Readings of the day: Exodus 34:4b-6, 8-9; Responsorial Canticle: Deuteronomy 3:52, 53, 54, 55, 56; 2 Corinthians 13:11-13; John 3:16-18
We experience God as a God of
relationship; a God of mercy and a God of love. This was Moses’ experience of
God that we hear about in our first reading from Exodus. God, the Book of
Exodus says, first “came down” to Moses “in a cloud.” God then “proclaimed his
name to Moses: “LORD.” In this encounter and in this name, “LORD,” somehow
Moses understood that the one God is a God of relationship; a God of love; a
God of mercy.
This is our God, love
at its fullest. This is our God, the Father who gives us his only Son for our
salvation and then fills and makes holy our world with God’s Holy Spirit. This
mystery defies our words and images. We are left, like children, in awe with a
blank page at the God who is beyond our grasp but in relationship with us
always. We believe in this mystery; this truth because we experience God as one and as three; singular yet in
relationship. This, our Most Holy Trinity, our God, is indeed a most
extraordinary mystery; a most extraordinary relationship; the most
extraordinary love.
Have any of us ever experienced the extraordinary ability of some children to grasp and express in basic terms what is
mysterious to many if not all adults? The Most Holy Trinity that we celebrate
today is one of these mysterious beliefs of our Christian faith; a truth that
defies our words and our images.
This solemnity we celebrate today reminds
me of my time as a children’s sacramental catechist in Toronto while I was in
seminary. One day, a seven-year-old child was asking me deep questions like,
“How can there be only one God, and yet we talk about God as the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit?” In preparation
for the following week’s class, I asked the children to draw on a blank sheet
of paper the first thing that came to mind when they thought of the Father.
Then, they were to draw the first thing that came to mind when they thought of
the Son, and then repeat this activity when they thought of the Spirit.
The children presented their drawings
the next week. Most of the children had drawn an old man surrounded by clouds
(maybe on a fancy throne in the sky) to represent the Father. Then, most drew a
young, handsome bearded man on land as the Son, and then a dove, flames, or
cartoonlike lines of wind to represent the Spirit. Then, one child sheepishly
carried up to me a still-blank sheet of paper. He gave the paper to me saying,
“I don’t get this!” Instead of scolding this child for not doing the activity I
had assigned, I consoled him, saying that he probably had a better understanding
of the Trinity than me or than his parents. In fact, his blank page is still
the best answer to this activity I have ever seen!
The Most Holy Trinity‒ one God, Father,
Son and Holy Spirit‒ defies our words and images. And yet we experience God
both as one and as three persons: Father; Son; Spirit. How can this be?
Our God is not a God who sits on a
distant throne in heaven and says, “You’re on your own.” Our God is not a God
who, when we encounter him, condemns us for our sin, who scolds us for being a
“stiff-necked people” who cannot grasp just who our God is; a God who would
say, “That picture you drew in First Communion preparation looks nothing like me!”
No, when Moses pleads with God for his
wayward people; when we draw near to God in prayer; when we worship as one
faith community at Mass; when we act with love and mercy toward one another,
God receives us “as his own.” God receives us into relationship with him. God
strengthens our relationships with one another. Our God of relationships; our
God of love; our God of mercy is marvellous in this way, but it remains a
mystery as to how God can be both three and one.
In Exodus, Moses experiences God as one.
Moses describes God in a variety of ways: “a merciful and gracious God, slow to
anger and rich in kindness and fidelity.” But for Moses our God has just one
name: “LORD.”
In his Second Letter to the Corinthians,
Paul, too, first describes what God is before doing his best to name who God
is, one God and yet three persons, Father, Son, and Spirit. Paul describes God
as “the God of love and peace.” What, then, are the values and actions of a God
of love and peace that Paul encourages us to live out? Paul writes: “Rejoice.
Mend your ways” that are not of God; that do not respect human dignity and
community. “Encourage one another; agree with one another; live in peace” Paul
continues… “Greet one another with a holy kiss” of peace. But then who is this
God of love and peace who invites us to take up these values and actions? God
is identified in many ways. Moses’ one name for God, “LORD,” becomes for us a
threefold name for our one God: “Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.” From St. Paul
we have a greeting in the one name of the Trinity that is often used to begin
our Mass: “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you.”
St. Paul invites us through his writings
and through this greeting to act in ways that strengthen relationship, not only
because we are, as human, relational creatures, but because God, in God’s
oneness is also mysteriously a God of relationship; a God in relationship with us as
well as a “God of love and peace” among
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Because our “God of love and peace” is a
God of relationship, both among the three persons of the Trinity and with us,
that love and peace must be directed toward another; toward the world; toward
us. God does not keep God’s love and peace to himself; God is experienced by
us, a creature capable of experiencing relationship with God and with one
another. Is this not extraordinary, even if it defies explanation; words;
images?
We experience God as simply “LORD.” We
experience God as “the God of love and peace.” We experience God as three
distinct yet inseparable persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We experience
God, as our Gospel from John says, as the God who “so loved the world that he
gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but
might have eternal life.” God’s Son, the second person of the Most Holy
Trinity, became a relational human being like us, to save us but also to relate
to us both as divine and now as human.
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