There is something about being on a mountain top that fills
you with awe and wonder. The sense of having achieved something, reaching a
goal, the wonderful view and vista, a
chance to have a different perspective on what is around you. Even Auckland
City looks great from Waiatarua. Mind you as I’ve got older that sense of
wonder is usually that I’ve made it to the top, and the view for the first ten
minutes is my knees and feet as I bend over and try and catch my breath.
We use the metaphor of mountain tops to talk of spiritual
experiences, encounters with God and high points in our lives. I recently went
out through the Waitakere’s to Karekare with a friend and found myself reminded
of hills and high places that had been special to me. The hill top just above
the Arataki Information centre, where you can look down at the bush. I had gone to pray when I had to choose
between staying in Auckland and heading down to St John’s in Rotorua and
receiving very clear guidance from a bible passage in Marks gospel, “a prophet
is without honour in their own town”, that it was time to move away from Auckland my
home that sprawled below me.
The craggy rock over the river at the north end of Karekare, where you could climb up to the
lifeguards platform. I’d originally had my twenty first out at Karekare and had
left the party and found this place to be alone. One night I had sat there for
hours, praying and praising God, singing at the top of my voice, knowing I
couldn’t be heard by anyone but God over the pounding surf. Away from the lights of Auckland the stars shone
bright and the milky way arched overhead, in the warm late summer evening the
waves glowed with fluorescence as they struck the sand. Maybe it would have
been easy to think that spiritual experience was just being in such an awesome
place at night, but in the middle of that I sensed God’s presence and he spoke
to me and asked me to renounce involvement in astrology. I didn’t under stand
it at the time, but I did it, and it wasn’t till years later walking and
praying in Rotorua that God reminded me of that night and that as a child I had
worn an Aquarius medallion round my neck, a bit like a lucky charm. Just
something that needed to be worked out spiritually, as involvement in that occult stuff can be a source of spiritual problems.
In the scripture mountains are see in two ways, firstly
there is the link with encounters with God, but they are also used as a
metaphor for the challenges and difficulties we face in life. In the passage from
Matthew’s Gospel we see it used both ways. Firstly on the mountain the
disciples have this amazing encounter where Jesus is transfigured before them, they
see him in his glory, along with Moses and Elijah, that represent the law and
the prophets, then as they have come down the mountain they find themselves
right bang in a messy situation, a demon possessed boy, the disciples can’t
seem to help. Jesus rebukes them about
their faith and talks of a mustard seed faith being able to move a mountain.
Its mountain Sunday in the season of creation and what I
want to do today is do a quick survey of mountains in the scriptures, that
speak of spiritual experiences and encounters with God and what they have to
say to us about those experiences and how they relate to the valley floor of
everyday life, the inevitability, that is says in Matthew 17:9 and they were
coming down the mountain”
In Genesis 22 there is the mountain in the region of Moriah,
where Abraham is tested and in obedience with what he hears God say, takes his
son Isaac and is about to offer hm as a sacrifice. Then we have the God
encounter and God provides a ram for Abraham to sacrifice in Isaacs place. This
passage has always been pointed to as showing Abrahams faith, but it is a
worrying story, because while Abraham has great faith and is wiling to obey
what he hears God say, it also is a test of relationship, how well did Abraham
know God, to think that God would want child sacrifice. But on this mountain
which some suggest is the same mountain on which Christ was crucified we
encounter God’s mercy and love for us, that God provides the sacrifice and of
course we look forward from there into the new testament to see the death of
Jesus on the cross as a sacrifice for our sins. I think the Abraham story
speaks to us that we need to wrestle with our mountain top experiences with God
to fully understand them and know what they mean when we go down from the
mountain. We should look at them from what we know of God, God is knowable, God
has revealed God’s nature through scripture.
At the beginning of Exodus, we have Mt Horeb or Sinai, where
in Exodus 3 Moses encounters God in the burning bush. It’s a story of God’s
compassion for his people and of calling. God calls Moses to lead his people
out of Israel, so they can worship him at this mountain. That mountain top encounter with God is not
always about us and God, but to strengthen and call us to go and serve and care
for God’s people. Well see it again and again, genuine encounters with God
result in service and the furthering of God mission in the world, and Moses is
sustained by this encounter through a very difficult and trying time.
As the people come out of Egypt Moses again encounters God at
Horeb, and is given the law, the ten commandments, and meets with God. Only
Moses and his aid Joshua go up, the rest of the people remain behind, God is
too holy and awesome for them to meet as Moses does. Moses is transformed by
his encounter and for forty days after he shines with this glory from meeting
with God. Spiritual encounters and
mountain top experiences can leave us basking in their glory, but again the
reality of a spiritual encounter is like with Moses at Horeb, that we catch a
revelation of what God wants and like with the law was intended it results in a
way of life that reflects the God whom we have encountered. At Horeb the people
of Israel receive the law, how as this new people of God they are to live that
will reflect God’s justice and mercy. Because of that other hill of Calvary we
don’t have to hang back at the foot of the mountain but we are all invited to
meet with and encounter God, not just at the mountain but in our every day.
Mt Horeb appears again in 1 Kings 19 right after another
mountain top experience on Mt Camel, where Elijah has a competition with the
prophets of Baal about who is the real God. It’s interesting in this encounter
that the prophets of Baal may have outwardly been seen to have a more ecstatic
experience, they dance and sing and cut themselves, hoping their God will
answer them. But with Elijah it almost seems mundane, he builds an altar pours
water over it and at the right time for evening sacrifice prays and God answers.
