Sunday, February 15, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, February 15, 2026 Transfiguration Sunday

 

Worship Service for February 15, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you all.

P:      And also with you.

L:      Let us worship God.  Clap your hands all you peoples;

P:      Shout to God with loud songs of joy.

L:      For the Most High is awesome.

P:      A great sovereign over all the earth.

L:      It is good to give thanks to the Lord.

P:      To sing praises to Your name, O Most High.

 

Opening Hymn –  Take My Life            #391/597

 

Prayer of Confession

Mighty and Merciful God, You have called us to be Your people and claimed us for the service of Jesus Christ.  We confess that we have not lived up to our calling.  We have been timid and frightened disciples, forgetful of Your powerful presence and the strength of Your Spirit among us.  O God, forgive our foolish and sinful ways.  As You have chosen us, claimed us in our baptisms, strengthen us anew to choose Christ’s way in this world.  Give us Your Holy Spirit that each one in ministry may be provided with all the gifts of grace needed to fulfill our common calling; through Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      The proof of God’s amazing love is this: while we were sinners Christ died for us.  Believe the good news of the gospel: Christ died in order to redeem us back to God. 

P:      In Jesus Christ we are forgiven.  AMEN

 

Gloria Patri

Affirmation of Faith/Apostles’ Creed

I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; And in Jesus Christ His only Son our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried; He descended into hell; the third day He rose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Ghost, the holy catholic Church; the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and the life everlasting.  AMEN

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

Holy God, long ago You revealed the anointed Messiah to Peter, James, and John on the mountaintop, may You also be revealed to us; a lamp set on a lampstand.  A light that reveals our pathway.  Fill us with praise for Your Glory, overflowing with cheers and mysterious visions of peace and justice for all.  Continue to light our way; direct our course; and energize us for the journey ahead.  For we always have one more mountain to climb each and every day.  This mountain may be personal – one that we climb alone with You at our side, but it might also be communal – a mountain that we climb together for the good of the world.

We are thankful for the opportunities Lord, to represent You on earth, but often we fail to live up to the world’s expectations of us, let alone Yours.  So, in our time of prayer this morning, give us a moment to breathe deeply of Your strength, breathe deeply of Your love, breathe deeply of Your grace and mercy, so that we can truly be Your hands and feet working out Your will each and every day. 

We pray for our loved ones today….We especially lift up to you…

 

Now hear our concerns, joys, and sorrows in this moment of silence…

 

Gathered together, we say aloud the prayer Your son taught us saying...Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed be Thy name.  Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.  Give us this day our daily bread.  Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.  And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.  For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever.  AMEN.

 

Hymn –     In Christ there is no East or West                 #439/428

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Psalm 99

Second Scripture Reading – 2 Peter 1:16-21

Sermon – Walking Forward

(based on 2 Peter 1:16-21)

 

Every generation faces the same fundamental question: What voice can we trust?  Mine, yours, God, the Holy Spirit, a Grandparent, a well-known theologian, a pop artist who speaks from the heart, a guru of some sort, a therapist, or a friend.

Our world is loud with competing claims—news channels, podcasts, influencers, religious leaders, scholars, activists—all offering interpretations of reality and insisting that their perspective is the one that truly explains the world.  The result isn’t always clarity but rather confusion.  Many people no longer ask the age old question, “What is truth?” but rather, “Is anything certain, at all?”

However, this is not new.  The early church faced a very similar moment.  False teachers were rising, offering sophisticated arguments, attractive spiritual shortcuts, and teachings that made faith easier, but less faithful.  And into that confusion, the apostle Peter in is second letter to the Jewish and Gentile believers who were exiled to the greater province of Asia Minor, writes with pastoral urgency.  Near the end of his life, he wants believers to stand firm, not because they feel confident, but because their faith rests on something reliable.

In this section of 2 Peter 1:16–21, Peter leads us through a progression:

The gospel, or all the stories of Jesus and the good news about God’s salvation, healing, and teachings, is grounded in eyewitness testimony.

That testimony is confirmed by the prophetic Word from the Old Testament.

