Portland, Oregon Church  -  Affiliated with the Intercontinental Church of God and the Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association

SUBJECT:  The Transfiguration:  Moses, Elijah and Jesus Matthew 17—Mark 9 and Luke 9

 

QUESTION:  Don’t these portions of scripture prove that men go to heaven after death?

 

ANSWER:

 

No, they do not.

 

This is a common question.  As a means of offering a perspective, let us consider what man can do:

 

Humans have invented a number of technologies and practices that portray people and events of the past.  Let us look a just a few.

 

1. Reenactments on stage

2. Photographs of the actual event

3. Documentary video of the event.

4. Live recording (video) of the event as it took place.

5. Home movies.

6. Movies, especially historically set movies.
7. Real-life exhibits of past or future events.  Examples: Titanic exhibits and Star Trek Experience exhibit.

8. Holograms--3 dimensional videos

9. Holidecks--an idea in science fiction now but deemed possible by scientist in the future.

 

Man has been able to create, very convincingly in many cases, images of real events or persons.  With the new technology of Holograms and Holidecks experts feel that your mind will be absolutely convinced of what it is seeing.  It will be possible for you to actually be "present" at a real event that was video taped with this technology and processed into a Hologram.  You will stand or sit while the Hologram projection starts and you will witness the event as if you were there.  In some lab tests, this has already been done.

 

Now project this out (if time were to continue) and imagine what man will be able to do in 100 more years of technology in this field.

 

Now if man can do this, imagine now what God can do.  Is it out of the question that God, with all the power in the Universe, could create a very convincing 3 dimensional vision that mortal men would think is real?  I believe He can and could.

 

Think about it for a moment.  After we are all in the Kingdom wouldn't you think it appropriate and probable that God would show us the history of mankind in vision, the way history really was?  Don't you think that at Passover/Lord’s Supper time, He would show us in vision, the actual crucifixion?  It seems, based on all the visions we read about in the Bible, that God would continue this practice and let us see what really took place in history and maybe even what is going to happen in the future. 

 

Now when Jesus took Peter, James and John to the high mountain and they saw Moses and Elijah, was it a vision?

 

Notice Matthew 17:1-9.  Now the event is described in verses 1-8 but when they are done and coming down from the mountain, read verse 9...

 

Matthew 17:9

And as they came down from the mountain, Jesus charged them, saying, Tell the vision to no man, until the Son of man be risen again from the dead.

 

Note:  See how He says, "Tell the vision to no man".  You can only conclude that if Jesus, who was there and made it happen, calls it a vision, then it must have been a vision.  It seems almost strange that man is willing to assume that God has enough power to resurrect these two men and make them appear for a while but does not have enough power to present a vision to the witnesses.  The following excerpt is taken from the booklet, "Where are Enoch and Elijah" by Herman Hoeh:

 

Was Elijah on the Mount?

 

The only remaining texts that puzzle people are those relative to the appearance of Moses and Elijah on the Mount of Transfiguration with Jesus. The record of the event is found in Matthew 17:1-9; Mark 9:2-10; Luke 9:28-36.

 

Leaving the mountain, Jesus told his disciples: "Tell the vision to no man (Matthew 17:9)." A vision is not a material reality but a supernatural picture observed by the eyes.

 

Moses died, and was buried (Deuteronomy 34:5-6). Both he and Elijah were still dead in their graves, but in vision both they and

Jesus were seen in the glory of the resurrection-an event to which Moses and Elijah have not yet attained (Hebrews 11:39).

The vision was granted the disciples after Jesus had spoken of the glory of immortality in the coming kingdom.

 

How plain the Bible is! Elijah is dead in the dust of the earth awaiting the resurrection of the just. Elijah, some years after being removed in the whirlwind, went to the grave, but will rise again to live forevermore!     ---end quote---

 

Notice also in Matthew 17:

 

In verse 5 a cloud appears and they hear a voice.  In verse 6, they fall on their faces, eyes in the dirt...not looking.  In verse 8 they life up their eyes and Moses and Elijah are gone.  Where did they go?  Answer:  the vision was ended.

 

Notice the commentary on Matthew 17:9

 

Matthew 17:9

And as they came down from the mountain, Jesus charged them, saying, Tell the vision to no man, until the Son of man be risen again from the dead.

 

 [Tell the vision to no man] This vision was designed particularly to confirm them in the truth that he was the Messiah. While he was with them it was unnecessary that they should relate what they had seen. When he was crucified they would need this evidence that he was the Christ. Then they were to use it. There were three witnesses of it as many as the law required <Deuteronomy 17:6; Hebrews 10:28>, and the proof that he was the Messiah was clear. Besides, if they had told it then, it would have provoked the Jews and endangered his life. His time was not yet come.

 

 [Vision] Sight; appearance. What they had seen on the mount.

 

 [Charged them] Gave them a commandment.

 

The sole design of this transfiguration was to convince them that he was the Christ; that he was greater than the greatest of the prophets; that he was the Son of God.

 

Mark adds <Mark 9:10>, "they kept that saying with themselves, questioning one with another what the rising from the dead should mean." The Pharisees believed that the dead would rise, and there is no doubt that the disciples believed it; but their views were not clear, and, in particular, they did not understand what he meant by his rising from the dead. They do not appear to have understood, though he had told them <Mark 12:40> that he would rise after three days.  ~from Barnes' Notes

 

Notice something else:  This event is often referred to as the "Transfiguration".  Question is, who was transfigured?  Answer:  Clearly the only one transfigured was Jesus.  The scripture also clearly indicates that the other two "appeared".  Read the scriptures:

 

Matthew 17:1-3

1 And after six days Jesus taketh Peter, James, and John his brother, and bringeth them up into an high mountain

apart,

2 And was transfigured before them: and his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light.

3 And, behold, there appeared unto them Moses and Elias talking with him.

 

Note: Jesus was transfigured in verse 2 and in verse 3 Moses and Elijah appear.  Notice the Strongs Concordance on the key word, "transfigure":

 

3339  metamorphoo (met-am-or-fo'-o);

 

from 3326 and 3445; to transform (literally or figuratively, "metamorphose"):

 

KJV-- change, transfigure, transform.

 

The verse does not specifically say that Moses or Elijah were transfigured; only that they "appeared".  A proper term for a vision.

 
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Portland, Oregon Church  -  Affiliated with the Intercontinental Church of God and the Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association