MY 19
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May 19
Matthew 17:1-4.   The Transfiguration. 
  We lately read of Jesus  conversing with his disciples respecting his sufferings. Now we read of his unveiling to them hisglory. The  prophet Isaiah foretold that his face should be more marred (or disfigured)  than the face of any man. (Is. 52:14.) No doubt, therefore, he wore usually an  aspect of care and sorrow; but on this occasion he permitted the glories of his  divine nature to shine forth through his frail earthly tabernacle. Thus he gave  us a glimpse of the glory which awaits all the saints; for when they shall see Him as he is,  they shall be like Him, and their vile bodies shall be changed into the  likeness of his glorious body.
  The mountain upon which this change in  the appearance of the Lord took place, is supposed to be Mount  Tabor, in Galilee.  This mountain stands alone, and its top is not pointed like that of most  mountains, but broad and flat, and therefore well-suited for a resting place.  Its height is not great. In one hour it may be ascended. In this retired and  lovely spot our Saviour was praying (as  Luke informs us) with three of his  disciples, when his form underwent a most glorious alteration. Have not many of  his servants in all ages experienced a like glorious change in their feelings when engaged in prayer? Has not the gloom that  oppressed them when they began to pour out their souls before God, been  succeeded by the light of heavenly day?
  The Saviour was attended on the mount  by two heavenly visitants, Moses and Elijah. Like their Lord, both these holy men, when on  earth, had fasted for forty days in the wilderness. But all their sufferings were over, while the bitterest  sufferings of Jesus were yet to come.  These prophets were well prepared, by what they had themselves endured, to  comfort their Lord in the prospect of his agonizing death. That death was the  subject of their discourse. The Saviour could obtain no consolation from his apostles; their minds were still dazzled  by hopes of earthly glory; but he could obtain the most tender sympathy from  the discourse of his glorified servants.
  The appearance of those departed saints  on the mount, is calculated to comfort us also in the prospect of death. Are we not led from  this fact, (as from many others,) to believe, that the spirits of the saints do immediately pass into glory, and that they do not wait for the general resurrection to be introduced  into the presence of Christ?
  How was it that Peter  knew that the glorious people he beheld were Moses  and Elijah? We are not informed by  what means the discovery was made. But does not this circumstance give us reason to  believe that we shall know the  saints in glory—not only our own friends,  whom we loved upon earth, but all the  saints? How delightful is the prospect! What will be the raptures of fellowship  with such a company! And yet this will be one of the lesser delights of heaven, for the presence of Jesus will be the chief. 
  Peter was delighted with the scene, and desired that it  should never be interrupted. In the warmth of his feelings, he made an unwise  request; he asked permission to prepare three tents, for the abode of Christ and his prophets. It was unwise, because Peter  himself was not fit to continue in such a scene; flesh and blood cannot inherit  the kingdom of God; we must therefore all be changed, and this mortal must put on immortality. 
  Besides this, Peter  forgot the unwelcome truths that his Master had lately revealed; he forgot that  Christ must be offered as a sacrifice for sin before  he could enter into his glory, and that his disciples must partake of his sufferings, before  they could partake of his glory. But  though the request betrayed an ignorant mind, it showed an affectionate heart.  Had not Peter's heart been full of  love to his Lord, he would not have thought it such exceeding joy to behold Christ and his saints, and to hear their conversation. No  ungodly man would feel satisfied in such company; he would feel anxious to  escape to his earthly delights, and his congenial society. He would not say,  "It is good for me to be here." It is a sign we have made one step in  religion, if we really prefer the society of the godly to any other pleasure.  Yet there may still be much that is weak and wavering in our hearts, as there  was in Peter's. It is hard to attain  to the feelings of Paul when he said,  "I reckon that the sufferings of  this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be  revealed in us." (Rom. 8:18.)

