followers.  He doesn’t finally join up with us at the end when we at last have everything figured out.  No, He is with us always.  His grace is truly amazing (to say nothing about His patience, considering how His disciples then and today regularly misunderstand and misrepresent Him).  I like how one of my commentaries on Mark’s Gospel puts it:

Jesus is with the disciples.  The disciples – then as now – are not expected to go it alone in this hard and joyous thing of discipleship.

From James R. Edwards, The Gospel According to Mark
(Pillar; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2002), p. 269.

Mountaintop experiences are great, and we can be thankful for them.  But they don’t last.  The surprising Good News is that we don’t encounter Jesus only on the mountaintops.  He does not reserve His presence for the lucky few who can occasionally find themselves on spiritual highs.  Jesus is with us in the dark valleys of trouble and suffering as surely as we sense His nearness on a mountaintop.

Perhaps it is in the dark, low, painful, weak places that we especially experience Jesus’ tender presence and strength, and there are able to truly glory in Him.

Art credit: 
Stained glass window at St. Peter the Apostle Church, Parsippany NJ, photographed by Loci Lenar.

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  1. […] Artwork by Andrew Gray found at WordLive.Original 4th Point post: High Mountains, Dark Valleys.- […]

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