The great preacher, Phillips Brooks...
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The great preacher, Phillips Brooks, titled his sermon on this text, "Vision and Task." We
all need a vision lest we are not able to meet the tasks that come. Scholars tell us that
when Jesus took Peter, James, and John up on the mountain something momentous
happened to them. Jesus was transfigured before them. God said: "Beloved" to Jesus a
second time. The disciples may not have understood that a cross awaited him in
Jerusalem. This experience prepared him and the three disciple leaders for that awful
event. So Transfiguration was a preparation time. Simon wanted to stay there and build
three tabernacles and bask in the presence of God. Jesus knew better. Visions come and
visions go. At the bottom of the mountain, a boy convulsed and the disciples stood
helpless before this need. Jesus rebuked them and healed the child. Phillips Brooks
preached that vision is always linked to some task. Luke linked what happened on the
mountain to the convulsive boy and his desperate father. The great experiences of our
faith are not disconnected from the world we live in. Someone has said that God gives us
just enough mountaintop experiences to get through the lonesome valleys. If the church
took Transfiguration seriously how might it change the way we respond to the needs
around us?