The Welcoming Trinity

It is tempting to treat the Trinity as a mathematical problem. How can three be one at the same time? I don’t know much about math but I doubt that any mathematicians have solved that one. Let’s try imagery. St. Patrick is said to have used the shamrock to illustrate the Trinity. You have three leaves but it’s one plant so. . . well, historians have found no evidence that St. Patrick tried that trick anyway. Paintings with an old man, a dead Jesus and a dove may be moving at times but are crude theologically. Rublev’s famous icon, however, does succeed in making the three angels form a unified shape. More sophisticated is St. Augustine’s notion that the Trinity is implanted in human beings through the faculties of memory, intellect, and will. That’s one human with three faculties, but with our sense of individuality, not so say individualism, this analogy stresses the unity over/against the threeness. The classic formula of three persons in one substance is pretty abstract but at least it has a decent balance of Three and One.

As an alternate route, it might be worth thinking a bit about the dialectic of unity and diversity among humans. Each person is a separate entity but there are many instances where a deep unity is felt between two or more people. Marriage is the most obvious example where the two are said to be one flesh. The two are a couple. People talk about a couple being an “item.” But you still have two people. Friendship is another obvious example and here we could easily have three friends being closely united with one another. This analogy, too, is far from perfect as it veers towards plurality, especially in our individualistic age. Even so, what unity people experience with one another seems likely to be a faint but true indication of the Trinity. After all, if the Trinity teaches us anything, it teaches us that persons don’t have relationships, people are relationships. We shouldn’t give individualism the last word.

The mystery of diversity in unity at the heart of the Trinity speaks to what is arguably the biggest human challenge: learning how to encounter the other, the stranger, and to reconcile with enemies. One might object that since the three Persons are somehow one God, they surely aren’t strangers to one another. Presumably not, but sometimes the strangest strangers and bitterest enemies are those closest to us. Aren’t civil wars the most uncivil of all? What about the infighting within various church groups? And then there is what happens when two people who are “one flesh” tear each other apart. Offspring of a marriage may presumably be like the parents, but all too often these offspring become total strangers. Young Sheldon, an autistic child highly advanced in physics and math, is as strange as they come to his otherwise normal family. With the series having just ended, we see that the family, most profoundly his father, rose to the challenges of raising such a stranger for the most part, contrary to snippy remarks by the older Sheldon in The Big Bang Theory. One could interpret the Young Sheldon series as a long parable of struggling to meet the stranger, a stranger who at times is incomprehensible and at other times willfully difficult.

So, the persons of the Trinity. presumably far from strangers to each other, are the perfect example of close relations abiding in love without rivalry. Unbelievably more than that, they collaborated in the immense Act of creating a world of strangers to meet with and love and cherish. Not only that, but incredibly, these Persons seek to enter into deep union with all created strangers and continue to love these strangers when they become enemies. We aren’t left alone with our challenges to welcome the stranger and reconcile with enemies. We have Three Divine helpers and we have each other.

See also Trinity as Story and Song

Living the Mystery of the Trinity

lakeGray1The Trinity is often presented as a puzzle: How can one be three and three be one? Mathematicians haven’t come up with any answers to that, so let’s treat the Trinity as a mystery to live, not a puzzle to solve. After all, it was through living the Mystery that the apostles preached a Triune God.

The mystery begins at Creation. The Breath of God breathes on the primordial waters and the Word of God calls the world into being. Then, God breathes God’s own life into the first human made out of wet clay.

Think about it a moment. Having been made out of the clay of the earth, we are each called to life by a silent voice that resonates deeply within us with God’s Desire, and the Breath of the same God enlivens us with that same Desire.

Of course, we don’t remember either the Call or the Breath. We emerge into life with forgetfulness, quickly falling prey to anger and anxiety, even though the Call and the Breath continue without ceasing. In daily life, we use memory to refer to remembering things such as appointments, how to do things, and what books we’ve read. But the great mystical writers in Christianity such as St. Augustine and St. John of the Cross use the word “memory” to refer to recollecting ourselves in the Memory of God who Calls us and Breathes in us. That is, memory, this deeper memory, is recollection in the Trinity. If we stop and think, we might hear the still small voice of this inner memory calling us and breathing in us. If we are fortunate enough to have people in our lives who take time to remember deeply, our own deeper memory is quickened.

At the end of Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus commands his disciples to “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” (Mt. 28: 19) In itself, this admonition sounds abstract but, as St. Paul explains, the baptism of which Jesus speaks is a baptism into Jesus’ death and Resurrection. (Rom. 6) That is, we are baptized into the death of the Word that Calls us into being when the Word was killed by angry and anxious people like us and brought back to life by the quickening Breath that inspires us to understand, in the depths of our own desires, the Desire that lead the Word that calls us to do such a thing for our sakes.

Most of us don’t remember being baptized any more than we remember being created. I don’t, having been baptized as an infant. But even for those whose baptism is a memory in the lesser sense, we have to remember in the deeper sense, the mystery of our redemption in the same way that we must remember the mystery of our creation. Again, the deeper memory is grounded in the work of the Trinity in our lives. For St. Augustine, Psalm 42 points to this mystery: “Deep calls to deep at the thunder of your cataracts;.” (Ps. 42: 7)

If we puzzle over the numbers, we miss the adventure of the mystery of living deeply in the memory of the Trinity calling us and breathing through us out of the depth of the Godhead. This is a mystery we need to live each day as we live in a world where so much anger and anxiety pull us towards forgetfulness. But if “the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit” is with all of us as St. Paul affirms in his closing words to the Corinthians, then we will “agree with one another [and] live in peace.” (2 Cor. 13: 11-13) And, we will preach this deeper memory to others by the way we live our lives.