This is similar, but not identical, to what I preached this morning. This was a Zoom service; please excuse the washing-machine noises at the beginning!
Today is Trinity Sunday,
the day on which we celebrate all the
different aspects of God.
It’s actually a very difficult day
to preach on,
since it’s very easy to get bogged down in the
sort of theology which none of us understands,
and which we can
very easily get wrong.
The trouble is, of course, that the
concept of the Trinity is trying to explain something that simply
won’t go into words.
We are accustomed to thinking of God as
Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
and most of the time we don’t
really stop and think about it.
Trinity Sunday is the day we are
expected to stop and think!
The thing is, the first half
of the Christian year,
which begins way back before Christmas,
is the time when we think about Jesus.
We prepare for the
coming of the King, in Advent,
and then we remember his birth,
his being shown to the Gentiles,
his presentation in the
Temple as a baby.
Then we skip a few years and remember his
ministry,
his arrest, death and resurrection, and his ascension
into heaven.
Then we remember the coming of the promised Holy
Spirit,
and today we celebrate God in all his Godness, as
someone once put it.
The second half of the year, all
those Sundays after Trinity,
tend to focus on different aspects
of our Christian life.
And today is the one day in the year when
we are expected to stop and think about God as Three and God as
One.
And it is difficult.
It’s a concept that doesn’t
really go into words,
and so whatever we say about it is going
to be in some way flawed.
It took the early Church a good 400
years to work out what it wanted to say about it, and even that is
very obscure:
“That we worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity
in Unity:
Neither confounding the persons nor dividing the
substance.
For there is one person of the Father,
another
of the Son,
and another of the Holy Spirit.
But the
Godhead of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit is all one,
the glory equal, the majesty coeternal.
Such as the Father
is, such is the Son, and such is the Holy Spirit.
The Father
uncreated, the Son uncreated, and the Holy Spirit uncreated.
The
Father incomprehensible, the Son incomprehensible, and the Holy
Spirit incomprehensible.”
The whole thing incomprehensible, if
you ask me!
There are all sort of illustrations you can
use to try to get a mental image of what it’s all about.
Look,
for instance, at what happens when you join two hydrogen atoms to one
oxygen one –
you get H2O.
Di-hydrogen
monoxide!
Which, I am sure you realise, can be ice –
a
solid, good for cooling drinks or injuries, for preserving food, or
for skating on.
Or it can be water –
a liquid, making
up most of our bodies, good for drinking, sustaining all life.
Or
it can be steam –
a gas, good for removing creases from our
clothes or for cooking vegetables. Ice, water, steam, all very
different from each other, but all, still, H2O.
It’s
an illustration.
It happens to be my favourite one, but there
are plenty of others.
Another local preacher, on the same
subject, brought in three tins of soup –
lentil, mushroom and
tomato –
well, it might not have been exactly those, but
something like that –
all tasting very different but all
soup.
Some people like thinking of an egg,
which has the
shell, the white, and the yolk....
They are all sort-of
pictures, but only sort-of.
Nobody really understands it.
And,
of course, that is as it should be.
If we could understand it,
if we knew all the ins and outs and ramifications of it,
then
we would be equal to God.
And it’s very good for us to know
that there are things about God we don’t really understand!
It’s
called, in the jargon, a “mystery”.
That means something
that we are never going to understand,
even after a lifetime of
study.
Lots of things to do with God are mysteries, in that
sense.
Holy Communion, for one –
we know what we mean
when we take Communion,
but we also know that it may very well
mean something quite different, but equally valid, to the person
standing next to us.
Or even the Atonement –
none of us
really understands exactly what happened when Jesus died on the
Cross, only that some sort of change took place in the moral nature
of the Universe.
Nevertheless, for all practical purposes,
we live very happily with not understanding.
We synthesise
some form of understanding that suits us,
and, provided we know
it is not the whole story, that’s fine.
And the same applies
to the Trinity.
It doesn’t matter if we don’t really
understand how God can be Three and One at the same time:
what
matters is that we love and trust him, whatever!
And in
our Gospel reading, Jesus talks of Himself, the Father and the Spirit
as equal:
“All that belongs to the Father
is mine.
That is why I said the Spirit will take from what is
mine and make it known to you.”
Like St Paul, He doesn’t
have the word “Trinity”, but it is the kind of thing He
means.
And in the reading from Proverbs, which is
sometimes used today, we are reminded of
Wisdom.
“The LORD brought me
forth as the first of his works,
before his deeds of
old:
I was appointed from eternity,
from the beginning,
before the world began.
When there were no oceans, I was given
birth,
when there were no springs abounding
with water;”
and so on and so forth.
Wisdom, here,
is personified as female.
The Greek word for Wisdom is
Sophia.
And some commentators equate Sophia, here, and in other
passages, with the Holy Spirit.
Incidentally, some people
find the image of God as Sophia, Wisdom, helpful and different.
It’s
one of the many images of God we have, up there alongside the
Shepherd, the Rock, the Strong Tower and so on.
If you don’t
find it helpful, then don’t use it, but if it is something that
appeals, then do.
But that is beside the point.
Seeing
God as Wisdom is a very old tradition,
but the real point is
that even in the Old Testament we get glimpses of God as having more
than One Person.
The Trinity might not be a Bible expression,
but it is a Bible concept.
But really, the thing about
today is that, no matter how much we don’t understand God as Three
but still One,
today is a day for praising God in all his
Godness.
It is not really a day for deep theological reflection,
nor for self-examination, but a day for praise and wonder and love
and adoration. Amen