1 And he said to them, “I guarantee you, there are some standing here who will not experience death until they see that the kingdom of God has come with power.” 2 Then, six days later, Jesus took Peter and James and John with him, and led them up a high mountain apart, by themselves. And he was transfigured before them, 3 and his clothes became dazzling white, such as no one on earth could bleach them. 4 And Elijah with Moses appeared before them, discussing something with Jesus.
already – not yet
Jesus wasn’t pointing His disciples toward some distant, end‑of‑the‑age moment when He spoke of the kingdom coming in power. Mark wants us to see that Jesus was speaking of something much nearer, something they would witness with their own eyes. On the mountain, when His face blazed like the sun and His clothes radiated with unearthly brightness, the disciples saw the kingdom embodied in a Person. The glory they expected to arrive someday was already standing in front of them. The vision included Moses and Elijah, but even their presence only served to highlight the One at the center. Whatever they discussed with Jesus, it was not about their greatness or their ministries. The Law and the Prophets were bowing to the One who fulfills them. Jesus is the already.
Our lives, however, are filled with “not yets.” We wait for healing, for clarity, for justice, for restoration. And above all, we wait for Christ’s return, the moment when everything broken will be made whole and every one of us will be reshaped by His glory. But the Transfiguration reminds us that we don’t have to live only in the waiting. We can begin to be formed by the future now. When we shape our lives around the Jesus revealed in Scripture—when we follow His way, love as He loved, and give ourselves to the work of reaching people with His grace—we begin to live out the kingdom that has already arrived in Him.
When the vision faded, the disciples looked around and saw no one except Jesus. That is the heart of it. He is enough.
Lord, teach us to shape our lives around Jesus—the already—and let His glory form us even as we wait for the not yet.