Facing the whirlwind: A sermon for Transfiguration Sunday, 2 Kings 2:1-13

2 Kings 2:1-13

This year’s short Epiphany season, the time after Christmas and before Lent, means that even this early in February it is already Transfiguration Sunday. This is the week of the year when we typically read the story of Jesus taking a few disciples up a mountain where they see him change before their eyes and hear the voice of God declare, “This is my Son, the Beloved!” 

We hear that story again this year, but the majority of our focus this year is shifting to one of the several “pre-quels” that sheds some light on the transfiguration. 2 Kings 2 tells of the prophet Elijah, one of the ancestors in faith who appears on the mountain to talk with Jesus during the transfiguration. Elijah is unique among prophets because his death is recorded with a dramatic, divine flair. With his student and successor Elisha watching, chariots and horses of fire come to earth to carry Elijah in a whirlwind to heaven. 

What do this stories of an encounter with divine power tell us about God’s presence in times of grief and transition?

The full worship video for this service is available here.

Kin(g)dom Sight: A sermon for January 14, 2024, Martin Luther King, Jr Weekend, based on John 1:43-51

The worship video for this sermon is available here.

John 1:43-51

Photo by wendel moretti on Pexels.com

It has taken me a while to warm to up to the gospel according to John. And by a while I don’t mean a few days this week in preparation for worship today. I mean like years, decades. Maybe it’s taken that long for my brain that was trained in the sciences to finally open up to the poetry and symbolism and mysticism in the fourth gospel. But I’m coming around to. Where I used to get frustrated, thinking, “Just say what you mean.” Now I’m more intrigued by how many different things are meant by the one thing that is said.

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