Holey; Wholly; Holy
by Calum
I. MacLeod, Interim Associate Pastor
The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago
June 10, 2001
Romans 5:1-5
John 16:12-1
"Gods love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit
that has been given to us." Romans 5:5 (NRSV)
* * *
Anthony
De Mello, an Indian Jesuit priest, was a great collector of wisdom and religious
stories from throughout the ages; he died towards the end of the 20th century.
One of his stories is about a poet who is sitting on his porch one evening
bent over a vessel of water. His neighbor walks by and hails him, saying,
"Can I ask, what are you doing?"
The man replies, "I am contemplating the reflection of the moon in a
bowl of water."
Now the
neighbor is a bit puzzled by this and says, "Why are you doing that?
Unless youve got a broken neck, why dont you just turn around
and look directly at the real thing?"
De Mello
offers a commentary to the story. He says, "Words are inadequate reflections
of reality." He imagines a man who sees a piece of marble and is told
that the Taj Mahal is made of marble. The man says, "Well I can see what
it is, its just a collection of these bits of marble put together;"
or a man who is given a bucket of water from Niagara and imagines that because
the Falls is just more of that water, he has somehow seen the Falls.
Contemplating
the moon in a reflection in a bowl of water. I feel a bit like that today
because of my bad luck in getting to preach this morning! Today is Trinity
Sunday, one of those Sundays in the churchs calendar which is set aside
for congregations to reflect on particular aspects of our Christian story
and Christian traditions. The trouble is that most Sundays have a good story
attached to them. At Christmas, youve got a baby and Bethlehem and shepherds
and sheep and all that good stuff. And at Easter youve got the big story:
the Passion and the death of Jesus and then the great celebration of the mystery
of resurrection. Even Pentecost, which was last week, has got a great story
about the disciples gathering and the Holy Spirit coming down and everyone
thinking theyre drunk. And what do I get? I get Trinity Sunday. Even
the dates in the calendar that we have created as Protestants, like Reformation
Sunday, have stories about Luther and Calvin and at least we hear the bagpipes
being played. No bagpipes this morning, Im afraid.
Trinity
Sunday. Were given the chance to contemplate and to reflect on what
we might call a difficult or even an abstract concept, which yet is one of
our basic articles of faith, one of the foundational ways in which we understand
God. Thats why this morning in welcoming these little children into
the community of faith we do so in the name of the Father, and the Son, and
the Holy Spirit. The Creator, the Redeemer, the Comforter. Gods nature
expressed somehow in three ways.
Scripture
doesnt help much, Im afraid. Earlier we read together the beautiful
poem from Proverbs that invites us to reflect on Wisdom, which in the Hebrew
scriptures is a woman. The poem invites us to imagine Wisdom being present
with God at the Creation. As we read scripture in the light of scripture,
we may think of Wisdom as the personification of the Holy Spirit, identified
with the Word at the beginning of Johns gospel, "the Word became
flesh" and through the Word all things came into being. In a sense were
given what one commentator described as another person to deal with on Trinity
Sunday, as if three werent enough!
In the New
Testament scripture theres no parable or story that explicates this
concept of Trinity, rather its implied in the scripture as we heard
in Pauls letter to the Romans and in the text from Johns gospel.
So weve got no story. Were sitting here, contemplating the moon
in a bowl of water, reflecting on that which transcends our human thought
processes and language that which we call God. And yet doing it with
all that we have at our disposal: human thought and language.
Its
a dilemma--a dilemma which is raised in a very funny and provocative poem
written by Mark Jarman, a professor of English at Vanderbilt University. He
has a collection called Questions for Ecclesiastes, and in it theres
a section in which he follows on George Herberts "Holy Sonnets,"
and writes "Unholy Sonnets." This is "Unholy Sonnet #1."
Dear God, Our Heavenly Father, Gracious Lord,
Mother Love and Maker, Light Divine,
Atomic Fingertip, Cosmic Design,
First Letter of the Alphabet, Last Word,
Mutual Satisfaction, Cash Award,
Auditor Who Approves Our Bottom Line,
Examiner Who Says That We Are Fine,
Oasis That All Sands Are Running Toward.
