It might be that we could think on umpteen different people who though they have come from poverty-stricken backgrounds have been able to move into a very prosperous and fulfilling adult life.  Perhaps someone like the actor Kirk Douglas might spring to mind.  Raised in abject poverty throughout his childhood years he was able to overcome his past and even make use of the lessons he learned in early life, to work his way to the top of his profession.

 

A few years back the story "My Left Foot" won several awards for the retelling of the life of a young boy growing up amidst the poverty of Ireland and also coping with severe physical handicap.  That same young boy, Kristy Brown, in later years, writing the story of his life, displayed considerable talent as an author.  Part of his determination to succeed came from the hard lessons of childhood.  Those lessons enabled him to transform his life. 

 

In similar vain is the story, "Angela's Ashes", where Frank McCourt tells the story of his miserable and greatly deprived childhood in Catholic Ireland.

 

Frank McCourt had a dream which he kept always before him and which he clung to throughout the worst of times.  His dream was to travel to America which he achieved as a young man.  He made good in America and eventually was able to use his appalling childhood to good effect.

 

Somehow, Frank McCourt redeemed and transformed his terrible childhood.  Or perhaps God had transformed and redeemed it for him, and Frank McCourt had seized the opportunity for redemption, which God offered him.

 

Peter, James and John, the three disciples Jesus took with him up the mountainside in today's story, were just ordinary people.  They weren't particularly spiritual, they didn't understand very much and they weren't especially reliable.  For although they were the three singled out after the Last Supper to watch with Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane, they all failed to stay awake.  And along with the other disciples, they all deserted Jesus when the crunch came.

 

So although they had this amazing mountaintop experience of transfiguration, and heard God speaking to them from a cloud, nothing much changed for them initially.  It was only years later, after Jesus had died and had risen again, that those early experiences came into their own and Peter, James and John became the acknowledged leaders of the early church.

 

Perhaps it's significant that God spoke from a cloud.  A cloud was a recognised medium for encountering God.  Back in the early days of wandering in the wilderness led by Moses some 1,500 years before the time of Jesus, God had guided the Ancient Israelites by going before them in a cloud.  The Jews always looked back to that time in the wilderness as the golden years when God was very much present with his people.  So Peter, James and John would immediately be aware of the significance of the cloud as a sign of God’s presence.

 

But maybe a cloud also describes how they felt about things at the time.  Jesus had already begun to talk to them about his coming death and about the suffering involved in his death, which must have made unsettling and disturbing listening.  The glorious revelation of Jesus as God at this event of the transfiguration, perhaps goes some way towards counter-balancing the fear and anxiety generated by Jesus' talk of approaching death.

 

It's interesting that the two figures seen on either side of Jesus were two people considered by the Jews never to have died.  According to the end of the book of Deuteronomy, God himself took Moses, and according to the second book of Kings, Elijah was carried up to heaven in a chariot of fire.

 

Moses was the bringer of the law, and considered to be the great leader of the Jewish people.  Elijah represented the prophets, that other great strand in Old Testament history.  The prophets were those people who were closest to God and who interpreted and conveyed God's wishes.  According to prophecy, Elijah was expected to appear before the coming Messiah.  Jesus later identified Elijah in the person of John the Baptist, the forerunner.

 

At the transfiguration, Jesus is seen as the central figure flanked by Moses and Elijah, and therefore more important than either of them.  The implication is that although God spared Moses and Elijah from the normal processes of death, his beloved son must suffer and die.  But the very fact of the transfiguration hints that Jesus' glory will overcome even his death.

 

Some people today enjoy mountaintop experiences, where they have an overwhelming spiritual revelation of some sort.  But just as only a quarter of the disciples experienced the glory of the transfiguration, so not everybody has mountaintop experiences.

 

Many of us muddle along in a bit of a cloud, not quite knowing exactly where we're going, and not able to see the way ahead very clearly.  And most of us experience clouds from time to time.  But they're not necessarily white, fluffy clouds.  The clouds, which gather over human lives, are often dark and ominous and threatening.

 

So it's worth remembering that no matter how glorious the transfiguration experience, God didn't speak at all during it, but spoke afterwards from the cloud which overshadowed them. 

 

And God didn't give a particularly earth-shattering message, but simply repeated the words used at Jesus' baptism, "This is my beloved son, listen to him."

 

Perhaps when we're overshadowed by cloud, we sometimes expect God to give very specific directions, telling us exactly what to do and how to do it.  But if we're expecting that, maybe we fail to hear the quiet voice and the gentle message, which simply says, "Listen!"

 

Listening to God can transfigure lives.  Although he may not have been aware of it, Frank McCourt was able to listen and learn sufficiently during the dark and overshadowing cloud of his appalling early childhood, to enable a later transfiguration of his life.

 

And although it wasn't immediately apparent, those ordinary disciples listened sufficiently to God's voice in the cloud to enable their lives to be transfigured at a later date.

 

There are always times when we wish our lives were different, or that we could be different people in some way.  Most often it is the dark times, which make us feel like that.  Perhaps if we want our life to be transfigured, we simply need to listen to God when the clouds overshadow us.  For the lessons we learn at his hand in the most difficult times are the lessons which change our lives in the good times.