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Good morning. Most of this week I’ve been up on Whidbey
Island on study leave. Once each year, my study group from
seminary gets together for three days to dissect one another’s
lives, read a book together…and try to sneak in a
little totally non-competitive team golf. This year, the
dissecting of lives was challenging as always…we read
a very good book from Craig Barnes called Searching
for Home, …and
my team won the non-competitive golf. So all is well!
As Mike has said, today is “Trinity Sunday” on
the church calendar, and we’re using just one of the
many biblical texts that talk about this mystery called the
Trinity. Next week we’ll return to our study of the
book of Hebrews for a long stretch.
Let me give you three images:
- A man came to me once and said, “I’ve just
found out I have a very serious disease. I think that God
is paying me back for something I did wrong a long time
ago.”
- A
few weeks ago I read you the description from a new age
book of a god described as the “generic God, the
one in plain white wrapping ready to be dyed and decorated
by your own creative world view.”
- A woman once said to
a friend, “You need to know right
up front that I don’t believe in God.” The friend
said, “Tell me what God it is that you don’t
believe in.” She proceeded to denounce the idea of
a distant God who had to be begged to care about things
in human life.
In all cases, I would want to say this: “I
don’t
believe in that god either!”
But if we are willing to say the kind of God we don’t
believe in, we must also be willing to name the God we do
believe in, and have a reason for doing so. Perhaps another
way of saying that is that it is very, very important that
when we say “God,” we are clear about who we
are talking about.
It was Gregory of Nazianus, an early church father, who
once said,
“When I say God, I
mean Father, Son and Holy Spirit.”
In the second book of the Lord of the Rings series, J.R.R.
Tolkien creates a special creature called an “ent.” Ents
are sort of living trees which are older and wiser than most
things on the earth. And when the ents speak, they rumble
on and on and on. To other folks, it seems like they take
forever to say something.
When the hobbits first meet an ent they call Treebeard,
he tells them:
“I am not going to tell you my name, not yet
at any rate…for one thing it would take a long
while. My name is growing all the time, and I’ve
lived a very long, long time; so my name is like a story.
Real names tell you the story of the things they belong
to in my language… (In
my language) it takes a very long time to say anything…because
we do not say anything…unless it is worth taking
a long time to say, and to listen to.”
Gregory says, “When I say God, I mean Father,
Son and Holy Spirit.” It’s a bit cumbersome, this
whole trinity idea, and it does take quite a bit longer to
say. But it is well worth our time.
In Matthew’s gospel, from the very beginning, God
is present as Father, Son and Holy Spirit: Mary found to
be with child through the Holy Spirit. She will give birth
to a son, Jesus, Savior. It fulfills what the Lord has said, “call
him Immanuel, which means God with us.”
In the baptism story I just read from Matthew 3, Jesus the
Son is baptized. Heaven opens, the Dove of the Holy Spirit
descends upon him, and the voice of God from heaven says,
“This
is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”
As Matthew’s gospel unfolds, this Father, Son and
Holy Spirit confluence becomes more and more defined until
at the very end, the Resurrected Jesus leaves his final words
to his disciples:
“Go now and make disciples of all nations baptizing
them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit.”
It is the fullest name for God that scripture can give us.
The trinity that Christians believe in, one God in three
persons…three ways that the one God is present with
us…has some mystery inherent in it. One theologian
(Shirley Guthrie), in fact, says the trinity
“is a
mystery to be confessed, not a mathematical puzzle to be
solved.”
We don’t look up “trinity” in
a Bible concordance and check out the verse. It’s not
there. The trinity is the church’s best attempt, from
the earliest of times, to say the truest word about God,
based upon God’s revelation to us, as recorded in the
scriptures. All of the scriptures.
A couple months ago on a Saturday we held our quarterly “Exploring
Theology” class. The topic was this one, the trinity,
and we broke up into groups and looked up at least a couple
dozen scriptures, and categorized them. We looked up scriptures
that focused on Almighty God, the God that Jesus called Father.
We looked at the scriptures that talked about Jesus, as both
human and divine. We looked at scriptures that emphasized
the role of the Holy Spirit. We looked up scriptures that
insisted that there is One God.
We also saw how the three sometimes overlap. For instance,
God created the heavens and the earth. But Colossians and
Hebrews tell us the Son was present at creation. Then Genesis
says the Spirit of God moved over creation.
We looked at the scriptures that talked about the equality
amongst this Father, Son and Holy Spirit God. We looked at
other scriptures that talked about each of the three being
subordinate to the others. We looked at how each pointed
towards the other. We looked at the love shared between Jesus
and the Father. We looked at the provision of the Holy Spirit
permanently after Jesus left the earth. We listened to Jesus
say, “The Father and I are one.”
We charted all of these, and drew lines and categorized
and sat back and looked at it all of them. Like the early
church, we tried to wrestle with the whole testimony of scripture.
Augustine called the trinity a holy society. A divine community.
There is some mystery here. A mystery that probably should
be confessed rather than solved.
What is not a mystery is this: The
God of the universe, has chosen to reveal Himself to us.
And the way He chose to self-reveal, to tell us his name,
his story is this: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. One God.
- Father: Creator, ruler, protector, God over us.
- Son: Savior, reconciler, liberator, God with/for us.
- Holy Spirit: renewer, transformer, God in/among us
It is important to name the God we follow. There are gods
everywhere these days. And so from the earliest times, Christians
tried to articulate this confession. The Apostle’s
Creed started coming together in second century. It begins:
I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven
and earth…
…and in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord,
conceived by the Holy Ghost…
…I believe in the Holy Ghost.
