(Homily for the Holy Trinity Sunday Year C)
“Just… as the three angles of a triangle do not make three triangles but one, … so too in some much more mysterious way, there are three Persons in God and yet only one God” (Fulton J. Sheen, The Divine Romance)
After we
have celebrated in Advent and Christmas the merciful love of the Father who
sent his Son to, in and for the world; in Lent and Easter we celebrated the
infinite goodness of the Son, who gave his life for us, and after celebrating
the feast of the Pentecost, the coming of the Holy Spirit, sent by the Father
and the Son, in order to bring to fulfilment the wonderful works of our
salvation, in today’s liturgy we celebrate the three divine Persons together
(Father, Son, Holy Spirit). Indeed, the reality of the three divine Persons is
not a fairy tale, rather a certainty of what has been revealed to us. Even
though it has been revealed, it still remains a mystery. The revelation of our God who in essence is one, and manifests Himself
in three Persons is beyond human logic and calculations. The Holy Trinity is the mystery that distinguishes our religion from others (the Jews adored only one God: Jahvè, the pagans adore
many divinities, without unity), but in
ours there is unity in distinction. The Holy Trinity is not just the
perception in three aspects (Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier) that we
sometimes have of God, more than that, the
Trinity does not only refer to human viewing, but to God himself, to His ways
of being God. The Holy Scripture actually made us to understand that
the Father is God (Phil.1:2), the
Son is great God (Titus 2:13) and
that the Holy Spirit is God (Acts 5:3-4). The God revealed by Jesus Christ is not a distant and
inaccessible divinity that has nothing to do with the contingent humanity. He
does not sit unconcerned on
His eternal throne, rather He condescends to mankind. Even
though we may not understand God fully as Trinity, we do experience Him as
Trinity daily (in the sign of the cross etc.). God is not only believable, He
can be experienced (Taste and See). In the words of Pope St. John Paul II, “God,
in his deepest mystery, is not a solitude, but a family, since he has in
himself fatherhood, sonship, and the essence of the family, which is love (the
Holy Spirit).”
In that bid, I
would like to introduce the Holy Trinity in this reflection in two broad
terms: economic and immanent Trinity, taking inspiration from some
of the modern theologians. Economic Trinity is how God has revealed
himself to us as Father, Son and Holy Spirit (through His actions in
the world) in the history of salvation. And many a times when we talk about the
Holy Trinity, we tend to do so, limiting ourselves to the economic Trinity, as
revealed to us. But more than that, the Holy Trinity is also to be considered
from the point of view of how God is in himself, God in his essence
is One but manifests himself in three Persons: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and
that is immanent Trinity. The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is a mystery
beyond and above us, for it has to do with the ontological aspects of the
Trinity (Immanent) and at the same time it is a mystery that
has been revealed to us and it is our way of knowing that God is present in
Human history (Economic). Be that as it may, it behooves us to underscore that this
doctrine does not explain nor define God, because as St. Augustine opined
"si comprehendis non est Deus".
In another writing of his St. Augustine exclaimed "if you see love, you
have seen the Trinity". “God is love” (1Jn. 4:16) as
revealed in the New Testament, and love cannot remain closed up in itself, and
the God revealed by Jesus Christ is Trinity because is love. Jesus said to
Philip, “I and the Father are one” (Jn.10:30) and no doubt the
Holy Spirit is part of this oneness. Whether considered from the
dimension of transcendency or immanency, the central word that dovetails into
God’s essence and manifestation is LOVE. The Trinity is therefore a sign of a harmonious unity
existent in God, which should equally be existent among God's children. The central message of today's doctrine is
that of Love (Father-Lover, Son-Loved and Holy Spirit-Love).
The word Trinity (tri-unity)
was coined by Tertullian about the third century in the bid to establish the
distinct Persons in one God. The Scriptures in no small way, buttress the
reality of the Trinity with some biblical quotations: In Genesis 18: 1-2: God appeared to Abraham at the sacred tree of
Mamre. As Abraham was sitting at the entrance during the hottest part of the
day, he looked up and saw three men. God came to Abraham in the Trinitarian
form. In Isaiah 6:8: “Whom
shall I send and who will go for US?” Here we can discover God the Father
making a representational request on behalf of the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Likewise in Matthew 28:19: “Go
therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.” Jesus Christ, the Son
undoubtedly is God: John 1:1: “In
the beginning was the WORD, the WORD was with God and the WORD was God. The
Holy Spirit is equally God: Genesis 1:2:
“The Spirit of God was brought over the waters” This was before God began
active creation. The Holy Spirit has been with the Godhead from eternity. Hence
the Holy Spirit is God. In John 14:26:
“The Counsellor whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you
everything”. The Greek word perichoresis (derived
from the Greek traditional wedding dance) will help us to have a clue of how
God is Trinity. It is the reciprocal com-penetration of being among the
three divine Persons, it is like the bond that unites the three Persons in
a mutual indwelling. For instance, in Jesus’ priestly prayer: “Father, the hour
has come. Glorify your Son, that your Son may glorify you.” (Jn. 17:1);
and again Jesus says referring to the Holy Spirit, “he will glorify me” (Jn.16:14).
