On a personal note: Noel dedicates this "essay", an assignment for Early Church History, to write an article, as for a church newsletter, on the practical implications of the doctrine of the Trinity, to the good people of Holy Trinity Anglican in San Antonio, TX (not least of which to her parents who dubbed it thusly). Thank you for worshiping God as He reveals Himself; as the loving Trinity. Noel is very excited to worship with you one day soon.
Greetings, church! As we approach Holy
Trinity Sunday, let us imagine together our ordinary days profoundly
lived in the light of the One God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit whom
we worship. What do you imgine when I say that? Do you think of an
apple? Water? A flame? While these analogies can be helpful in
certain matters, what I want to address here will glean little help
from them lest, as Gregory of Nazianzus says, “we be
frenzy-stricken for prying into the mysteries of God” (Guy, 280).
So, let us proceed in humility. Because we take God at His word that
He has revealed Himself as Trinity that this should have an impact on
our daily lives. But, perhaps, we might ask, I know we affirm, pray
and worship the Trinitarian God on Sunday morning and in morning and
evening prayer, but I’m still fuzzy on the details, can you fill
them in? I hope St. Augustine might be of some help to us on this.
He says,
“has redeemed us through His own blood, giving His soul for our souls,
His flesh for our flesh, and has also poured out the Spirit of the Father
for the union and communion of God and humanity, imparting indeed
God to human beings by the Spirit, and on the other hand, attaching
humanity to God by His incarnation, and bestowing upon us at His
coming immortality durably and truly, by means of communion with God.”
This is a good synopsis of God’s
working out of our salvation in the life, death and resurrection of
Jesus as well as through the indwelling of the Spirit. What do we
see that can help us in our daily living? How does this effect how I
go to work tomorrow or hang out with my kids tonight?
Well, first of all, we can trust in
the mediation of Christ that Augustine spoke of, both His mediation
of Himself to us and of our humanity into the life of God. Isn’t
that amazing? That sends shivers down my spine to think that God did
that! We receive this mediation through the Spirit, moment by
moment. And friends, where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
freedom! 2 Corinthians 3 goes on to say that in this freedom, we
reflect the Lord’s glory and are being transformed into Christ’s
likeness by the Holy Spirit. And He is with us always as Christians.
So, engage Him at all times of day with confidence, ask Him to join
you to Christ’s likeness and to live into those good works He has
for you. Ask Him to help you really love and care for Jim in the
cubicle next to you whom you are sure has a fingernail growth
condition for as often as you hear his clippers being used! Be
assured that the triune God is working in your workplace, at your
home, in your grocery store, at the post office and He invites you to
participate with Him as a minister of reconciliation in the world.
So, repent for those times you have been unwilling to participate and
ask Him to help you understand Him more and to help you be more like
Him.
Another means of practicing our
Trinitarian faith is through remembrance. Friends, we as Anglicans,
stand in a long tradition of those who have chosen to remember and
celebrate God’s events in history. You might notice that much of
our liturgy involves this recollection with gratitude, nowhere noted
more than in the Great Thanksgiving, Eucharist. By remembering the
salvation trajectory, we can know Father, Son and Holy Spirit for
willing together to sustain the creation even after sin entered, for
destroying the power of sin and death, and restoring us to new life
in communion with God, as Augustine said. In all things, thank God
for the ways in which He does these things in your life now, recall
them with others, use them to tell others the Good News. Even ask
the Spirit to help bring these things to mind as part of practicing
this Trinitarian way of living.
Last but certainly not least is that
our Trinitarian God is within Himself love and relationship. The
source of all our love, ability and yearning to relate is in Him. He
is known in relationship and it is for life in Him that we are saved.
When Jesus prays, that they may be one even as we are one, I in them
and you in me that they may become perfectly one, so that the world
may know you sent me and loved them even as you loved me,” He is
not just saying something nice and comforting. He is expressing the
reality that the triune God desires for us, that the Church be
Christ’s body, one with Him and the Father. After Jesus ascends,
He sends the Spirit of Truth to work in those whom He loves the
reality of unity that is the same unity between the Father and the
Son. How do we know this? Because the Spirit is also one with the
Father and Son as God! So, we are, in a profoundly real way, being
bound together in love as members of Christ’s body, the same love
that is found in the Trinitarian God of the Universe. So, love in
freedom! Practice our Trinitarian faith with risky love through
hospitality, gift-giving, gift-receiving, prayer for one another,
asking the Spirit to help you see others needs and a way to help,
carrying others burdens, befriending the lonely, and all of those
things that Jesus did in the Gospels in the power of the Spirit. We
are living into our call as the royal priesthood when we welcome
others into loving relationship just as we were welcomed into the
loving relationship of the Triune God by the mediation of Christ
worked out in us by the Spirit.
We will explore more of these themes
and perhaps imagine a few more as we explore the vastness of the
doctrine of the Trinity in our Christian Ed series beginning in
Pentecost. All of this here has been just a tantalizing morsel of
what is to come and at the least you’ll learn some new cool words
to impress friends and family! We will meet together in the hope that
“we, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together
with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is
the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses
knowledge—that we may be filled to the measure of all the fullness
of God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”
Hurray!
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