Proverbs 8:22-31; Rom
5:1-5; John 16:12-15
The
mystery of the Holy Trinity, whose solemnity we celebrate this weekend, is one of the most important mysteries of our
faith. It invites us to ponder the ways in which God lives and exists. The same
God in whose image we are created.
However
, whenever we talk about this mystery we should be reminding ourselves that it
is not the mystery in a sense of a puzzle which some genius can solve someday. But
the mystery of our faith in a sense of a deepest reality we may be encountering
in our lives. The reality, which is always beyond anything, we can completely
experience, understand or comprehend.
The
mystery of the Holy Trinity calls us and invites us into a dialogue that lasts
our whole lives. Whenever we are willing to enter into this dialogue, we are changed
by it, and we start relating to God and
to one another in different ways.
So what
is the church’s understanding of the mystery of the Holy Trinity?
These
are some of the highlights:
1. Our God is not a lonely, solitary God, but it stays in
a relationship of three distinct entities whom we imperfectly and confusingly
due to our human language limitations describe as persons. Since the
Enlightment the word “person” has been understood by most of us as “individual
conscious subject.” But this is not the meaning of the word the church relies
on when it talks about the persons of the Holy Trinity. Whenever the church
talks about the Holy Trinity it applies the ontological, philosophical
understanding of this word describing God as a single divine subject possessing
a single consciousness which exists in three different ways.
2. In this relationship all God’s persons are equal.
There is no discrimination among them. None of them is more important or
greater than the other one. We just perceive them and experience them differently
as:
-
God the Father
who created the world, led his chosen people, sent us his beloved son;
-
God the Son who
became human, shared with us his good news and was willing to die for us;
-
God the Holy
Spirit who helped us to become one church, one community, who leads us and
shares with us his strength and wisdom on our faith journey.
3. In
their relationship the persons of the Holy Trinity are united with each other
and in a way they create an interdependent community of persons. This is why we
describe them on a base of their relationship to each other as the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit.
The
mystery of the Holy Trinity can help us to understand ourselves. For as the
ones created in the God’s image we can easily recognize, as we ponder and
meditate upon this mystery, that God does not create us:
-
To live lonely
and solitary lives;
-
That although we
have different talents, gifts and roles in this life we are still equal
children of God. Each one of us is equally important in the eyes of God and
unconditionally loved by Him;
-
That we need each
other and we are dependent on one other;
-
That we can only
understand each other in relationships with others and because of the community
we are a part of.
Whenever we make the sign of the cross in the name of
The Holy Trinity: The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, we remind ourselves
that we are created in their image, in the image of our Triune God. That we are
invited by God to live in the communion with Him and others.
This is why when we are baptized we are baptized in the
name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.


