The
Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity, Year B
The Paschal Season concluded last Sunday
with the celebration of Pentecost, and this week’s liturgy cannot help but draw
further treasure from the mysteries of Christ's life and teaching. Today we are called to become more aware of
the Good News that Christianity brings.
From the Nativity to Pentecost - from the birth of the Saviour in
Bethlehem to his death, resurrection and ascension, and ultimately his sending
of the gift of the Holy Spirit - our conception of God has been radically
changed. By the gift of his grace,
rather than our merit, it has been made possible for us to know the true God:
one in essence yet three persons.
It's as if Moses is asking us the
question which we hear in the first reading. "Ask now of the days of old, before your time, ever since God created
humankind upon the earth; ask from one end of the sky to the other: Did
anything so great ever happen before? Was it ever heard of?" (Dt
4:32). God has spoken to us, he has
revealed to us his Eternal Word, Jesus Christ.
He has chosen us from among the nations as his own, redeemed us with the
blood of his Son and has given us the gift of the Spirit (cfr 2 Cor 1,22). He has done all this before our very eyes.
The certainty and hope that come
from this divine predilection allows us to reflect briefly on the way that our
own times deals with the ‘question’ of God.
We have said that the mysteries of
Christmas and Pentecost have given humanity a true conception of God. Obviously, this gift is only for those who
have received it. As St John in the Prologue
to his Gospel writes; those to whom 'he
gave power to become children of God'(Jn 1:12). We cannot contemplate the mystery of the Holy
Trinity as if we were spectators in an art gallery looking at a painting. We can only see that mystery from within a
friendship with Christ which draws into the same divine filiation through the
gift of the Spirit.
However, if knowledge of the ‘true’
God is given only to those who accept Christ, does that mean that outside the
Gospel there is no way for humanity come to a knowledge of the existence of
God? Is the atheism of the Western world
entirely down to a failure to spread the Gospel? No!
For the Church, the evangelical
mission is necessary - it is derived from the Church's own nature. Today it is even more urgent as the Pope
Benedict has noted by establishing a Pontifical Council for ‘New Evangelisation’
in the last couple of years and by proclaiming a Year of Faith which begins on
October 11th this year.
However, our culture's 'crisis' in
its knowledge of God goes beyond a lack of evangelisation. It is rooted primarily in a 'crisis' of
reason, which seems to be impervious to reality and to the Gospel. Humans had affirmed the existence of one God
several centuries before Christ’s coming, and understood God to be the origin
and end of all that exists. Today,
though, our culture seems unable to express this knowledge. It is as if the argument is impossible to
deal with. The existence of God is
considered ‘unprovable’ because there is no premise from which it can be
deduced. God seems to be unavailable to
our senses, missing from all the scientific discoveries whether on a galactic
or molecular scale. God is sometimes simply
considered a human invention, developed in past times to justify what man did
not know about the world and about himself, and therefore seems obsolete in our
modern age.
This worldview is a mutilation of
true reason, because it prevents us from recognising reality as a 'sign'
through which God reveals Himself to us and calls us incessantly into a
relationship with Him. Knowledge of God
only occurs when there is true freedom which springs from God as the author of
all things. The only limit God has set
on his own Omnipotence is our freedom.
Only by letting ourselves be challenged by the 'sign' of creation can we
learn of God's existence. And only be
letting ourselves see the greatest sign of all - the Church which brings the
Divine Presence into the world - can we be drawn by Christ into an intimate
knowledge of the Father in love and adoration communicating it to those that we
meet.
The Lord shows great confidence in
us when he asks us to announce this Good News in this difficult epoch. But we trust in the Lord who, faced with the
doubt that still lived in the hearts of His disciples did not hesitate to
reassure them, saying " know that I
am with you always; yes, to the end of time" (Mt 28:20).
May the Blessed Virgin Mary guide us
to welcome more and more the gift of the Holy Spirit. May we faithfully serve the Son so that, with
Mary, our whole life may come one day to sing with the choirs of heaven: Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to
the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world
without end. Amen!
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