The Most Holy Trinity
I am with you always. (Matthew 28:20)
What do these four images have in common: 1) water, ice, and steam; 2) three keys on a piano played together as a chord; 3) a three-leaf clover; and 4) two eyes on a person’s head? If you guessed that these images have been used to describe the Holy Trinity, you’re right! These images are far from perfect, but each of them tells us something about the Church’s definition of the Trinity as three divine Persons in one God.
While we may have to use these inexact images to explain the Trinity, we don’t have to use them to describe how God’s love—these three Persons—wells up in our hearts.
The Father is always reaching out to us. His love is there for us whether we are apart from him, like the prodigal son, or whether we are there with him, like the son’s older brother.
Jesus showed the extent of his love by the way he gave his life for us at Calvary and by the way he constantly gives us himself to us in the Eucharist.
The Holy Spirit shows us his love by the way he teaches us and comforts us and guides us toward heaven. He is constantly filling us with God’s power to live holy lives.
Spend some time today praying about the Trinity. Ask the Father to fill you with his creative, parental love. Ask Jesus to fill you with the love poured out on his cross. Ask the Holy Spirit to fill you with the love of a Comforter and Advocate.
As you pray, look into your heart. See if you are being filled with Trinitarian love. See if you are getting a glimpse of the glory and humility and grace of the Trinity. See if you can sense a release of this grace as it draws you closer to God. Our God promised to be with us always. May we all come to know this truth more deeply!
“Lord, open the floodgates of heaven. I want to see you and feel your love.” Amen!
Deuteronomy 4:32 “Indeed, inquire about the past, before you were born: since the day God created human beings on the earth, from one end of heaven to the other, has there ever been anything as wonderful as this? Has anyone heard anything like it? 33 Did any other people ever hear the voice of God speaking out of a fire, as you have heard, and stay alive? 34 Or has God ever tried to go and take for himself a nation from the very bowels of another nation, by means of ordeals, signs, wonders, war, a mighty hand, an outstretched arm and great terrors — like all that Adonai your God did for you in Egypt before your very eyes?
39 know today, and establish it in your heart, that Adonai is God in heaven above and on earth below — there is no other. 40 Therefore, you are to keep his laws and mitzvot which I am giving you today, so that it will go well with you and with your children after you, and so that you will prolong your days in the land Adonai your God is giving you forever.”
Psalm 33:4 For the word of Adonai is true,
and all his work is trustworthy.
5 He loves righteousness and justice;
the earth is full of the grace of Adonai.
6 By the word of Adonai the heavens were made,
and their whole host by a breath from his mouth.
9 For he spoke, and there it was;
he commanded, and there it stood.
18 But Adonai’s eyes watch over those who fear him,
over those who wait for his grace
19 to rescue them from death
and keep them alive in famine.
20 We are waiting for Adonai;
he is our help and shield.
22 May your mercy, Adonai, be over us,
because we put our hope in you.
Romans 8:14 All who are led by God’s Spirit are God’s sons. 15 For you did not receive a spirit of slavery to bring you back again into fear; on the contrary, you received the Spirit, who makes us sons and by whose power we cry out, “Abba!” (that is, “Dear Father!”). 16 The Spirit himself bears witness with our own spirits that we are children of God; 17 and if we are children, then we are also heirs, heirs of God and joint-heirs with the Messiah — provided we are suffering with him in order also to be glorified with him.
Questions for Reflection or Group Discussion[Deuteronomy 432 “Indeed, inquire about the past, before you were born: since the day God created human beings on the earth, from one end of heaven to the other, has there ever been anything as wonderful as this? Has anyone heard anything like it? 33 Did any other people ever hear the voice of God speaking out of a fire, as you have heard, and stay alive? 34 Or has God ever tried to go and take for himself a nation from the very bowels of another nation, by means of ordeals, signs, wonders, war, a mighty hand, an outstretched arm and great terrors — like all that Adonai your God did for you in Egypt before your very eyes?
39 know today, and establish it in your heart, that Adonai is God in heaven above and on earth below — there is no other. 40 Therefore, you are to keep his laws and mitzvot which I am giving you today, so that it will go well with you and with your children after you, and so that you will prolong your days in the land Adonai your God is giving you forever.”
Psalm 33:4 For the word of Adonai is true,
and all his work is trustworthy.
5 He loves righteousness and justice;
the earth is full of the grace of Adonai.
6 By the word of Adonai the heavens were made,
and their whole host by a breath from his mouth.
9 For he spoke, and there it was;
he commanded, and there it stood.
18 But Adonai’s eyes watch over those who fear him,
over those who wait for his grace
19 to rescue them from death
and keep them alive in famine.
20 We are waiting for Adonai;
he is our help and shield.
22 May your mercy, Adonai, be over us,
because we put our hope in you.
Romans 8:14 All who are led by God’s Spirit are God’s sons. 15 For you did not receive a spirit of slavery to bring you back again into fear; on the contrary, you received the Spirit, who makes us sons and by whose power we cry out, “Abba!” (that is, “Dear Father!”). 16 The Spirit himself bears witness with our own spirits that we are children of God; 17 and if we are children, then we are also heirs, heirs of God and joint-heirs with the Messiah — provided we are suffering with him in order also to be glorified with him.]