I can say almost anything about you,
O Big Idea, and with each epithet,
Create new reasons to believe or doubt you,
Black Hole, White Hole, Presidential Jet.
But whats the anything I must leave out? You
Solve nothing but the problems that I set.
The dilemma
of language there. What a great line, "I can say almost anything about
you, O Big Idea." We are indeed liberated in our language from where
we were fifty, a hundred years ago, where the only concept of God that was
articulated was male in gender. Weve come a long way, and yet is it
now that we can say "almost anything," and if so, does that mean
that we are losing meaning? Even meaning of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit?
Peter Hawkins,
a professor at Boston University, in a journal for preachers, warned about
Trinity Sunday. He warns against finding easy meaning. He talks about "the
dangers of persistent attempts by preachers to make sense of an abstraction...
the danger that the Trinity becomes a puzzle to be solved." Hes
right about the danger, Im aware of that this morning. But I also know
why preachers get up and try their hardest to find some hook that we can hang
our thoughts on. Thats because we want to engage with this God, this
God whom Christian tradition has spoken of for two thousand years as three-in-one
and one-in-three. I know it because of my own situation, I know it because
I meet members of this congregation who will say, "I can deal with God
and Jesus but the Holy Spirit I dont get," or "Jesus and the
Spirit is fine but the whole cosmic God and Creator stuff is difficult."
Tradition hasnt helped us too much either, I dont think. Its
full of concepts like "persons" and "natures," "begotten,"
"proceeding," "Paraclete."
So with
all this abstraction and complexity facing us, I decided the only thing to
do this morning was to revert to the old preachers trick of having a
three-point sermon! Some of you might not know what a three-point sermon is.
I was brought up on them. My minister at home started studying when there
was a reaction against the old forty-five minute rants from the pulpit, and
so they realized that to communicate they needed three points: an introduction,
three points, and a conclusion. It was helpful if your three points were alliterative,
they all started with the same letter, and then everyone could go home for
brunch remembering the point of the sermon. This morning your three points
you dont have to guess them they are Holey, Wholly, Holy.
If youve
not looked at the sermon title in the bulletin, (there is a reason for sermon
titles, its when you have puns, like I do this morning), it might help
because our first point, our first "Holey" this morning, is the
one that means having holes in it, h-o-l-e-y. And thats the first point
because no matter what happens this morning here, no matter how in the unlikely
event that I would ever be erudite and that you would walk off with something
to contemplate; no matter how wise you were in discerning Gods spirit
today through scripture and preaching and song and prayer, no matter, you
would not have the complete story. There will always be holes in our understanding
of God and of God as Trinity.
But we stand in good company in that. Remember Pauls familiar words
from 1 Corinthian 13, "Now we see in a mirror, dimly," and in the
King Jamess version, "
we see through a glass, darkly."
Almost like the reflection of the moon in a bowl of water. Protestant doctrine
has been strong in emphasizing the sovereignty of God and our limited ability
to understand God. Kierkegaard, the Danish philosopher and theologian, describes
God as being the complete qualitative Other. Completely out of our bounds
of understanding and knowledge, and Karl Barth in the 20th century picks up
on Kierkegaards concept in his commentary on Romans, when he says, "The
Gospel proclaims a God utterly distinct from humanity." For Barth, we
have no way of apprehending God except through where God intersects with humanity
in Jesus Christ.
And so,
our first point is a kind of warning, that we must be careful about how we
use the concept of Trinity lest it become dogmatic and seem fully systematic.
To accept and acknowledge the holey-ness of this perhaps can cause a change
in our engagement with faith. We find, looking back on human history and the
history of the church, that its littered with corpses, literal and metaphorical,
of regimes which demanded loyalty to an all-encompassing and systematic world
view; religious orthodoxy, which burned heretics; expansionist colonialism,
which oppressed the poorest in the world. National Socialism, totalitarian
Communism, you know the stories. You know the isms. Scholars call them
meta-narratives, over-arching stories in which all the different parts sustain
and support each other with an internal logic. Kind of like houses of cards.
And theyre still around today, we still have them, religious fundamentalism
of the Iranian kind and of the Bible Belt American kind. Over-arching stories,
like the certainty of those in power that unbridled free market capitalism
is the only way in which to allocate the worlds resources.
We have
something of a story this morning. For the Trinity is a kind of story of how
we glimpse our experience of God, and it doesnt have to be complete
or self-sustaining or fully thought out or totally self-supporting. We can
stand again with Paul in 1 Corinthians 13 and affirm that "Now we know
only in part." Our understanding is full of holes, is holey, and because
of that, it takes us to our second point of how to approach God, and that
is, Wholly, this time from the word, "whole," meaning unified.
Our talk
of God often places God apart from us and our daily existence and daily life.
God has been seen as a distant creator who winds up the universe and then
lets it run and watches it from afar. Or, indeed, God as a kind of superlative
friend whom we call on when we need to be bailed out of a difficult situation.
We need different ways of seeing God.
Denise Levertov, another modern American poet, in her collection "The
Stream and the Sapphire," has a lovely poem called "In Whom We Live,
and Move, and Have Our Being." In the poem she asks whether the wind,
the current of air that carries the birds that she sees, is Gods breath.
In the poem she responds, "No, not breath of God, / it seems, but God
/ the air enveloping the whole / globe of being. Its we who breathe
in, out, in, the sacred..."
Its
we who breathe the sacred. God, not an addition to our lives, not an optional
extra, to be taken on or not depending on our particular philosophical position
at the time. In the first letter of John in the New Testament the writer talks
about this. The writer says, "God is love, and those who dwell in love
dwell in God, and God dwells in them." Levertov takes that concept and
widens it and ends her poem in this way, "But storm or still, / numb
or poised in attention, / we inhale, exhale, inhale, / encompassed, encompassed."
Encompassed
by a God of love, and it is this which takes us to our third point of our
three point sermon this morning. Our third Holy is the religious one, h-o-l-y,
the Holy Trinity. Holy because it takes us into a mystery.
Leonardo
Boff, the liberation theologian, in his book "Trinity and Society,"
says, "When we think of this mystery, its not a logical mystery,"
not an arithmetical conundrum, "but rather a saving mystery." What
does he mean by "saving mystery?" I think Boff is talking about
the amazing and incomprehensible assurance that we are reconciled to God and
to each other in our baptism in the name of the Trinity. Our broken relationships
are restored, our sins are and will be forgiven. Listen to Boffs words,
"The Trinity has to do with the lives of each of us, our daily experiences,
our struggles to follow our conscience, our love and joy
our struggle[s]
against social injustice, [our] efforts at building a more human form of society."
And the Trinity affects us at all these levels because it is how Gods
one loving nature is revealed to us where we are.
I had an
email this week, a little moment of grace, from a member of this congregation
who is a professor in an English department. He and I meet and talk occasionally
about issues of life and faith and literature and literary criticism, and
he sent me an email, because he knew I was reflecting on the Trinity. I want
to share some of the things that he wrote because he has insight into this.
He says, "The Trinity might best be understood not as a thing, a noun
that defies our system of rational thought, but rather as a form of action,
a verb one might say, a continuous process by which God creates and nurtures
Gods relationship with people."
He goes
on to talk about identity; how the Enlightenment concept of identity was very
much about the individual being a whole person with individual right. He claims
that postmodern thinking, more recent thinking, is suggesting that we are
not just one individual identity but that we have many identities. Our identity,
perhaps, as a child, and as a parent, as a friend, as a lover, as a Cubs supporter,
all different identities. And perhaps, he suggests, "
the same thing
can be said about God. Maybe God becomes apparent to people in three distinctly
different ways, as a creator or parent, as a sustaining spirit, and as the
one who shares our humanity," Jesus Christ. "Not because God is
three separate entities, but because we humans need at different times and
for different reasons to experience God in these distinct ways. Considered
in this way the concept of the Trinity becomes not some complex paradox about
the nature of God, but a form of action, a demonstration of divine love."
The Trinity as a demonstration of divine love. Holey, Wholly, and Holy. So let us, when we go from here, continue faithfully to contemplate the moon in a bowl of water, knowing that in the end, perhaps all we can do is say with the psalmist, "Oh Lord, our Lord, how excellent is your name, how glorious throughout the earth," and all the time feeling and knowing the encompassing grace of Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit. Amen.