Sunday, 26 May 2024

The Holy Trinity

 

For centuries people have been trying to comprehend the mystery of the Holy Trinity as if it is a puzzle which we are meant to resolve and when we do we get a prize.

God the Father, Jesus the Son, and the Holy Spirit ... (no title) ... three in one. What is that supposed to mean?

We accept (those of us who believe) that God exists and is up there somewhere, in Heaven , above the clouds or wherever. He has always existed and has created us as well as everything else in the Universe and beyond. OK ... we can understand and believe that.

Then there is Jesus. Born as a baby of a Virgin by the power of the Holy Spirit, and came to earth as a human. OK ... so He is the Son of God.

But wait a minute ... in the Credo it says I believe "in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, and born of the Father before all ages. God of God, light of light, true God of true God. Begotten not made, consubstantial to the Father, by whom all things were made."

Jesus was begotten, not made by God just like He made us and everything else. "Before all ages" - this means that Jesus has always existed. He did not just begin to exist when He was born on earth. When He was born on earth is when He appeared to us in human form. But before that, He has always existed with God, because He is God.

Consubstantial to the Father. From Latin consubstantialem, of one essence or substance. This word was used by the Council of Nicaea (325) when they wrote the Credo to express the Divinity of Christ. The Trinity is not a hierarchy. It isn't God at the top, then Jesus, and then the Holy Spirit. All three are equal and one; and have always been so.

Confusing? I suppose it is. But there's more.

We are then told about the Holy Spirit. He is the Spirit of God - His soul perhaps. He doesn't have a title as such. God is God, the Creator, Our Father in Heaven. Jesus is His only Son, our Saviour. But the Holy Spirit ... no title!

It was St Hilary of Poitiers, a Bishop in the 3rd Century AD, who first described the Holy Spirit as ‘the gift’. He is the gift given to us by God after Jesus ascended into Heaven. He is the very Spirit of God Himself. His very soul come back to us on earth to dwell within us and to help us in our Christian life. That’s why He is sometimes referred to as the Helper, the Counsellor, God’s own Being living within us.

And that is the Holy Trinity which we believe in and perhaps don't understand.

But let's be honest, there are many men in this world who do not understand their wives; so what hope have we really got of understanding the Holy Trinity?

When we get to meet St Peter we will not sit an exam to check how much we have learnt and what we understand.

God will instead look into our hearts ... our Faith ... and our actions.

God does not ask us to understand Him ... He asks us to trust Him and love Him.
 

16 comments:

  1. Not for the first time, I do appreciate you making sense out of the Holy Trinity. That's always been a Nonsensical issue (to me) -- yet something I was afraid to question for being thought a fool.

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    1. Please Mevely, do not think yourself a fool. The belief in the Holy Trinity is in itself a mystery - something we believe in blindly without understanding it. Just like Catholics believe that Communion is actually the body and blood of Christ. Based on John 6 when Christ said more than once that unless we eat His body and drink His blood we would not have eternal life. Catholics believe this, (or are "invited" to believe this), without understanding it.

      To get back to the Holy Trinity - how did this belief start and originate? I explain more about this in the EXPANDED VERSION HERE link above. Don't hesitate to write-in at enquiries@holyvisions.co.uk if I can help further.

      God bless, Mevely.

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  2. You certainly know how to make theology approachable, Victor. No, God doesn't ask us to understand it, just believe.
    Blessings!

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    1. Thank you for your kind words, Martha. I have explained this in more details in my link above EXPANDED VERSION HERE.

      God bless.

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  3. ❤️
    ---Cheerful Monk

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  4. I like how the last sentence sums up the whole topic.

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  5. We're asked to believe, even those things we will spend all eternity trying to understand.

    When I approach reading Scripture, I try to take the attitude, "Lord, I believe you. I may not understand all of it, but I take You at Your Word and pray you will reveal a bit more to me today than I knew yesterday."

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    1. Yes Mimi, we need to believe even though we do not fully understand.

      God bless you always.

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  6. thecontemplativecat here. Again, I am learning so much from your posts.

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  7. Good read as always, I like the triangle graphic up top. Good one. It is understandable but it is better to accept and try to live the best we can. I know we are all in for a shock one day, even the most faithful, methinks.

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    1. Thank you for your kind words, Jack. Indeed, we will be shocked one day to understand what we do not understand now.

      God bless you and Sherry.

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