The Three Amigos…Who??

Click here to hear the audio recording of this sermon.

Matthew 28:16-20 • June 19, 2011

Brothers and sisters in Christ grace and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord and Savior Jesus. Amen.

We celebrate two very significant events today – the first is something that I think we all understand, hopefully for better, but I’m not too naive to also understand sometimes for worse – Happy Father’s Day to all fathers and those who are fathers to us in so many beautiful ways. Father’s Day. We understand and know why we celebrate it.

Second – a celebration that most of us probably don’t understand quite as well is the Christian Doctrine of the Holy Trinity. So – let’s start with a bit of a church history lesson. The Holy Trinity is one of the earliest doctrines of the Christian church and I believe is one of the most difficult doctrines for followers of the risen Jesus Christ to wrap our minds and hearts around.

Some of the earliest reflections on the Trinity that we have are from an early church father named Tertullian in the late second century. Tertullian was seeking to understand and identify more fully who God is. The idea of the trinity becomes more clearly spelled out as a doctrine of the Christian church during the Council of Nicea in 325 and the Council of Constantinople in 381. And finally in 1334, Pope John XXII placed it on the Christian liturgical calendar as the Sunday after the Day of Pentecost.

It’s very easy to get stuck thinking about the Doctrine of the Trinity from an academic perspective using only academic concepts. This has consumed theologians for centuries. Let’s try not to do that today, after all Martin Luther even said, “To try to deny the Trinity endangers your salvation, to try to comprehend the Trinity endangers your sanity.”

We began our worship gathering today with a very standard greeting that most of us have heard many times before. It is the same greeting that we hear the Apostle Paul offer at the close of his letter to the church in Corinth, “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you all.” This is significant because Christian worship does not begin with a simple “Good Morning” or “Hi – it’s good to see you today.” As Christians united in the body of Christ, with this greeting we give to one another the grace, love, and communion of a triune God.

Pastor Ruban Duran, the Executive Director of New Evangelizing Congregations for the ELCA, gave a wonderful presentation at the Western North Dakota Synod Assembly in Bismarck a few weeks ago. If you have never attended a Synod Assembly, I invite you to go at some point. It is an exciting experience of being church that will open your eyes in amazing ways that you simply can’t experience fully by only staying within the walls of this congregation.

Pastor Ruban is originally from Peru and is one of the most dynamic and exciting people I have ever met. He calls the Holy Trinity – the Three Amigos. He uses the term Three Amigos for the Holy Trinity because he believes that the trinity calls us very deeply into relationship with God. A relationship with God that is not stale or dead. Instead, it’s a relationship with a God who is ever present and ACTIVE in the world, today, right now. Our relationship with God in the Holy Trinity is not a relationship that we have with 2 dead guys and a bird.

The Holy Trinity is also a little like the famous Abbot and Costello skit “Who’s on First?” Walk with me through this conversation.

When you come to church you need to know the key players…you know, the ones who are worthy of our worship, thanksgiving, and praise.

Thanksgiving and praise, huh? Well who are they?

OK, now listen closely. There is one God. One God.

That seems easy enough. What do you call this one God?

This one God is called, “God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.”

Now wait just a minute. You told me that there is only one God.

That’s right!

So which is it?

So which is what?

Which name do you use for this one God?

The name I gave you.

But you gave me three names.

That’s right.

What’s right?

God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

So you have three Gods?

No, one God.

So which is it?

Which is what?

Father, Son, or Holy Spirit?

Yes!

Yes to what?

That’s God’s name.

Which God?

Our one God.

Why did you give three names?

Because they aren’t the same.

But you just told me there is one God. So which is it?

Which is what?

Which name is the name of your God?

I told you, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

But that is three.

Yes. But it’s only one.

I used a wonderful old children’s story about a shark and a whale who are good friends in my Pentecost sermon last week. I think it speaks very well to our reflection on the Holy Trinity today as well. The good friends whale and shark were swimming along one day in the sea enjoying a quiet afternoon when the shark asked the whale, “You are so much older than I, and wiser too. Could you tell me where the ocean is?” The whale smiled gently and said, “The ocean is what you are in now.” The shark couldn’t possibly believe that. “Come on, tell me where the ocean is so I can find it!” The whale repeated, “The ocean is here, now; you are in it.” Still unbelieving, the shark swam away disgusted, still searching for the ocean.

Brothers and sisters in Christ – don’t spend too much time looking for God, God is here, now, all around you in the now of your life, dwelling within you, within me, and within the broken world in which we live and this community of faith that we call Good Shepherd Lutheran Church.

The Doctrine of the Holy Trinity is not something that we discover only in academic theory and study or by believing that our relationship with God is based on God and me being buddies or not being possible for us until we have the entire history of God’s unfolding creation memorized and placed in a neat little God timeline.

The Doctrine of the Holy Trinity places you and me, children of God, in the right now of the world. God with us and for us in the Holy Trinity right now – lifting you and me up when we are broken by anger or hatred or loneliness or death. God with us and for us in the Holy Trinity right now – sending us out to be hands and feet and listening ears to our brothers and sisters in need after rising flood waters have consumed not only their houses, but their homes. God with us and for us in the Holy Trinity right now – bringing restoration and hope to each one of us.

May you be broken enough to help one another, for wholeness comes from healing.

May you disagree enough to hear one another, for unity comes from listening and forgiveness.

May you be lonely enough to hold one another, for touch defeats division and hatred.

In the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit we are claimed as children of God. Let us give thanks and praise for the gift of the Holy Trinity.

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About Bishop Craig Schweitzer

The Rev. Craig Schweitzer, of Bismarck, was elected as bishop of the Western North Dakota Synod on July 17, 2020, in the first-ever digital Synod Assembly. A historic event, Schweitzer is the first bishop in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) to be elected in an online assembly. Bishop Craig Schweitzer began serving the Western North Dakota Synod-ELCA on September 1, 2020. He has always seen himself as an easy-going person who seeks to daily discover anew how God is present in his life and the world in which he lives and serves. Prior to service in the Office of Bishop of the Western North Dakota Synod, Bishop Craig served at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Bismarck, ND as Music and Worship Minister (lay staff from 2002-2010), Associate Pastor (2010-2014), and Senior Pastor (2014-2020). Beyond his service in the church, he has an eclectic background that is a diverse collection of musical, educational, and business experiences ranging from live concert production and promotion to recording studios and live performance to music education. Throughout all of his professional and personal experiences, the Apostle Paul’s words to the church in Rome have been a guiding light that has kept him grounded in whatever work God was calling him into – “Welcome one another, therefore, just as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God.” (Romans 15:7) Bishop Craig is a graduate of the University of Mary in Bismarck with a Bachelor of Science degree in Music Education and a Master of Science in Strategic Leadership. He also holds a certificate degree in Theological Education for Emerging Ministries (TEEM) from Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary in Berkeley, CA. He was ordained as a Minister of Word and Sacrament on September 16, 2010. Outside of his life as Bishop, Bishop Craig enjoys reading, all music, a little golf, a cold beverage with friends, and intentional times of quiet. And, of course, spending time with his wife Wendy and their adult twin daughters Ilia and Taegan. View all posts by Bishop Craig Schweitzer

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