Homily (Reflection) for the Solemnity of
The Most Holy Trinity, Year C (16th June, 2019) on the Gospel and
the Solemnity
Prov 8:22-31;
Ps 8:4-9. (R. v. 2);Rom 5:1-5;
Jn 16:12-15.
Topic: Three Persons but One God.
We read from the Catechism of the
Catholic Church (CCC), “The Trinity is a mystery of faith in the strict sense,
one of the ‘mysteries that are hidden in God, which can never be known unless
they are revealed by God’” (237). In
the ordinary sense, mystery is “the quality that something or someone has when
they seem strange, secret, or difficult to understand or explain.”[1]
And A Catechism of Christian Doctrine
defines mystery as “a truth which is above reason, but revealed by God” (n.28).[2]
The image of God as Father is commonly acceptable in many
religions. However, the belief that there are three Persons in one God (mystery
of the Most Holy Trinity) does not go down well with some religions. For
instance, the main problem the Jews had with Jesus arose from His reference to
Himself as the Son of God which means making Himself equal with God, cf. Jn 5:18. 10:30-33. 19:7.
Yet undoubtedly, He is equal with the Father, cf. Phil 2:5-6. And surprisingly, the
demons acknowledged this fact whenever and wherever they met Him, cf. Mk 3:11; Matt 8:29; Lk 4:41. Yet His brothers and sisters failed to see it.
And in today’s gospel, Jesus revealed to us the third Person of the Most Holy
Trinity, the Spirit of truth.
By the Most Holy Trinity,
We do not confess three Gods, but one
God in three persons, the ‘consubstantial Trinity.’ The divine persons do not
share the one divinity among themselves but each of them is God whole and
entire: ‘The Father is that which the Son is, the Son that which the Father is,
the Father and the Son that which the Holy Spirit is, i.e. by nature one God’ (CCC 253).
It is also important to note:
The divine persons are really distinct
from one another. ‘God is one but not solitary.’ ‘Father,’ ‘Son,’ ‘Holy Spirit’
are not simply names designating modalities of the divine being, for they are
really distinct from one another: ‘He is not the Father who is the Son, nor is
the Son he who is the Father, nor is the Holy Spirit he who is the Father or
the Son.... The divine Unity is Triune (CCC
254).
Furthermore,
The divine persons are relative to one
another. Because it does not divide the divine unity, the real distinction of
the persons from one another resides solely in the relationships.... While they
are called three persons in view of their relations, we believe in one nature
or substance.’ Indeed ‘everything (in them) is one where there is no opposition
of relationship.’ ‘Because of that unity the Father is wholly in the Son and
wholly in the Holy Spirit; the Son wholly in the Father and wholly in the Holy
Spirit; the Holy Spirit is wholly in the Father and wholly in the Son’ (CCC255).
A priest was sitting in a Chicago airport waiting for his
plane. A man sat down beside him and began to give his opinions on religion. He
boasted: “I won’t accept anything I can’t understand. Take this business of
three Gods in one God or whatever it is. I can’t buy that. Nobody can explain
it to me, so I will not believe it.”
Pointing to the sun streaming in
the window, the priest asked: “Do you believe in the sun?” “Why, of course,”
the doubter admitted. “All right,” the priest continued, “the rays you see
coming through that window are from the sun, 90,000,000 miles from here. The
heat we feel comes from both the sun and from its rays. The Holy Trinity is
something like that. The sun is God the Father; the sun sends out its rays, God
the Son. Then from both the sun and its rays, from the Father and the Son,
proceeds or comes the Holy Spirit, the heat. Can you explain how that happens?”
The doubter quickly changed the subject.[3]
Although the Most Holy Trinity is a mystery but we are not to
follow the footsteps of this doubter. Our inability to neither fully understand
nor explain this mystery ought to humble us. It reminds us that we are mere
humans. It is God who enlightens us, cf. Jn
1:9. As a result, we must turn Him, the revealer of mysteries for
enlightenment and not resort to doubts, cf. Dan 2:47. Finally, borrowing the words of Saint Columbanus, the
summary of this mystery of mysteries is this: “Who then is God? He is
Father, Son and Holy Spirit, one God. Seek no farther concerning God....”[4]
Bible Reading: Phil 2:1-11; Mt 28:16-20.
Thought for today:
Most Holy Trinity is a mystery.
Let us pray: God, sustain our faith in you
especially when our understanding fails – Amen.
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[1]
Longman dictionary of
contemporary English: New edition for advanced learners, 2009. 978 1 4082 1533
3.
[2]
A Catechism of Christian
Doctrine, 1978. London: Catholic Truth Society.
[3]
Fuller, G. (2010). Stories
for all seasons. Mumbai: ST PAULS, p. 120.
[4]
The instruction of St
Columbanus in The Divine Office: The liturgy of the hours according to the roman
rite, III, 1997. p.99.
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