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    08.31.08 Proper 17 Exodus 3:1-15 On May 31, 1792, a little congregation in Nottingham, England heard a shoemaker preach about...
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Can I Get A Witness?
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Can I Get A Witness?
By Greg Hollifield

2 Peter 1:16-21

Postmodern sages would have us believe that certainty is only an illusion in the minds of fanatics and fools. Despite such aspersions, the human mind continues to seek after certainty because the human heart craves security. Certainty begets security.

Because we live in such uncertain times, we are prone to feel insecure. Every change of color in our National Homeland Security alert system ratchets up our sense of insecurity. We increasingly find ourselves interpreting the world by a hermeneutic of suspicion.

Our personal psychological make-up further compounds feelings of insecurity by predisposing some of us to doubt. Bitter experiences have conditioned others among us to the same end.

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God understands the desire for certainty. Doubts don’t offend Him. I wish a seasoned saint had told me as much in my early days of following Christ. Like many new converts, I vacillated between confidence one minute and suspicion the next.

How did I know for sure that what I felt, what I believed, was real? Maybe what I took to be the Spirit’s assurance that I was a child of God was really just my mind calming anxieties wrought by a belief in superstition and myths. How could I know for sure?

The Bible doesn’t give irrefutable proof for the claims of the Christian faith. (Otherwise, it could no longer be called “faith.”) The Bible does, however, substantiate many of its claims with a preponderance of evidence.

At the core of the Christian faith is belief in the deity of Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus Himself encouraged such a belief and often provided evidence for it. To Peter, James, and John He gave special proof when He allowed them to witness His Transfiguration.

Jesus’ Transfiguration verified His identity.

We first read about this monumental event in Matthew 17:1-9. (Read the text.) All the glory Jesus manifested before His incarnation, and all the glory He will manifest at His return, was manifested on that first century mountaintop. As if the visual splendor of the moment were not enough, the voice of the Father sounded forth the praise of His Son.

Years later Peter recalled the event and what it meant for him as well as us. (Read 2 Peter 1:16-18.)

Had there been any shred of doubt in Peters mind about Jesus’ identity, even following his wonderful profession, “Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,” in Matthew 16:16, the Transfiguration erased it. Peter knew that he had not followed “cunningly devised fables.” Furthermore, he knew that neither he nor the apostolic band had preached such fables. They were eyewitnesses to Christ’s divine glory.

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