The power of love is a curious thing, makes one man weep,
makes another man sing! More than a
feeling, that’s the power of love!
All of us experience the power of love in many and varied
ways. For my wife and me, over these
past few weeks, we truly have experienced the power of love! We recently spent 5 glorious days playing,
chasing and loving and being loved by our #1 grandson Calvin Tyler! We witnessed the joy of marital love at the
recent wedding of a beautiful young couple, the bride being a childhood and
life-long friend of our daughter Elizabeth.
And we also participated in the power of love of family and a community
at the funeral of Wendy’s Uncle Collins.
Yes, in all three of these examples, we experienced the power of love.
As people of faith, we are called to experience the ultimate
power of Love: God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit, three
persons in one God: oh most Holy Trinity, undivided unity, Holy God, Mighty
God, God Immortal be Adored!
Every year, immediately after Pentecost and at the beginning
of Ordinary Time, the Church gives us this Solemnity of the Most Holy
Trinity. The Most Holy Trinity is a
mystery, the central mystery of Christian faith and life. It is the mystery of God in Himself! It is therefore the source of all the other
mysteries of faith (CCC 234). The Most
Holy Trinity is indeed the power of love.
For centuries explaining the mystery of the Most Holy
Trinity has proven to be a challenge for many.
It may be important to remember the following truths of the Most Holy
Trinity:
The
Trinity is one! Three Persons in One God!
And each person is wholly and completely God.
Each
person of the Trinity is different from the other two. In other words, they simply are not different
roles of the same person, each person has a distinct origin.
The
Father, Son and Holy Spirit share one nature and each of them is fully God.
The Most Holy Trinity is truly the power of love. The Trinity is a communion of love, existing
as communion (community) of persons.
For us today, living a life of faith in an increasing
hostile world to all things faith, we are called to reflect this communion of love
present in the Most Holy Trinity.
Nothing in our present day reality is more under attack than family life
and marriage. Today, on this Solemnity,
we should look to the Most Holy Trinity as our supreme model for Christian
family life and the Sacrament of Marriage.
The family is also a communion of love, existing as a communion of
persons. Not one, as God is one, the
family is still called to a loving unity.
Like the Trinity, family is called to love by a complete and total gift
of self, love that loves for the good of the other. Each of us is called to empty ourselves for
the love of another. There is a certain Trinitarian
formula to family life in the love of parents, children and grandchildren or
perhaps grandparents, parents and children!
In marriage, for the love of a couple to truly love, there
is that reality that marriage takes three, not two, but three. For any Christian marriage to endure, Jesus
must be at the center of that marriage; again, a kind of Trinitarian formula
exists in marriage where the Most Holy Trinity is our model. The Trinity is all about love and unity. The Catechism tells us that the Trinity is
inseparable in what they are and
inseparable in what they do (CCC
267). This inseparable unity is what God
deems present in the Sacrament of Matrimony.
There is not one Sacrament of service but two. Marriage is indeed a Sacrament that is
ordered to the salvation of others. It
is the responsibility of the one to assist in the journey of salvation of the
other. This too is true of the Sacrament
of Holy Orders. For those called to give
their lives in service to the Church, the Most Holy Trinity is also their
supreme model. In Holy Orders, we also
see a Trinitarian formula, as the three orders of Bishop, Priest and Deacon
exists. In Holy Orders, the ordained
kneels before the Trinity and pledges His life for the salvation of
others. To be faithful to this vocation,
the ordained must reflect the power of love of the Most Holy Trinity in who he
is and what he does.
As we leave this celebration today and go out to face our
realities this week, let’s take the Most Holy Trinity along with us. Something as simple as praying the Glory Be
throughout this week may help us be mindful that the Trinity is with us in all
that we do. What about reverently and prayerfully making the sign of the Cross every time we pray? And maybe in the week ahead,
we can remember the power of love by doing one simple act of love for one
person the world deems unlovable. In our
words and actions this week, how well will I reflect the power of that love?
And with a little help from above you feel the power of
love, can you feel it? That’s the power,
that’s the power of love!
Oh Most Holy Trinity, undivided unity, Holy God, Mighty God,
God Immortal be Adored!
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