Worship Guide for February 15, 2026

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Transfiguration in a Disenchanted Age

The Reverend Mark Sutherland

Last Sunday after the Epiphany

loandbeholdbible.com

Sermon Audio

Sermon Text 

We stand at a hinge in the liturgical year. Behind us lies the season of Epiphany with its moments of illumination. Ahead of us stretches the long road to Jerusalem and the austerity of Lent. At this pivotal point in the Jesus narrative, we are given two mountain stories: Moses on Sinai and Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration. Two peaks. Two luminous encounters. Two moments when heaven and earth appear to overlap.

Across the wide sweep of Scripture—from Moses to Jesus—we can trace not a change in God, but a deepening in human awareness of God. For Moses, God is encountered “up there” and “out there”—in thunder and cloud, in fire and trembling mountain. God commands wind and sea. The divine presence is external, overwhelming, transcendent.

By the first century, something has shifted. The prophets speak of a law written on the heart. The psalmists cry from the depths of inward experience. By the time Jesus appears, God is no longer encountered only on mountains but within conscience, compassion, and community.

The movement is from “up there,”
to “in here,”
to “between us.”

This is not a movement from transcendence to its absence, but from transcendence as distance to transcendence as depth.

Charles Taylor describes a similar shift in Western consciousness. In A Secular Age, he speaks of the transition from an enchanted world to a disenchanted one. In 1500, belief in God in the West was nearly unavoidable. The world felt charged with spiritual presence. Today, belief can feel implausible. Reality appears calculable, controllable, confined.

In an enchanted age, transcendence saturates reality. In a disenchanted age, reality is saturated with immanence. We have descended from expansive connectivity into increasing isolation.

And yet the hunger for transcendence persists. We binge stories of magical realism. We attend concerts like revivals.
We chase peak experiences. We curate spiritual moments. The longing has not disappeared. The human spirit still yearns for more than what can be measured.

On the mountain of Transfiguration, Peter sees Jesus radiant, his face shining, his clothes dazzling. Moses and Elijah appear. The veil between material and spiritual reality thins. Time itself seems to bend. In response, Peter cries out:

“Lord, it is good for us to be here. Let us build three dwellings.”

He wants to contain the moment, to hold it in place, to domesticate transcendence within the structures of control.

But the cloud descends. The voice speaks. And just as suddenly, it is over.

As they descend, Jesus orders silence: “Tell no one about the vision until the Son of Man has been raised.”

Illumination and secrecy. Now—and not yet.

But why secrecy?

Because revelation without readiness can distort.
Because glory without the cross becomes fantasy.
Because peak experience is never the destination—it is only ever a preparation.

The mountain is not a residence. It is a revelation.

The Transfiguration is a moment when the spiritual penetrates the material, allowing Jesus and his disciples to see more clearly the path downward and onward.

We often imagine transcendence as altitude. But altitude is a primitive religious metaphor.

When Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. declared, “I’ve been to the mountaintop,” no one assumed he had taken a hike. The mountain had become a metaphor for moral clarity, prophetic vision, the ability to see beyond present injustice toward promised possibility.

Transcendence is not about geography. It is about perception. And here lies the paradox for us in 2026: in a disenchanted age, transcendence is not found by escaping immanence. It is discovered within it. Not somewhere else. Right here.

The distinction between joy and happiness helps illuminate this.

Happiness is self-focused.
Joy is self-transcending.

Happiness asks, “How do I feel?”
Joy asks, “Who can I share this with?”

Joy and grief are closer than we imagine. At births and weddings, at funerals and memorials, we are carried beyond ourselves. In deep grief, we transcend the self just as surely as in deep joy. We are bound to others in shared vulnerability. Both joy and grief rupture the illusion that we are alone on center stage. Both are moments of transcendence that reconfigure our experience at the very heart of immanence.

In recent days, the people of Minneapolis have experienced something that, in its own way, bears the shape of transfiguration. Moments of crisis have catalyzed protest. Protest has coalesced into collective resistance to power. In those moments, something happens “between us.”

Strangers stand together.
Voices rise in chorus.
Fear and courage intertwine.
Grief and determination occupy the same streets.

No one would call such days “happy.” Yet they are transcendent. In the face of injustice, people move beyond private preoccupation. They step off the lonely center stage of individualism and into a web of shared vulnerability and resolve. Community, no longer theoretical, becomes embodied.

Ordinary streets become sites of moral clarity. Immanence becomes the arena of transcendence.

Not dazzling light on a mountaintop,
but illumination in the midst of pain.
Not escape from history,
but deeper engagement within it.

This, too, is transfiguration!

The disciples glimpse glory. But they must descend the mountain back into ordinary existence. They have glimpsed who Jesus is. But they must walk with him toward who he must become.

The Transfiguration is a hinge moment. Behind it lie teaching and healing in Galilee. Ahead lies the costly solidarity of Jerusalem.

Behind us is the light of Epiphany. Ahead lies the demanding honesty of Lent that will strip away illusion, confront us with suffering, and challenge our need for distraction.

But today we are given a glimpse—so that when darkness comes, we remember that Transcendence is real, not as escape, but as empowerment to live in the present moment – to face its challenges and to embrace its opportunities.

