Trinity Sunday
Holy Trinity
This Sunday we meditate
on probably the most abstract topic – in His mystery it is so
difficult for us to conceptualise, or visualise – the Blessed Trinity – GOD!
What is your image of God?
If you were to ask a child to draw a
picture it would be probably of an old man in white – elderly –with long
flowing beard, on a puffy cloud, looking down on us sometimes kindly, other
times angrily at us, waiting to catch us out, ready to send a lightning bolt!
But at least we know a bit more than that simplistic image!
God is One and yet God exists as the
relationship of mutual inter-personal love of Three Persons. We pray ‘In the
Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit’ at the beginning of Mass,
we bless ourselves at Mass; and every day in prayer – yet we cannot ever comprehend
the Greatest Mystery of all – God.
What is the best image we can come up
with?
I find Rublev’s Icon helpful – not only to preach about but as a visual
reminder of the Mystery of the Three Persons in One God.
You may have seen this icon before. It
is simply beautiful and worth pondering.
The first thing to notice is that the
three angels as depicted are all
identical facially. This points to the equality – the similarity as in a
family -of the Three Persons in the One God. They all have haloes – pointing to
the holiness of God
Next, the Father is seated on the
left – He points to the Son and the Holy Spirit who look back at the Father
– Christ who is sent to redeem us and the Spirit who is sent at Pentecost to
sanctify us.
We see the
colour blue – which
iconographers use to signify divinity or God. Christ and the Spirit have more
because they have been seen –become visible
Each holds
a rod or staff pointing
to their divine majesty and authority. As the queen of England celebrates 60
years this weekend, her ‘majesty’ is miniscule in relation to the Majesty of
God.
Each of
the Divine Person’s hands are also
worth examining more closely – that of the Father sending, that of the Son with
two fingers pointing downwards symbolising His journey to earth and His humanity and divinity, and that of the
Holy Spirit being sent downwards also to sanctify us.
Christ has
a stole on His
shoulder pointing to His priesthood and that He has offered Himself for our
sakes.
The tree behind Christ points to the Cross on
which hung the Saviour of the world.
The house behind the Father points to
our heavenly home
The Mass
is the
foretaste of ‘first course’ – the Body and Blood of Christ are on the table –
the wedding banquet or supper of the Lamb in heaven – to which all are invited.
The three Persons are seated
around a table that seats four – the fourth place is for you and me – God
invites you to sit with Him and feel at home as an equal - comfortable – there
is a place for you in this relationship.
There is restlessness in all of us that can only be satisfied by God and our
relationship with Him in prayer and the sacraments. Let us try to know him,
love Him and serve Him better in this life on order to be happy with Him
forever in the next.
Glory be to the Father and to the Son
and to the Holy Spirit: As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen
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