To read the texts click on the texts:Prov 8:22-31; Rom 5:1-5; Jn 16:12-15
Trinity Sunday might
also be termed Mystery Sunday. This is because the focus on this Sunday is
solely on God, and God is a mystery. He meaning of a mystery is that there is
something about it that we can know, but there is also a great deal about if that
we do not and can never know. We can also know who God is through the
revelation that Jesus Christ has made as Paul points out in the second reading
of today. However, even as we do know something about God it is always
important to realize that God will continue to remain a mystery and that there
is a great deal that we do not and can never know about God because our minds
are too finite to know the Infinite God. Much as we try to understand and
define who God is, we keep in mind that we will always fall short. As a matter
of fact the more we try to understand the more we realize that we simply do not
know. This does not deter us. Rather it makes us keep wondering about the
mystery of God. We as Christians are fortunate that God has been revealed to us
in a unique manner in the person, mission, death and resurrection of Jesus and
that much of what we know of God, is through the revelation that Jesus has
made.
The first reading
from the Book of Proverbs includes part of this revelation when it introduces
Wisdom as both part of the ordering of the created universe and its delight.
Just as creation is both intrinsic to God and an expression, delight is
intrinsic to the relationship within the Trinity as well as its effect. The
reason for the choice of this reading is to show that Jesus as Wisdom is both
the love and delight of God. Toward the end of her life, Julian of Norwich
penned this short but profound exchange which can be regarded as a summary of
the first reading: “Would you know your Lord’s meaning?” she asks. “Know it
well, love was God’s meaning. Who showed it to you? Love. What did Love show
you? Love. Why did Love show it? For love.” God is love and only love.
This is also the love
that Paul speaks of in the second reading of today when he tells the Romans and
us that God’s love has been poured into our hearts because of Jesus Christ and
the Spirit that Jesus gives. This love made manifest on the Cross by Jesus
Christ is a love through which a new relationship is established between God
and the whole of creation. It is a love that is unconditional and given freely
and a love which helps us to endure all and any kind of trial and tribulation.
The ability to
undergo trials is because the Spirit that Jesus promised his disciple and gave
is a life giving Spirit. It is not something given at a moment in time but
continuously and constantly. The gift of the Spirit ensures that those who
believe in Jesus will not be left alone but will always have help and
assistance. It is an indication that God’s presence in Jesus will be with the
community of disciples always. This constant presence of the Spirit of God made
manifest in Jesus is an indication that God is not for the Christian one who is
merely Creator, but also Redeemer and Sustainer. God is Father, Son and Spirit
and Almighty God, Word made flesh and Comforter. God is past, present and
future. God was, is and will be. God is all and in all.
Even as this eternal
presence of God with us and for us is true, it is also true that three persons
in one God indicates community, unity and inclusiveness. God does not exist in
isolated individualism but in a community of relationships. In other words, God
is not a loner or a recluse. This means that a Christian in search of Godliness
must shun every tendency to isolationism and individualism. God is found in
one’s heart but also in community and in relationships. Since God is present in
the now and in the world, it is right and fitting to find God in all things and
all things in him. Thus, the ideal Christian spirituality is not that of flight
from the world away from contact with other people and society but an immersion
into the world with a view to transforming sorrow to joy, injustice to justice,
negatives to positives, darkness to light and death to life. It is a
spirituality which seeks to transform fear into love.
Since love is
Universal, there is no one who is outside the kingdom of God.
We are all connected and interconnected. Yet, though the Trinity is united it also embraces diversity. We are not required to be the same. We can be different and yet united, we can be different and yet one, we can be different and yet integrated. We are asked each of us to offer our unique gifts for the good of the community. There is unity even in diversity. There is oneness even in difference. There are three persons yet one God.
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