Trinity Sunday
A sermon preached by Clare Heard on Trinity Sunday
In
thought for the day on Thursday from Bishop Graham James, he quoted a child who
had mixed up his bible verses and said “Lying is an abomination unto the Lord
and a very present help in trouble”.
Whilst
lying may be an expedient way to get out of a tricky
situation, it is never the right solution and ultimately damages the
relationship involved. Indeed, the 10 commandments include one that tells us
not to lie.
The
Bishop went on to point to research that shows that a group of people together
in discussion are far better at identifying lies than even the most trained
individual. We are stronger as a collective group operating in discussion with
one another.
James has
been doing jury service these part two weeks, and the jury system seems to have
recognised what this research has shown. And this all makes complete sense if
we are created by a Trinitarian God.
Today is
one of my favourite days in the Christian calendar because it is Trinity
Sunday. When I was doing my studying to become a licensed lay minister, I think
this was the doctrine I was most inspired by.
Whilst it
appears a nonsense to those outside the church and a paradox to many within,
I’m not sure how many of us often stop and think about the relevance it has for
our faith and the way we live it out.
So what I
would like to do today is to go back to basics. I’d like to think about who God
is, in the light of this doctrine, and I hope that, if you don’t already, you
will start to love and value it as something of ultimate significance and meaning
for your life and faith – that’s my hope – it’s something of a tall order but
I’m going to give it a go!
Priory
notice – Abbot preached each Sunday except Trinity Sunday.....
The
Trinity is a doctrine that developed over 300 years of reflection and prayer.
As Christians looked at Scripture, at Jesus life and at the experience of the
early church they realised that Father, Son and Spirit was the only possible
description of the God they believed in – but it did take 300 years so we can’t
imagine that we can get our heads around it in a 10 min sermon.
First
doctrine, then why it matters......
Believing
in a Trinitarian God holds on to the monotheistic faith of the Jewish people
which says “The Lord your God is one”.
However,
if we examine both Old and New Testaments we will find references to God’s
word, breath, wisdom, spirit and Son. We have thus always believed in a God who
has manifested himself and revealed himself in a number of ways.
The
Trinity is a doctrine which says God is “Father, Son and Spirit” and yet God is
one.
How can
this be – 3 and 1? In the West, as I’ve said, this has always been considered a
bit of a paradox. Various different analogies have been used to try and explain
it – many of which may be helpful for children but often are very flawed (such
as ice, water and steam – 3 forms of H2O but can’t be all 3 at the same time)
The
Eastern Christian tradition has focused more on the actions of God in history
to explain the Trinity. Each person has a slightly different part to play – the
Father or Spirit could not have become incarnate – it is the Son who does this
and becomes the saviour of the world and reveals God to us – self giving
revelation.
The
Father wills the world into creation (the Son and Spirit both do the will of
the Father) – it is the Father who has the ‘ideas’, as it were – it is the
Father who gives the Son and sends the Spirit.
The
Spirit inspires and perfects – leads us and all creation towards God’s kingdom.
There are
thus 3 identities within the Godhead but one divine action of creation,
salvation and perfection.
We do
need to be careful that we don’t fall back into modalism – this is not about
roles, or modes, but about personhood – God is three persons, three identities,
in one being.
The best
analogy I’ve come across (from Jeremy Begbie) is that of a music chord........3
distinct notes, each different, and yet one harmonious sound. God is three
persons, Father, Son and Spirit, but One God.
So why
does this matter?
Believing
in a Trinitarian God firstly allows us to legitimately say that God is love.
Without the Trinity, God would need creation in order to be love (for love
cannot exist in isolation) – but if we look at the Trinity we see 3 persons in
loving relationship which neither absorb nor pull away from each other.
The
relationship has been described as a dance in which each person has their own
part and yet they dance in harmony as one – If you’ve ever seen really good
dancing you’ll understand how this analogy works. So God is love within
himself, not just in his actions towards us.
This
understanding affirms both unity and diversity. God is 3 distinct identities –
not trying to be the same or competing but affirming and appreciating each
other in unified action.
