"When to Speak and When to Listen"
The Transfiguration of Our Lord
Last Sunday after the Epiphany
February 19, 2012
Mark 9:2-9

It might be a problem to not know what to say. A bigger problem is not
knowing when to speak. What we learn today is that we need to listen
before we speak. Ecclesiastes 3 says it well: there is a time to
remain silent and a time to speak.

But it’s also important to not get ahead of ourselves. The
Transfiguration is amazing, but it’s not the end result. It’s not even
the main thing. It’s an event like no other but Jesus tells the
disciples something curious on the way back from this event: don’t
tell anyone.

Don’t tell anyone, that is, until another event of note has occurred,
and that is the resurrection of the Son of Man. When I, the one whom
you just saw transfigured before you, have gone to the cross,
suffering for the sin of the world, and then have gone through an even
more spectacular transformation than what you have seen on this
mountain, going from death to life, then you can speak to your heart’s
content.

There is a time to speak, but there’s also a time to be silent.

What we learn today from the Transfiguration is that we must speak
only after we have first heard. Any telling people without having
first remained silent and simply listened is speaking in the way Peter
did—he didn’t know what to say and so he babbled. Babbling isn’t going
to get the Gospel out, speaking after we have first heard our Lord
will.

How were those groups of the prophets speaking in the Old Testament
reading? Were they telling Elisha something he needed to know? Were
they convinced that he might have a difficult time if suddenly God
removed Elijah from him without him knowing it? Who knows? What we do
know is that Elisha knew just as the groups of the prophets did. And
isn’t it interesting what he kept telling them back? “Keep silent.”
Some things are better left unspoken. There is, after all, a time to
keep silent. Not every moment of our lives as Christians need to be
spent in speaking. There are times where we need to simply hear and
take to heart.

What is it that we are to hear? How do we know what we are to listen
to? Peter, James, and John found out quickly. Jesus. Listen to Him.
Moses and Elijah were up on that mountain and they were talking with
Jesus. How much was that of Jesus speaking and them listening and how
much was them speaking and Jesus listening? We don’t know; what we do
know is that they were speaking as one with their Lord, the same Lord
of Peter and James and John. How do we know this? We know it because
they are there as representatives of the Word of God, at that time the
Bible consisting only of the Old Testament. Moses and Elijah represent
what the New Testament sometimes refers to as the Law and the
Prophets; Moses representing the Law, Elijah the prophets. These men,
as with all those who wrote the Scriptures, were inspired by the Holy
Spirit. What they wrote was what God had inspired them to write.

As they stood now on the mountain with Jesus they spoke with Him. Now
in a glorified state themselves, they spoke as one with Him. It will
be the same for us when we are in heaven. We will not be talking with
God about things that are not in line with His good and gracious will.
It’s not that we won’t be thinking. It’s that God will restore to us a
will that is perfectly in line with His good and gracious will. Peter
might have gotten a clue if he had just listened to Moses, Elijah, and
Jesus’ conversation. Even if he couldn’t hear what they had been
saying, he should have realized that listening to Jesus and responding
to Him was where it’s at. After all, what had Moses and Elijah and the
rest of the Old Testament writers done? They had pointed people to
Jesus. They had shown that Jesus was the one who was to come; the
Savior; the one who would fulfill all things. Yes, He would definitely
be the one to listen to.

But Peter was terrified. They all were. Peter, being the one who often
spoke without thinking, decided to speak on this occasion. This is
great! We’ll set up shop. We’ll make three booths. Moses will get one,
Elijah will get one, and You, of course, Jesus, will get one. We can
just stay up here forever! God the Father was the one who put the
kibosh on that plan. Moses and Elijah were gone as quickly as they had
appeared. Jesus was there alone, He was all the disciples could see.
But that’s all they needed to see. God the Father spoke concerning
Him, “This is My beloved Son; listen to Him.”

