June 7, 2020
Matthew 28.16-20
+ I saw
this cartoon the other day on Facebook.
It shows
a coffee place.
There is
a sign at the check out that says
Now, if
you get that cartoon, you sort of get the Trinity.
And if
you don’t get it, that’s alright.
Because
the Trinity is a difficult thing to wrap our minds around.
Now, I
don’t quote Martin Luther very often from this pulpit.
And I
really wish Thom Marubbio were here in church to hear me do this, because it
would make him very happy.
But I am
going to quote Luther because this is by far the best way to establish how to
talk about the Trinity on this Trinity Sunday.
Luther
wrote,
“To deny
the Trinity is to risk our salvation; to try to explain the Trinity is to risk
our sanity.”
I love
that quote!
And it
speaks very loudly to me today.
Because,
let’s face it, it’s true.
There
are, no doubt, a few anxious preachers out there in the world.
There is
probably more than one who is going into the pulpits of churches quaking a bit
over the sermon they have to preach today.
For some
reason—a reason I never understood—there are a lot of preachers who just don’t
even want to wrestle with the subject of the Trinity.
Not me.
I LOVE to
preach about the Trinity.
Now, I
don’t claim to know anything more about the Trinity than any other preacher.
I am no
more profound than anyone else on trying to describe what the Trinity is or how
it works.
For
me, as for everyone here this morning, it is a mystery.
In
fact, God as Trinity is the ultimate mystery of mysteries.
Of
course, I see it as the paramount belief we Christians have.
The
Trinity.
God
as Three-in-One—God as Father or Parent or Creator, God as Son or Redeemer and God as Spirit or Sanctifier.
When
we really think about it, it is
difficult to wrap our minds around this concept of God.
The
questions I regularly get is: how can God be three and yet one?
How
can we, in all honesty, say that we believe in one God when we worship God as
three?
Aren’t
we simply talking about three gods? (No, we are not talking about three Gods)
Whole
Church councils have debated the issue of the Trinity throughout history.
The
Church actually has split at times over its interpretation of what exactly this
Trinity is.
For me,
none of these are deal breakers.
The
Trinity is not a stumbling block.
Yes, I
know the word “Trinity” never appears in scripture.
But I do
enjoy exploring the different aspects of how God as Trinity is made known to
us.
And…I
very unashamedly believe that God does manifest God’s self in Trinitarian
terms.
But that
doesn’t mean I am not confused by this mystery some times.
And it doesn’t
mean that I don’t occasionally doubt it all sometimes.
In our
Gospel reading for today, we find that some worshipped Jesus when they saw him
resurrected.
And we
find that “some doubted.”
I think
that was a normal reaction for those people, who were still struggling to
understand who Jesus was, especially this resurrected Jesus—this second person
of the Trinity
And the
fact that we too doubt things like the Trinity is normal as well.
It IS
difficult to wrap our minds around such a thing.
It’s
complicated and it’s complex.
And,
speaking for myself, and to echo Luther, sometimes the more I think about it, the more
complicated it seems to get.
Especially
when we try to think in the so-called correct (or orthodox) way about it all.
But the
doubts, the complications and intricacies of the concept of the Trinity are all
part of belief.
Belief is
not meant to be easy.
It is
meant to be something we struggle with and carry around with us.
And doubt
isn’t always a bad thing.
We all
doubt at times.
Without
doubt we would be nothing but mindless robots of God.
There are
moments when the Trinity does confuse me and I am filled with doubts.
Sometimes
my most common prayer is, “Seriously, Lord? Really?”
I am one
of those people who occasionally just wants something simple in my faith life.
I just
want to believe in God—the mystery of God, the fact that God is God and any
complexity about God is more than I can fathom.
I
sometimes don’t want to solve the mystery of God.
I don’t
want God defined for me.
I
sometimes don’t want theology.
I
sometimes just want spirituality.
I
sometimes just want God.
But, as a
Christian, I can’t get around the Trinity.
And none
of us can either.
And so I
struggle on, just like the rest of us.
Yes, I
have my doubts.
Yes, my
rational, intellectual mind prevents me from fully understanding what this
Trinity could possibly be and, as a result, doubts creep in.
Every
year, on Holy Trinity Sunday, I place the Andrei Rubelev’s famous icon of the
Trinity in the Narthex.
I will
post this icon on Facebook and on my blog.
Be sure to take
a look at it and see how truly beautiful
it is.
In it you’ll find
three angels seated at a table.
According to some
theological interpretations, these three Angels represent the three Persons of
the Trinity.
In the icon we can
see that all three Angels are shown as equals to each other.
In a sense, this icon
is able to show in a very clear and straightforward way what all our weighty,
intellectual theologies do not.
What I especially
love about the image is that, in showing the three angels seated around the
table, you’ll notice that there is one space at the table left open.
That is the space for
you.
In a sense, we are,
in this icon, being invited to the table to join with the Trinity.
We are being invited
to join into the work of the Trinity.
And I think that icon
speaks very loudly to all of us on this Sunday in which out country is so
divided—divided by racism, divided by civil unrest, divided by one side versus
the other side.
This icon is saying
to us: no matter who you, now what your
divisions, come, sit with here.
Sit here in the
present of the One in whom there are no divisions.
Sit here in the
presence fo the One in whom those dark and terrible things that divide us have
no place.
Sit here at this
table and become one with the One who invites us there.
And I think that is
why this icon is so important to me.
It simply
allows me to come to the table and BE with God as Trinity.
It allows
me to sit there with them and be one with them.
No need
to wrestle with them, or debate them, or doubt them.
And we
realize, certainly in our own life here at St. Stephen’s, that God as Trinity
is still calling to us to be at the table with God.
Here, at
this altar, we find the Trinity, inviting us forward.
And from
this table, at which we feast with God as Trinity, we go out to do the
ministries we are all called to do.
We go out
to do the work of God as Trinity.
We don’t
need to rationalize everything out about our faith in God.
We don’t
need to sit around and despair over it.
We don’t
need to risk our sanity.
Or our
salvation.
No matter
how much we might doubt the Trinity, the fact is: the Trinity exists.
God as
Trinity goes on, in that eternal, wonderful relationship.
And no matter how much we might doubt in our
rational minds, we are still being called to the table to sit and to serve with
the Trinity.
So, let
us do just that.
Let us
sit down at that table.
Let us
bring our doubts and uncertainties with us.
And let
us leave them there at the table.
Let us
let God be God.
And let
us go out from this table to do the work each of us has been called by God to
do.
Jesus
today, in our Gospel reading, commands us to go and make disciples of all the
nations.
By doing
so, we are joining in that communion of the Trinity.
And by
doing so, we know, despite our doubts, despite our uncertainties, that the
Trinity will be with us always.
Always.
Even to
the end of the age.
Let us
pray.
Holy God,
you are a mystery even to those of who long to know you; help us to live within
the bonds of the mysteries of our faith that in seeking you, we may truly find
you; we ask this in Jesus’ holy Name. amen.
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