Thus, the Holy Spirit glorifies the Son, the Son glorifies the Father and the
Father glorifies the Son.
Similarly,
no matter how hard we try, we remain limited in the endeavor to understand this
mystery in toto, what is important for us is not even to understand Him, rather to
recognize how he manifests Himself, what are the signs of his presence and
action, for God is experienced as going out of himself, in revelation and
and redemptive actions. And it is on this, no doubt that the three readings of
today try to give us some indications:
The first
reading (Pro. 8:22-31) speaks of the divine wisdom orchestrated in
the self-disclosure of God. In the wisdom literature and in the Old
Testament generally, Yahweh is a God who
exists in himself, who also goes out of himself in his revealing and saving
actions, and he as well brings men to respond in and with faith to his
saving action. Here, the wisdom of God is portrayed in His going out of
himself. As such, the hymn of the eighth chapter of Proverbs is fundamental in
the understanding of the divine wisdom. More than in any other passage, Proverbs 8 assigns an active and subjective
role to wisdom in creation. Therein, wisdom is personified for “she was
present when God creates”. The liturgy
of today therefore, suggests a contemplation of the Father, the fountain and
origin of all, who conceived the design of spreading His love on the
creatures that are capable of knowing and loving him, and he realized this, by
the creation of man in his own image and likeness and the universe at the
service of man. On this wisdom St. Paul later affirmed: “It is of the
mysterious wisdom of God that we talk, the wisdom that was hidden, which God
predestined to be for our glory before the ages began” (1Cor. 2:7). Besides, the
pertinent question as far as this passage is concerned could be: where is the
trinitarian import in this passage? And we find it at the beginning of the
passage: “The Wisdom of God speaks: Yahweh created me, first-fruit of his
fashioning…From eternity, I was firmly set” (vv.22-23). Indeed, before the beginning of the world, we see at
God’s side, a mysterious reality, the Wisdom that speaks of God and with God,
and assists Him (God) while He creates. St. John in his prologue identified
this mystery, calling it Wisdom Word: “In the beginning was the Word: the Word
was with God and the Word was God…Through him all things came into being” (Jn. 1:1.3). This opens the window to
the revelation on the Trinity.
In the second
reading (Rm. 5:1-5), St. Paul talks about the triadic structure as
revealed in the experience of God. For God is the origin of our redemption
in Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Spirit who pours the love of God into our
hearts we come to experience the redemptive action. However, St. Paul takes it
to a different dimension, for he departs from the consideration of man, created
in the image of God, but who has lost his friendship with God because of sin,
and he was destined to perdition, but God did not abandon him to the powers of
darkness and death; instead God comes
with a project of redemption, and as such, the Incarnation, Passion, Death and
Resurrection of Christ are geared towards the realization of this redemptive
project that reveals fully the Son of God to man. The Only Son of God,
hidden from all eternity in the bosom of the Father and who was with Him when
He was creating the heavens, has manifested himself therefore, as a Person in
Jesus Christ.
In today’s
Gospel (Jn. 16:12-15) Jesus through
his words manifested the relationship existent amongst the three Persons of the
Holy Trinity, “He (The Holy Spirit) will glorify me, since all he reveals to
you will be taken from what is mine. Everything the Father has is mine; that is
why I said: all he reveals to you will be taken from what is mine” (Jn. 16:14-15). Without the Father and
the Holy Spirit, it is impossible to believe in Christ, because He speaks of
them (the Father and the Holy Spirit) and they speak to us about Him (Christ).
A Jesus without his profound and uninterrupted dialogue with the Father, without
his Abba!, is no longer Jesus; a Jesus without the Spirit that illumines Him is
not the risen Jesus who saves and sanctifies humanity. There is a network of connection and rapport that exists between the
Father and the Son, and between the Holy Spirit and the Father and the Son.
