
The Holy Trinity, Hendrick van Balen the Elder 1620s, Sint-Jacobskerk, Antwerp, Belgium.
“A bell’s not a bell ’til you ring it –
A song’s not a song ’til you sing it –
Love in your heart wasn’t put there to stay –
Love isn’t love ’til you give it away!”
Although that is not in today’s readings, you might say it reflects the truth the painting above is trying to convey…
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I know those words above are not to be found in today’s Scripture readings, but I contend they could have been! Oscar Hammerstein II wrote that verse, a song in the musical The Sound of Music. Maria von Trapp sings it to Lisl, a daughter of the widower Maria had just married. Lisl has fallen for a young man in the town and was eager to act on her feelings. Maria cautions patience and care, and the song suggests what Lisl should be looking for. Has the truth in the song actually happened yet? That’s the question. So: what has all this to do with today’s feast? Everything! God the Father had guided the Chosen People through centuries of turmoil, betrayal, trust, adventure, conquest and defeat over and over again. And God had clearly decided that they were ready for the ultimate truth, the overwhelming revelation from the lips of his own Son. And the message was simple, pure and direct: “Love one another as I have loved you” (John 13:34-35). God had approached Abram/Abraham at a time when children were being sacrificed as the price to be paid for divine protection. That was taking place in Canaan, where God wanted Abram to go, and that, I believe, was the main reason God intervened in human life at all. Over the centuries, God managed to alter that mind set into one of appealing for divine assistance, allied to good lives and obedience to God’s will as revealed over hundreds of years and as stated in the Hebrew Bible. And clearly God had decided that now was the time for the ultimate revelation: the Holy Trinity. And at the heart of the Holy Trinity is love. That is the divine power which never fails. It is eternal, and can be relied upon through anything and everything. St. Paul says today: The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you (with which every Mass begins). And ultimately, the proof beyond all telling: “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son…” How much more proof do we need? Rather than deny that, Jesus was prepared to undergo ultimate suffering as a proof of that reality. Each one of us is the focus of God’s love – that’s how important we are to God! And remember, never say “How can God feel that way because of me – what about the millions of others? So don’t forget: we are dealing with God, all powerful, all loving and able to show it each and every one one of us! And, as is the nature of love, God wants it returned! It is then true love, alive and healthy.
And logically, love demands at least two conscious beings able and willing to do exactly that. So clearly God had decided that the Chosen People were now ready for the revelation. But God has made us all with a profound freedom to say yes or no. On the whole, the Chosen People said “No” to the Messiah (“a murderer they save, the Prince of Life they slay”), and the Christian Church was born, claiming the divine reality of Three Persons in One God. And at the heart of this new divine revelation was love. There are three realities within One Godhead. They are so united in love that two things happen: Complete unquestioned dedication to each other, and with a love so strong that it must be shared. Within human reality, the union of two results in three, echoing the Trinity itself. Here (and I am assuming much) the Father and Spirit unite so profoundly and eternally that the Son is always and always has been and always will be the reality of that love. I think that we humans reflect God, who made us. It is said that all artists incorporate something of themselves in their work. This is called automimesis, a concept the result of the Renaissance. Well, it’s possible. Vincent van Gogh certainly seems to have achieved that. Self-portraits are very frequently found even among the greatest painters (Rembrandt?). God is the greatest of all artists who gifts us with our own talents with which we are make our way through life. And within all of those, the light of God should flow, author of all. So no matter who or what we are, God is present as a matter of love for each of us, and so we are expected to respond and reveal the divine within each of us in what we do, what we say and what we believe. And I repeat my strong belief that the feminine reality must be present in God for such to become reality. It seems to be unthinkable without it. And the Spirit is the feminine principle. This is seen in the mundane – the gender of almost all of the Aramaic/Hebrew words relating to the Spirit are feminine (including the word Spirit itself) – and the numinous union of the Father-Spirit is expressed in the Son eternally. And it is our greatest privilege to be invited into the very heart of love itself by God Godself! It is the nature of love to be given away, and it is our privilege to return it when it came, with humility, gratitude and joy. And, in the end, to be taken up into that very source of all love and life – forever.

The Holy Trinity, Attributed to Francisco Caro 1627, Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid, Spain.
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