So what can we learn about a special visit Jesus took with his three closest friends to a mountain? That’s the question. What can we learn from a special experience Jesus had with his three closest friends?
Mountains are significant in lots of ways. You and I have this all the way down to our own contemporary parlance. We talk about a mountaintop experience.
One of my favorite historical examples of this kind of a thing is from the late great David Livingston, who you may know was one of the great Christian missionaries of all time, and he was the first European to see Victoria Falls. Victoria Falls, I’ll try not to get diverted, is one of the most spectacular natural sites in the world. It’s 5,604 feet wide.
That’s over a mile wide, and it goes down over 340 feet. It is the largest falling continuous sheet of water in the world, even to this day. And one of the most striking things about it is, it’s so much water in such a little time that it sends clouds of water vapor up into the sky that you can see from miles away.
And this is Livingston, and he was the first European to ever see this, and this is from his diary.
‘Five columns of smoke arose. The whole scene was extremely beautiful.
Scenes so lovely must have been gazed upon by angels in their flight.’
Scenes so lovely must have been gazed upon by angels in their flight. It’s that kind of an experience.
So I want to look at it in some detail, and let’s figure out what happens….
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Ivanka Demchuk, "Transfiguration of the Lord", 2015 pic.twitter.com/EZ9O8PK6xv
— Solas (@solas_na_greine) February 16, 2026