The thread that binds Moses, Jesus, Charles Taylor, Martin Luther King Jr., Minneapolis, joy and grief together is this:

Transcendence is not about leaving the world.
It is about seeing the world differently.

It is not about climbing higher.
It is about loving deeper.

It is not found in isolated bliss.
It is found in relational courage.

God is not only “up there.”
Not only “in here.”
But “between us.”

In the space where we risk connection. Where grief becomes solidarity. Where solidarity transforms hope, Jesus does not remain on the mountain. He touches the frightened disciples and says, “Get up. Do not be afraid.” Then he sets his face toward Jerusalem—toward suffering, service, and a love that does not retreat.

“Listen to him,” the voice from the cloud commands.

And what does he teach?

Blessed are the poor.
Blessed are the peacemakers.
Love your enemies.
Lose your life to find it.

This is transcendence within immanence. Glory revealed in vulnerability.

In a disenchanted age, we are tempted either to chase spectacle or to surrender to cynicism. The gospel offers a third way.

Attend to the relational space.
Stand together in grief.
Serve in love.
Resist injustice.
Practice courage.

Transcendence has not vanished. It has simply moved.

Not up there.
Not someday.
But here.
Now.
Between us.

The mountain shows what is possible.
The descent shows who we are becoming.

As we enter Lent in 2026—with political fractures, digital distraction, ecological anxiety, and spiritual weariness—the invitation is not to escape upward. It is to descend with purpose to discover that even in a disenchanted age, the world still burns with unconsumed fire—if we have eyes to see and ears to listen.

And so we listen.
We rise.
We walk down the mountain—together!

Prayers of the People

Last Sunday after the Epiphany

15 February 2026

 

The response to the bidding, “God made visible,” is “Hear us, we pray”

Jesus, God’s living Word, on the holy mountain, the Father reaffirmed the fullness of your identity as Son and Savior. May your transfiguration on the mountain top transfigure us to resist evil and to stand with the oppressed by proclaiming the gospel of our Savior in acts of service and costly witness.  God made visible: hear us, we pray.

We pray for our nation in a time of grave instability. Hear us, Lord, as we decry the perilous state of the Republic:

  • Where paramilitary forces are no longer subject to Constitutional restraint and legal accountability, as they openly oppress law-abiding communities.
  • Where summary arrest, detention, and deportation are sanctioned on the basis of racial profiling.
  • Where the ugly face of corruption is practiced in plain sight.
  • Where sycophancy has replaced sound government, incompetence is masked by loyalty, and cruelty is celebrated through the abuse of Justice and Federal law enforcement.

May we have the courage to embrace non-violent resistance through actions, standing as witnesses to the evils of this time.                         [Pause for the count of 5]          God made visible: hear us, we pray. 

We pray for the Church and her life: for Sarah, 146th Archbishop of Canterbury; for Sean, Presiding Bishop, and for Nicholas, our bishop; for the brave witness of Hosam, Archbishop of Jerusalem. We give thanks for Pope Leo’s courageous and inspiring leadership, and we pray for him along with Bartholomew, Ecumenical Patriarch. We continue to pray for a witness and commitment to service and nonviolent resistance by all Christian leaders.   God made visible: hear us, we pray. 

In a world of pressing needs, we decry Israeli destabilization in Lebanon and Syria, amidst continued Settler violence against Palestinian communities in the West Bank. We continue to cry out against the utter degradation of the people of Gaza, and we decry the collusive silence of our leaders. We echo the age-old prayer, let peace with justice come to the Holy Land, for without justice, there can be no peace. [pause for the count of 5]

We pray for the people of Iran as their protest involves the ultimate sacrifice of their lives in resistance to the yoke of oppression. We decry our transactional abandonment of them in their hour of need. We remember the plight of the Sudanese people, pawns in a wider Middle East power play.

We continue to pray for a negotiated peace in Ukraine that honors a commitment to Ukrainian sovereignty and future self-determination. [pause for the count of 5] God made visible: hear us, we pray. 

We remember the Earth and the threat of climate change, praying for the strengthening of emergency services and necessary infrastructure to meet the challenge of climate instability. We remember communities suffering severe cold without power following the recent winter storms. We pray for others in the path of wildfires and rising sea levels.                                                  God made visible: hear us, we pray. 

We pray for all in need and in trouble: for those whose strength is failing through ill health; whose spirits are flagging through depression; whose determination is being sapped through addiction; that they might know God’s comforting presence and healing. God made visible: hear us, we pray.

We remember with love those who have asked for our solidarity in prayer: Holden, Ellen, Bill, Sam, Liz, Jill, Mark, Elke and those we name. [pause]

We pray for our own needs, together with those nearest and dearest to us, remembering those celebrating birthdays this week: David Blake, Eleanor Summerhill, Merrill Hastings, Donald Cunnigen, Murielle Adadevoh [pr. uh-DAD-uh-voh], Miah Parker, Kim Worrell, and Hope Dubois.

We give thanks for the birth last Tuesday of Remy James Davies, grandson of Tony Cottone. God made visible: hear us, we pray.

Rejoicing in the fellowship of so great a cloud of witnesses, we pray for those we love but see no longer, especially those we name [pause]. We pray for all who grieve. God made visible: hear us, we pray.

 Celebrant adds a concluding prayer.