Boom, we can get caught up in the externals and the exciting and different and
the ecstatic and think that’s where we encounter God and not realise that its often in the
personal rhythm of worship and devotion and prayer that we meet with God. I’ve
found that the more regular and regulated my emotional life the more God seems
to speak to me through the scriptures.
At the bible course of Tuesday, we talked about the fact that the
prophets of Baal were killed by the people of Israel and it seemed bloodthirsty
and violent. As I’ve re red for this sermon, the thing that sticks out is the
prophets of Baal and jezebel were systematically seeking out and killing the
prophets and people faithful to Israel’s God, so it becomes more of a justice
thing, than vengeance or simple brutality, maybe a bit like the Nurnberg trials
after the second world war
But back to Horeb, Elijah is afraid because jezebel the
queen threatens revenge, she puts out a hit on Elijah, if this was a gangster
movie… Elijah demoralised after that flees. His encounter on Horeb when he sees
God passing by encourages him, gives him a new perspective on the awesomeness
and power of God, but also on God’s love and care. God speaks not in the
earthquake or hurricane but in the stillness. The mark of this genuine
encounter with God is Elijah comes away encouraged and with a definite plan and
a way forward. He is given someone to walk the path with him in Elisha. When we
are discouraged and well facing mountains that genuine encounter with God,
provides clarity and ways forward, not a way out, but a way through, with
Christ’s abiding presence.
Mt Zion, the city of Jerusalem, was where David established
his capital and where Solomon built the temple and bought the focus for the
worship of God to that specific hill. In
the reading we had from Isaiah chapter 2 we see how the city is to be a place
where God’s kingdom is established, people are to be drawn to that place
because of God’s mercy and justice. It here of Course that Christ comes and is
crucified, it is here when the promise of the Holy Spirit is poured out on all
those who believe. At the end of acts 2 we have this wonderful picture of the
new people of God, the church, living out that hope of peace and justice, they
are a people dedicated to knowing and learning what it means to be God’s
people, they devote themselves to prayer and scripture and the teaching of the
apostles. They practise hospitality and generosity, and live in harmony so that
none of them is said to be in need, and they experience the power and presence
of God in miracles and in people coming to know Christ, they enjoy the goodwill
of the people: people see how they live and it draws them in. It is a pattern
and a hope for us the church, that in us people might glimpse that rule and
reign of God, that will make them want to change and put aside war and
conflict.
A minister who lead a Christian community in west Auckland
once talked about the marks of true revival, he said that you know the geniuses
of that encounter with God when it results in a hunger for God’s word and
prayer, a desire for Christian unity, hospitality and generosity, a care for
the poor, and a heart for seeing people come to know Jesus. Yes miracles and all that stuff goes along
with it, but at its heart is the kingdom of God.
The mount of ascension outside Jerusalem is where the
gospels finish and the book of acts kicks off. It is a place where the
disciples see Jesus taken up from them into heaven. It would be easy to finish
the story with them gazing off into the sky, simply waiting for Jesus to come
back to them. To sit and wait for that vision of Isaiah to come to being, but
that is not what happens they are told by angels, to go back down and wait in
Jerusalem for the power of God and then be Jesus witness to Jerusalem, Judea,
Samaria and to the ends of the earth.
That is the challenge of the mountain top that we come back down and get
on with making what we have encountered of God a reality where we live.
That brings us back to the gospel reading we had today and
the mount of transfiguration. The three disciples closest to Jesus have this
amazing encounter, their eyes are open and they are able to see the reality of
who Jesus is, a real glimpse beyond the veil to the spiritual realm. Jesus is
totally human, but there is a glimpse of this glorified body, conversing with Moses
and Elijah and the first instinct they have is that they want to stay there and
they want to build an altar and shelters a structure to enshrine this
experience. Let us build a shelter for each of you… that’s a very human
reaction, a very human response to such a spiritual experience. A lot of our
church traditions and expressions and denominations even are built to preserve
hopefully a new truth about God, but they want to encapsulate a spiritual
experience. But Jesus is not having any
of it. He is suddenly just plain ol Jesus and thy go down the mountain, back
into the difficulties and metaphor mountains of trouble they have left behind.
But they Go back down… but down there Jesu is also with them. The disciples had
tried to cast out a demon and they couldn’t do it, but as Jesus is with them
and he is able to do it, and teaches them how to do it, how to have faith in
facing mountains. It’s not the mountain top experience where we know God and
his presence, its where we glimpse the reality of the God who is with us on the
valley floor, who we can trust and put our faith in as we face those other
mountains.
The mount of transfiguration is book ended by looking forward to another mountain, Golgotha or Calvary as
Jesus speaks of his death and resurrection, and it is this mountain that
enables us to know God’s presence with us on the mountain high and valley low.
It Jesus giving his life for us and being raised to life again, that does not
mean we need to go to the physical mountains to see and know him. Rather he is
with us. In John4 Jesus has a discussion with a Samaritan women about which
mountain is right to worship God on… Jesus response is to tell her that there
is a time coming when we will worship God not on the mountain but in Spirit and
truth, that is the hope and the reality that we have among our mountains… Maungarei, Maungakiekie, Mt Hobson, Hamlin hill, and beyond… as we face the mountains of aloneness, searching for meaning and purpose, pain, family struggles, caring for friends facing oppressive social mountains or a whole range of personal mounds… Mountain top encounters are great and helpful and draw us on, but we have the assurance that Christ has come down the mountain with us and dwells with us on the valley floor, the up and downward trek, wanting to see his kingdom and justice and love make that Mt Zion vision a reality
ReplyDeleteReaching the mountain top is always an inspiring experience! It's a moment of accomplishment, offering both breathtaking views and a fresh perspective on the world around us. No matter the age, the feeling of having made it to the summit is priceless!
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