
Once a year in the church we tie ourselves up in knots trying to get our heads around the three sides of God on Trinity Sunday.
So what do we do with the three sides of God? The three persons of the Godhead, the three natures of God, the multiple personality God, or however it is you see it?
If you or someone you love is hurting- you probably don’t care about Trinity Sunday.
If you are struggling with personal or family issues- you probably aren’t interested in church doctrine, the history of the Council of Nicaea will probably not help much and it probably doesn’t matter to you that God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit uncreated, incomprehensible three consubstantial persons, expressions, or hypostases one God in three distinct persons, yet one in substance, essence or nature.
You just want to know that God is God and that somehow God knows who you are- where you are what you are going through and what you need. You just want to know God cares. So, why do we even need a Trinity Sunday?
Why don’t we take a cue from Augustine and simply say the Trinity is a like a tree the roots, the trunk, the branches, they are all wood (one substance) but they are three entities or expressions. Amen
End of sermon! Perhaps I’ll go on a bit longer…!
The writer Dorothy Sayers equates God in 'the Mind of the Maker' with a creative artist. God's work is seen best in creation, where there are three stages- idea, expression and recognition. God the creator is the idea, or Essence of all reality.
We learn about God from all of creation, yet it is only in Jesus that we have the perfect expression of the idea or essence of God. The Spirit of God, coming to fruition at Pentecost, abides inside human creatures offering them recognition of the Idea. Idea, expression and recognition.
The 4th century Gregory of Nyssa suggested God is not an object to be understood but a mystery to be loved.
The story is told of St Augustine of Hippo, a great philosopher and theologian. He was preoccupied with the doctrine of the Blessed Trinity. He wanted so much to understand the doctrine of one God in three persons and to be able to explain it logically.
One day he was walking along the seashore reflecting on this matter…. the mystery of the Trinity. Suddenly, he saw a little child all alone on the shore. The child made a hole in the sand, ran to the sea with a little cup, filled her cup with sea water, ran up and emptied the cup into the hole she had made in the sand.
Back and forth she went to the sea, filled her cup and came and poured it into the hole. Augustine drew up alongside and said to her, “Little child, what are you doing?”
She replied, “I am trying to empty the sea into this hole.”
“How do you think,” Augustine asked her, “that you can empty this immense sea into this tiny hole and with this tiny cup?”
She answered back, “And you, how do you suppose that with your small head you can comprehend the immensity of God?” With that the child disappeared.
The theologian Shirley Guthrie writes
“The same God who is God over us as God the Father and Creator, and God with and for us as the incarnate Word and Son, is also God in and among us as God the Holy Spirit.”
Eugene Peterson reminds us that our Greek ancestors referred to the Trinity as perichoresis– which means dance.
“Imagine a folk dance, a round dance, with three partners in each set. The music starts up and the partners holding hands begin moving in a circle. On signal from the caller, they release hands, change partners, and weave in and out, swinging first one and then another. The tempo increases, the partners move more swiftly with and between and among one another, swinging and twirling, embracing and releasing, holding on and letting go. But there is no confusion, every movement is cleanly coordinated in precise rhythms, as each person maintains his or her own identity.”
But all the explanations, all the descriptions, all the answers to the questions about the Trinity are frail human attempts to describe something that simply cannot be described.
We can read descriptions of God in scripture. Believers have tried for centuries to describe God. But the best anyone can really do is describe what their particular, personal experience of God is like – how it sounds, how it feels, what it reminds us of.

Barbara Brown Taylor wrote-
The problem is that it is rarely the same experience twice in a row. Some days God comes as a judge, walking through our lives wearing white gloves and exposing all the messes we have made. Other days God comes as a shepherd, fending off our enemies and feeding us by hand. Some days God comes as a whirlwind who blows all our certainties away. Other days God comes as a brooding hen who hides us in the shelter of her wings. Some days God comes as a dazzling monarch and other days as a silent servant. If we were to name all the ways God comes to us, the list would go on forever: God the teacher, the challenger, the helper, the stranger, God the lover, the adversary, the yes, the no.”
So in all the mystery and confusion we need to remember about having a BIG God who does BIG things. We need all of God whether we understand it or not.
Beth, an episcopalian priest in America writes this:
“When our son was six or so, he overheard my conversation about the Trinity with our Jewish neighbour. Later, he asked, “So there’s God who’s God and Jesus who’s God and the Holy Spirit who’s God, right? How’s that work exactly?” I paused for a moment to think about something I could say to a six-year-old when he piped up with, “I know! It’s like a peanut butter and jam sandwich! Without the peanut butter or the jam, it wouldn’t be a peanut butter and jam sandwich. And without the bread it would just be a big old mess!”
Understanding the Trinity is not important.Knowing the promises of the Trinity is essential.
The Trinity assures us we are not powerless in the world because God is. A God who created all that is. We have the redeeming work of God through the human being Jesus and we experience the presence of that same God in the Holy Spirit who dwells within us and among us.
The Trinity keeps us from reducing God to what we can understand.
It keeps us aware of God’s mystery.
The Trinity assures us our God can do great things.
It promises we can trust a God we cannot predict or ever know completely.
The Trinity promises us we are never alonebecause God is a God of community. God is three- community- in relationship- not alone,
God is not alone and promises us we will never be alone. just as the Trinity is a call for us to be in community, in relationship with God and God’s children, there is no aloneness in the Trinity.
The Trinity is also an invitation. An invitation to participate with God in the dance. We are not mere spectators. There are always hands reaching out to pull us in to be an active participant in the relationship that is God.
We have the promise of a BIG God in all three manifestations particularly when we are sitting inworship feeling detached, isolated, alone, angry, deserted, depressed, grieving, hopeless, fearful, anxious, wounded, ashamed, tired, lost. We have the promise of Jesus he gave his disciples after telling them to get on with being his people. Remember – I am with you to the end of the age.
I love this quote with which I’ll end:
“The Trinity serves to remind us always of the magnificence of our God; that God isn’t singularly revealed; that God can’t be put in a box on the shelf; that God is active and dynamic and worthy of our prayers and praises. God chose to relate to us in three persons because God desires to be very personal. The Trinity shouldn’t frighten us. The Trinity should EXCITE us! Because of the Three Persons in one God, we know for sure that the God who spoke so abruptly to Job in a whirlwind is the same God who said, “forgive them” from the cross. And the Spirit who hovered over the chaos at creation is the same God who told the parable of the Prodigal Son.When we’re tempted to make God the reflection of our own smallness, Trinity Sunday calls us to a grander understanding.”
I also love the story of the little boy who was fishing with his grandfather in the beauty of nature with a fabulous sunrise just beginning to happen and the boy turned and asked his grandfather, “Have you ever seen God?” And the man answered, “Sometimes I think I never see anything else.” God is and God acts… isn’t that good news?
God of unchangeable power,
you have revealed yourself
to us as Father, Son and Holy Spirit;
keep us firm in this faith
that we may praise and bless your holy name;
for you are one God now and for ever.



