UCC Seneca Valley
February 15, 2026
Six days later, Jesus took with him Peter and James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain, by themselves. And he was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white. Suddenly there appeared to them Moses and Elijah, talking with him. Then Peter said to Jesus, ‘Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.’ While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said, ‘This is my Son, the Beloved; with him I am well pleased; listen to him!’ When the disciples heard this, they fell to the ground and were overcome by fear. But Jesus came and touched them, saying, ‘Get up and do not be afraid.’ And when they looked up, they saw no one except Jesus himself alone. As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, ‘Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.’
I’d like to begin this morning after first saying, Hello dear friends and thank you for inviting me and wanting to be together again. That makes my heart full in a year my heart has seldom felt full. I want to start us with prayer, and I want to pray in the words of Wendell Berry, patron saint of mad farmers, manifestos, liberation fronts: Join me if you will.
Love the quick profit, the annual raise,
vacation with pay. Want more
of everything ready-made. Be afraid
to know your neighbors and to die.
And you will have a window in your head.
Not even your future will be a mystery
any more. Your mind will be punched in a card
and shut away in a little drawer.
When they want you to buy something
they will call you. When they want you
to die for profit they will let you know.
So, friends, every day do something
that won’t compute. Love the Lord.
Love the world. Work for nothing.
Take all that you have and be poor.
Love someone who does not deserve it.
Amen.
We’re balanced today in the crossroads of a number of meaningful seasons and days this week, and their confluence feels like the stars and planets in the hands of a good astrological reading. We are in the last days of Epiphany, a time of revelation and realization that contains traces of the creche and journey and voodoo wisdom seekers (speaking of signs and star charts). Yesterday was Valentine’s, an anniversary of death superficially associated with chocolate and roses but with roots in persecution and civil disobedience. Today is Transfiguration Sunday on which I’ll argue for the next little while that all of discipleship rests or doesn’t rest, as it were. And on Wednesday, many will mark a Lenten period of repentance and preparation by smearing ash on our face and naming our own deaths to begin a season that culminates in Easter, an event of life (superficially associated with chocolate and flowers but steeped in persecution and civil disobedience).
I’m into how Taoist and circular all these seasons and days are, how like a river. I like how much every Christian season arguably also contains the meaning and symbolism and devotional of every other Christian season, like a ying yang. Like a fractal. I like bringing up astrology and Taoism because I reckon the truths of Christianity are not unique to Christianity nor even especially Christian. No offense. And the centrality of death and rebirth in Christian seasons and holy days and for the way of discipleship itself can’t be overemphasized. Hold that thought.
Today’s text in both scriptures centers on transfiguration and, speaking of microcosms: The gospel transfiguration may originally have been a poster-Easter sighting like the road to Emmaus or Houdini Jesus appearing to the disciples behind locked doors. It is filled with symbols from Jesus’ baptism at the Jordan, and with tropes of the Easter morning empty tomb. And it is built on the transfiguration story of Moses receiving the law of God after 40 days on God’s mountain. In both, Jesus’s and Moses’s face becomes the sun. In both God is a cloud and a voice speaking a holy name. Jesus’ clothes are dazzling white like the angels at the tomb. In the gospel, Moses appears along with Elijah in glory. The disciples and the Israelites are afraid and filled with dread.
The radiance in these stories is likely an impression or afterglow of God’s presence. God is often radiant as a burning bush, a fire descending on the mountain, a pillar of fire, the torch and the smoking fire-pot, chariots of fire, the rain of fire consuming Elijah’s wet wood and stones and lapping up the water in the trench. God is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path. A city on a hill and a light outside of a bushel. Moses and Jesus (and Saul and other disciples) are transformed by encounters with God, by intimacy with God. In Exodus, the intimacy is so great that it describes Moses speaking to God face-to-face, as one speaks to a friend (33:7-11). Moses and Jesus receive God and God’s radiance unmediated, undiluted. It’s nuclear. It’s like Raiders of the Lost Ark, when the angel of God melts the faces of everyone who dares to look.