The revelation that Jesus brings is from the Father and it is the Holy Spirit,
who teaches and continues the propagation of this revelation from generation to
generation. However, the Spirit does not
communicate or convey a new or an independent revelation, instead he purifies
and updates our understanding of the revelation of God manifest in the event of
Christ. This passage opens for us glimmer on the last phase of the history
of salvation, the time of the Church, where the presence of the Holy Spirit is
revealed. He will come to the Church and lead her to the truth, the continuator
of the work of Christ and sanctifier of the Church and every single Christian.
Be that as
it may, we have a number of virtues to learn from the mystery and divine
manifestation we celebrate today: ●Unity
in diversity, a call, therefore, to recognize all as brothers, despite our
differences, and to live in love and
communion as children of the same Father.
The revelation of God as Trinity is a revelation of love. ●We can as
well reconsider the Holy Trinity in three dimensions: the Trinity of faith (of the past, that revealed himself), the Trinity of Love (of the present,
that lives and works in us), there is also the
Trinity of Hope (of the future, we are on our journey towards the return to
the Father). It is of a Hope that is certain (cf. Rm 5:5). The Trinity is ocean of Peace and communion; the
Father always works with the Son and the Holy Spirit “let us” (cf Gen 1 & 2).
The mystery
of the Holy Trinity is a reality hidden in the heart of God. The mystery of the Holy Trinity is neither
the work or the fruit of theological thoughts nor of mysticism. The Trinity
is not a fruit of human invention, is not an idea, rather it is a reality, the most sublime reality, not a static
reality but a process-reality; that the Father revealed through the Son and
the Holy Spirit. The mystery of the Trinity was immensely revealed to us
through the action and manifestations of God in human history. God revealed
himself as Father by sending the Son. And Jesus Christ revealed himself to us
in his perfect obedience to the Father, through his death and redemptive
resurrection. And the Holy Spirit revealed himself to us as the “cement” of the love of the Father and
the Son, as a gift of communion to man, so that they will live in the
trinitarian image.
What should
be the attitude of man before this mystery? ►First, there is need for the attitude of adoration and submission to the
Father that so much loves us, to our
Brother Jesus who gave his life for us, and to the Holy Spirit who accompanies and sustains us in the course of our
earthly existence. More important to reflecting, thinking and pondering on
the mystery is to worship and render all adoration to the Triune God. ►Second, is the attitude of thanksgiving,
thanking God for the fact that He is a mystery and continues to be a mystery
even after the revelation. But not a mysterious and complicated mystery, for we
are constantly involved in the life of the Blessed Trinity. Being a mystery,
as such it cannot be manipulated or instrumentalized by man. ►Third, is the attitude of humble acceptance of the
mystery, avoiding a rationalistic position and an
irrationalistic position, that seeks to exclude it (because it does not
comprehend it) or that seeks to succumb to its weight (because it is perceived
to be cumbersome) respectively.
Above all
else, however, drawing the issue further, we see that the Holy Trinity is a mystery of Mission: the Father sends the Son,
and both send the Holy Spirit, and in the name of the Father, and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit, the Church is sent by Christ to “go and make disciples
of all nations”. You too, you are sent
to be heralds of love, unity and communion. In the mystery of the Holy
Trinity, there is love amongst the three Divine Persons (ad intra), but in the
same vein the trinitarian love is manifested externally (ad extra), love towards
humanity, towards us. This trinitarian love extended to us should be a
prerogative for the extension of that same love to our fellow human beings. The Trinity is therefore a sign of a harmonious unity
existent in God, which should equally be existent among God's children. The
central message of today's doctrine is that of Love. The Holy
Trinity is a mystery of interpersonal communion of love. It is a sign of communion and of love. As those called to live a trinitarian life, is our life a sign of
communion and of love, a reflex of the trinitarian life? Drawing the issue
further, we call the attention of our leaders and all, enough of all this
religious, ethnic and political divides that create tension, hatred, violence
and the massacre of human beings, especially in our country today. We condemn
in all its forms and manifestations the barbarous warfare, persecution, endless
massacre, kidnapping and plunder going on today in this nation. We need an
urgent rediscovery of the sense of the sacredness and respect of the human
life, created in the image and the imprint of the Trinitarian God. Let us pattern our lives according to the God we worship and teach other to do same. May Jesus in
whom “in bodily form dwells all the fullness of divinity” (Col. 2:9), continue to reveal to us the God who is communion. Oh our Trinitarian God, help us to love You and to love one
another! Enable us to recognize you in each other and in our world, so that we
may be capable of living the Trinitarian existence of communion, love and a
harmonious unity. Amen!
(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
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