Don’t speak. Don’t think about what this all means. Don’t make plans.
Just listen. Hear the words of your Lord, My only-begotten Son with
whom I am well pleased. Even with Peter’s short reaction of how great
all this was there was too much talking. Not enough listening. Not
enough hearing of the words of his Lord. Notice what the Father says
to Peter: Listen to Jesus. He says nothing about speaking. In fact,
when Jesus gets around to telling the disciples about speaking it’s to
tell them the opposite: do not speak! Don’t tell anyone about this.

See, Elisha wanted to hang around. Elijah knew he was leaving and
Elisha wanted to be around him a little longer. Peter, James, and John
wanted to hang around. They had not seen a sight like this before, of
Jesus transfigured in a spectacular display; they wanted to remain a
part of this. But Jesus never intended for this to be the final
revelation of His glory. He had intended all along to go back down
that mountain in order to ascend another one; one not quite as
glorious, one where He would be transfigured before them all right,
but into a bloody mess. Instead of rays of light gleaming from His
face blood would be pouring down His cheeks. Instead of clothes
shining brighter than any bleach could make them, He would be stripped
and His clothes would be torn and tattered.

Funny how the disciples didn’t want to be around on that day. It was a
solemn day. A tragic day. We who have heard our entire lives the good
news that Jesus died on the cross for the sins of the world have
trouble thinking about what that day was really like. It was the
opposite of the Transfiguration. It was the antithesis of glory. It
was the other extreme of the sentiment we’ll sing in our closing hymn,
How Good, Lord, to Be Here. Who of His disciples wanted to be here,
seeing their Lord hanging on the cross, His life slowly fading away?
Which of them wanted to hear Him cry out, “My God, My God, why have
you forsaken Me?” There’s no way they could have felt worse than
Jesus, but they would have traded anything to prevent this from
happening.

But there is the problem. They didn’t do what God the Father had said
to them: “This is My beloved Son; listen to Him.” Jesus had told them
what it was all about. He must be delivered over. He must suffer. He
must die on the cross. He must rise from the grave. If they had
listened to Him they would have realized that the glory on the Mount
of Transfiguration could not compare with the glory before their eyes
on the cross. Look in the book of Acts and you will not see one sermon
on the Transfiguration from the apostles. Of the suffering, death, and
resurrection you will see many. Peter does point out on an occasion
the glory of the Transfiguration in his second letter, but mostly what
he and the other writers of the New Testament do is proclaim the
Christ of the cross and the empty tomb.

The point of this isn’t that the Transfiguration isn’t really that
important. It’s of utmost importance. The Bible makes that abundantly
clear. The question really is, why is it important? The reason it’s
important is because we haven’t learned to listen. We have big trouble
hearing our Lord, just as Peter did. We need to listen first, and then
we will be able to speak of what our Lord has given us to speak. When
we hear Him we will have the words to say back to Him.

Hear the words of your Lord, listen to Him. His words were spoken to
you at your Baptism: I Baptize you in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. His words are spoken to you at His
Table: Take and eat, this is My body, given for you; Take and drink,
this is My blood, shed for you for the forgiveness of your sins.
Listen to Him. If you’re too busy speaking of what you think and what
you’d like then you’re missing what your Lord has to say to you. How
do you know when to speak? You know to speak after you have listened.
You need to hear God the Father’s beloved Son. That’s what God the
Father said: “This is My beloved Son; listen to Him.” In Baptism and
in the Lord’s Supper that’s exactly what you hear. He speaks to you.
He speaks forgiveness to you. And in so hearing the words of the
Father to His beloved Son you have the words to say. You speak back to
Him what He has spoken. The beloved Son of God is your beloved Lord
and Savior.

When it all was over the disciples saw no one but Jesus only. No more
Elijah. No more Moses. There was no more talk of booths and hanging
around. There was only Jesus. That’s what you get in Baptism and the
Lord’s Supper, Jesus. When you get Jesus you get it all. Now there’s
something to talk about! Amen.

SDG


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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