A 5-day per week study.
February 3– Reading Mark 9:2-13
Read and believe in Jesus.
“And He was transfigured before them, and His clothes became radiant, intensely white as no one on earth could bleach them. And there appeared … Elijah with Moses … talking with Jesus.” Mark 9:2-4
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The Gospel according to Mark 9:2-13.
Jesus and the disciples have been north of Israel, in the area of Caesarea Philippi, where Jesus gives them the hard teaching about His suffering, death, and resurrection (though they seem not to have heard the last word).
And he taught them (and the crowd) that they too would suffer and possibly lose their lives if they desired to follow Him. Sobering words!
Then Jesus said that some of them WOULD NOT see death until they saw “the kingdom of God come with power.” What did that mean? (Pentecost? Or what was about to happen to His inner three disciples on the mountain?)
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Vss. 2-3.
Six days after that amazing statement, Jesus and his men climbed Mount Hermon. Jesus left nine disciples waiting in a lower place and took Peter, James, and John higher up the mountain. Then, to their utter amazement, terror, and fascination …. Jesus was “transfigured” before them.
What does that mean?
He was “transformed” (partially) from the Jewish man in a homespun robe, into the true Eternal One clothed with the heavenly glory He shared with His Father from Eternity past. This was “the true Light that had come into the world.” It was radiant. Intensely white. No human could have bleached His clothes to shine so brilliantly.
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(I’ve always pictured this scene like some modern-day superhero, pulling his human shirt open to allow his true character to be seen. But THIS glory, which emanated from the Lord Jesus, was shining through His robes. HE WAS the Light.)
(The promise to true believers is that we will one day be “transformed” into the “likeness of Jesus.” 2 Corinthians 3:18.)
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Vss. 4-8.
This vision of Jesus would have been enough, but the disciples also saw the living Elijah and Moses talking with Him. (Luke 9:31 says they were talking to Jesus about His upcoming death.)
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(How did the disciples recognize Elijah and Moses? God revealed it to them, just as we will recognize the souls of Bible characters, family members, and even the babies we’ve lost, when we get to heaven.)
(It’s interesting that Moses and Elijah represent the whole Old Testament: The Law and The Prophets, both of which pointed to Jesus and His work of redemption, from Genesis 3:15 onwards. These two will be seen again during the final days of earth, according to Revelation 11:5-6.)
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Peter, ever with an open mouth and an opinion, spoke to Jesus, even though he didn’t know what he was saying.
“Rabbi, it is good that we are here. Let us make three tents, one for You, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”
(I’m sure we’ve all said similar nonsense in our nervousness!)
But God Almighty, the Father of Eternity, interruped Peter’s feeble words by surrounding the three holy ones in the Shekinah Cloud of His Presence. And speaking aloud,
“This is my beloved Son, LISTEN to HIM.”
(Matthew tells us that when the disciples heard this, they fell on their faces (which is the typical response of a mere human in the presence of God. (See Isaiah 6:5, Rev. 1:17)
The next thing they knew, Jesus, in his everyday clothes, was touching them, helping them up. It was once again a mountain place, and not the halls of Heaven.
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Vss. 9-13.
As they returned down to the other disciples, Jesus commanded them TO TELL NO ONE what they had seen (and that included the other nine) UNTIL He had risen from the dead.
Peter, James, and John kept this amazing incident to themselves (who would even believe them anyway?) but still questioned Jesus’s words about the resurrection.
(Hadn’t they heard his prediction that he would DIE… and be resurrected? They, like we, sometimes only hear what we WANT to hear, and they wanted to hear about Jesus setting up His Kingdom here and now.)
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Also on the climb down, the disciples asked Jesus about Elijah. “Why do the scribes say that first Elijah must come?”
This had been a conversation before, and indeed, the Jews from Jerusalem had even asked John the Baptist if HE was Elijah. Jesus told the three that “Elijah HAS come, and they did to him whatever they pleased, as it was written of him.” ***
(NOTE: *** John’s murder “typically” fulfilled the fate that was intended for the OT Elijah, although it had not been “actually” prophesied. The vile, murderous Queen Jezebel vowed to kill Elijah (1 Kings 19:1-2), but God had other things for Elijah to do. However, when the vile, murderous Queen Herodias vowed to kill John the Baptist, her equally evil husband, Herod, killed the prophet.)
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Luke 1:17 does say that John the Baptist came, “in the Spirit and Power of Elijah,” if they would accept that.
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