In the paper
this morning, there’s a very long story. It takes up three or four
complete pages and is called 102Minutes: Last Words at the Trade Center.
Just a few excerpts from the story will make the setting for our reflection
on the Holy Trinity.
It begins:
They began as calls for help, information,
and guidance that quickly turned into soundings of desperation, anger and
love. Now, they are the remembered voices of the men and women who
were trapped on the high floors of the Twin Towers. From their last
words, a haunting chronicle of the final 102 minutes that the World Trade
Center has emerged. Built on scores of phone conversations and e-mail
and voice messages, these accounts, along with the testimony of the handful
of people who escaped, provide the first sweeping views from the floors
directly hit by the airplanes and above.
Rescue workers did not get near them.
Photographers could not record their faces. If they were seen at
all, it was with glimpses at windows nearly a quarter mile high. Yet, like
messages in an electronic bottle from people marooned in some distant sky,
their last words narrate a world that was coming undone.
A man sends an e-mail message asking, “Any
news from the outside?” before perching on a window ledge.
A husband calmly reminds his wife about their
insurance policy, then says that the floor is groaning beneath him and
tells her that she and their children meant the world to him.
No single call can describe scenes that were
unfolding at terrible velocities in many places. The words from the
upper floors offer, not only a broad and chilling view of the devastated
zones, but also the only window onto acts of bravery, decency, grace and
love at a brutal time.
It becomes very clear, as you read this account
of that last 102 minutes, how people at that moment came to realize what’s
really important -- what is really important in our lives. And, of
course, it’s our relationships, those we love, our family, our friends,
our neighbors.
I’ve shared this before, but again it’s something
that I have found very inspiring, some words that my brother had written
down as he was dying a couple of years ago and kept alongside of his bed.
He says, “You’ll never be happy if you can’t figure out that loving people
is all there is and that it’s more important to love than to be loved --
because that’s when you feel love, by loving somebody. I’ve learned
that you get the rewards of love by giving love.”
Again, it becomes so clear when we put our
whole life in perspective to our death -- what is so important, loving
other people and being loved, nothing else.
And that really is a good thing to remind ourselves
of as we celebrate the Feast of the Holy Trinity, because we are made in
the image of God. That’s what we’ve learned from our earliest years, that
you and I, every one of us, is made in God’s image. And that’s why
it’s so important to love and to be loved. There’s nothing else that
can bring us into a fullness of our life, to be the whole person that we
can be, and to be all that God wants us to be. Nothing is more important.
And it’s because we are made in God’s image.
As we celebrate today, God isn’t just some
abstract power, the source, or some combination of super people, God is
a community of persons. We learn from the mystery of the Trinity
that God loves and is loved; that there’s mutuality, reciprocity, a communion
of life. That’s the very essence of God. And God has made us
in that same image. Yet, unless we learn to love and be loved, we
can never grow into the fullness of the image of God that we’re called
to achieve.
Today’s lessons bring this out so clearly,
who God is, what kind of god it is that we worship.
In the first lesson, God is proclaiming God’s
own name, “Yahweh.” Yahweh which means I am who am, the one who is,
the one who is the source of everything, the one who is the ground of all
being. I am who am. I am who gives being to all others.
God had revealed that name to Moses sometime before. And in the Jewish
tradition, when you reveal your name to somebody, you’re making yourself
open to that person, you’re becoming vulnerable, you’re entering into a
relationship.
And so in the book of Exodus, we learn how
God opened Gods whole being to us. The God who is -- I am who am
-- enters into relationship with all of us.
And, then, in the lesson that we hear today,
God is a God of forgiveness, of compassion, of mercy, of love. Even
though the people had been totally unfaithful, had denied their relationship
with God, God could not stop loving them. That’s the kind of God
we worship and celebrate today in this Feast of the Holy Trinity.
In the Gospel, John puts it so plainly and
so powerfully in his reflection. These are words from John 3:16 that
you see quoted in many places because they really sum up the whole message.
We pray in the Eucharistic prayer how Jesus came to bring the good news
of life to be lived with God forever in heaven. And Jesus shows us
the way to that life; the only way, the way of love. We proclaim
that in our Eucharist because of what John says here: “God so loved the
world that God gave Jesus.”
And the depth of that gift can be brought out
for us if we reflect on how Paul recounts the same thing in his letter
to the church in Philippi where he says, “Jesus, though he was God, did
not think his divinity something to be clung to, but emptied himself, emptied
himself and became fully human.”
