Saint Ignatius High School

Lessons From the Archive: The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity

Originally published on May 20, 2016.

Also, listen to the LFTA podcast on Spotify! Click the link in the post to listen.

The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity
First Reading: Proverbs 8:22-31
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 8:4-9
Second Reading: St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans 5:1-5
Gospel: According to St. John 16:12-15

God is love.  

The statement is so embedded in our collective psyche that to read it is to have it go in one eye and out the other.  There is a vanilla blandness to it that keeps us from seeing the revolutionary nature of its claim.

Many characteristics are attributed to God, and from religion to religion these characteristics can have some overlap, but there are no necessary properties that are claimed about God for every religion.  Some believe God to be personal, others impersonal; some believe God to be one, others many.  Unique among all of the world’s faiths is the Christian claim of God being a Trinity, three Persons in one God.

Over the years theologians have attempted to use various metaphors to help the faithful to understand this seeming contradiction.  The most famous metaphor comes from a legend about the Apostle to Ireland, St. Patrick, who pointed out that the three distinct leaves of the shamrock did not destroy the plant’s unity, and in fact helped to define what a shamrock was.

The Dogma of the Trinity is the essential Truth of the Christian understanding of God.  Our creeds, both Apostles’ and Nicene, are divided along Trinitarian lines: they speak to our beliefs about the Father, then the Son, and then the Holy Spirit.  No one member of the Trinity is more important than the other – all are God equally.

Because we believe in a God of Persons we can begin to speak of God in terms of love.  A monotheistic, non-Trinitarian view of God will produce descriptors such as omnipotent, just, omniscient, and eternal.  It might even lead people to speak of a loving God, but it will never allow them to conclude that God is love.

Only when there is a Trinity of Persons is God able to be love.  Only when there is a Trinity of Persons can we claim that the essence of God is love. For if God is love, then there never was a time when God did not love – even before anything was created.  The Dogma of the Trinity teaches that the Father loves the Son perfectly and eternally – without beginning or end – while the Son loves the Father in the very same way, and that perfect and eternal love, that perfect and eternal self-giving, actually is another Person, the Holy Spirit.

I remember as an adolescent hearing someone on television being asked to answer the question, “What is love?”  The person responded, “Love is love is love,” and at the time I thought that it was a fairly lame way to avoid answering the question.  But, in retrospect, maybe it wasn’t so lame.  Perhaps the response was simply the fruits of years of study of Trinitarian theology and was worded in a way that took into account the audience being addressed.  It could be, like “God is love,” a profound and revolutionary statement on the essence of God encased in a bland vanilla coating.

A.M.D.G.

 
 
 
Listen to the LFTA podcast!

https://open.spotify.com/show/1GXM65IOxcsVe4IMpaGF7f
The Sunday readings are on a three-year cycle. The current series being shared is Cycle C, there are recordings that were previously already posted to Spotify that include different readings (Cycle B). Enjoy, and thank you for listening!