And that prophetic Word itself comes through the Spirit of God all the way back to Moses and Aaron.

And because of this progression, believers are called to live as people who walk forward in the steady light of God’s revealed truth.  They walk forward, yes – maybe into the unknown, maybe into a scary space, maybe into new territory that no one has been before.  But they have something that can guide them – the truth in Christ.

Peter begins with a clear defense: “We did not follow cleverly devised myths.”  Christianity is not a symbolic philosophy created to inspire moral behavior.  It’s not just a moral code, a system of ethics to follow.  It is the proclamation that God acted on purpose in history through Jesus Christ.  Peter insists that the apostles were not storytellers inventing spiritual legends; they were witnesses describing what they had seen.

He recalls the moment when he saw the majesty of Christ revealed and heard the voice from heaven declaring Jesus to be the beloved Son.  That experience, the one that he shared with John and James on the mountaintop when Jesus was transfigured before them, shaped everything Peter preached afterward.  The message of Christ’s glory was not a theory for Peter, it was an encounter with the truth of Christ, the glory of Christ, the wholeness and beauty of God.

This matters because faith always rests on testimony.  Every person lives by trusting someone’s witness.  We trust historians to tell us what happened before we were born.  We trust scientists to explain processes we cannot observe directly.  We trust friends to tell us what they have experienced.  

And honestly, friends, we are in times exactly like those early Christians were in.  People who twist the truth, who spin things to meet their own desires.  Who blatantly want tell us that what we know is false, who want to erase what’s been written by eyewitnesses to the truth, even spinning what we see with our own eyes.  Life itself would be impossible without relying on credible witnesses, not false ones, but credible ones.

Our own Christian faith works in the very same way.  We trust the testimony of those who encountered Christ, whose lives, sacrifices, and consistency across generations affirm the reliability of their message.  The apostles gained no wealth, no status, or comfort from their testimony; instead, many endured imprisonment, persecution, and death.  People may lie for profit, but they rarely endure suffering for what they know to be false.

In a courtroom, eyewitness testimony still carries enormous weight. When multiple independent witnesses describe the same event with consistency, their testimony shapes the outcome of the case.  The credibility of the witnesses matters.  Peter is, in effect, saying to the church: You are not hearing rumors, you are hearing sworn testimony from those who were there, who saw Christ’s glory.

For us, as modern believers, this means our faith does not depend merely on emotional experience or personal preference.  Those emotional or personal experiences are important, but our faith also stands on the historical witness of those who encountered the risen Lord.  Christianity is not sustained by wishful thinking but by the proclamation that God has acted in the real world, and what’s more that proclamation has stood the test of time for thousands of years.

After describing his extraordinary experience, Peter makes a surprising statement: “We also have the prophetic word more fully confirmed.”  Even though he witnessed Christ’s glory firsthand, Peter directs believers not just to his experience but to the rest of Scripture, as well.

         Spiritual experiences are meaningful, but they must always be interpreted through and by the Word of God.  Experience alone can sometimes mislead.  Why?  Because our emotions change, memories fade, and impressions can be mistaken.  But the written Word provides a steady reference point that does not shift with circumstance and each individual experience builds on the last.

Peter describes Scripture as “a lamp shining in a dark place.” Darkness in Scripture often represents moral confusion, spiritual blindness, and uncertainty about the future.  The world is filled with brilliance in technology and knowledge, yet many people remain uncertain about how to live, what truly matters, and what gives life meaning.  Scripture does not remove every mystery.  In fact, I’m glad it doesn’t.   Some mystery in life is important; it keeps us striving for knowledge and understanding.  But what the Scripture do is provide sufficient light for faithful living.  This image of a lamp, or the admonition that Christ gave his disciples in last week’s reading, “You are the light of the world!” suggests something important: the Word, God’s light, our own light, doesn’t illuminate the entire journey at once.  Instead, it gives enough clarity for the next faithful step.  God often guides us progressively rather than all at once, forming trust as we walk.

