St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church, Owings Mills MD
February 15, 2026
Year A: The Last Sunday after the Epiphany
Exodus 24:12-18
Psalm 2
2 Peter 1:16-21
Matthew 17:1-9
Everyday Mountaintop Experiences
Today we reach the Last Sunday after the Epiphany, the final Sunday before the start of Lent on Wednesday.
On Ash Wednesday, we will gather here to be reminded that we are dust and to dust we shall return.
We will receive crosses of ash to remember that someday we will die – which most of us are well aware of – but these ashes are also a sign of our total dependence on God, the God who not let go of us, never, not even in death.
Lent is a season for repentance and sacrifice.
And Lent is also a powerful call to mindfulness, a season to really pay attention to what’s going on in our lives, seeking signs of God’s presence, God’s activity, within and among us.
If you were here last Sunday, you may remember that I talked about synchronicity and keeping a synchronicity journal.
For the past couple of years, I have been keeping a journal. I’ve tried to do this a few times in the past, but this is the first time I’ve been consistent about it.
It’s not specifically a synchronicity journal but almost every day, I’ve managed to write one page. I think that’s the key. One page feels manageable, doable, to me.
Aiming for more than that, or just being open-ended about it, would be overwhelming and I would convince myself that I just don’t have the time for it and my mostly blank journal would eventually get shoved into the back of some drawer.
But I can almost always manage one page.
Partly my journal is just a record of what happened – where I went, what I saw, did, and said, and what other people said and did.
Sometimes I write about hard stuff – misunderstandings, conflict, illness, death – and other times I record joy – wonderful, often unexpected, blessings.
And occasionally I write short prayers – very short, I’ve only got one page – asking God’s help with something or offering written prayers for particular people.
And sometimes I even remember to write “thank you.”
So, if you are still looking for a Lenten practice – there’s certainly nothing wrong with giving up a bad habit or refraining from some luxury – but I think journaling can be a very powerful and beneficial practice.
Maybe because it makes me slow down and pay attention, journaling has also refreshed my memory – helping me recall things that I had buried in the past – embarrassing things, regrets, sins, yes – but the journal also helps me remember long-ago blessings that I had forgotten, especially seemingly small moments, what we might call everyday mountaintop experiences
Everyday mountaintop experiences.
At the end of last week, I made a quick trip to Jersey City to visit my parents and my sister – everything’s fine, I just hadn’t seen them in a couple of months.
As perhaps you’ve heard, I lived most of my life in Jersey City so, of course, there are so many memories there, just about everywhere I look.
But on this visit, besides seeing my family, I also spent time on the campus of St. Peter’s Prep, my high school alma mater, the school where I later taught history until I left for seminary and priesthood.
It was so good to be back, but also a little disorienting. I hadn’t been inside the school in nearly ten years, so lots of things are quite different.
And yet, despite all the changes, my mind was flooded by many memories, including two that I would call everyday mountaintop experiences.
So, when I was growing up, my family always just assumed that I would go to St. Peter’s Prep.
I guess my family really believed in me because, not to brag, but St. Peter’s was and is the best Catholic boys’ school around – it’s just a fact!
I’m not sure how much pressure I felt about the assumption I would go to St. Peter’s. I think I always just believed it, too. And I was a pretty good student, with one painful exception: math.
I always struggled with math.
I didn’t understand it – and, honestly, once we got past arithmetic, I just didn’t see the point.
I had absolutely no interest in solving for x.
But, despite my poor math skills, I was indeed accepted by St. Peter’s Prep, and those four years shaped the rest of my life.
So, here’s the first memory:
One day in my freshman year, I was pushing open one of the swinging doors that led to a stairwell when suddenly I heard the bells ringing from the Orthodox church across the street, which was a daily event.
But in that moment – I can still see it and feel it – in that moment, I thought, “I’m here. I’m really here. I go to St. Peter’s Prep.”
And I was flooded with gratitude and amazement that I had made it and it was really happening,
Everyday mountaintop experiences.
And here’s the second memory:
After I graduated, I had really hoped to return to St. Peter’s as a teacher. I thought that would just be the best job ever and if I managed to land a spot, I was sure I would stay there for the rest of my life.
(Yes, I know, I know, God is full of surprises!)
Well, it took a couple of tries but eventually I got it – I was hired to teach history.
That was big – and I was so excited.
There was just one kind of awkward, frightening situation.
Many of my teachers were still on the faculty – and, besides having to force myself to call them by their first names – that was fine.
Except there was this one math teacher…
A math teacher who, I have to say, had been pretty tough on me – a math teacher who had seen me at my academic worst – a math teacher who I was sure was thinking, “My God, this school is really going down the drain if they’ve hired the likes of Murphy!”
And then it was the first day back from summer vacation, the first faculty meeting, and before the start of business we were all chatting in the library, catching up, making introductions. At one point, from across the room my former math teacher caught my eye, and she summoned me by curling her finger.
I made my way over like I was heading to my execution.
But when I got close to her, she suddenly smiled and she said, “Good things come to those who wait.”
In that moment I just felt huge relief but as I remember it now, I think of it as a sign that we are not defined by our weaknesses and mistakes – we are more than that in God’s heart and in the hearts of others, even really tough math teachers.
Everyday mountaintop experiences.
On this last Sunday after the Epiphany, the final Sunday before Lent, we always hear the story of the Transfiguration – much more than an everyday mountaintop experience for Jesus and for his friends, Peter, James, and John.
The Transfiguration is a vision with rich symbolism:
Jesus is affirmed by the presence of two central figures of Israel’s past: Moses and Elijah.
Jesus is both transformed but still himself, a foreshadowing of Easter.
And much like at Jesus’ baptism, a voice from heaven announces: “This is my Son, my Beloved; with him I well pleased; listen to him!”
The most poignant moment in the story is when Peter wants to build dwellings for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah. Peter wants to memorialize this mountaintop experience, to hold onto it for as long as he can.
And who can blame him, right?
But, of course, that’s not the way it works.
And so, Jesus and his friends come down the mountain and begin the journey to Jerusalem and all that awaits them there.
We all know that feeling of returning to the ordinary after an extraordinary experience.
We all know what it feels like to face something frightening, to face something painful.
And yet, in the ordinary times, and even in the hard times, there are everyday mountaintop experiences: simple, beautiful, powerful moments when we can feel God’s presence, God’s activity, within and among us.
If only we remember to pay attention.
Amen.



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