Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our strength and our redeemer (Psalm 19:14).

Friday, May 31, 2013

Trinity Sunday - May 26

Separate, But Inseparable

Today is Trinity Sunday. Another of the principal feast days in the church calendar. The only one dedicated, not to an event in Christ’s life or the saints of the church, but to a doctrine. It must be a pretty important doctrine… the doctrine of the Trinity.

Most preachers face this day with apprehension, burdened by the feeling that it is our responsibility to make the doctrine of the Trinity comprehensible to the people in the pews. In my experience, however, the people in the pews either really don’t care at all whether or not they understand the doctrine of the Trinity, or they cling steadfastly, and will not be budged, from their own pre-existing understanding of the Trinity. An understanding which is inevitably heretical. If you think you really understand the Trinity, it’s pretty sure to be heresy.

So whether it’s H2O as water, steam and ice, or St. Patrick’s famous shamrock, or a man who is husband, father and son… those are all heresies.

Fortunately, an orthodox understanding of the doctrine of the Trinity is not an essential element for personal salvation. On the other hand, clinging to a heretical understanding might be an impediment to the life of faith, a prideful barrier to an ever-growing experience of God’s presence.

At the very least, the doctrine of the Trinity reminds us of the mystery of God’s being and of our ultimate inability to comprehend or describe that mystery. If you ever think you’ve got God figured out, remember the Trinity with humility. We can never fully comprehend or describe the mystery of God’s being.

Basically, the doctrine of the Trinity affirms that God is Three. And One. At the same time. Three. And One. It isn’t “like” anything else in our world or our experience. All of the metaphors fall short.

They either describe God as one who happens to function in three different ways or as three different gods who happen to communicate really well with one another and share a common mission.

But as I’ve thought about the Trinity this year, I’ve been using some new language that, at least for me, takes the mystery of the Trinity and applies it to something that is important in our own relationship with God.

The Trinity is made up of separate things or persons who are inseparable. There’s nothing “like” it anywhere else in our world. Totally separate, independent persons that are inseparable.

The persons of the Trinity are distinct, but you never get one without the other two. Separate, but inseparable.

This can be a model for our relationship with God. We are separate from God. We are distinct individuals, each of us entire of himself or herself. Our bodies, our personalities, our wills, are ours. Totally ours. Nothing hampers or limits our individuality or our independence from God.

And yet, by God’s wondrous grace, we share in God’s being. We are inseparable from God.

We are as inseparable from God as the persons of the Trinity are inseparable one from another.

Distinct and separate, but inseparable.

And through our mutual participation in God’s life, we are also inseparable from one another. Distinct and separate as we may be as individuals, we are inseparable as the Body of Christ. And furthermore, we are inseparable, the living from the dead. A reassurance on this Memorial Day weekend when many pause to think of those we love but see no longer. There’s a prayer that we often say at funerals. One phrase says, “Draw us closer to you that we may know ourselves nearer to our beloved who are with you."

In our relationship with God, we are separate, gloriously unique and whole as individuals, but inseparable from God. Separate, but inseparable.

My prayer this Trinity Sunday is that God will increase my awareness and my trust in the inseparability of my life from the life of God. Separate, but inseparable.