Undiluted God, uncut, raw, unadulterated God is stuff we talk about as the Other. These are descriptions for the patriarchs and prophets. Moses and Jesus have God’s shining face, not us. It’s treated almost as apostasy to think of ourselves on that mountain. That place is untouchable and God is untouchable. Raw, uncut, fully-caffeinated God is perfect and far away, heavenly, distant. It’s stuff we talk about as a metaphor or a nice idea. A paragon: parables and aphorisms, words that are only symbolic, that we have no intention of or capacity for doing, that we have even devised excuses and justifications for not doing. Commandments like, Give away everything you have to the poor. Love your enemies and do good to those who hate you. Submit yourself to everyone. Take the lowest seat. Invite losers to your dinners so that fancy society thinks you are also a loser. God’s mitzvot, gospel discipleship. These are all biblical, both testaments. And I think that’s the radiance, the atomic power that has Moses and Jesus shining like Chernobyl. That’s what the Israelites and the disciples with Jesus find so fearful and dreadful. Who can blame them? I think it’s what most of us are afraid of.
Most of us prefer diluted God. We want to drink our God with a little milk. We want a buffer between us and an undoctored God. That’s partly what the excuses and justifications we devise are about: Jesus didn’t really mean that. It’s not realistic. This poor person doesn’t need my stuff. I don’t want to be taken advantage of. I can’t help everyone. They are the ones being hateful. There isn’t enough to go around. My contribution won’t make a difference.
Most people don’t take those injunctions literally. Most people consider them completely unrealistic. But undiluted God isn’t popular. Undiluted God isn’t realistic. Undiluted God burns people’s eyes out of their skull. Undiluted God fills people with fear and dread.
I want to say, too, that I’m not sure Jesus was on the mountain for the sake of being elect. Others do; that’s cool. I don’t think of God as big on elevating people over others. God’s what undermines hierarchy and power-over, that inverts banquet seating charts and guest lists, that levels mountains and raises valleys, that pours out holy spirit on all flesh and makes the sun to shine on everyone alike. I figure Jesus is on the mountain because he didn’t water God down. Moses, too, though his struggles are better documented. Jesus lived the talk. Importantly, he died the talk. And we can discuss whether that was predicted and prophesied and predestined, and whether he was God uniquely incarnate somehow that we’re not, but this is the unquestionable truth: we are all called to follow. He didn’t do it once and for all. He didn’t do it for us. I feel a little blaspheme-y saying it, but that’s a lie we’ve been told by snake oil salesmen who want us to obey them, it’s a lie we’ve told ourselves to water down our responsibility and accountability, to ease the way for wet-bread theology and maybe what Bonhoeffer called “cheap grace.” Easy. Risk-free. If church is only on Sunday, maybe we’re not doing it right. If church is only in church, we may not be doing it right. Whatever else Jesus is or wasn’t, Jesus reflected full-on, concentrated, uncut in-the-raw radioactive God. Jesus led the way. He told us to take up our cross and follow. He meant it, I think; he meant our literal, non-symbolic cross. Every day.
Yeah. I want a buffer from that. Most of us do.
Renee Good was shot and killed on a daylit street photographing immigration enforcement. I don’t think she thought she was going to die that day. I don’t imagine she made a choice that day, said, I’m going to go do a thing, I might die and not pick up my kids from school this afternoon. Probably not. She just went and did a thing and got shot.
Every person in Minneapolis who stepped onto the street to photograph immigration enforcement after Renee Good was shot did make that decision, is making that choice. In Minneapolis and wherever. They’re all thinking, I’m going to go do a thing, I might die today and never see my dad again, my girlfriend, my dog who won’t understand. I think Alex Pretti probably made that choice. I think this is our choice. I think that’s taking up our cross. And, I think that’s God.
Why are we here? What do you believe it means to take up a cross? What is happening around us and is so wrong that it’s dangerous to do something about? I think this our choice. Not just photographing immigration enforcement, it doesn’t have to be the same as Renee and Alex. Raw, unmitigated God has lots of pans in the fire. Not just ICE and not just stuff from this this year or last. Certainly this year and last, for me. But also every year of this country, every day. What white folks are calling encroaching autocracy and imminent fascism today, maybe Black folks on any day in this country ever call Tuesday, and that’s the tip of the iceberg.
It doesn’t have to be facing down ICE, but there is much to do there. Dahlia Lithwick said on Amicus podcast yesterday that immigration has always been hard, but now it’s hard with a side of Kafka. Kids are being detained and given food with worms and mold. People are being released states away from their homes, they’re driving people into the woods and out country roads and dropping them to find their own way even back to town. It doesn’t have to be the same thing as your partner or best friend. There are a thousand ways to be ready to risk, ready to die. I can think of climate, trans health access. There’s medical integrity and vaccine best practice, there are forty ways diversity and racial equity need to be protected this week. I think of stuff like speaking up when someone at work says some thing that normalizes sexual assault. Saying something when family at the dinner table tells a joke punching down. Taking up our cross doesn’t always mean dying, sometimes it means being unpopular. The one that can’t take a joke.
