Meditation for Trinity 2025
Collect for Trinity Sunday
and in the power of the divine majesty to worship the Unity: Keep us steadfast in this faith, that we may evermore be defended from all adversities; for you live and reign, one God, for ever and ever.
Romans 5:1-5
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we boast in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.
John 16: 12-15
Three in one and one in three?
In the ranks of clergy, there is a widespread feeling that preaching on Trinity Sunday is best left to either the Bishop or the Curate. The exam question is ‘How can something be three independent entities but also be one entity – at the same time?’
People tell you it’s not actually that difficult really – we just need to understand that God is one person – but three persons. Er…
OK that doesn’t help. Try again, Michael. What does it say in today’s creed? That we ‘acknowledge the glory of the eternal Trinity and in the power of the divine majesty worship the Unity.’ Yes but how?
The singer John Pantry recorded a song called ‘Builder, Buyer, Occupier’ (I couldn’t find it online, unfortunately) that helps in understanding the Trinitarian Roles of God the Creator, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit; and it’s theologically spot on. But in practical terms, I sometimes use the example of a kite.
In Euclidean geometry, a children’s kite is a flying quadrilateral with reflection symmetry across a diagonal, the area A of which may be calculated as half the product of the lengths of the diagonals p and q. So A=0.5 (p*q) Did that help? No, I didn’t think it would.
Much better to ask a child, who will explain patiently that a Kite is a collection of sticks, paper and string glued together that blows in the wind. Three things in one thing.
The sticks, paper, and string are created by God. The glue that puts them together is Jesus our Redeemer. But that isn’t all. For a Kite to be a kite, it has to fly – which needs wind – or, you might say, the Spirit, the breath of God.
The sticks are still sticks. The paper and string haven’t lost their properties either. The wind blows whether there is a kite or not. But when they come together, they are one. Just like a church – God’s people created as unique individuals, brought together with a common creed, and living as the body of Christ in the power of the spirit. The whole is greater than the parts – in the case of the Kite. But in the case of the Trinity, each part is great in itself, so in that case, the kite metaphor breaks down. We need a better one. Answers on a postcard, please.
p.s. just a thought – you couldn’t fly a kite inside a church building –for the Kite to fly you’d have to go into the windy street outside. Where does that place the need for the Spirit to act???
Previous Posts
Praying Together 16th April 2023
However it may happen, when we see Him, we proclaim Him in the same words as Thomas – ‘My Lord and my God’ and award Him our trust. Forever.
Praying Together Easter Day 9 April 2023
The only way that we know that the victory over death is permanently won is if we accept that the tomb is empty.
Praying Together 2nd April 2023
And just as the donkey is a figure at the beginning of the Gospel story, so a donkey is present at its end.
Praying Together 26th March 2023
We have to ask ourselves if, like Thomas, we are prepared to follow Jesus at whatever cost
Praying Together 19th March 2023
Perhaps, then instead of just giving chocolate and flowers on Mothering Sunday, we might resolve to offer love in return throughout every day of the year
Praying Together 12th March 2023
The story of the woman at the well has been described as one of the most significant to our understanding of the Gospel message.
Praying Together 5th March 2023
This day is all that is good and fair.
It is too dear, with its hopes and invitations to waste a moment on yesterdays.
Praying Together 19th February 2023
If suffering did not exist, we could never know joy. If there was no ‘evil’, we wouldn’t be able to recognise ‘good’.
Praying Together February 12th 2023
Faith means little when God’s plan is the same as our plan. Faith is everything when it isn’t. When we don’t understand, when the things of the world tempt – and often overcome – us. When disaster happens.
Praying Together February 5th 2023
Goddess or Saint? The stories are interwoven, in many cases feeding off each other. But whatever the reality, Brigid’s care for the poor is the common theme – living a life of love and service, for all creation.
Praying Together 29th January 2023
We don’t have to wait for eternity – we can be the body of Christ right here, right now. And then we can begin to take our part in the healing of the Nations.
Praying together 22nd January 2023
The annual Week of Christian Unity seeks to respond to the prayer of Jesus the night before He died, as recorded in John 17,– ‘that they may become completely one’.