He became one of us. That’s how
much God loved us; that God’s son, Jesus, emptied himself, became fully
human, and entered into our history, related to every one of us, even to
the point of death and the horrible ignominious death of execution on the
cross. That’s how much God loves us.
There is no limit to the love that God has
for us. God so loved us that God sent Jesus to be one of us, to allow
us to share the life of God, to enter into communion with God, and to enter
into the depths of the mystery of that community of persons that is God.
And it becomes very clear then, that if we
really enter into who God is, how we must interact with one another.
We can’t grow in our union with God, unless
we grow in love. And we can’t grow in love, unless we reach out to
one another and begin to share in the same way that God shares within that
mystery of the Trinity; reciprocity, mutuality, communion of life.
We must be people who love and who are loved in order to be all that God
wants us to be.
Something that is really quite extraordinary
about that passage from John is the fact that God offers us this love,
but doesn’t force it upon us. It’s there if we want to enter into
a relationship with God and deepen that relationship by loving one another.
But we have to make the choice. Whoever
believes in Jesus will not be condemned. But those who do not believe
are already condemned because they have not believed in the name of God’s
only son, Jesus.
And sadly enough, we sometimes make that choice,
don’t we? We choose not to love. We’ll carry hatred, resentment
in our hearts, sometimes within our own family. What could be more
hurtful than that?
But sometimes in our relationships with our
neighbors, or work, or school, wherever we are, we choose not to love.
We choose to hate or to carry resentment and anger. What does it do?
It doesn’t diminish God in any way, but we are condemned. It diminishes
us, destroys us. And that can be on an individual level.
Obviously, every one of us has relationships
that we need to nurture and to build up, if we really want to grow in our
ability to love. But it has to go beyond our individual relationships.
Something else that happened this past week,
reported in all the papers, was the meeting that took place in Russia.
Most of the articles you read were celebratory. What a great thing
they signed; this treaty to get rid of a few thousand nuclear weapons.
But if you really look at what happened, they signed a treaty confirming
the fact that we will continue to have thousands of nuclear weapons.
We will continue to have a policy of using them first; continue to have
a policy of using them even against nations that do not have nuclear weapons.
In other words, we continue a policy that calls
us to hate, to destroy not only people, but to destroy the whole planet
as well. We are acting against the very creative love of God, the
God who is love and who invites us to enter into communion with God.
We make a determination that we will destroy
whatever God has made, if we choose.
How wrong that is. It goes against everything
that God is. Whoever chooses not to believe is already condemned.
If we think that there is a way that you can bring goodness and peace into
the world through violence and hatred and killing, we’re already condemned.
So we must take very seriously what we learn
from this mystery of the Holy Trinity about who God really is and what
God is calling us to be.
A couple of years ago, Pope John Paul II was
in the Holy Land and he preached a very powerful sermon at the place called
the Mount of the Beatitudes, where Jesus had first proclaimed those powerful
words about blessed are the poor and so on, and don’t love just those who
love you, love your enemy, do good to the one who hurt you. And John
Paul preached about that. He said that Jesus’ call demands from everyone
a choice between good and evil, between life and death. That’s what
we are being presented with today, a choice between good and evil, life
and death, love or hate.
But then John Paul, at that particular sermon,
for some reason, began to think about the young people in our world and
he said, “What choice will the young people of the 21st century make?”
And I have a sense that he was very concerned about the young people, because
this is a new century. We have to make some new choices and the ones
who are the most important in making those new choices are the young people
of the 21st century.
John Paul was reflecting on the fact that the
last century, the 20th century, was the most violent century in all of
human history. 174 million people killed in genocide or massacres
connected with war; the most violent bloody century in all of human history.
What choice will the people of the 21st century
make? The choice to love, to enter into communion with a God who
is love, or the choice of death and destruction.
Each of us, here today, is being offered that
same choice.
As we celebrate this feast, I hope we will
try to grasp more clearly who God really is in the kind of God that we
worship; a God who is three persons in one, a community, a God who is loved
and being loved at every moment. But then, also, remember that we’re
made in the image of that God.
We must, I hope, choose life, not death, love,
not hate. We must choose the way of Jesus. Then, we will bring
goodness and peace and joy into our lives, but also help to bring peace
and goodness and joy and love into our world.
As Saint Paul said in closing his letter to
the church in Corinth, I say to you this morning and I hope we will say
this to one another, to everyone, “The grace of Jesus, the love of God
and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you and with all of
those whom you love and who love you.”
In the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. |