Tuesday, May 29, 2012

6/3/2012 – The Holy Trinity – Matthew 28:16-20, Romans 8:14-17

          Every year, on the Sunday after Pentecost, after the end of our Easter season, we celebrate the Holy Trinity in a very special way.  In fact, we have been celebrating the Holy Trinity on the Sunday after Pentecost since the early 14th century, as declared in an edict by Pope John XXII.  We try to use human concepts and human words in order to understand God and in order to describe God as a Trinity. Ultimately these concepts and words do the best job they can, but they are far from perfect. 
         Last weekend, I had four Baptisms: three in Belzoni with two Hispanic family, and one at St Mary’s with the baptism of Katherine McKay Choate, the daughter of Will and Elise Choate.  All of the little babies were dressed up in beautiful gowns or little white suits, and family members and friends came from near and far in order to celebrate this wonderful day.  We hear the command from Jesus in our Gospel today to go and baptize new believers in the name of the Trinity, in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  In fact, baptism is recognized as valid by most Christian churches, including the Catholic Church, only if it is done with water and in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  There is no getting around this, and it shows how important and essential our belief in the Trinity is to our faith.  In fact, I remember when I first arrived in Milwaukee as a seminarian, I had heard a story that the new Archbishop there had heard about a parish in his archdiocese that wanted to use inclusive language in all its forms in its expressions of worship and in the sacraments, so much so that it was baptizing in the name of Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier, not the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  One of the first things the new Archbishop did was to alert this parish that it was going back to the correct wording of the Trinity in the baptismal formula, and that it would have to re-baptize all of the children in which the Trinitarian formula was not used, because those baptism had not been valid. 
Gregory of Nyssa, one of the early Church fathers from the 4th century, wrote that when we are baptized, we do not receive this sacrament of the Church in silence, but while the names of the three sacred persons are spoken over us, for we believe in the three persons of God, in whom we place our hope, from whom comes both our present and our future existence.  
The Trinity is so important to our faith in God that it has been the focus of much theological discussion in our Church, from the early days right after Christ’s death and resurrection.  In fact, new vocabulary words developed in to describe the Trinity.  As you know, in the new translation of the Nicene Creed, we now say that Jesus is “consubstancial” with the Father, meaning that they are of the same substance.  The Greek word “hypostasis” was used to describe the Trinity as persons that make up the God we believe in, that each of these three members of the Trinity is an individual, non-interchangeable subject in itself. 
For me as a priest, it is so important for me to bring out the message that God is love for us, that our God exemplifies love, mercy, and compassion.  To even begin to understand what the love of God is all about, we need to see the mutual love that exists in the three persons of the Trinity, the loving way in which they interact with each other, the way those three persons are bonded together in love. As believers in the Trinity, and as beings made in the image of God, it is most important that we experience God’s love in our relationship with the members of the Trinity.  The members of the Trinity are in relationship with themselves as the one God, and as such, we are all called to discover more about ourselves as followers of Christ by recognizing and learning about the relational nature of God.
And perhaps Paul gives us a glimpse of our relationship with the Trinity in our second reading from the letter to the Romans.   Paul tells us that the Spirit leads us to identify ourselves as sons and daughters of God, but children of God through adoption and not through slavery.  As such we are able to call God “Our Father,” “Our Dad.”   This makes us heirs of the Father just as Christ was an heir, and so we go through sufferings here on earth, we unite our sufferings with the sufferings that Christ endured, and so are able to be united with God’s glory as well.
When I was recently on pilgrimage in Spain, there were certain “saints” that I prayed to for help, including some of you parishioners here.  I prayed with you on that pilgrimage, I prayed for you.  I thought of Father Jeffery, the rectory of St Peter’s cathedral, of Sister Paulinus Oakes, my feisty Sister of Mercy friend in Jackson, of Suzan Cox, the liturgist at St Richard, and of Martha Ueltshey, one of the parishioners of St Richard who is very good friends with two of the ladies who went with me.  My pilgrimage was made so much richer by the relationships of those whose spirit I felt with me as I walked across Spain each day on my way to the cathedral in Santiago.  In a similar way, as we interact with the different persons of the Trinity in our lives of faith, we will grow more and more in our faith, and our faith life will seem so much more richer.
I want to close with a blessing that comes at the end of the sacrament of the anointing of the sick, that asks the blessing of the Trinity in our lives:
May God the Father bless you.
May God the Son heal you.
And may God the Holy Spirit enlighten you.
May almighty God bless all of us – the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit – Amen.  

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