Deacon Pat's Books

Deacon Pat's Books

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Second Sunday in Lent (Year A) - The Transfiguration


Year A – Lent – Second Sunday – Deacon Pat

Today, the Gospel invites us to climb a mountain with Jesus—a mountain that reveals His glory and challenges us to see Him anew.

In the gospel, we hear the story of the Transfiguration:

Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a high mountain, away from the noise of the world below.

There, something extraordinary happens.

He is transfigured before them—His face shines like the sun, His clothes become dazzling white, and He stands in the company of Moses and Elijah, the towering figures of the Law and the Prophets.

Then, a bright cloud overshadows them, and the voice of the Father speaks: “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to Him.”

The disciples fall to the ground in awe and fear, overwhelmed by this glimpse of the divine.

What does this moment mean for us today?

For Peter, James, and John, it was a revelation of who Jesus truly is—the Son of God, the fulfillment of all that God had promised through the ages.

For us, gathered here in this church, it’s a moment to pause and reflect:

Do we truly see Jesus for who He is?

And are we ready to listen to Him as the Father commands?

The timing of the Transfiguration is no accident.

Just before this event, Jesus had spoken to His disciples about the hard road ahead—His suffering, His death on the cross, and His resurrection.

Peter, in his human weakness, had resisted this talk.

He didn’t want to imagine his Lord enduring such pain.

But here, on the mountain, God offers a vision of hope to sustain them.

The Transfiguration is like a window into eternity, a promise that the cross is not the end.

Yes, suffering will come—for Jesus and for us—but beyond it lies glory.

The radiant light of Christ on the mountain foreshadows the brilliance of the resurrection, reminding us that God’s love always has the final word.

As Catholics, this mystery resonates deeply with our faith.

We are a people who embrace both the cross and the resurrection.

We know that life is not free of struggle.

Perhaps some of you are carrying heavy burdens right now—a illness in the family, a strained relationship, financial worries, or a quiet doubt that gnaws at your faith.

These are our crosses, and they can feel overwhelming.

But the Transfiguration lifts our gaze.

It tells us to look up, to see Christ in His glory, and to trust that He walks with us through every valley.

The light we see on the mountain is not just for Jesus—it’s a light He wants to share with us, transforming our own lives, bit by bit, into reflections of His love.

Let’s turn for a moment to Peter’s reaction.

Caught up in the wonder of it all, he exclaims, “Lord, it is good that we are here. Let’s make three tents—one for you, one for Moses, one for Elijah.”

You can almost hear the excitement in his voice.

He wants to freeze this moment, to build a permanent dwelling place on the mountain and stay there forever.

Don’t we know that feeling?

When we encounter God—maybe during a powerful Mass, a heartfelt confession, or a quiet moment of prayer with our rosary in hand—we long to hold onto that peace, that closeness.

I think of the young mother who told me recently how she felt God’s presence so strongly while praying with her children at bedtime.

She wanted that moment to last.

But Jesus doesn’t let the disciples stay on the mountain.

After the vision fades, He touches them, calms their fears, and leads them back down—back to the world, back to the mission.

This is a profound lesson for us.

The mountaintop moments are gifts, but they’re not the whole of our Christian life.

We’re not called to live in isolation, basking in spiritual highs.

No, we’re called to take what we’ve seen and heard and bring it to others.

Imagine if Peter, James, and John had stayed up there, building their tents—what would have become of the Gospel?

Instead, they descended, and eventually, after the resurrection, they carried the light of Christ to the ends of the earth.

We, too, are sent forth from this Mass to do the same—to bring hope to a coworker who’s struggling, to show kindness to a neighbor in need, to share our faith with a world that often forgets God.

And then there’s the Father’s voice: “Listen to Him.”

These words aren’t just a suggestion—they’re a command, a call to discipleship.

Listening to Jesus means more than nodding at His teachings; it means letting them sink deep into our hearts and change us.

It means trusting Him when He asks us to forgive someone who doesn’t deserve it, to serve when we’re tired, to pray when we’d rather give up.

It means following Him to the cross, knowing that the journey doesn’t end there.

In this Lenten season, as we walk toward Easter, listening to Jesus might mean recommitting to our prayer, fasting with greater intention, or reaching out to someone we’ve neglected.

The Transfiguration is our strength for this journey.

In Lent, we climb the mountain with Jesus through our sacrifices and our penance.

We may not see His glory fully revealed yet—not like the disciples did—but we trust that He is with us, transfiguring us, making us more like Him.

Every time we receive the Eucharist, as we will in a few moments, we encounter the same Christ who shone on that mountain.

His presence fills us with the grace to keep going, to keep listening, to keep following.

So today, let’s ask ourselves:

Are we truly listening to Him?

Are we open to the ways He wants to transform our hearts?

And are we ready to carry His light back down the mountain, into a world that hungers for hope?

May this Eucharist, the living presence of Christ among us, give us the courage to say with Peter,

“Lord, it is good that we are here,”

and then to rise and follow Him—down the mountain, through the cross, and into the glory that awaits.

Amen.


 

No comments: