We celebrate today the feast of the Holy Trinity. Many images and analogies were brought forward to explain the mystery of the three persons in one and three Gods. The most popular one is the one presented by St Patrick with the image of the clover leaf, the shamrock. Well this story which I shared in my homily today is very interesting too. It deals with an atheist confronting a priest about this mystery.
Pointing to the sun streaming in the window, the priest asked the atheist: “Do
you believe in the sun?” “Why, of course,” the atheist admitted. “Alright,” the
priest continued, “the rays you see coming through the window are from the sun,
90,000,000 miles from here, give or take a few thousand miles. The heat we feel
comes from both the sun and from its rays. The Holy Trinity is something like
that. The sun is God the Father; the sun sends out its rays, God the Son. Then
from both the sun and its rays, from the Father and the Son, proceeds or comes
the Holy Spirit, the heat. Can you explain how that happens?” The atheist
quickly changed the subject.
The sun is the source of physical good; the Trinity is the source of God’s life
in us.
The sun gives energy and strength; the Trinity gives inner power and strength.
The sun gives light; the Trinity lights the mind and heart of man.
The sun produces heat; the Trinity pours forth spiritual heat - love of God and
mankind.
The sun heals sickness and disease; the Trinity heals the sickness of the souls
- sin.
The sun helps resist germs and infection; the Trinity drives off temptations and distractions.
The sun cheers and brightens the world around us; the Trinity cheers the heart
of mankind.
Let us remember also to never be embarrassed in making the sign of the
cross, as we honor God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.
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