March 2, 2010

SENSORY OVERLOAD

Key Verse
Peter said to Jesus, "Lord, it is good for us to be here; if You wish, I will make three tabernacles here, one for You, one for Moses, and one for Elijah." While he was still speaking, a bright cloud overshadowed them, and behold, a voice out of the cloud said, "This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well-pleased; listen to Him!" (Matthew17:4-5)
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Central Truth

We’ve got to grasp Jesus in both His glory and His suffering to know who He really is. Our need to shelter a moment will break when we see our tent is too small, and He’s up to something bigger.


Reflections

Christ was going to suffer and die. This truth countered all Peter had known and was willing to face. As God turned up the decibels in proclaiming Jesus as the glorious Messiah, He simultaneously cranked up the volume of Christ’s coming suffering. Glory has two sides. Peter and the others were railing against that reality.

During a recent visit to Costa Rica, I was pretty confident I knew what a volcano looked like. I’d been to science class and seen TV pictures  and movies. It’s a big black mound with red lava flowing down, right? Our hike that day ended at a ledge in thick fog. Here was the moment. I thought, “That’s it?” Then seconds later, the fog receded, and my jaw dropped. I wasn’t looking up at a volcano, but into the belly of one. Luckily, it wasn’t active in all its glory, or it would have swallowed us whole. The sheer magnitude of its cavernous center and acid lake shattered every preconception I had. It humbled me.

What Peter, James, and John experienced trumped what I saw. They weren’t just looking up at Jesus of Nazareth, they were seeing the glory of the living God. God sent His law through Moses, His plea for man’s repentance through prophets, and now His rescue through Jesus alone. All history has one aim--to point to Christ. Jesus is the focus. Luke adds the detail that the conversation among Moses, Elijah, and Jesus centered around Jesus’ death and resurrection.

When Moses and Elijah were leaving, Peter rushed to prolong the moment. But the Father interrupted him. Peter wanted to shelter something rather than to listen and let his plans be wrecked. God was up to something that couldn‘t fit inside a tent.

We’re no different. We’ll take history and let it stand in separate pieces and yet miss the one thing God’s trying to communicate. The Transfiguration was emotional and spiritual sensory overload. But at the end, what remained was Jesus. We can't avoid Christ's glory and  the cross's reality because they don’t fit in our tent. Our tent's too small.


Discussion Questions

1. What‘s your response when God seems different than how you‘ve known Him before? Do you allow Him to shift your understanding, or do continue to stay loyal to your own way of thinking?

2. When was the last time you saw God break your limited understanding to show you the deeper truth of who He is?

3. What seemed good to Peter was not good to God. What Peter thought would bring God glory would not bring glory because it missed the Father‘s will. Where is it hard for you to listen to God and see His glory both on the mountain and in suffering?

4. Where is your view of God too small? Where are you trying to build tents?

FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

1. Read verse 5. Whose voice came from the cloud? What did He say about Jesus?

2. We are called to listen to Jesus, where do you learn about what He said?

3. Talk about other things that you know that Jesus said and why they are important.


Comments

The views expressed under “Comments” are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Watermark Community Church.
  1. Jan

    March 2, 2010 09:02 AM

    Thanks, Charla, for a nugget that fit right in the middle of what is happening in what the Lord is saying to me in this season, that my plans are too small for Him and fit only in a tent, when what He wants is to have me get my plans and fears our of the way to let Him take over and lead--for me to set my sights on His interests instead of my own. Like JP said on Sunday, He wants to give me what I need, not what I think looks good and what I think I want--which leads to being unfulfilled and disasters. Thanks for a great devo, I'd like to be covered in cake now, hope it's made with dark chocolate.

  2. Larry H

    March 2, 2010 10:20 AM

    Good job, Charla. I've never printed out a Journey to keep in my Bible, but I did for this one. Great insight. Great illustration! God bless.

  3. Ann Holford

    March 2, 2010 12:12 PM

    Wow,Charla! Great reminder that God wants to show me that He's up to something that's bigger than my plans and preconceived ideas! Thanks for the way you respond when God refocuses your reality.

  4. Marcus

    March 2, 2010 12:59 PM

    Awesome entry. What cool truths you pulled from the Transfiguration; I was encouraged by them!

  5. Marni

    March 2, 2010 01:48 PM

    "We can't avoid Christ's glory and the cross's reality because they don’t fit in our tent. Our tent's too small." That line completely sums up what I feel like the Lord is trying to teach me these days. Thank you for being a vessel of His message :)

  6. Valerie

    March 2, 2010 03:06 PM

    Love you friend! What a great devotional. I love your bio analogy of devouring God's word like a child whole heartedly devours cake and gets covered up in it! That's a picture to remember. Thanks for the reminder to let go of my preconceived ideas and grasp God's bigger plans wholeheartedly!

  7. Reggie

    March 3, 2010 05:03 AM

    "God was up to something that couldn't fit inside a tent". What a great way to state the truth that God's purposes and person are always beyond our attempts or abilities to contain them or control them. Thanks for your thoughtful devotional.

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