TRINITY SUNDAY C 2025
Today, we celebrate one of the most profound mysteries of
our faith: the most Holy Trinity – one
God in three persons: Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. It’s a truth so central to
Christianity that every prayer we make, every Mass we celebrate, begins and
ends in the name of the Trinity.
Today we celebrate the Feast of the Holy Trinity. We celebrate the mystery of the inner life of
God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The
inner life of God is communal, is relational; it is family. In contemplating the Trinity, we reflect on
the family of God. We are drawn into the
heart of God.
The Trinity is not a math problem. No, it is nor isolation but communion.
The mystery of the Trinity can only be approached by analogy
through our own experience of the power of love. What we can understand points to what we
cannot fully grasp, the inner life of God.
But we glimpse it. God is a
community, three divine persons emptying themselves into one another in an
infinite cycle that is the source of all love.
To grasp the inner life of God in the mystery of Trinity, we
don’t need to be theologians; rather we need to experience the great gift of
friendship and love and mercy in life.
For us, Jesus is the face of the Father’s love and mercy.
Human friendship has the power to free people from the
isolation we all experience as individuals.
At its highest point, friendship has the power to overcome the defenses
and barriers that keep us separate. We
anticipate the thoughts and the needs of the beloved as our own, and we abandon
ourselves in this exchange. This is the
beauty of love and friendship whether it is a young couple passionately in
love, or the quiet intimacy of the long-married couple or with old friends
whose habits are intertwined with affection and humor and familiarity.
It is only by analogy, but human relationships give us a
glimpse into the mystery of the Trinity.
What does this mean? For us to
experience God in our hearts, we need to experience and value the friendship
and the love of another in our hearts.
For me, God’s presence is revealed to me in family and in the
friendships of my life. When I love and
am loved, I know God in my heart.
In some ways, the feast of the Trinity is the feast of
family life. We come from God in
creation and we return home to God as we enter the fullness of God’s eternal
life. What will help us better
appreciate where we have come and where we are going to is family life. In the inner life of God as Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit, God is communal, God is family – the divine family.
Our experience of God is discovered in prayer, yes; our
experience of God is also discovered in family – your family life. Trust me I am not presuming your family life
is perfect for you to experience
God. I was born at night, but not
last night. There is struggle in all
family life; to be a family is hard work at times. But God dwells in your family life. This I know.
In fact, there is no dimension of your family in which God is not
present – in sickness and in health, in good times and in bad.
The mystery of the divine family in the Blessed Trinity is
perfect in the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
But the mystery of God’s love and mercy is that God comes to
us in our weakness, in our brokenness, in the craziness of our family
life. God’s love for us is
unending. What I like to say is there is
nothing we can do to stop God from loving us.
Our response to the Trinitarian love of God for us is one of
gratitude. And so, in this Eucharist, we
gather to give thanks to the Lord our God.
When we know the merciful love of Jesus in the depths of our hearts, we
will love with an attitude of gratitude for our days.
What are we to make of the messiness of our family life --
when a couple are struggling to love because past hurts keep them from reaching
out in love to each other, when parenting their children seems to getting
derailed by the failure of children to listen to their parents and by the
failure of parents to listen to their children.
It goes both ways, of course.
The Spirit-filled grace we seek is to see in the struggles
of our family life, we realize more fully our need for God’s grace and to be
more immersed in the mystery of God’s love for us. Jesus immerses Himself in our limitations and
our struggles. Through united to God,
Jesus empties himself of divine privilege and becomes one of us and dies like a
slave. In so doing, God is pouring out mercy
to a broken world. Our brokenness does
not keep us from receiving the love of God; rather, it is because of our brokenness
that God send his Son into the world to be our friend as well as our Savior and
Lord.
So, how do we live the mystery of the Trinity?
·
Be a person of communion. Just as the Trinity is unity in diversity,
we’re called to build relationships marked by love, forgiveness and mutual
respect.
·
Be open to the Spirit. Let God speak to you through prayer,
Scripture, and conscience
·
Live from the heart of the Trinity. Know you are loved – eternally,
unconditionally – by a God who is Father, Son, and Spirit.
At the end of the day, it is in the human love and
friendship we have with each other that is the lens in which we will discover
the love and mercy of God that is poured on us from day to day, from moment to
moment.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
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