Trinity Sunday
Trinity Sunday
The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity
An act of Intense LOVE given for us
(ref. Ex. 34:4b-6, 8-9. 2 Corinth. 13:11-13. Jn. 3:16-18) Dcn. Bill Kenney 5-27-26
The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity celebrates a fundamental doctrine of our Catholic faith. It is a central mystery that there is one God who exists as three distinct, co-eternal divine Persons—the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The math just doesn’t add up: one equals three, three is one- that’s why it is a mystery. Yet it is precisely this fact of our faith that unites the Christian family with God and his Son through the power and love of the Holy Spirit. The Catechism states that “the Most Holy Trinity is the mystery of God in himself, the source of all the other mysteries of faith and the light that enlightens them.” God is Love itself and that love shared between the Father and the Son and given to us in the sacraments is the Holy Spirit. The fullness of the sacraments is revealed and conferred by the name of our Triune God, giving us “a share in the life of the Blessed Trinity”. Using the Trinitarian formula at baptism, we are graced with the indwelling of the Holy Trinity. St. Matthew tells us, “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit”. The Father creates; the Son redeems; and the Holy Spirit sanctifies. An efficacious Trinity, indeed.
The sign of the cross is itself a short Triune prayer. When we invoke the name of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit we must, with great intentionality and reverence, act, understand, and believe what we are doing. We lift up and carry that cross in all humility, respect, and love for God in every prayer throughout our lives.
Our Gospel reading we prayed today is John 3:16. This verse has been made popular in modern times by evangelists holding signs and wearing shirts especially at televised sporting events. I doubt signs were made and held up at Roman gladiator fights or chariot races, lest they be martyred! Thank goodness for our freedom of speech! Do they and those who make the effort to look up this verse in the Bible realize the profound and dynamic meaning of this divine truth? In this verse the Holy Trinity is revealed. Out of love for sinful man, the love of the Father, which is the Holy Spirit, gifts us with the incarnation and Passion of his only consubstantial Son for our redemption. Three persons in one intertwined by the love between the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. This verse serves as the ultimate expression of God's intense and intimate agape love between Creator and creature and is the foundation of the Christian message of salvation.
Ask yourself: When have I felt God’s love most intensely? How can I emulate Jesus’ self-giving love through the power of the Holy Spirit in my life?
The Gospel passage from John continues…”everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life.” That seems pretty clear-cut, pretty do-able, right? True faith in Jesus, however, goes beyond merely believing that He existed. We are called to a personal, life-altering reliance in Jesus Christ for our salvation. And more than that, we must study, learn, and live his Gospel. We must accept and trust Jesus as the Way, the Truth, and the Life for our salvation. We must live our faith in Jesus, transforming our hearts and surrendering ourselves to obedience, repentance, and good works of love and service to others. This is but the tip of the iceberg for what it means to “believe in him”.
The Holy Trinity is also revealed in the Eucharistic prayers at Mass. We offer our humble gifts of bread and wine to the Father, through the Son, and, by the transforming power of the Holy Spirit, is made manifest the true presence, the Body and Blood of Jesus, for our sanctification. The Holy Eucharist is the enduring sign of sacrificial Love which Jesus left us in order that we might recommit ourselves to Him, to let ourselves be nourished by His love, and so be ever more transformed into the perfect image of God.
The Holy Trinity is three divine persons uncreated, infinite, eternal, and almighty. One God, not three Gods. One God, we call Abba, Father that we may have relationship with him. He calls us to match his intensity of love for us with intense praise, and worship of him. May we, in the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, not perish in our unbelief. As Exodus says, “O Lord, pardon our wickedness and sins and receive us as your own." May we be united as coheirs with Christ sharing the unconditional love of the Father in our lives- for the hope and joy of our eternal salvation, and for the glory of God.



