Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity
What made me think of “Cheers” is the Most Holy Trinity, whom we celebrate today. When it comes to our God, He always knows our name. And He’s always glad we come to spend time with Him. Our Trinitarian God, St. John the Apostle and Evangelist tells us in his first epistle, is love. And love affirms, to paraphrase Bishop Barron and quote a country music title from Dan and Shay, “I’m Glad You Exist.” There is something especially good about having another person affirm your existence and affirm that they treasure you.
There’s nothing “soft” about wanting to be wanted. God, who is Himself a Trinitarian Communion of Divine Persons, made us in His image, which means that He made us for union with others, whether that be the union of friendship or even, for many the union of Holy Matrimony. But likewise, God made us for union with Him, which can happen in any and all states of life. So many people try to mask over that desire with goods which will never truly satisfy. Maybe, as Luke Combs sings, beer never broke your heart, but it also doesn’t support a healthy self-esteem and a feeling of desirability. You can buy a lot of things, but as Paul McCartney sings, you can’t buy me love.
So many young people, and I’ll admit that I got a little caught up in this too, think that social media affirms them. And maybe, in some small way, it does. But a like, or a share, or a snap-streak cannot compete with true love. The trouble is that social media seems to be set up to give some good feelings, feelings of acceptance and desirability, but ones which quickly fade. So you post more to get more attention. But that still fades. So you post more and more, until you find yourself addicted to social media reactions. Or, on the flip side, as much as you post, people don’t like or favorite or share your status or pics or posts, which only reminds you more of the lack of true love in your life, sometimes leading to depression or even suicide.
God made us for love. God made us with the desire to be in a communion of human persons and divine Persons. We need love, just like we need God. And nothing else will fill that hole in our heart. Nothing else–not riches, power, fame, or sex–will ever fill up the tanks in our hearts that love can.
“God showed His love for us,” St. Paul says, “in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.” Or, to quote John 3:16: “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life.” Love does not equate simply to an emotion, but requires action. And Christ demonstrated in a way we could understand just how far the love of God would go to reclaim us for Himself, to remind us that nothing earthly thing could ever truly fill our need for love. God the Father showed His love for us by creating us in His image and likeness. God the Son showed His love for us by dying on the cross for our salvation. God the Holy Spirit shows His love for us as we get those God moments, of various types, that remind us just how much God loves us. The action of love, from the beginning of all time until the consummation (very much a love word) of all time at the return of Christ, is a work of the entire Trinity, who is Himself a Communion of Love.
Our role is to accept the invitation into that love that truly makes us whole, and to invite others into that love, too. The command of Christ at the end of Matthew’s Gospel to baptize all nations is a command to invite the entire world into the love which truly fulfills us. Baptism, by uniting us to Christ, gives us entry into Trinitarian love. And everyone needs that, even if they don’t recognize it. Otherwise, they’ll try to find it in a bottle, in a paycheck, in notoriety, or in power. And while those will satisfy for a little while, they will leave people feeling even more empty than before, because the thing they thought would fill their need for love abandoned them and lied to them and did not give them what they wanted.
We have a God who knows our name. We have a God who is always glad when we come to Him. We have a God who is love and who wants to embrace us with His love. So many other things cry out and pretend to love us. But in the end, only God’s love, and any true loves connected to God’s love, will last and sustain us. Through Holy Baptism God joins us to His love. Through the Mass, we see that love in action as God allows us to join in to the sacrifice of Christ, the Second Person of the Trinity, made once for all on Calvary. Through our daily lives the Holy Spirit helps us to respond to that love that God first offered us. Don’t search for love in a bar, not even a famous one in Boston. God’s love is here, ready to be shared. And God wants us to share that love out there, outside of this church, so that all people can experience the fullness of love, from the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
