Transfiguration on Tabor-Faith & Mountaintop Experiences

This post is also available in: Spanish, Italian

The Transfiguration of the Lord Jesus at the summit of Mt. Tabor, remembered each year on August 6, is one of the pivotal events of the Lord’s public ministry.  The veil of the carpenter’s humanity is pulled back for a moment and his divine nature is revealed.  This sudden manifestation of the divinity of Christ and anticipation of his risen glory tells us of the role of mountaintop experiences – to remind us that things are not always as they appear to be, and that we must walk by faith, not by sight.  To LISTEN to this post read by Dr. Italy, click on the play arrow on the left, directly below this paragraph.

 

One of the bible’s names for the God of Israel is “El Shaddai” or “God of the Mountains.” And from the very beginning of salvation history, we see that mountains are a special place to communicate with Heaven. Abraham ascends Mount Moriah to sacrifice his son (Genesis 22). God reveals his name to Moses on Mount Sinai (Exodus 3). Moses later receives the Ten Commandments on that very spot (Ex. 31:18). Elijah returns to the same mountain, also known as Horeb, to hear what God’s “still, small voice” has to say (I Kings 19:8).

Glory on Tabor – Transfiguration

So it is no surprise that Jesus brings His three “pillars” (Galatians 2:9) with Him up a high mountain to experience a special moment of communion with the Most High.

Website Option 2 undated maroon

It is this event, the Transfiguration,  that is commemorated by the Church each year on August 6. The gospel of the day tells the story. As tradition has it, Mount Tabor is the place. Rising from the plain of Jezreel, its summit provides a spectacular view of all of Galilee. But, what Jesus intends for Peter, James, and John to see is not the countryside. He wishes to provide them a moment of vision – insight into who He really is, a glimpse of his risen and divine glory.

Transfiguration – Pulling Back the Veil

Jesus is a carpenter from Nazareth, true. He must have looked much like any other Jewish craftsman of that time and place. That much could be seen by the naked eye. But this exterior appearance of His ordinary humanity was a veil hiding something more extraordinary–His glorious divinity.

So on Tabor, God pulls back the veil. Moses and Elijah appear. These heroes of old had long since passed out of this world and gone to God. So what does it say about Jesus’ identity that they appear on His right and His left?

Jesus’ clothes suddenly appear dazzlingly white, “whiter,” notes Mark, “than the work of any bleacher could make them.” The book of Daniel tells us the significance of this. In a vision, Daniel sees a vision of the “Ancient One.” How does He appear? With clothing that is snow bright. Then one like “a Son of Man” comes on the clouds to receive dominion, glory and kingship from the Ancient One [Daniel 7:9-10, 13-14].

Divinity of the Son of Man Revealed

On Tabor, a cloud comes and overshadows Jesus and a Voice from the Cloud proclaims that this particular Son of Man happens to be the beloved Son of God.

What we have here is what is called a “theophany,” a manifestation of God. It is revelation, first of all, of the divinity of Christ. What The Creed says about Him could be viewed as a commentary on this very episode: “God from God, light from light, true God from true God.”

But it is also a manifestation of the entire Trinity. The cloud that overshadows the apostles is the same one that overshadowed Mary [Luke 1:35]. It is the glorious cloud of the Holy Spirit out of which the Father’s voice resounds. Father, Son, Holy Spirit, one God in three persons, prefigured in Daniel’s vision, revealed in the Transfiguration.

Suddenly, after a brief prostration, they get up and see only Jesus, looking the way He had always looked. The veil was now back in place.

mountain top experience
Featured/above image by an unknown artist on pxhere. Public domain.

Faith reveals what the Senses Can’t

The five senses are wonderful gifts from God. But they are limited nonetheless. Often we make the mistake of thinking that reality is nothing more than what our senses perceive it to be. So God gives us occasional mountaintop experiences, glimpses into realities that our senses can’t normally detect.

Jesus is always divine, regardless of His everyday human appearance. Jesus is always accompanied by saints and angels even when He appears to be alone. It was the entire Trinity who opened the eyes of the man born blind, even though it was only Jesus’ hand we could see touching the man’s eyes.

Even though it’s much easier to forget such things and live according to what everybody can see, faith is remembering such moments of revelation and building our lives upon them.

For a podcast on this event in the gospels, listen to TRANSFIGURATION ATOP TABOR.

For even more on the meaning of Jesus transfiguration atop Mt. Tabor, including reflections by some of the early church fathers, see the TRANSFIGURATION SECTION of the Crossroads Initiative Library.

This post discusses the transfiguration mountaintop experience of the disciples with Moses and Elijah on Mt. Tabor, when the glory of Christ’s divinity was revealed.  It shows us how faith brings knowledge that our senses alone cannot provide.  It reflects on the readings for the Feast of the Transfiguration on August 6, liturgical cycles A, B, and C (Daniel 7:9-10, 13-14; Psalm 97; 2 Peter 1:16-19; Mark 9:2-10 or Matthew 17:1-9 or Luke 9:28-36). 

Banner/featured image by an unknown artist. Public domain.

2 Comments
  • Paul Carter
    Posted at 12:09h, 06 August

    The transfiguration has always somewhat befuddled me, thank you for a very understandable explanation of it.

  • Dr. Marcellino D'Ambrosio
    Dr. Marcellino D'Ambrosio
    Posted at 12:55h, 06 August

    You are most welcome, Paul! Glad that the post was helpful!

Post A Comment