God invited Moses to the top of mount Sinai to visit him and
asked him to be there (Exodus 24:12).
This is a peculiar phrasing. Why
would God ask someone to come to him and be there? Isn’t this implied? Why is the request to come and then be? I imagine a parent asking their child to come
over for dinner but he also requests that his son have the meal in the same
room. Isn’t the latter just
understood? It makes me wonder how many
times we’ve been summoned by God to a place only to miss something truly
spiritual because we didn’t mind the other part of the invitation.
In the beginning was God and then God created a creation and
was together with that creation. But
then people began to rebel against God and this led to a separation and God’s
been working tirelessly to be united with us again. Generation after generation, people were
called to help set things to right. They
were holy listeners going to mountaintops to relay a message from a disenfranchised
deity. A deity whose presence in the
broken creation was so powerfully painful the very sight of God’s face could
kill a man (Exodus 33:20).
Jesus calls Peter, James and John up to a mountain to come
be with him. Jesus transfigures and the
three disciples find themselves in the midst of a moment of heaven and earth
becoming one again. Unfortunately, the
focus shifts immediately to Peter’s distraction, making plans to stay a
while. And God, in an attempt to save
this gloriously tranquil moment, blurts out from heaven, ‘this is my son, the
beloved; listen to him!’ God’s outburst
terrifies the disciples. Face down on
the ground they tremble, and in an instant, this precious moment of shalom has
evaporated.
I am heartbroken for our lonely God, who longs to simply be
reunited with us. A God, who has every
bit of strength to break through the invisible barrier separating our realms
but cannot because it would be too much for our little frames to bear. A creator, who has a plan to rescue us from a
path of destruction and death but struggles daily to find a proper method of relaying
the message effectively. Yes, this is
Yahweh and my heart wrenches when I try to empathize.
“This is my son, listen to him!”
God stepped out into our realm, risking the cosmos, to
deliver this message: Jesus is my son,
listen to him. In fact it was so
important he said it twice (Luke 3:23).
What does it mean to listen to Jesus?
In John’s epistles we are told that the only way for people to know
God’s love is in the love we share with each other (1 John 4:7) because God is love.
To listen to Jesus, we listen to love.
Author Gerald May says,
that our true desire and reason for being is to love and be loved. He says that love is the fundamental energy
of the human spirit. When we love and
receive love we are whole. Why? Because if God is love, then when we have
love, we have God.
Unfortunately, we live in a world that causes us to become
skeptical. The voices in our world that
tell us we are not beautiful and loveable creep in, get louder and louder and
finally drown out the most precious sound of the voice of God telling us we are
beautifully and wonderfully made.
Listen to love.
Ignore the voices of criticism and terror. Stop giving power to the voices that only
want to steal your goodness. Surround
yourself with people who love you and listen to them. Be present to your loved ones, heed their
advice, and learn their stories. Share
space and time with the ones you love in sacred ways. When we allow the voice of love in and
release noises of hate and fear, then we find ourselves with God on the
mountain, being there. And God is no
longer alone.
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