The Gloria Patri, (which I won’t sing from the pulpit
this morning!), also dating back to the second century:
Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost...
The Scots Confession, 16th century, reads at its very beginning:
We confess and acknowledge one God alone…one
in substance and yet distinct in three persons, the Father,
the Son and the Holy Ghost.
A Celtic Prayer:
O Father who sought me,
O Son who bought me,
O Spirit who taught me.
Now, there are all sorts of images people
have used to describe the Trinity in an understandable way.
An egg (shell, white, yolk), water (liquid, steam, ice).
Those are more or less helpful, I guess. But what is more
helpful to me is the conversation the church has had through
the ages over this idea of trinity.
If we go back to more ancient times, the Western church
(Rome) most often emphasized the Oneness of God, and then
recognized the distinctiveness of the three persons. One
visual image used for this is a triangle. Ideally, it is
an equilateral triangle, with the sides labeled “Father,
Son, Holy Spirit.” The danger with the picture is that
the labels have often been slid to be at the points of the
triangle rather than the sides. The upper point is inevitably
the Father, the lower ones the Son and Spirit, giving the
impression that one is hierarchically above the others.
The Eastern church, that we think of as the Orthodox church,
first emphasized the distinctiveness of the three persons,
and then moved to affirming the unity of God. In the ancient
artwork of the Eastern Orthodox church, the trinity is most
often shown as three figures sitting around a table.
A helpful picture here is of a circle. On the circle are
three smaller circles, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. And then
arrows moving in every conceivable direction among those
three circles, all trying to show the relationship within
God’s being.
One of the words very popular in
theological circles today is perichoresis, which
attempts to help with this idea of God as trinity. It was
coined in the 7th century, by John of Damascus. Perichoresis
is a Greek word made up of two words: peri = around and choresis (we get our word choreography) = dance.
Dance around. The dance of God. The point is that within
Himself, God is in community, is in relationship. That is
the God of Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Now, I’m going on and on about this idea of the trinity
of God. But what difference does it make?
We are a society of extreme individualism. But the God that
we follow is a God of community, a fellowship. And amazingly,
he invites us to enter into that dance. The church is not
a bunch of individuals who show up at a building at 9 a.m.
(or 9:05 or 9:10!), but a people. A family.
We are made in God’s image. And if, within the nature
of God there is a loving, caring, mutually supportive community…then
we too are wired this way. We need others. We were made to
be in relationships.
Now, we have all heard that within each one of us is a God-shaped
space because we were made to be in relationship with God.
That is very true. Author John Ortberg says it would seem
that there is also a people-shaped space because we were
made to be in relationship with one another, wired that way.
That is the way that we reflect the God who made us!
In Genesis, while everything was still
good in the Garden,
before any snakes or temptation or sin had crept in, God
said time after time that everything that was made—land,
animals, sky, human beings—“…was good.”
All good. Except one thing. It was not good for man to be
alone. There was a need, a longing. And with the creation
of the second human being, it was the beginning of a community
that in some way, often a distorted and pale way...reflected
the community within God.
Do we see that desire for community in our world? At
every turn. It doesn’t matter if it is images of
Lake Wobegone, old episodes of “Cheers,” the
neighborhood reading group, the bowling team…or the
building of seven coffee shops within four blocks of Bethany.
What does that reflect? Besides an addiction to caffeine…a
desire to be with others.
The unfortunate thing is that, according to a number of
studies… we are at an all-time low in terms of the
level of community, by almost every possible measure. We
drive the car into the garage and skip the conversation with
the neighbor. We work long hours. We email instead of call,
we call instead of visit. We spend hours on the computer
and minutes with people. The most common answer to the question
of the day, “How are you?” is this: “Too
busy.” I heard it come out of my mouth three or
four times this week. “How are you?” “I’m
too busy.”
We are a people who, no matter how we try to hide it or
cover it up…are wired to be in relationship with others.
Of course we are! We are made in the image of a God who has
always experienced community: Father, Son, Holy Spirit.
And the amazing thing is: We are invited into this community.
It has been extended to us, at great cost. And we are called
to extend it to others. Ortberg says it like this:
“Every time you forgive someone who hurt you, encourage
someone who feels defeated, extend compassion to someone
who stands alone, confront someone in love, open your heart
to a friend, reconcile with an enemy, devote time to a child,
you align yourself with God’s central purpose in this
world (and I would say with God’s character).”
Community may be closer than you think, maybe even at home.
When the fires in California were raging last year, a journalism
teacher named Blake Nelson and his family (wife and two adolescent
kids) were forced to flee from their home as their neighborhood
began to go up in flames. Each member of the family had to
quickly pack up a couple small things they thought were most
important, fully expecting that they would lose everything.
Nelson had a hard time zeroing in on anything, then just
thought of documents, things. They drove away with the flames
edging into their neighborhood and went into town.
It was Sunday, and they went to church. Nelson stayed in
the car with the family dog, and listened to the updates
on the radio. After a short time he says,
Pretty soon my 13-year old daughter came out to the
parking lot and sat in the backseat with the dog. “I couldn’t
concentrate in there,” she said.
I turned off the radio so it wouldn’t scare her
any further. Tears just rolled out of her eyes.
“It’s all replaceable,” I said, trying
to comfort her, making eye contact through the review mirror. “If
the house goes, we’ll build a bigger one and you’ll
have a bigger room.”
She nodded, and smiled through her tears. “I packed
the picture of you and me at Disney World.”
I think his daughter had it just right. Each time we choose
people over things, relationship over activity, we participate
in the way God has designed us to be…in community.
We reflect God.
And when I say God (as Gregory said), I mean: Father, Son
and Holy Spirit.
Let’s pray.
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