Homily for Trinity Sunday - Getting to Know God

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If you look in the Bible for proof of the existence of God, you’re going to be disappointed; The Bible isn’t about proving God exists but is about how God who exists reveals himself to us.

This happens slowly throughout salvation history; at different times in various ways God spoke to his people, lifting the corner on the veil covering the mystery of the Trinity. Finally, in the fullness of time, he revealed himself through the Son, so we might come to know not just the Son but the Father who sent him, and Spirit which proceeds from them both; know the transcendence and the immanence of God - God who dwells in the heights of heaven but who is also close to us.

In this way, we’re invited into a relationship, to share in the intimate inner life of the Trinity, to become like him who became like us. In other words, God who is love, wants us to share in his life of love; be coming up builders of the Kingdom of heaven on earth, spreaders of the civilization of love.

In this way, we see what we who have been created in the image of God can and are meant to be. So, what we hear in the readings, isn’t a description of how God is but of us - our true selves, which we discover through the Triune God dwelling within us.

Of course, that doesn’t make understanding the Trinity any easier and it’s tempting to see it as being too difficult, all a bit awkward to get our heads around, and so ignore it. However, to do so is to settle for a simplistic, superficial faith; only interested in what we already know. The Trinity is a mystery, not in the sense of something for us to solve, but something which we wait to be revealed. It’s not something which we can ever come to know never mind understand by ourselves, but we who know what it means to love and be loved can in the same way know God who is love - the Father who loves, his beloved son, and the spirit of love between them.

In this way, while the mystery of the Trinity is beyond our understanding, God is not distant, or detached. Instead, as we hear in the powerful passage from John’s gospel, “God so love the world that he gave his only son so that all who believed in him might not perish but might have eternal life.”

Most of all, we can know the Trinity through the humanity of Jesus - his care and concern for the powerless and poor, oppressed and outcast. This is how we should be - Jesus shows us through his humanity the divinity we are called to be a part of.

Finally, making the sign of the cross, reminds of the closeness of God who although beyond our understanding, shares our hopes and joys, sufferings, and struggles. It also reminds us to give our lives completely to him, undertaking all we do in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.

All of us, God’s beloved children, have been adopted by the one Father, share in the brotherhood of the Son, and given the gift of the Holy Spirit. So, as St Paul fittingly puts it, we might try to grow perfect, help one another, be united and live in peace so that the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit maybe with us now, always, and forever.
 
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Nicely done! Thank you…
God who dwells in the heights of heaven but who is also close to us.
God is not distant, or detached.
From Deuteronomy 30:10…

“Yet so if thou hear the voice of the Lord thy God, and keep his precepts and ceremonies, which are written in this law: and return to the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul. This commandment, that I command thee this day is not above thee, nor far off from thee: Nor is it in heaven, that thou shouldst say: Which of us can go up to heaven to bring it unto us, and we may hear and fulfill it in work? Nor is it beyond the sea: that thou mayst excuse thyself, and say: Which of us can cross the sea, and bring it unto us: that we may hear, and do that which is commanded? But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart, that thou mayst do it. Consider that I have set before thee this day life and good, and on the other hand death and evil.”
 
Collect for Trinity Sunday
Father,
you sent your Word
to bring us truth
and your Spirit to make us holy.
Through them we come to know
the mystery of your life.
Help us to worship you,
one God in three Persons,
by proclaiming and living our faith in you.
We ask you this, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
one God, true and living, for ever and ever.
 
Thank you all for you kind words. Every time I read Pope Francis’ homily on the same readings, I can’t help but be reminded of the inadequacy of my own efforts!
 
Thank you for this Homily Father In the Pew.
Your efforts are wonderful and very appreciated.

We are able to attend Mass again, only 20 at a time, must pre register, and wait to be rostered on, everyone takes turns. The space behind the new free standing altar and the older altar is being used instead of the larger church, we gather in a social distanced circle around the Bishop and the new Priest.

Today was my first day at Mass for some time.
The Bishop said of the homily

When in Jesus time Jesus was teaching his disciples they were walking a lot of times. But as with the sermon on the mount, when Jesus had something He really wanted to emphasis ( as was the custom in those days), they would gather and sit down.

I thought of your homilies you post to us 🙏
 
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