Friday, May 15, 2026

Parish Magazine Item for June 2026

I am trying to always mention Matthew's Gospel this year as it is a diocesan focus.  


From The Rectory

 

Sunday 31st May this year is Trinity Sunday. Each year this comes after Pentecost or Whitsun, when we remember Christ sending the gift of the Holy Spirit on the fledgling New Testament church. On the Feast of the Ascension we thought about the crucified and risen Christ returning to the glory of heaven and enthroned as the God-Man at the right hand of the Father. So the drama of Pentecost, like all of salvation, is Trinitarian in shape. The Father and the Son send the Spirit. The Son’s saving work is complete and the Spirit is sent to be God’s presence and power with the disciples to equip them for their great work of mission. The Spirit sends them out to proclaim Jesus that people might be brought back to the Father.

 

This year we’re focusing on Matthew’s Gospel. And one of the readings for Trinity Sunday is the very end of Matthew’s Gospel, from chapter 28, verse 16. The disciples worship the risen Christ and he says to them:

 

“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

 

Jesus won’t be with them physically any longer, but by his Holy Spirit.

 

And when people believe, they are to be baptised in the Triune name of God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. Not three names but one name. As the church would later go on to say, the name of the one God who is three Persons.

 

When Matthew was writing, the technical definitions of the Trinity had still to be worked out. Even the word “Trinity” doesn’t come in the Bible. But the essential teaching is there. Jesus is worshiped as God. The Spirit makes Jesus present. There is obviously a profound unity between Father, Son and Spirit. Not three gods.

 

Jesus’ own baptism, right at the beginning of his public ministry, which Matthew records (3:13-end), powerfully portrays the Triune God in action. The voice of God the Father says from heaven about Jesus: “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.” And God the Holy Spirit comes down on God the Son in the form of a dove. There’s the Trinity!

 

It’s easy for us to feel rather baffled by the Trinity. Thinking about it can make our brains hurt. But it’s not surprising that God is incomprehensible to us. We can know God truly, but not fully. A God we could have all pinned down and sorted out wouldn’t be much of a God. Yes, he’s revealed himself, but he also remains a Mystery – perhaps rather in the way that Elsie the Dog, I trust, knows and loves me, but I like to think there are hidden depths to me that she has not yet plumbed!   

 

Theologians have insisted that everything God does is Trinitarian because that is who God is. And the Trinitarian formula at baptism puts the Trinity right there at the beginning and centre of the Christian life. Of course the Trinity can rightly be the subject of many tomes of profound dogmatics. But Jesus intentionally includes it in the essential basics of Christian initiation. The church thought it really mattered that Jesus and the Spirit were really God so that we could really be saved by God alone, and know that God is really with us and for us.

 

If you’re interested in thinking more about this, you might enjoy the 3, 2, 1 Course from Speak Life: 321.speaklife.org.uk/course/321. It’s a free online video-based course that helps you explore life according to Jesus, with space for reflection. One of the sessions focuses on God’s three-ness – his tri-unity. As ever, I’m always keen to hear from parishioners who’d like to talk further about this stuff. Happy Trinity Sunday and season to you!                              The Revd Canon Marc Lloyd

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