Reflection for the Second Sunday of Lent Transfiguration
- Claire Henning
- Feb 25
- 3 min read

Carl Bloch, The Transfiguration of Christ, 1872
Jesus invites Peter, James, and John to come away with Him, stepping out of ordinary life and into a place of sacred encounter. On the mountain, they are given a glimpse of who Jesus truly is. His glory is revealed. This moment of clarity feels complete, as though everything finally makes sense.
Peter’s response is deeply human. He wants to build tents and hold onto what feels holy, safe, and certain. We recognize that desire. When faith feels clear and steady, when God’s presence feels close and reassuring, we want to preserve it. When our life, the Church or the world feels complicated or divided, mountaintop moments can be a refuge.
But the Gospel reminds us that clarity is not meant to replace faith. The vision fades. The cloud lifts. Moses and Elijah disappear. What remains is Jesus, and the road that leads back down the mountain. The Transfiguration does not remove the disciples from what lies ahead. It strengthens them to face it, to return to daily life and to remain in communion with one another.
The other readings echo this same invitation. Abram is asked to leave what is familiar and step forward in trust, without knowing where the journey will lead. Paul encourages Timothy to remain faithful even when following Christ brings hardship, reminding him that strength comes not from us, but from the grace God has already given. Again and again, God leads people forward, not around difficulty, but through it, asking for trust rather than certainty.
Lent teaches us that when the path becomes uncertain, communion in Christ is not lived out in mountaintop moments, but in trust and fidelity. Faithfulness is lived in the descent, where differences remain and understanding is incomplete. It is there that God meets us, inviting us back to the table and asking us to remain there, not in certainty, but in love.
Faith-Sharing Questions
Returning to the daily table is an act of trust. It is the quiet decision to stay engaged, to listen more than to speak, and to believe that, even when the path becomes tiresome or steep, God is still at work among us.
1. Personal: Can you recall a moment or a time when you felt especially close to God? If so, what is/was that like for you?
2. Church: If we all return to the same table and hear the same Gospel, yet come away believing different things, what might that reveal about how we listen, what we carry from our daily lives, and how we choose to stay engaged with each other as Church?
3.World: Where do I feel pressure in the world around me to react quickly, take sides, or speak sharply instead of responding with patience and restraint?
This Week’s PracticeThis week, pay attention to one moment when you feel the urge to pull back into what feels safe or familiar. In that moment, pause and gently pray, “Jesus, help me to listen.” Then, with trust, choose to stay present at the table, open to God’s grace at work in you and in others.
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Thank you so much for this reminder of what was illuminated and discussed around the table of our Lenten faith-sharing group. I believe it is there that God meets us, inviting us back to the table and asking us to remain—not in certainty, but in love. When I wonder whether I will make it to the 8 a.m. faith-sharing group, it is often uncertain, but what brings me to the table is love. God bless, love Maria xxx