Tag: Trinity

  • The Holy Trinity – More Than a Theory

    https://ronpogue.typepad.com/.a/6a00e54fb5e54d8834014e892d92ef970d-piThe Holy Trinity is a doctrine, a teaching, developed over time by the Church as an aspect of the unfolding revelation of God derived from, but not confined to the pages of sacred scripture.

    Doctrine is not Truth, with a capital “T”, but rather our faithful approach to or reach for the Truth. Doctrine that really matters is more than an intellectual pursuit or a theory. The best doctrines are those that speak to deeply felt needs of those who seek God. For example…

    We have a need to know who created the universe and placed us in it. In response, the Church tells us that it is the Lord God Almighty who is the Creator and Parent of all life and being. We see God’s hand at work in the world around us. It is powerful, though only a glimpse. To see God face to face is something we hope for and long for and live for.

    We also need to know that we have a source of forgiveness and understanding that will not let us down. In our declaration of the divinity of Jesus Christ, we are saying that God sees us not just from the viewpoint of a loving Creator/Parent, but with redemptive concern as well. God’s reason for dealing with us in Jesus Christ is to offer us forgiveness of sin, release from guilt, to reconcile us and draw us closer to the ultimate purpose for all creation.

    And, we need to know that we have a friend who is near, always able to sustain our faith, bind us together in worship, and empower us in God’s mission. So, we proclaim that God is the Holy Spirit, ever present in our midst for guidance, comfort, and strength. As St. Paul says, the Spirit of God bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God and heirs with Christ of God’s amazing grace (Romans 8:16-17).

    The Holy Trinity: Three expressions of how One Living God relates to everything and everyone in the universe. More than a theory, it is a teaching given to us to help us better know who God is, how God loves us, and how God abides with us.

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • God in Three Persons

     

    The doctrine of the Trinity was developed by the Church centuries ago in an attempt to help explain the nature of God.  For many people, the doctrine raises as many questions as it answers.

    Several years ago when I was rector of Galveston’s Trinity Episcopal Church, a local news organization sent a photographer to cover an event we were having.  After the event, which was held on the sidewalk in front of the church, she followed me back inside the building and asked if she could talk with me for a few minutes.  I told her I would enjoy the opportunity.

    She then told me that she had not been inside a church since she was eleven years old.  (I secretly guessed that would have been about thirty years earlier.)  It seems her family was attending a church in Florida at the time and she had an experience in Sunday School that was the reason she decided to stay away from churches.

    The Sunday School lesson concerned the Trinity.  After listening to the teacher talk about the Trinity, she asked, “How can one God be three persons?  It doesn’t make any sense to me.”

    The teacher and the other children laughed at her.  She never went back.

    I expressed my sadness about that incident and told her that in our Church we had a Sunday School program for children called Godly Play and that children were encouraged to ask questions.  In fact, our teachers and our children are taught that every question deserves to be heard respectfully.
    Trinity

    Since we were standing in Trinity Church beneath the beautiful window with the traditional symbol that has long been associ-ated with the doctrine, I asked her if I she would permit me to respond to her long-unanswered question.  She said she would appreciate that.

    I said, “You are someone’s daughter, right?”  “Yes,” she answered.  “Do you have siblings?”  She told me that she had a brother and a sister.  “So, in addition to being a daughter, you are a sister, correct?”  “Yes, she replied.”  I asked if she had a husband and she told me that she did, so I said, “Then, besides being a daughter and a sister, you are also a wife.”

    All of a sudden her eyes lit up and she exclaimed, “But I’m still me!  I’m one person but I have different roles in the lives of other people.  That must be what the Church is trying to say in describing God as Trinity.”

    We talked on and discussed several other analogies for understanding God, the holy and undivided Trinity.  I assured her we can never fully comprehend the majesty and mystery of God.  Our doctrines are truth in the sense that they represent the best we can do as we reach for the Truth. 

    In the end, I believe she had finally gained an appreciation for this doctrine that had been a source of embarrassment and anger for so long.  But, even more, I believe she found some peace that day in her relationship with God, her creator, redeemer, and sustainer.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

     

     

     

     

     

    P.S. The image above is the Trinity Window in Trinity Episcopal Church, Galveston, Texas, one of the oldest stained glass windows in Texas.