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VisitTrinity Sunday
Our service began as it does week by week with the words “In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit”; it will end with the words “the blessing of God Almighty the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit …”.
So, Father, Son and Holy Spirit are clearly at the heart of our Christian worship. And as soon as I have finished speaking, we shall affirm together the Nicene Creed. During the summer months of the year 325 (that is 1700 years ago this year) a Council of around 200 bishops was summoned by the Emperor Constantine to meet at Nicaea in modern day Turkey to resolve various issues in the church of their day. One of those was two thirds of the doctrine of the Trinity, as they decided what it is the church believed about the relationship between the God the Father, and God the Son in Christian teaching, and they put together what we call the Nicene Creed.
Today is Trinity Sunday – it is the only feast day dedicated to a doctrine rather than a person, such as last Wednesday when it was Barnabas, or an event such as last Sunday when it was the coming of the Holy Spirit. But Trinity Sunday is purely about doctrine.
No wonder it is a Sunday when no one wants to preach. Thank you, James!
The story is told of a Japanese man politely listening to a Christian trying to explain the idea of the Trinity. He was puzzled and responded – Honourable Father, very good; Honourable Son, very good; Honourable Bird I do not understand at all.
The word Trinity is not in the Bible. It was Tertullian, who lived just over a hundred years before that Council met, and who at the time when the Bible was being translated into Latin, was the first person to use the word trinitas when speaking about Father, Son & Holy Spirit. And he it was also who introduced the idea of ‘persona’ to distinguish between the three of them and who said that although there were three persons they were of one ‘susbstantia’ – substance. Now that is something that is difficult to understand, and it is not for nothing that we refer to it as a mystery.
Many people have come up with images to help us understand what is going on. Tertullian himself used the image of a plant: where the Father is the deep root, the Son is the shoot that breaks forth and the Spirit is the force which spreads its beauty and fragrance across the earth
St Patrick of Ireland, perhaps not surprisingly, said that it is like the shamrock where we have three individual leaves, but all part of one and the same plant
Now the point about Christian teaching – doctrine – is that it is not there to turn us into theologians, but rather to turn us into disciples.
The concept of the Trinity helps us to understand and experience God’s presence and activity in a very rich way. We see that there is a real depth to who God is. God is and always has been a community. God is a living relationship and so that immediately takes us into the realms of complexity and diversity. If complexity and diversity are there in God, they will also be there in God’s world and in God’s church – and so it is. And to that I will return.
Lest you think that this is all some clever middle eastern idea, dreamt up by some bishops in the desert, you will I am sure have already noted that our two scripture readings this morning link into that theme of the relationship within God. In Romans 5 Paul is coming to a high point in his letter. The chapter begins ‘therefore’, and whenever you see the word therefore in the Bible you should look to see what is there for. In the preceding four chapters Paul has been spelling out our human predicament of being separated from life with God and there being nothing we can do about it – religious ritual doesn’t help, trying to keep God’s law doesn’t work, and so God sent his Son to suffer and die so that we could receive as a gift God’s life. And now he summarises that in chapter 5. Simply put he says – we are now at peace with God the Father because of what Jesus the Son has done; and the way we experience that is because the Holy Spirit has taken God’s love and poured it into our hearts.
Each of Father, Son and Spirit playing their part in enabling us to receive that gift of new life.
And lest we think that three part drama is something Paul dreamt up, we see that in our gospel reading in John, Jesus himself speaks in a similar way. He is saying to his disciples that there is lots he would like to tell them, but they simply wouldn’t be able to cope with it yet. He is of course referring to his death on the cross and his resurrection. However, he says there will come a time when the Holy Spirit will guide them into all they need to know. The Spirit will do that by taking what the Father has given to the Son, and will make it known to Jesus’ followers. Truth here is not a matter of facts or accuracy. In John’s gospel truth is always to do with God and being like or consistent with who and what God is like.
We are still there, as we were throughout the Easter Season, with our gospel readings being taken from what Jesus did and said in that upper room where he washed his disciples’ feet and prepared to give up his life and die for them. This is the pattern of truth into which the Spirit was going to lead them as the Spirit made sense to them about the things that were to come – the things to come are not things such as the date of the second coming but about what is to happen to Jesus. Without the Spirit giving them an understanding of that it would all be utterly baffling for them. We know that whenever Jesus spoke about his death, about the cross, they either rejected it or were completely confused by it.
And when Jesus speaks as he does here about being glorified – in John’s gospel glory is always related to the cross.
So this is all about the Spirit giving them to understand the nature of God’s self-giving love – entering not only into our world in His Son, but in some way taking our sin and death and overcoming it so that we can receive and enjoy the life of God – and that life will lead us to a similar pattern of foot washing and suffering!
So just as the love of God is seen in the relationship between Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we now are drawn into that relationship – into community with God – to live with them and become like them
That is why back in Romans Paul speaking about this trinitarian work, speaks of the Spirit pouring that God style love into our hearts which will inevitably lead to suffering but suffering which we will be enabled to endure with hope.
And that is how we learn to live with all the complexity of the world and the church in which we live. If there is complexity and diversity in God, then you will expect it in the world God has made; and you will also expect it in the church he has redeemed.
Many of us like simplicity, and struggle with the complexity we find in the world around us.
Diversity too can be threatening – whether it is diversity of race, class, status, affluence, sexuality, or anything else. Such differences can be threatening. Why can’t everyone be like me, or like us?
So often we want our religious truths to be pure and simple too.
But in our own complex lives we can discover God in all our own diversity: in the highs and the lows, the good and the bad. God who is in the midst of our mistakes, our pain, our depressions, our illnesses, in the most fractured places of our lives, and even in our deaths. There we can find a God who is walking alongside us rather than one who is distant.
We find a God who loves us and saves us in the ways only a complex and diverse God can.
Let me end on a different note. If you are troubled that all this imagery is rather masculine – Father and Son – in the book of Proverbs we have the idea of Wisdom (and as my wife always reminds me wisdom is feminine!). As you may know many commentators have linked the idea of wisdom in Proverbs to that of the Logos in John chapter 1. The Word that was with God and the Word that was God. In Proverbs chapter 8 we read about wisdom also being there when the world was made – and a more literal translation of vv 30 and 31 would be “I was having fun, smiling before him all the time, frolicking with his inhabited earth and delighting in the human race”. That was wisdom’s experience of being there with and in God when the world was made, bringing us an image of God in relationship – secure, joyful, creative, dancing and gambolling or frolicking.
That same God has taken our pain into the midst of that relationship and has experienced separation within the family of God because of our sin. But the Holy Spirit now leads us to see that the truth is that ultimately love has triumphed and that love of God is now being poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, so that in all our diverse situations and circumstances we find a God who draws us into God’s very family.
Amen
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