Matthew 28:16 So the eleven talmidim went to the hill in the Galil where Yeshua had told them to go. 17 When they saw him, they prostrated themselves before him; but some hesitated. 18 Yeshua came and talked with them. He said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore, go and make people from all nations into talmidim, immersing them into the reality of the Father, the Son and the Ruach HaKodesh, 20 and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember! I will be with you always, yes, even until the end of the age.”]
1. In the first reading, Moses' reminds the people of the great works that God performed to rescue them from slavery in Egypt and to form them into his people. He also reminds them that “so great” a work by God demands a response by the people: “This is why you must now acknowledge, and fix in your heart, that the LORD is God in the heavens above and on earth below, and that there is no other.” God has done an even greater work for us in rescuing us from slavery to sin and forming us into his people. What has been your response to this great work of God in your life? What has been your response to the incredible truth that God emptied himself and became man, suffered and died in our place, and sent his Spirit so that we could share his very life? How would you present these truths of God’s saving works through Jesus Christ to someone who needs to hear these “good news”?
2. The Responsorial Psalm also describes the great works of the Lord and ends with this response by the psalmist: “Our soul waits for the Lord, who is our help and our shield. May your kindness, O Lord, be upon us who have put our hope in you.” What part of your life do you give to God, “who is our help and our shield?” In what ways do you sometimes withhold part of your life from God's help and protection?
3. The second reading says that we have not received “a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear” but “a Spirit of adoption, through which we cry, ‘Abba, Father!’” Because we are “children of God,” we can call God “Abba,” the Hebrew word for “daddy,” a term of love and childlike familiarity. Do you view God the Father as a loving and tender father or as a strict enforcer of his laws and commandments (like a cop in the sky)? What steps can you take to change any false images you may have of your Heavenly Father?
4. The Gospel reading presents an expression of our faith in the triune God, in whose name we were each baptized. Have you ever reflected on the graces of God, received in the Sacrament of Baptism and through faith in Jesus Christ? In what ways should such reflections cause us to praise and adore God for showing us his mercy and giving us a share in his divine life? Are there some steps you can take to make these reflections a greater part of your daily times of prayer?
5. The Gospel also includes Jesus “great commission” to the apostles to go and “make disciples of all nations.” What part, as baptized Catholics, do you believe we are called to play in this great commission to the Church?
6. The meditation describes attributes of each person of the Trinity in terms of their love for us. It also describes our need to allow their love to “well up in our hearts”. What has God been teaching you this Easter season about his great love for you? What steps have you taken, or what additional steps can you take, to open yourself more to the great love of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—and to develop a more personal relationship with the Father who loves you? The Son who redeemed you? And the Holy Spirit present within you in power?
7. Take some time now to pray for the grace to know and experience more deeply the great love of the Trinity. Use the prayer at the end of the meditation as the starting point.
1. In the first reading, Moses' reminds the people of the great works that God performed to rescue them from slavery in Egypt and to form them into his people. He also reminds them that “so great” a work by God demands a response by the people: “This is why you must now acknowledge, and fix in your heart, that the LORD is God in the heavens above and on earth below, and that there is no other.” God has done an even greater work for us in rescuing us from slavery to sin and forming us into his people. What has been your response to this great work of God in your life? What has been your response to the incredible truth that God emptied himself and became man, suffered and died in our place, and sent his Spirit so that we could share his very life? How would you present these truths of God’s saving works through Jesus Christ to someone who needs to hear these “good news”?
2. The Responsorial Psalm also describes the great works of the Lord and ends with this response by the psalmist: “Our soul waits for the Lord, who is our help and our shield. May your kindness, O Lord, be upon us who have put our hope in you.” What part of your life do you give to God, “who is our help and our shield?” In what ways do you sometimes withhold part of your life from God's help and protection?
3. The second reading says that we have not received “a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear” but “a Spirit of adoption, through which we cry, ‘Abba, Father!’” Because we are “children of God,” we can call God “Abba,” the Hebrew word for “daddy,” a term of love and childlike familiarity. Do you view God the Father as a loving and tender father or as a strict enforcer of his laws and commandments (like a cop in the sky)? What steps can you take to change any false images you may have of your Heavenly Father?
4. The Gospel reading presents an expression of our faith in the triune God, in whose name we were each baptized. Have you ever reflected on the graces of God, received in the Sacrament of Baptism and through faith in Jesus Christ? In what ways should such reflections cause us to praise and adore God for showing us his mercy and giving us a share in his divine life? Are there some steps you can take to make these reflections a greater part of your daily times of prayer?
5. The Gospel also includes Jesus “great commission” to the apostles to go and “make disciples of all nations.” What part, as baptized Catholics, do you believe we are called to play in this great commission to the Church?
6. The meditation describes attributes of each person of the Trinity in terms of their love for us. It also describes our need to allow their love to “well up in our hearts”. What has God been teaching you this Easter season about his great love for you? What steps have you taken, or what additional steps can you take, to open yourself more to the great love of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—and to develop a more personal relationship with the Father who loves you? The Son who redeemed you? And the Holy Spirit present within you in power?
7. Take some time now to pray for the grace to know and experience more deeply the great love of the Trinity. Use the prayer at the end of the meditation as the starting point.
“Lord, open the floodgates of heaven. I want to see you and feel your love.” Amen!
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