A couple quick points in response
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I should really stop this as I should be doing other things. But I feel the need to respond.
(1) I am not particularly interested in the Trinity. It may be a useful analogy in that God expresses himself in three dimensions - as creator and sustainer, through Christ and others who bring the message of salvation, and through the spirit of God, much alive in the world. Rather like the sun (Father) which sends light (Son) and heat (Spirit). But all the hubbub about Trinity as a mysterious and complex theology is of little interest to me, I actually have some sympathy for the Adoptianists and Arians and Monarchians and other early heretics, many of them oppressed or killed for their beliefs. Still, I have not found the Unitarian Universalist church all that attractive because most of their churches give inadequate attention to Christ and because I love the old hymns of the mainline churches.
They are somewhat too cerebral for me, also. I like some emotion along with intellectual sermons.
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(3) To me - let's face it - this enormous and magnificent creation involves much that we do not understand. Many people, maybe most, need a set way of interpreting it. That's why so many belong to authoritarian churches - like the Catholic Church and fundamentalist Protestant churches (that seem to be thriving at this time). I don't need such an authority, whether the Vatican or the Bible. Besides, I confess to a basic skepticism which says that our finite minds simply can't understand the universe, that mortal minds are too limited. To me this only adds grandeur and awe when it comes to God. Isn't it arrogant and presumptuous for humans to think that they can know the unknowable? I had just as soon live by simple faith without the need for a variety of creeds and catechisms. My credo is what Jesus called us to do: love God and love one another. Sadly, theology has done too much to promote dogmatism and prejudice - and worse.
I just wanted to respond to a couple of your points, Roy5. Howdy, by the way.
- As for not being interested in the Trinity. I read this yesterday but I didn’t even try to respond to it then. I was speechless. Not interested in the Trinity? Not interested? The Trinity Who Christ revealed? Hmm…Christ seemed to think it was important enough to mention, so that seems to be a hint that it’s important enough to ponder, don’t you think?
Now as to the Trinity being the creator, sustainer, messenger and spirit of life, or something close to that…What an amazingly Hindu-New Agey idea. Of course, these might be said to be things that the Trinity does, but the whole point of Christ’s message is that the Trinity is not a what (as in, creator, sustainer) but a Who. A family consisting of Father, Son and the Love between the Two, giving us the Three Divine Persons of the Most Blessed Trinity. And this very Holy Family is precisely the Family of which we are invited to become members by adoption. By entering into covenant with God, we become children in His Family. Through the sacraments we actually enter into covenant with God. He’s not some silly concept to be dispensed with. He’s our God and Father to be loved and communed with.
So…not being interested in the Trinity…completely boggles my mind. The Most Blessed and Holy Trinity is beautiful, mysterious, stunning, exciting, and I haven’t even scratched the surface about this here. Or in my personal reflections either. I look forward to spending eternity in the presence of the Trinity but I don’t have to wait until then. The Trinity lives in my soul already and I give thanks to God for this precious gift.
- As far as a “set” way of interpreting creation…And calling the Catholic Church “authoritarian”… Our understanding of scripture and revelation has certainly not remained as it was in the beginning. We have grown and our understanding has grown too, as would be expected. The more we understand, the more the Holy Spirit can teach us and the more He teaches us, the more we can understand.
But as to the charge of authoritarianism, this is surely unjustified. That the Church has authority, I accept. That this makes her authoritarian, I do not accept. The implication is that she pretends to authority that she has no right to claim. But her authority she received from her Lord and this is in the text of the Bible which all Christians profess to accept. If she were merely throwing her weight around, willy nilly, then she could be rightly called authoritarian. But she is certainly not merely throwing her weight around when she speaks the truth in the name of that Truth Who founded her and commissioned her to speak that same truth throughout the world.
Christ Himself insitituted the Church, her ministerial priesthood, her sacraments, and told His apostles to go make disciples of all nations, baptizing in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, teaching them to obey all that He had commanded them. And that is what she does in every place and in every time: she speaks the truth that she has received, whether people are interested or not, whether they are receptive or not. She speaks and she teaches. Always has. Always will. And the discovery of Christ and His Church is the most interesting and exciting thing that has ever happened to me. Thirteen years and I’m more in love now than I was then with both of them.