Saturday, March 12, 2022

Second Sunday in Lent


Many of God’s greatest revelations are associated with mountain-tops, and it is to such a summit that we are brought each year on the Second Sunday in Lent.

The Law was given to Moses on Mount Sinai; the Temple itself was built on Mount Zion; the Transfiguration was on Mount Tabor; the Crucifixion was on Mount Calvary; the Ascension took place on part of Mount Olivet. On each of these occasions, we see the meeting of the heavenly and the earthly, the divine and the human.

At the Transfiguration, the Divine nature of Christ shines through His human nature, and the apostles who were there caught a glimpse of the heavenly through the earthly. Also there were Moses and Elijah – Moses as the representative of the Law, Elijah as the representative of the Prophets. Among the many mysteries contained in this event, we’re faced with the reality of the God Who has entered into history, the God who has taken human flesh upon Himself, and Who has come to us so that we can come to Him.

At the time of the transfiguration St. Peter wanted to build a tabernacle, a permanent dwelling place. He wanted to “capture the moment,” so to speak. By itself, that desire wasn’t wrong. It just wasn’t the time. There was still work to be done, still truth to be learned. The opportunity would afford itself later, after the passion and death, after the resurrection and ascension of Christ. It would be later, when the Holy Spirit descended upon the apostles. It would be then that Peter would have the task. He would be asked to build the Church upon that Rock which was chosen by Jesus Christ Himself.

This would be the tabernacle which needed to be built: the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ. Not far off on a mountaintop would it be built, but a tabernacle which is to be in the midst of the world, allowing everyone to worship the One who lives within it. Christ gave St. Peter the desire to build and He gave him everything he would need to make the most glorious tabernacle.

And we’re privileged to catch a glimpse of all this, along with Peter, James, and John. Every time we participate in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, it is as though we are on every one of those mountain-tops – Mount Zion, Mount Tabor, Mount Calvary, Mount Olivet. But like the apostles, we cannot remain. We receive what God gives us – that is, Himself – and we’re commanded to take that gift with us, into the world, to share Him with a world which, whether it knows it or not, is starving for the Food and Drink which is the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, Emmanuel, Who is God with us.

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Painting: "Transfiguration" by Titian, c. 1560