“Givenness and Gratitude”
Readings: Genesis 1, 2 Corinthians 13:11-13, Matthew 28
In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Today’s sermon is going to be about gratitude. Being grateful. Sometimes it’s good to give the answer at the beginning. That way you’re not searching for it the whole time. “Gratitude” is where we’re going to end up.
But what does gratitude have to do with Trinity Sunday?
Unique commemoration in the Church Year
Most feasts days are about Events in the life of Christ or his Mother or the saints
Trinity Sunday: not an event, but a teaching
Dogma of the Holy Trinity: One God in three Persons (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit)
Mystery, beyond human comprehension
The apostles did not come up with the dogma of the Trinity because they thought it was clever. It emerged out of sustained, prayerful reflection on their experience.
The God of Israel, Christ, Holy Spirit (e.g., Baptism of Christ)
They didn’t have an agenda; this dogma emerged out of their experience of the Incarnation and the life of the Holy Spirit in the Church
Not only experience, but Scripture (raw data)
Readings, aptly chosen
- Genesis: God creates through His Word and Spirit
- 2 Corinthians: Trinitarian benediction
- Matthew: Baptism in the Name…
The data is there, but how is it synthesized? How does the Church express the truth that there is only one God, but that this God exists as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit?
There’s a reason for the Prologue to John’s Gospel is written the way it is—as poetry
The apostles and their successors needed to find the language and the ritual to express this truth about God— and this was a process that took several centuries. They had to not only put forward what was true about God but reject what was false.
Heresies (opinions): Arianism, Modalism, Divinity of the Spirit denied
And after centuries of prayerful reflection on the Church’s experience of Christ and the Spirit, after centuries of wrestling with the teaching of sacred Scripture, the bishops and confessors of the faith assembled, took a deep breath, and formally confessed the belief of the Church:
“We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth.
And in one Lord, Jesus Christ, begotten of the Father before all ages, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, being one in Essence with the Father, through whom all things were made.
And we believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life, who proceeds from the Father, who with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified.”
Every Sunday, when we repeat the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, we confess the same faith that our forebears confessed. We are expressing our continuity with their understanding and experience of God the Holy Trinity.
Givenness of Christian doctrine
We don’t construct the faith anew every generation. We humbly receive what has been passed down to us. Because the identity of God is not something for us to construct anyway
God to Moses from the Burning Bush: “I am who I am”
God just is the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The Trinity is the eternal Verity, the truth beyond and behind and between all things. This is what and who God is, not because we came up with it, but because it is what has been revealed.
Throughout Christian history, there have been some speculations about why God is triune rather than a Monad. Some have even asked why are there Three Persons and not four or five? And perhaps there is insight to be found in such reflection, but the truth is that God has revealed Himself as three Persons, not two or four or five or whatever.
This is what has been revealed. This is what has been given.
There is a givenness to the Christian faith, a sense that our religion is not what we construct, but what we receive with gratitude and even a sense of responsibility.
But this givenness applies not only to the realm of doctrine. Everything that exists is a gift of the loving triune God. Ultimately, everything has a givenness to it.
Genesis 1: In the beginning, God created “the heavens and the earth” (Hebrew idiom for everything that is): God declared it good, very good
Everything we have, everything we are, God gave to us
Our existence, our time on this earth, our relationships, the food we eat and the clothes we wear, the gift of thought and expression and art– everything that is good and lovely in the lives of men and women– is a gift from a loving God.
So our fundamental posture as Christians should be gratitude— to receive God’s gifts in gratitude. And not only to receive, but to give it back in thanksgiving– Eucharistia
That is our vocation, to be priests of the New Creation, to offer back to God all that He has given to us:
“All things come of thee, O Lord, and of thine have we given thee.”
Or as the priest says in the Eucharistic prayer: “And here we offer and present unto thee, O Lord, our selves, our souls and bodies, to be a reasonable, holy, and living sacrifice unto thee.”
So on this Trinity Sunday, we remember that God’s identity is not something we construct, but something revealed and handed down to us. We remember that all things are the gift of the loving triune God, to be received in humble gratitude and offered back to God in thanksgiving and love. Givenness and Gratitude.
May the blessing of the Life-Giving Trinity, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, rest upon us evermore. Amen.