Throughout
the centuries, the rosary has been one of the most popular forms of prayer for
the Christian people. It allows us not only to invoke the powerful intercession
of the Blessed Virgin Mary, but the repetition of the Our Father, the Hail Mary
and the Glory Be invites us to focus our minds on the mysteries of Jesus' life
which we contemplate with each decade. As the rosary becomes more and more a
part of our spiritual life, the mysteries take on new meaning for us. They are
no longer just events of the distant past. Rather, we begin to look at our own
lives through the lens of the life of Christ. We see in our joys the joyful
mysteries of Jesus' life playing themselves out. Our difficulties and suffering
are transformed into moments of grace as we see the sorrowful mysteries of the
suffering and death of Christ becoming a reality in our own lives. Through this
powerful form of prayer, we learn that mysteries are not just something we
ponder in our minds with wonder, but realities that we are invited to enter
into and to live.
Each year we
set aside this first Sunday after Pentecost to ponder the great mystery of the
Blessed Trinity. We reflect on the nature of our one God who is three persons -
Father, Son and Spirit. There have been many attempts to try to explain this
reality. Saint Patrick used the example of the shamrock which has three leaves
but is still one flower. Sometimes the triangle which has three sides but is
one shape is used as a symbol of the Blessed Trinity. One of the best examples is
that of a family. A mother, a father and a child - though distinct persons -
come together in love to form one family, one household. So God is a family, a
community of persons marked by self-giving love. The mystery of the Blessed
Trinity, in its simplest terms, is another way of describing our God as a God
of love.
Like the
mysteries of the rosary, the Blessed Trinity is a reality that is not just
meant to be pondered but to be entered into and lived. Saint Paul explains how
in today's second reading. The third person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit,
lives in our hearts and testifies to us that we are the sons and daughters of
our Heavenly Father. God has invited each of us to join the family of love that
he is. We have been adopted by God so that we can share in the unconditional,
self-giving love which the Father offers to the Son and the Son offers to the
Father through the Holy Spirit. The mystery of the Blessed Trinity is not just
about the nature of God, but about how we are chosen to become part of the
family that God is.
As we
meditate on this mystery and enter into it, we cannot help but change. We begin
to act like members of the family of God. If we were adopted by a king or a
wealthy person it would no doubt change our lives. Because of the power and
riches which would be at our disposal, we would no longer be happy with the
simple life we lived before. It is just so for us when the reality of our
adoption in Christ takes root in our hearts. We no longer settle for the
fleeting pleasures this world offers. We no longer live and act like people who
have no faith and no hope. Rather the knowledge that we are loved by God and
are members of his family causes us to act with a certain dignity and a new
purpose.
Our ancestors
in the faith, the Jewish people, understand this reality very well. As Moses
describes it for us in the first reading from the book of Deuteronomy, the Jews
understand that they have been chosen out of all the nations on the earth to be
a people special to God. They look at their long history through the lens of
God's saving power beginning with the covenant with Abraham, through their
delivery from slavery in Egypt and into the crossing of the Jordan River into
the Promised Land. Because they are a chosen people, they understand that they
cannot live the way other nations do. Rather they must live according to the
Law which God revealed to them. They must show forth his justice and mercy by
caring for those whom society casts asides and by turning their backs on all
forms of permissiveness and immorality. Just so we who have been called out of
the slavery of sin and given the Spirit of adoption must live our lives
according to the gospel message so that our dignity as sons and daughters of
God can be shown forth to the whole world.
Because, by
its nature, a mystery is impossible to fully explain or understand, ritual is
at the heart of what we do as a believing people. Jesus and the apostles
understood that if we were to participate fully in the saving mystery of the
one God who is three persons, we would need something more than words to
nourish our spiritual lives. For that reason, Jesus left us not only his
teaching but the sacraments as well. In today's gospel Jesus commissions the
disciples not only to preach the good news but to baptize the nations "in
the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit." Through
baptism, which is the first of the sacraments, we are adopted as sons and
daughters of God. The other sacraments build on this reality. And so participating
in the sacraments whenever possible is vitally important if the mystery of
God's life is to become real in our own lives.
We bless
ourselves "in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit." We offer the Mass to the Father, through the Son and in the Holy
Spirit. Though we cannot fully explain or understand it, the mystery of the
Trinity is woven into our lives as believers. It is nothing more or less than
the nature of God whose love is so abundant that he welcomes us to share in his
very life. It is an invitation which we first received at our baptism. We
strive, with God's help, to respond to that invitation daily by living our
lives according to the dignity that is ours as sons and daughters of God.
Through the sacraments and prayer, we enter more fully into that mystery which
is beyond words. And we live with an active hope that one day we will see God
as he is - one God in three persons - and praise him forever.
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