Of
course, if’s very hard to get the balance right. Historically, in the East, the
church focussed on the three – leading to a lack of unity. Whilst in the West,
society focussed on the one – leading to conformity. The typical church
services for Eastern and Western churches illustrate this perfectly........[West
doing everything together at the same time, east – different comings and
goings, different things at different times]
So, in
the West, the focus on the oneness of God led to conformity. People were
expected to conform for the greater good – diversity was not valued and was
seen as a threat. People felt like they were being absorbed into the greater
picture and were losing themselves.
There was
a strong reaction against this, particularly in the later part of the 20th
century, leading to a culture of individualism. It is the individual and self
who is important, rather than the wider community. Others can be seen as a
threat to the “real me”. Individualism separates people from each other to try
and preserve identity and ultimately leads to isolation.
The
doctrine of the Trinity, in contrast, allows affirmation of diversity and unity
to be held together. We can distinguish each other best through relationship,
not separation. It is through loving relationship with others that we can best
be affirmed and valued for who we are.
If we
really believe in a Trinitarian God then we will cease to see differences of
opinions, skin colour, upbringing and so on as a threat and will start to
appreciate diversity. But at the same time, we will be holding on to the unity
of God which calls us to love our neighbour and value them to live in harmony.
This
understanding of God should affect everything – how we do church, how we do
social care, how we do politics and so on.
It puts
the primary value on relationships rather than power, self sufficiency, success
or ability. It asks us to value people for who they are rather than what they
can do – and also to value creation and the world around us. Most of us know,
to some extent that this is true. Most people on their death beds are concerned
about the people they love, not the work they haven’t managed to do – does
anyone say as their last words – I should have spent more time in the office?
However,
knowing this is true and really living it are quite different things.
How easy
is it to love someone who has completely opposing ideas to yourself, to spend
time with a disabled person, especially one who struggles to communicate in the
usual ways, and build a relationship with them compared to a fit and well
person – it can be hard. Yet most families with disabled members, as well as
acknowledging the difficulties, will speak of the rewards and what those people
bring and give.
Henri
Nouwen – Catholic priest went to work at L’Arche community – when asked about
how much he had to give up to do this (his study, teaching and so on), all he
could focus on was what the residents had given him – these residents who could
hardly talk, feed or dress themselves – but through the relationships he built with
them he was rewarded and blessed in a way he could never have predicted.
Think how
the world would change if people really valued each other, gave each other time
and tried to understand those who were different from themselves.
Think how
our politics might change if we put relationships before re-election and
economic success. (e.g. disabled children schooling, care for the elderly). There
are now think tanks that try and focus on what a society that values
relationships would look like and then come up with strategies to how this
could work economically (rather than starting with the economics and then
trying to make the social structure work around it).
Obviously
there are no easy answers but what belief in a Trinitarian God does is
challenge our values and preconceptions. It does not allow us the simple choice
of unity or diversity, love or justice, but asks us to hold them together.
So a
Trinitarian God, requires us to emphasise the importance of creating and
maintaining healthy and loving relationships with those around us.
We can
say that God is love because he is the three persons in loving relationship – 3
identities, one substance. And this Trinitarian God loves us and wants us to
join in and participate in this dance.
In the
gospel reading today Jesus blows away what Nicodemus thinks he knows and
instead makes the point that our knowledge of God comes from God alone. We need
God’s Spirit to know God, we need Jesus for our salvation and we have him –
because God so loved the world that he sent his only Son.
We are in
Christ, adopted as children of God. As Paul points out– we are heirs with
Christ and it is by the Spirit we understand this as the Spirit leads us into relationship
with our heavenly Father.
Ultimately,
I can talk about God and explain about doctrine but to know anything, really,
you have to live in a relationship
with it. To know the Trinity, you have to relate, actively, to the
Trinity. It is not something just to think about. It is revealed by being tasted. It is a bit like
friendship.
Even the
smallest experience of God will help you to realise that this is about freedom.
It’s about the freedom to be the person God made us to be and we do that
through loving relationships with each other, with creation and with the
Trinitarian God.
If we can
experience this and catch something of the glory of God then I think we will
all be impelled to say, with Isaiah, after his vision of God’s glory, “Here I
am, send me”.