Gospel
            Reflection
            Solemnity of The Most Holy Trinity
            15 June 2025, Church Year C
          Beauty
          Beyond Comprehension
        By Fr. Richard A. Miserendino
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At first glance, our
          Gospel for this
          Trinity Sunday seems only tangentially related to the mystery
          and doctrine we
          celebrate at Mass. For sure, the Trinity makes an appearance —
          Jesus the Son of
          God speaks to his disciples, promising the Spirit’s guidance
          and teaching to
          know the Father. Thus, all divine Persons of the Godhead are
          accounted for. But
          the passage still seems like it could be easily replaced by
          several others in
          the Gospels that speak of or illustrate the Trinity. As such,
          it’s worth asking:
          Why might the church put this passage forward for our
          consideration?
The key to unlocking
          the answer might
          be Jesus’ somewhat surprising statement: “I have much more to
          tell you, but you
          cannot bear it now.” It turns out that there are more things
          in heaven and
          earth than are dreamt of in our philosophy or theology,
          especially regarding
          the Trinity.
This is profoundly
          good news from the
          Lord. There is so much goodness in God’s glory and providence
          that it would not
          be told or comprehended in a hundred thousand lifetimes. If
          Christ even found a
          way to break it all down and give it to us in one go, we
          couldn’t bear it, both
          in terms of our current spiritual maturity and our maximum
          capacity for
          understanding.
Some truths are
          difficult to bear until
          we grow into them. For instance, if you try telling young kids
          that someday
          they’ll enjoy foods other than pizza and chicken nuggets,
          you’re likely to get
          a wry look. Growing into maturity opens the way to bearing and
          enjoying things
          more fully. Other truths cannot be born because they simply
          extend beyond our
          capacity for comprehension in themselves, even if we devote
          our whole lives to
          them. Ask any astronomer whether they comprehend all the stars
          in the sky. They’ll
          tell you they only know a little about a few and they couldn’t
          bear to know all
          about all. Yet their love and interest remain undimmed.
The core mysteries of
          our faith,
          including the Trinity, have both aspects. We can never really
          completely know
          it in the sense that it both lies beyond the bounds of our
          comprehension and
          outside our spiritual maturity. All our analogies limp, all
          our sacred art
          loses something in translation. In fact, it’s even deeper and
          more inscrutable
          still. We can see the stars with our eyes even if we can’t
          count them all, but
          we can only know intimate details about God such as the
          Trinity if he reveals
          them and gives us the spiritual sight (in addition to
          maturity) to take it in.
And yet, this is still
          good news. Jesus
          himself has come to reveal the Father and lead us into that
          spiritual maturity
          and relationship, he sends his Spirit into our hearts and
          minds to enlighten
          them so that we are drawn more and more deeply into the wonder
          of who God is.
          That is how our Gospel fits. We’ll never be able to comprehend
          God, but we will
          be able to grow in union and love with him, which is
          infinitely better. Thank
          God for that. We should not lose focus — better is the
          relationship with the
          Lord than having an exhaustive and comprehensive file on him.
          Friendship is
          infinitely more valuable than mere facts.
Similarly, we can ask:
          would we rather
          have a God that is easily comprehensible? Could you imagine
          neatly explaining
          the nature of Almighty God in a single PowerPoint
          presentation? That the
          sublime mystery of eternal love at the heart of all existence
          could be packaged
          and explained away in 20 charts and diagrams? What a terrible
          and terribly
          underwhelming sense of God that would be.
Better by far is the
          mystery of the
          Trinity as we have it — tough to explain and wrap our minds
          around, living,
          vivid, alive in a love and creative power that is intelligible
          and yet true
          with a depth and inexhaustibility that we can never master. We
          know truths
          about God but can’t fully comprehend him. And yet God never
          stops broadening
          our understanding and drawing us nearer to him.
St. Ephrem puts it
          well (albeit in a
          slightly different source context): “The thirsty man rejoices
          when he drinks
          and is not downcast because he cannot empty the fountain.
          Rather let the
          fountain quench your thirst than have your thirst quench the
          fountain. Because
          if your thirst is quenched and the fountain is not exhausted,
          you can drink
          from it again whenever you are thirsty.” Come Holy Spirit and
          lead us to deeper
          union with the Trinity — that for which our soul truly thirsts
          — that which is
          inexhaustible truth, goodness and beauty beyond our
          comprehension.