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Homily on how the radical revelation of the Triune God
affects our own relationships
You may wonder why the Church gives so
much attention to our human experience of community. In a nation built
on rugged individualism, why is our worship experience focused so much
on our common prayers at Mass, the Kiss of Peace, processing together to
receive Holy Communion, communal penance services, and so forth? Well,
the answer has a great deal to do with the very nature of God.
Today we rejoice in the revelation of
the Holy Trinity. It is upon this reality that Christianity is built.
One of the most radical revelations of Jesus is that God is in himself
community, that we are made in God's image and likeness, and that in
Christ we are to become like God. God is Three Persons, a community of
Persons that exists in love. That is the inner nature of God, that is
the life of heaven, and that is what we are called to live here on
earth.
It is interesting to note that in the
Book of Genesis we find God saying: "Let us make man in our image...".
We are called into existence, to be in and to live in a relational
existence. We discover ourselves, we find the meaning of life, and we
know who we are when we see and understand ourselves in the eyes of
those who know us, who love us, and who relate to us. Do you have really
good friends who deeply know you? Have you experienced the joy of loving
and being loved by a number of people? If you have, you've begun to
taste heaven and to experience the ultimate community of God, the
communion of the Three who are One. Not only that, but also when you
live in communion with others you become more than just your self. Who
you are is expanded, broadened, and deepened.
It is for this that we praise and thank
God in the Preface of today's Mass. We give him thanks always and
everywhere because he is more than solitary. We praise God because he is
a union of Persons who are absolutely in love and in total union with
each other. What a blessing that is for you... a blessing because if you
lived just with your self and for your self, life would be horrible.
There are those who are troubled with
the Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity. It appears to them to be so
unreasonable, so incredible, and impossible. From where, we might ask,
does this teaching come? Well, it comes from Jesus. It is uniquely His
revelation to us. No other religion in history has anything like it. No
philosopher ever reasoned to it. It is original to Christ while at the
same time we find hints of it in the Jewish Testament, the Old
Testament.
This belief in the Holy Trinity rests
upon Christ's life and is found in His continual references to His
Father in heaven and to the Spirit of God. Belief in the Holy Trinity
does not come to us from the thoughts of men, nor is it a construct
produced from deep within the psychological recesses of our human
subconsciousness. It is beyond human speculations about what kind of a
god God really is. It's beyond any human thought about what God might be
like. Yet it is central and vital to the message of the Gospels, the
faith of the Apostles, and consequently to our faith.
A man like St Paul, trained as a Jewish
leader and acknowledging only the one God, when brought into the
Christian world by Jesus... such a man completely changed his ideas
about God. We have so very often at Mass heard the result of Paul's
newfound faith, a Trinitarian faith. He went on to frequently speak of
the Holy Spirit, calling us to let the Spirit lead us... the Spirit of
adoption who leads us, says St Paul, to cry out: "Abba, Father". The
Spirit himself, St Paul writes, gives witness with our own spirits that
we are children of God. "And", says St Paul, "we are heirs as well;
heirs of God, heirs with Christ...".
What does it all mean for you and me in
our everyday living? Well, it means that our lives are geared to be
relational. We find ourselves through our close relationships with
others. We discover the meaning of life when we love others and when we
particularly love a significant other for life. Our problems in seeing
ourselves, our identity problems, are solved when we find ourselves in a
communion with others, one that allows us to be who we really are. In
the recent past philosophers who are Christian have written a lot about
that. For them, the Holy Trinity has much to say about our living
authentic and meaningful lives.
Another and much more important aspect
is that Jesus' teachings about the Holy Trinity allow us to begin to
participate in the life of God. This is what the Catholic Church teaches
us in its concept of sanctifying grace... that gift from God that
sanctifies us and makes us holy. When we become more like God in the way
we live with others then God's presence, power, and love are made all
that much more real for those who live around us. The more we live in a
caring communion of love with others the more we become filled with
God's holiness, not only for our own sake but for the sake of others who
know us and love us.
Loving others, you see, isn't something
that's simply nice... it is essential; it is of the essence of being one
with Christ. It is only in love and in deep relationships with others
that we can understand what St John is talking about when he says that
God is love and he who loves has found God, and God lives in him.
Finally, it is the doctrine of the
Trinity that is the foundation of Christian ethics, social justice, and
morality. Upon it rests the two great commandments: Love God and love
your neighbor as yourself. Upon it rests the Ten Commandments and the
teachings of our great saints. They all call us into right relationships
with others. What is good and what is evil depends upon how we relate to
others and the quality of love that we share with them. Community life
depends upon those commandments, commandments having their foundation on
the Triune God who is a community of Persons in union and in love.
So rather than being puzzled at the
teaching about the Holy Trinity, and rather than trying to question it
from the distance of detached examination, let's you and I throw
ourselves into life, into love, and experience the life of the Trinity
in our own relationships with others. Let us share with each other a
life in which we can be so much more of our true selves. It is there
that we can know God. It is in loving others deeply, closely, and with
constancy that we can begin to feel the wonder of life and the joy of
knowing who God is and what His life is like.
Jesus told us that heaven begins here on
earth. The kingdom of heaven is here, among you, he told us. We are not
far from it. The life of God begins to be experienced here. Heaven is
not a carrot dangled in front of us. Heaven isn't the reward at the end
of a road of pain, trial, and suffering. Heaven begins when we discover
ourselves, when we discover each other, when we begin to live a
Trinitarian life with others, when we begin to live in the communion
with others that is God's. Isn't that what Holy Communion is all about?
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