Categories
2014

Feast of the Holy Trinity (A) – June 15

by Archbishop Joseph Harris
by Archbishop Joseph Harris

Gospel: John 3:16-18.

At that time, Jesus said to Nicodemus: “God loved the world so much that he gave his only Son so that everyone who believes in him may not be lost but may have eternal life. For God sent his Son into the world not to condemn the world, but so that through him the world might be saved. No one who believes in him will be condemned; but whoever refuses to believe is condemned already, because he has refused to believe in the name of God’s only Son.”

Homily

All of us have experienced nightmares at sometime in our lives. One that I remember very well is that of finding myself dumb, of wanting to speak and of not being able to do so. Social psychologists tell us that this is one of the problems of the modern world. So many people in spite of being surrounded by others experience great loneliness. So many people find themselves abandoned with no one to whom they can speak, with no one to whom they can relate. Without others we are truly lost.

The Gospel reading for this Feast of the Most Holy Trinity tells us “God loved the world so much that he gave his only Son so that everyone who believes in him may not be lost but may have eternal life.” It is important to remember that eternal life is life with God who is Trinity and therefore communion.

The muscles relax and blood vessels dilate so that canadian viagra pills the blood gushes toward the penile organ is increased, promoting an erection, but only during sexual arousal. In cases, Nocturnal emission is cheap viagra one of the conditions that can develop impotence in men: Psychological – Anxiety, depression, stress, embarrassment, low self-esteem and relationship problems Physical – Cardiovascular disease, atherosclerosis, diabetes, obesity, neurological disorders, chronic alcoholism, low testosterone and smoking Iatrogenic – Bad effects of certain medications affect erection. With these insights your practice becomes about getting connected to your digestive system. icks.org discount cialis Here we will give a brief introduction of it. 1. levitra 60 mg People who believe in Jesus are people who seek to live communion with God and each other even while still here on earth. This means living in harmonious relationship with others, and this seeking to live in harmonious relationships with others allows us to live in a harmonious relationship with God.  Harmonious relationships help us to support one another in such a way that we are able to overcome the tragedies of life. People who live in harmony with us support us in moments of humiliation and failure, in moments of great loss and great grief.  How often have we not heard people say “were it not the friendship and support of this friend, I would not have survived. Thus eternal life begins even now.

In the second movement of this Gospel passage, Jesus is very conscious of the vocation given to him by the Father. The Reading tells us “for God sent his Son into the world not to condemn the world, but so that through him the world might be saved.” Jesus’ vocation was to bring life to the world, not to condemn it. It was to gather all who were scattered so that as said before, human beings would not be alone anymore but would rather be united and live in harmonious relationship with God and each other.

But as the Father sent Jesus, so Jesus sends us, so that through us our world may not be condemned but it may be saved. And so for all of us, the question must always be; is the world a more harmonious place because of my passage through it?  Indeed are my family and neighbourhood better places because of my presence?  Is there greater communion? That is what the great saints of our church did throughout the ages. They saw what the world needed to make it better and they dedicated their lives to that. When the world needed captives to be ransomed, there were orders founded for that purpose. When the poor needed education and health care there were orders and congregations founded for that. When the world needed people to take care of the poorest of the poor, Mother Teresa came along. When the lack of these fundamental human rights is removed the world always moves to a place of greater communion and we live ever so much more the life of the Trinity because Trinity is communion. When we recognize what needs to be done to make our world a better place and we do it, then we join that great tradition of our church and we keep it alive, so that others, faithful to the mission given to all disciples of Jesus, and because of our witness, also keep that tradition of our faith alive. We become more and more a Trinitarian people. We thank God for the witness of the saints.

And so the Gospel today challenges us.  Am I really concerned about making my world; my family, my work place, my club, my neighbourhood a better place because I work to remove the divisions that separate us.  Am I like Jesus bringing salvation through harmonious relationships or am I bringing condemnation because I am an agent of discord.  If I bring salvation, I thank God for that also. It is because of God’s grace that I can.  If I am not doing that then I have to pray and ask fervently for God’s grace so that I become an agent of harmony, someone who brings salvation to those with whom I relate and thus helps humanity to live the Trinitarian vocation which ensures happiness to all who live it.

Prayer

Most Holy Trinity, who have created us in your image and likeness as a Trinitarian people, help us to be more deeply aware of the vocation which you give us both by being human and by the name of the country which we bear. Help us to understand that it is only by removing the divisions amongst us that we will arrive at the happiness which we seek. We ask this through the intercession of Mary our mother and Jesus your son, the second person of the Trinity. Amen

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share