March 3, 2019 – Transfiguration
Text: Deuteronomy 34:1-12
Dear Friends in Christ,
There
is some thought that near the moment of your death your entire life will flash
before your eyes. We don’t have much to
back this up, obviously, but what if this happened to Moses?
He
floats in the Nile River. Pharaoh’s
daughter rescues him. He lives as a
prince in Egypt. He murders a man and
goes into hiding. For forty years, he is
in the wilderness. He marries and starts
a family. At age 80 he sees a burning
bush and the Lord tells Moses he is going to lead his people, the Israelites.
He
utters the famous line to the Egyptian Pharaoh, “Let my people go.” He watches the ten plagues and the hardening
of Pharaoh’s heart. He oversees the
instructions for the Passover and he leads 2 million Israelites through the Red
Sea with the Egyptian army drowning behind them. This fascinating life is only getting
started.
The
Lord speaks on a mountain in a cloud and a fire and gives to Moses the Ten
Commandments. He brings God’s written
Word down to the people.
We
have the golden calf and Moses restraining the wrath of God. The construction of the tabernacle, the
anointing of Aaron and his sons to serve as priests and the glory of the Lord
filled the temple.
He
sent spies into the Promised Land. The
people listened to those filled with fear so the Lord gave them forty years of
wandering in the wilderness. Forty years
of people whining. Forty years of people
complaining to Moses. Forty years of
protection and food and water. Forty
years for Moses to write Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and
Deuteronomy. There were also forty years
of funerals. None of the men who came
out of Egypt would make it to the Promised Land, only their children. Now we come to the end, the edge of the
Jordan River, only one left to die – Moses at 120 years of age but “his eye was
undimmed and his vigor unabated.” (v. 7)
Other
than Jesus and King David, we know more about Moses than any other person in
Scripture. His life was stunning. They should make movies about him! He is a picture of Law and Gospel. He stands on the precipice of the Promised
Land but realizes that . . .
“THE
BEST IS YET TO COME”
Don’t
we all at times do what we just did with Moses – look back over our life. We are probably not going to make 120 or lead
2 million people or be given God’s Law but as we contemplate our past don’t we
see what Moses sees – the Lord’s Blessings.
In our wanderings, don’t we see His leading? In our complaining, don’t we see His
providing? In our times of need, doesn’t
the Lord speak to us? When we ponder the
past, live the present and face the future, do we agree with Moses, the best is
yet to come?
Look
at Moses. 120 and full of life, standing
on Mount Nebo across the Jordan. The
Lord puts before him the land of promise – because Moses is a Christian and
because the Lord intends for Moses to die as he lived, with faith and hope.
Moses
is not looking behind, he is looking ahead.
He looks across and sees the mountains of Judah. There is Bethlehem where Jesus is born. Flowing below him is the Jordan River where
Jesus will be baptized. There is the wilderness
of Judea where the devil will tempt Jesus for forty days and nights. To the north is Galilee where Jesus will
teach, preach, call his disciples.
Further north is the mountain where Moses will stand with Jesus and
Elijah and the disciples and he will finally be in the Promised Land.
There
in the hills directly in front of Moses is Jerusalem. Jesus will suffer and die here. He will be lifted on a cross, taking God’s
wrath in our place, in Moses’ place, in the place of all sinners. There, too, is the grave that will be
empty. Look the Mount of Olives where
Jesus will ascend to the Father to rule and reign for all eternity. Yes, Moses, the best is yet to come. Jesus will return and there will be the
resurrection of the body and the life everlasting for those who believe.
Moses
doesn’t relish in his past, the victory over Pharaoh, the dry land miracle, the
glory of the mountain, being the leader of so many for so long. As Moses dies he is looking to the promises
God has set before him.
Is
the best yet to come? The Lord drew us
out of the waters of Holy Baptism. He
rescued us with the blood of His Son. He
is with us in joys and sorrows according to his kindness and mercy. When we come to the end, He points us to his
unwavering promises. We look to Jesus
who was crucified and raised for us and who will return to take us to be where
He is in heaven.
As
you stand on the mountain today and see what is in front of you – the best is
yet to come. The resurrection of the
body and life everlasting await. The
Lord’s promises will carry us forward.
Hello Moses. Hello Abraham. Hello St. Paul. Hello loved ones. Then we see Jesus at last…face-to-face.
Amen.