***
My head is pounding from the sun beating down upon me.
Trekking my way up this high, steep mountain in the middle of a hot afternoon
makes my legs feel like jelly. When will
we reach the top? I’m tempted to shout. I swallow, swipe a hand across my
sweaty forehead, and plod on.
Suddenly,
Jesus pauses. He stands in front of us and doesn’t move.
My breath
catches in my throat. My mind tickles with the thought that something strange
and very memorable is about to occur. Pain and weariness momentarily forgotten,
I straighten up and wait with expectation.
Vivid light
radiates from Jesus’s face, and His clothes flash white. At the brightness of
it all, my eyes close without my telling them to. When my eyes open again, a
glorious, breathtaking sight awaits me. I gasp and stumble backward in shock. Moses? Elijah?
It can’t be! But the two
men stand there, right before me, one on either side of Jesus. And wonder of
wonders, Jesus is talking to them both!
“Lord,” Peter
is saying, “it is good that we are here. If you wish, I will make three tents
here, one for you and one for Moses and one for Elijah.”
I look up,
for, while Peter had been speaking, a cloud—a bright cloud—had overshadowed us.
“This is My beloved Son,
with Whom I am well pleased,” a Voice says from the cloud.
My eyes nearly
pop from their sockets. My hands fly over my mouth. I listen, scared almost to
death yet awed beyond belief, as the Voice continues to speak, “. . .listen to
Him.”
Peter, James,
and John fall down, faces to the ground. They shake, terrified. My knees feel
like water, and I collapse beside them. “Lord, You are truly a God of
miracles,” I whisper.
As we make our
way back down the mountain, Jesus instructs us to keep all that we’d seen a
secret until “the Son of Man is raised from the dead.” I walk slowly behind the
group, pondering all that I’d just seen.
I’d heard talk
of Jesus’s power. He healed people who were demon-possessed or ill. He could
tell the blind to see and the lame to walk. But that’s all I thought it’d been.
. . talk. Until now—when I’d seen it
for myself.
I work to get
my saliva past my thick, dry throat and glance at Jesus. I don’t think I’ll ever be the same after seeing what I’ve seen.
Over and over,
I visualize that bleach-white look upon Jesus’s face and garment. I hear again
that voice coming from the clouds, and I become lost in thought.
Elijah and
Moses are dead. They’re history. But there they’d stood, right in front of me. Alive. And talking. I shake my head. Too
terrific to be true. But I had seen it!
I ponder over
that voice that came from above. “This is
My Son, with Whom I am well pleased; listen to Him.”
It’d truly been God who
was speaking. And His “Son” is Jesus. God said, “Listen to Him.” Yes! Listen to
God’s Son. Jesus is truly a miracle-worker, a generous Savior. He can bring
even the dead to life.
In my mind’s
eye, I picture Moses and Elijah standing just as they had only a few minutes
previous. They, too, were white as a sheet, and very much there. Could it maybe had been possible they’d been ghosts?
I shake my
head. It doesn’t matter. Jesus had still pulled them into life. Through the
power given to Him through the Spirit, He’d worked a true miracle.
If faith can do that for Him, I decide, I want that kind of faith.
And I stop right here to
ask the Lord into my heart—such as I never had before. Sure, I’d known before
that I needed a Savior. I’d known I needed to tithe and follow my parents
around as they performed their sacrifices in the temple.
But it isn’t
until now that I realize just how great and powerful Jesus was. He hadn’t
talked to Moses and Elijah in private. He’d taken a few of his disciples—and
me—along, just to show us.
My heart feels
clean and new, and I smile and hurry so that I can catch up with the others.
That's very interesting Ellen; I've never read anything like it before now. :-) Are you a football fan? I am. I cheer for the Panthers (I was born in North Carolina) and for the Patriots (My three older siblings were born in New England). Right now it is half time of the Super Bowl. Patriots are winning! :-)
ReplyDelete-Hannah
P.S. I am the youngest child.
Glad you enjoyed the essay, and no, I am not a football fan :-(.
DeleteI don't watch football much, mainly I just hope they win and I watch the whole Super Bowl. Patriots won! :-)
Delete-Hannah
Wow! That was super interesting! Great job!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lexah!
DeleteLove the emotion in this essay! <3
ReplyDelete-Brooklyne
:-) Thank you, Brooklyne!
DeleteThe mount of transfiguration! Good story.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
Delete