Anyone who has driven at night on an unlit road knows that headlights do not reveal the entire destination.  They illuminate only a limited distance ahead, yet that limited visibility is just enough to keep the journey moving safely.  If we insisted on seeing the whole route before driving, we would never begin the trip.  Scripture functions in the same way, providing the guidance needed for the next step of the journey.

Many believers become discouraged because they want God to reveal every detail of the future before they act.  Peter reminds us that God’s promise is not unlimited advance knowledge but reliable present guidance.  The lamp shines, and we walk forward – maybe just one step at a time, but we walk forward.

Peter then explains why the prophetic Word can be trusted: it did not originate in human initiative alone.  Yes, humans and our each person’s perspective were important to the telling of the story, but prophecy, he says, never came by the will of human beings alone; rather, they spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.  Like a ship moved by the wind, the writers of Scripture were guided by the Spirit so that what they wrote communicated God’s intention.

This doesn’t mean the writers became passive instruments without personality.  Like God directing their hand as they wrote.  No, each biblical book reflects the language, background, and perspective of its author who experienced God or Christ in a unique way.  Through those human voices, the Spirit ensured that God’s truth was faithfully communicated.  The result is a Word that is both fully human in expression and fully trustworthy in origin.  They beauty of it all, is that it wasn’t just in the writing of it, but also in the gathering and the decision-making process of it all that took hundreds of years to collect and create.

The same Spirit who inspired the Bible, the written Word, also works through it to transform hearts.  Scripture is not merely information to be studied but revelation that reshapes how we think, choose, and live.

Consider how a navigation system depends on a signal from beyond the device itself.  The map may be stored internally, but accurate positioning requires connection to satellites that guide the system’s direction.  Without that signal, the device may still display roads, but it cannot reliably guide the traveler.  In the same way, Scripture is not simply a collection of ancient religious reflections; it is truth breathed by the Spirit of God, providing direction that human insight alone cannot supply.

When we neglect the reading and study of Scripture, we can often find ourselves spiritually disoriented—not necessarily because we lack intelligence or understanding, but because we have disconnected from the source that provides accurate and true direction.

Peter present these truths not merely to win an argument against false teachers; he presents them to shape how we live.  If the gospel rests on trustworthy witness, if Scripture provides a steady light, and if the Spirit stands behind its message, then the appropriate response is to order our lives around that Word.

To “pay attention” to Scripture, as Peter urges, means more than occasional reading.  It means allowing the Word to set priorities, shape decisions, correct assumptions, and cultivate hope.  Many people consult Scripture only when facing crisis, but Peter calls believers to live daily under its illumination.

That is the point of today’s sermon at this time of year.  This week we enter into Lent with Ash Wednesday.  Lent is often seen as a time for giving up something.  But, I want to challenge you to set more time aside to read, reflect, and pray.  God’s Word doesn’t exist to confirm our preferences, to confirm only what we believe; it exists to transform them.

We do not yet see everything clearly, but we walk in confident expectation of the coming day when God’s purposes will be fully revealed.  As we read, study, reflect, and pray; the light of Christ makes our way forward clearer.

The lamp imagery reminds us that God’s promises are already guiding us.  Faith is sustained in us not only by remembering what God has done but also by anticipating what God will complete.  In a world crowded with persuasive voices, we are called to anchor our confidence in three realities:

The gospel rests on credible witness.

Scripture provides steady illumination.

The Spirit guarantees the divine origin and power of God’s Word.

So the invitation of this passage is simple and demanding:

Return again to God’s Word.  Listen carefully to its light.  Shape your decisions around its truth.  And keep walking forward, confident that the lamp that guides us now will one day give way to the full brightness of God’s eternal morning.

Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

God of both mountain tops and plains, giver of all good gifts.  We ask that You bless these gifts brought to You today.  May they honor our commitment to further Your work of love and justice in the world.  In Your name we pray.  Amen.

Closing Hymn –  O Jesus I Have Promised                   #388/676

Benediction

Friends, walk in the light and in truth.  See the light of Christ in every face.  Be the light of Christ to all you meet.  AMEN.

 

Postlude

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