Jesu Juva
St. Matthew 17:1-9
February 15, 2026
Transfiguration A
Dear saints of our Savior~
Lord, it is good that we are here. That’s what Peter said as He beheld Jesus on the mountain top, shining brighter than the sun, conversing with Moses and Elijah. “It’s good to be here,” said Peter. And you can understand why he said it. The sights and sounds were glorious and thrilling. The special effects were almost beyond description. It’s the kind of event most of us would pay good money to see.
We call this the Transfiguration of our Lord. Peter, James and John had been selected to go up the mountain with Jesus. And while they were there, Jesus was changed in appearance. His face shone like the sun; His clothes gleamed white as light. They beheld Jesus as God of God, Light of Light, shining with the glory of God. Jesus’ hidden divinity was hidden no longer.
And there’s more! With Jesus were Moses and Elijah from the Old Testament. Moses, through whom God gave the Law, and Elijah, chief of all the prophets—standing and talking with Jesus the way one converses with an old friend. It’s a preview of the resurrection, when we too will stand in the glory of Jesus, freed from the power of sin and death, witnessing the wonders of God’s glory. It’s all a glimpse of your future.
Peter was so caught up in the moment that he just opened his mouth and started talking. He’s got a plan to build three tents for the guests of honor. He wants to construct a shrine to mark that place and that moment. Something this spectacular needs to be memorialized for the ages. Tis good, Lord, to be here!
But the Transfiguration of Jesus wasn’t really about the mountain—wasn’t about that place. Christianity, for that matter, is not about places—not about holy sites. Christians can and do go to the Holy Land to grow in knowledge. But a pilgrimage to the Holy Land will not cause your faith to grow. You can climb Mount Tabor where we think the transfiguration occurred. You can splash around in the Jordan River. But those places have no power to change your heart.
You don’t need to go on a pilgrimage or climb a mountain to draw close to God. God has drawn close to you in Jesus Christ. And Jesus manifests Himself for you personally in the water of your Baptism, in the bread and wine of His Holy Supper, in the absolution spoken on the heels of your confession, wherever two or three are gathered together in His name—right here and right now. This is your “mountain.” This is where Jesus has promised to forgive your sins, to build your faith, to comfort you with His love. This is where Jesus changes your heart. ‘Tis good to be right here!
Even Peter Himself eventually came to realize that while what happened on the mountain was a wonderful revelation from God—its value was limited. We didn’t see Jesus shining brighter and purer than all the angels in the sky. We missed out (as did three-fourths of the disciples).
But we have something better. For you see, later on in his life, many years after the Transfiguration took place, Peter wrote the words of today’s Epistle. And there he makes clear that you have something better—something more meaningful than a front row seat for the Transfiguration. Peter tells of beholding the glory of God on the holy mountain. But he quickly pivots to this astounding statement:
And we have something more sure, the prophetic word, to which you will do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark place.
Peter, who saw the Transfiguration with his own eyes and testified to it, he points us to the Word of God as something “more sure” than even that great vision. It may have been “good” for Peter to be there on the mountain; but it is “better” by far to be here, where the Word of God is preached and proclaimed. “This” is even “more sure” than “that.” It is “more sure” to hear the word of forgiveness spoken by your pastor than to see Jesus shining on a mountain top. It is “more sure” to remember your baptism than to see Moses and Elijah standing next to Jesus in His glory. It is “more sure” to eat the bread that is His body and drink the wine that is His blood than to see His face shining like the sun. It is “more sure” to encounter Christ in the Scriptures than to stand on the very mountain where all this happened.
You have something more sure—something better. You have the power and presence of Jesus the Christ here and now to bring you life that lasts forever. Tis good to be here! And what we do here is listen. This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him. He has the words of eternal life. Only Jesus can save you. Only Jesus bears your sin, your death, the punishments of the Law. Only Jesus can mediate between God and Man because He is both God and man.
And in the end that’s what the three disciples saw. Only Jesus. Jesus literally came over to them and touched them and raised them from their fear. When it was all over, they saw no one but Jesus only. What does it mean that they saw Jesus only? Does it mean that they came down the mountain with blinders on—that they were somehow oblivious to everything other than Jesus that crossed their line of sight? I don’t think so. No, I think it means that they learned to see Jesus at work in their lives, whatever the circumstances. They now saw Jesus as the center of life—of everything—regardless of the circumstances. Can you?
Our vision has a way of distorting things. Now we see through a glass darkly. Sometimes, when we’re on top of the mountain and our lives are filled with blessings and success, we fail to see Jesus. We fail to see Jesus, who is the Giver of every blessing and all success. At other times we’re in the valley, and our lives are filled with suffering and with sinful messes of our own creating. And at those times, as well, we fail to see Jesus. We fail to see Jesus, who has promised to sustain us—who says, “My grace is sufficient and my power is made perfect in weakness,” who is working all things for our eternal good.
To see “Jesus only” is not to be blind to everything else, but to see Jesus in everything. To see that He is the forgiver of our past, the companion of our present, and the hope of our future—to see that our family, our vocations, our home and health and every other good gift is but one more token of His love.
The Transfiguration tells you who Jesus is—true God and true man, divinity in humanity. But Jesus’ death on the cross and His resurrection from the dead—these events tell you who Jesus is FOR YOU—your Lord, your Redeemer, your Savior, God’s sacrificial Lamb who dies for the sin of the world. You will see it all for yourself one day. You will see Jesus shining soon enough. For He has promised to appear again in glory and to raise you from the dead and give you eternal life. You will see Moses and Elijah and all the saints of God.
But for now, the mountain of glory gives way to Mount Calvary. Glorious Jesus gives way to the crucified Christ. Alleluias give way to ashes and the solemn season of Lent. But year in and year out, through every month and every season, it is always good to be here.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.