I keeping thinking of Bad Bunny, and maybe this is a stretch. But I think about the difference of course between the people refusing to watch his show and those who watched it. But I think also about the difference between those who watched it, even joyfully, who enjoyed it without understanding it and those who didn’t understand it and wanted to. Who watched it a few times and read commentaries. Who found translations and wanted to learned about cane crops and US colonialism, gentrification in Puerto Rico and Brooklyn, the power grid and neglect by the US after Hurricane Maria, and Puerto Rico as a US territory without sovereignty or voice in congress. Whatever people call it, Critical Race Theory or Colonial Studies, or History, hearing fun popular music and turning it into a kind of homework feels like good work, even God’s work. Disciples aren’t supposed to just enjoy music, I guess. Definitely we’re supposed to take all the fun out of football and spoil it for others, too. If you take anything from this sermon, it’s that.
Ha ha. But also, take a look again if you didn’t see this: As Benito leaves the field we see his body guard, we see their faces change, we see the shape of a bulletproof vest under his white shirt. We feel the danger to this man for being picked to sing to us, the risk he takes to do it in Spanish, to celebrate his culture and community.
Whatever we decide is our work to do, God as undiluted is its core. Peter, as usual the Keystone Kop of the disciples, suggests that they stay on the mountaintop forever. Just stay there with the dazzling white and Moses and Elijah and the angels in tents, he says, and we’ll have drones bring Pizza Hut and K Fry. Because not going down the mountain ever is safe, It’s righteous without risk. It means not confronting the empire, it means leaving violence unchecked, it means letting the racist joke go by, not rocking the boat.
Whatever we decide is our work to do, it’s God unveiled. Moses covered his shining face with a veil. That means probably a dozen things, but too often we cover and silence the sharpness of God. Someone makes a joke about prison rape or Asian food or angry Black women and it’s so tempting to just let this one slide, to pick our battles, say we can’t fight them all, pace ourselves, duck a few and not lean into every last one. Speaking and interrupting that stuff, even with friends and family (maybe especially with friends and family), is uncomfortable, discomfort feels intolerable. But that’s the cross, too. Sacrifice is costly, and God is unrealistic, and discomfort comes with the territory. Jesus told us this when he said he brought not peace but the sword, and he came to set family members against one another, and rejoice when you are persecuted for the sake of my name, and who is my mother and brother and sisters? Those who hear God’s word and do it.
Whatever we decide is our work to do, it is those who hear the word of God, and do it. And it’s time. It’s always time. Now is certainly time to be God Undiluted, to let that discomfiting, radiant, searing light transform us and radiate from us, unapologetic, unafraid. Or maybe afraid, but dogged. Persistent.
Each of us can decide what is our work to do. I’m naming things. You may have different things. In a culture that wants us to think of sacrifice as affordable and of taking up our crosses as painless, in a society that buys into hierarchy and power-over, that believes in capitalist fictions like meritocracy and prosperity gospel, in a world where we believe that sharing power and apologizing is weak, there is no end to the possibilities.
Nothing is only one thing. We don’t have to do everything. There are a thousand ways to kneel and kiss the earth,
Whatever the work is for you, remember that I’m arguing Jesus wasn’t special for being special. That Jesus wasn’t elect for going up the mountain, but that he was Jesus for coming down the mountain. That’s the work. That’s the good news, and that we do it together.
Please pray with me again.
So, friends, every day do something
that won’t compute. Love the Lord.
Love the world. Work for nothing.
Take all that you have and be poor.
Love someone who does not deserve it.
Denounce the government and embrace
the flag. Hope to live in that free
republic for which it stands.
Give your approval to all you cannot
understand. Praise ignorance, for what man
has not encountered he has not destroyed.
Ask the questions that have no answers.
Invest in the millennium. Plant sequoias.
Say that your main crop is the forest
that you did not plant,
that you will not live to harvest.
Say that the leaves are harvested
when they have rotted into the mold.
Call that profit. Prophesy such returns… Amen.
Peace.