TRINITY SUNDAY
Year 2
INTRODUCTION To celebrate the Holy Trinity, let us
begin by invoking the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. Each time we celebrate this
fundamental mystery of our faith, we are drawn more profoundly into the
intimate life and love of the Three Divine Persons. That is why we can only stand in thankfulness
(for this is what Eucharist means) and pray God to make us worthy by taking our
sins away.
THE
HOMILY The Feast of the Holy
Trinity goes back to 12th. Century England and St. Thomas Becket,
Archbishop of Canterbury. Some historians say the great Thomas celebrated a
liturgy in honour of the Trinity in his cathedral. So was born the observance.
In the 14th. Century it came to be observed by the whole Church.
Belief in the Holy Trinity goes back, of course, to the New Testament; and try,
as we might, we would not be able to keep the Trinity in a closet, any more
than we can keep love a secret. We open and close the liturgy by invoking those
three most holy names of the Father, the son and the Holy Spirit.
A
priest was instructing a man for baptism, and taught him the names of the
persons of the Trinity. The following week he asked the man to repeat the three
names. The man said, “The first is the Father, the 2nd. Is the Son,
and.....excuse me, I can’t remember the name of the 3rd.
gentleman.” Gentleman, indeed ! We may not be able to enumerate the three
Persons, but let us be aware that we are in the presence of pure and sweet
gentleness.
To
comprehend God is out of the question. To worship Him is the need of the
heart. A priest was sitting in an
airport departure lounge waiting for his flight. A fellow passenger, wanting to
kill time, struck up a conversation. Said he, “Father, I believe only what I
can understand. So, I can’t buy your Trinity. Maybe you can explain it to
me.” The priest out down the New York
Times he was reading. “Do you see the sun out there ?” “Yes.”
Very well it’s 83 million miles away. The rays coming through the window
are coming from the sun. It’s a very cold day. And the warmth we are enjoying
comes from a combination of sun and rays. Well, the Trinity is like that. God
the Father is that blazing sun. His Son is the ray he sends down to us. Then
both combine to send us the Holy Spirit who is, in this context, the warmth we
feel on our bodies. If you can figure out the workings of the sun, the rays and
the heat, it will help you get a faint idea of the Trinity. And as for trying
to understand the Trinity, it’s like staring wide-eyed into the noonday sun in
order to understand it. All you get for your efforts is a serious headache and
blinded eyes, requiring aspirin, eyes drops and a pair of Ray-Ban.” So the
priest turned to the fellow passenger and asked, “You get the point ?” The man muttered something about catching a
flight and took off.
Neither
St. Augustine, nor St. Thomas Aquinas of Paris University nor Mr. Albert
Einstein could comprehend the Trinity. St. Paul mentions the Trinity 30 times
in his letter. In chapter 11 of the Book of Job, the old man says, “Can anyone
penetrate the deep designs of God?” Who said that God has to tell us
everything?
He
tells us only on a need-to-know basis. Take it on faith and you’ll muddle
through somehow.
You
and I should have no difficulty buying into a God who loves us passionately, a
Son who is willing to die for us, and a Holy Spirit who helps us become saints.
The Father played creator and was overjoyed that the world turned out so
attractively. The Son played redeemer to put everything right again in the
wounded world by stretching out his arms on the Cross. The Spirit played
sanctifier and joyfully made room in the heart of each of us for the entire
Trinity as large as they are. Today the Trinity invites us to keep playing with
this delightful game of life and love. And why not ? We have nothing to lose
but our chains.
The
14th. century Italian poet, Dante Alighieri, expressed his thought
on the Triune God in verse. His Italian runs off the lips like honey:
“O
trina luce, che in unica stella.”
And
for the benefit of the very young children, I translate into barbaric
Anglo-Saxon: “O triune light, which in a single star contents all upon whom it
shineth.”
PRAYER O
God, Father, moment by moment you hold us in being; on you we depend. O God, eternal
Son, friend and brother beside us, in you we trust.
O
God, Holy Spirit, life and love within us, from you we live.
O
God, beyond us, God beside us, God within us; Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
three Persons in one God, we adore you, we thank you, we love you.
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