My friends, this week we are called to ponder the second of three themes after Easter, before returning to Ordinary Time. This theme is hard to get our heads around, and as I always suggest, in such cases, it is best to come at these issues through our hearts—as someone said, “the heart is wiser.”
So, our theme today, to ponder, is that of a “Triune God” –or three distinct persons, Creator, Savior/Revealer, and Spirit—all in one entity. At face value, it does seem “wise” to come at this “wonderful dilemma” with all of our abilities, to shed as much light and intelligence, plus, understanding that we can find, in making sense of this.
In my mind, besides intelligence, and heart, it will take a great deal of faith to entertain the notion that our Loving God has all these capabilities: that of creating, revealing, and a healing—protectiveness in Spirit, and to such a degree that each capability shows itself as an individual being—person! Now, that’s the wonder part—let’s look at what that means in our everyday lives. Scripture is always a good place to start.
As I read and ponder the scriptures for this feast, I see a collective and general theme of our God wanting to be close to us, wanting us to know “who” the Creator of all life, including us is, and that this “creating force” wants, in the end, to simply share life with us, wants us to take our one, precious existence, and grow to our potential, and be willing to share that potential with others.
The first reading from Deuteronomy says this: “Know this today, and take it into your hearts, your God is God indeed, in heaven…and on earth—there is no other.” I think it is significant here that we read, “take this into your hearts” to know who God truly is, as the Old Testament people were known for “chasing after” all manner of “gods” who seemed more powerful than they were. From the chosen readings today, we see that our God wants us to consider a relationship that is about love given, and received, and then shared in like manner.
Our God will not be one who imposes, “power over others,” but one who “loves powerfully,” in order that we, each of us, will be strengthened and encouraged to, “return that love” through our ministry to others in the world. The psalmist in 33 says of it, “The Creator loves justice and right and fills the earth with love.” Our prayer then, with the psalmist must be, “May your faithful love be upon us, … as we place our hope in you.”
Our “Salvation History” as we long spoke of it, prior to the Second Vatican Council, was so much about, “awaiting a Messiah” who we might say, “would come and save us from ourselves.” Our Loving God let us know, through prophets galore, that we were loved and expected to love in return—the words of the prophet Michah are probably most familiar to us: “Act justly, love tenderly, and walk humbly with your God.”
Yet we, as a people, continued to get “stuck” in “small boxes” of understanding—devoid of “heart,” so that we missed the one, over-riding message that our God wanted us to get—we are loved and are part of “God’s family,” as “beloved children,” as Paul speaks of it today in his letter to the Romans.
Thus, it was then important that our Loving God would become present in the person of Jesus, who became the Christ, by showing us, once and for all, just how “to do” the “human thing”—that in the end, it was all about love—not redemption, or punishment spared, but simply, “over-the-top love” for God’s beloved creatures! Jesus showed us this so beautifully in the stories of the Prodigal Child and the Good Shepherd, among others.
When our brother Jesus became the Christ, all humanity then had a common link, and never again, would any of us need to feel alone—Jesus sent his Spirit, the 3rd of the 3 persons of our wonderful God-head to be with us.
Thus, when Jesus left us physically, he laid out quite clearly what our task as members of this great family would be—share this, all that you know, and have seen me do and say!
So, as always, my friends, we come back to our everyday lives—we ask for faith strong enough to believe what our minds can’t truly fathom, but which our hearts can more fully comprehend. And with all faith, we come to believe that “hope” in all that we are capable of, is part of this too.
Additionally, as we heard in today’s alleluia verse from Psalm 8, in the face of “over-the-top,” or as Episcopal bishop, John Shelby Spong is fond of saying, “wasteful love” of our God for us, our stance must be humility: “Who are we,[in all the heavens and the earth] that you should be mindful of us?” Yet, our God is!
I will end then today with two concrete examples from this past week that show us a bit of the way to go in living out our one, precious life in the presence and shadow of, a God who loves us in a “triune” way.
You may have had the opportunity this past week to watch on CBS Nora O’Donnell’ s interview for 60 Minutes with Pope Francis. Now, while I still take issue with this human male, who can’t seem to get past his cultural “machismo” where women are concerned, he is doing some ground-breaking work where popes of the recent past are concerned in encouraging our Church and world to open-up, and at least attempt to include as many as possible. And understandably, he suffers criticism in his attempts.
Nora got into many current-day issues with Francis, and he shared his belief that, “people are fundamentally good,” but went on to say that “the inability to change,” when change is needed, holding onto, “teachings and traditions,” that no longer serve, is “dogmatic suicide” [!] He also spoke of a “globalism of indifference,” naming too many of us as, “Pontius Pilates washing [our] hands” of any responsibility. He named the stance of “zero intolerance” within the clergy to hear differing views as being in a “doctrinal box” which he called, “madness.”
But the highlight of the interview for me was when Nora asked Francis about “surrogacy” as a way to bring children into the world. Francis was clearly against the procedure for a number of reasons to which Nora had what I would call, “an intimate moment” with him, where she smiled, and responded, “but for some, Holy Father, it is their last chance.” Francis had the “presence of heart” to thank Nora as he noticed, “the care” on her face as she said what she did.
Therefore friends, as we ponder today, a God who comes to us, in several different ways, basically showing us that “we are loved,” let us respond in kind to God and our world to the best of our ability…Amen? Amen!