“A white counter on which is written a name known only to ourselves and to our Creator”. That is how the book of the Apocalypse so poetically describes it. This priceless gift of personhood enables us to relate to others and to share in their lives just as the three Divine Persons share in the one Divine Life of the Trinity.
Fw: TRINITY
Holy Trinity, Mass Homily,
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----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Fr. Raymond ....
To:
Sent: Monday, 1 June 2015, 7:07
Subject: TRINITY
From: Fr. Raymond ....
To:
Sent: Monday, 1 June 2015, 7:07
Subject: TRINITY
TRINITY 2015 From: Fr. Raymond Homily
Mankind has acknowledged its God, its Creator, from the dawn of
time. there is plenty of evidence for this through all the
ages. Even in the most apparently God-forsaken places, in the most
primitive of societies, men have worship a god of one kind or another. St
Paul, in his speech in the Areopagus attributes this to the loving providence
of God. And St Augustine says that God did not abandon his children
altogether when they first sinned against him. The story of the fall
in the Garden of Eden is only the beginning of a great love story because God
was going to lead his children back gradually and patiently to reconciliation
and to full knowledge and communion with himself. God’s call of
‘Adam! Where are you?’ when he hid himself in shame after his fall
wasn’t the call of an angry, offended Deity. No! It was
the cry of a Father who has lost his Son! “Adam! Where
are you?” And mankind on its part, for all its waywardness, still hankered
after its Maker. It needed him!
It is only in relatively recent times that man has grown so self assured
that he sees no need for a God of any kind. He now imagines himself
to be so much in control of his “Tower-of-Babel”, this “Tower-of-Babel”of a
society that we have built for our-selves, that we have no longer have any need
for him! There seems to be nothing that we can’t accomplish for
ourselves now. We can reach out to the stars; we can split the atom;
we can manipulate nature; we can even engineer human life itself now! No
wonder we read in Genesis that God repented of making man. When they
built their tower of Babel God said “This is only the beginning! When
they set their minds to it now there is nothing they won’t be able to
accomplish!
But, although God repented of having made man, and although he could look
down the centuries and see the terrible accumulation of evil that man would
pile up, yet he still didn’t abandon him. Indeed we might take the
words out of the mouth of Job and put them into the mouth of God: “Even though
they slay me yet will I love them!” And how prophetic those words are: “Even
though they slay me yet will I love them!” because that is precisely what came
to pass. We put our very God, our creator, to death. We
nailed him to a cross.
In spite of all this our God continued, not only to seek after us, but
also gradually to reveal himself more and more clearly to us. We
tended to think of him in human terms. We made our God in our own
image and likeness, as it were. We thought of him in many different
forms. The Egyptians, the Babylonians, the Lands of the East, all
had their different ideas of him. Polytheism flourished
everywhere. But God carefully nourished and shepherded one unique
people, the nation of the Hebrews, the descendents of Abraham, to guard
jealousy the true idea of one, only, all powerful and eternal God. And
eventually, into that nation he himself descended from heaven in the person of
Jesus to finally reveal the great secret of the Godhead, namely that
although he is one, and only one in his divine being, yet he is three in
person.
And this Trinitarian nature of our Creator is manifest throughout his
handiwork of creation: 1. All things exist in one or other of three
forms, be it liquid, solid, or vapour. 2. All things exist in three
dimensions: length, breadth and height. 3. All time is enclosed in
past, present and future. 4. The human race exists and survives as
man woman and child.
But surely the most sublime gift of our wonderful human nature and the
one that most intimately likens us to the Trinity is the sublime gift God has
given each of us of our own individual personhood. “A white counter
on which is written a name known only to ourselves and to our Creator”. That
is how the book of the Apocalypse so poetically describes it. This
priceless gift of personhood enables us to relate to others and to share in
their lives just as the three Divine Persons share in the one Divine Life of
the Trinity.
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