30 May 2021
Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
The Festival of the Holy Trinity Vienna, VA
“Mysterious but Good”
Text:
John 3:1-17; Isaiah 6:1-8
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
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e worship the trinity in
unity and the unity in trinity.
That’s what we just
confessed in the Athanasian Creed. We worship this
God. This God that cannot be explained, only
proclaimed. All attempts to explain the mystery of God the Holy Trinity have
failed. How God can be one yet three, three yet one. One God
in three persons, three persons in one God. Finite, limited minds cannot
fully understand an infinite, limitless God. All attempts to explain the
Trinity (and maybe you’ve heard some of these) - that God is like a clover, one
plant with three leaves; or like an apple, one fruit with three parts, the
core, the flesh, and the skin; or that God is like water which can exist three different states: solid, liquid, or gas -
all fail because they either divide the three persons of the Trinity,
collapse them together, or limit each person in some way. Better instead
is to be like the prophet Isaiah and just stand in wonder and awe before this
Lord, who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, all co-existing, all 100% God, and
yet one God, and confess that we have no right to do so. That sinners like us have
no place before a holy, sinless God - and yet He wants us here.
He wants us to come before Him to receive His forgiveness. Like Isaiah did.
Now, that doesn’t work
for some people. For some who will only believe what is logical to them, what
they can figure out, what makes sense to them. A God who fits their categories, checks their boxes, fits
their expectations, thinking, and understanding. The next step then is that
what this God does must also fit their expectations, thinking,
and understanding. And if God doesn’t do or command or approve of what they
want or think is right, then He is rejected.
There are a couple of
problems, of course, with that. First, making God fit us rather than us fit God
is to put ourselves above God and make ourselves God. But also this: there then
will be as many gods in this world as there are people, each person fashioning
his or her own god based upon their own expectations and thoughts and dreams,
which all are different for just about everyone. Which is,
when you think about it, not far from where our world is today, with its
abundance of gods and religions and denominations. There is Tom, Dick,
and Harry’s god, Oprah’s god, this god and that god, but not one true
God. Which is exactly what satan
wants. For if everyone has a god, then no one has God.
But God is not so easily
tamed; not so easily controlled. We may want a God who is domesticated and
behaves how we think He should, but as CS Lewis once famously said: God is
not tame, but He is good. So if we change Him and tame Him, then we will
also be losing His good.
So we are left with a God
we cannot fully understand, because He is so different and above us, but one we
can trust, because He is good. And that is far better.
And that is what
Jesus was teaching Nicodemus that night when Nicodemus came to Him seeking
answers. He knew Jesus knew something about God, that God
was with Him. So Jesus teaches him about God - about a God who is
mysterious and beyond our understanding, but who is good and trustworthy. That
while Nicodemus may not get all the answers he was looking for, he get what he
needed - the gift of faith in the God in the flesh that was sitting right in
front of him.
So
first Jesus says to him: Truth.
Unless
one is born again, born from above, born of God, he cannot see
the kingdom of God.
And that leaves Nicodemus
befuddled. He cannot fit what Jesus says into his own thinking and
understanding. This teaching does not fit his earthly categories. It’s not logical.
He knows something of birth, perhaps having children of his own. So based on
his own knowledge and experience, being born again just isn’t possible. You
want me to climb back up inside my mother? No, but Jesus wants him to think of
God differently - as Father. Not as a God he serves, but
as a God that serves him and cares for him. A God who
fathers, who begets life - and not just physical life or in a physical way,
like his children at home. That it is not good enough to be a child of
Abraham, a physical descendant of Abraham - he must be a child of God. Born. Born of God. Born of water and the Spirit. Okaaaay. Nicodemus is going
to have to chew on that a while . . .
So Jesus then moves into phase
two of His teaching, and starts talking about the work of God the Spirit
like the wind. And that just as you cannot control the wind, so you cannot
control God. God cannot be tamed to fit how we want Him to be.
Now that makes a
little more sense . . . because we know something about wind and that it
doesn’t always blow where you want it to. A sudden gust of wind messes up your
perfectly combed hair. The wind blows the leaves you worked so hard raking into
a pile all back over your yard. There is the hard and
devastating winds of hurricanes, and terrible and unpredictable winds of
tornadoes. But there is also the cool breeze on a hot summer day, and the
refreshing breeze that comes off the ocean.
The work of God is like
that, Nicodemus. Not according to our thoughts, wishes, desires, and control.
Sometimes He comes and messes up things in your life, because sometimes things
in your life need messing up! Sometimes He needs to grab our attention
and turn us back to Him. But there are also times when He will be that
refreshing, cooling breeze to give us the relief we need. And just as birth
pains come upon a woman quickly and often unexpectedly - earlier than was
expected or much later - so it is with God and the children He fathers. It is
His doing, not ours. When and where it pleases Him.
When and where He says it will be, not us.
Well this is so
completely different than what Nicodemus was expecting! From what he thought he
knew and the way he thought things were. His mind is blown, blown wide open. His finite, limited mind blown open by an infinite, limitless God.
To think on things in such a new way . . .
Well, yes. But Nicodemus,
Jesus has saved the best for last! The best, but also
the most mysterious and hardest for us to comprehend or understand. That
God
so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him
should not perish but have eternal life.
That is, that God the Father would send God the Son into a sinful world filled
with sinful and rebellious people to die for them, so that they could be His
born again, born from above, born of God, children. And that God would consider
this a good thing - to trade His life for yours. His life of
limitless value, for your life of what value? Of nothing close to that,
that’s for sure. To love a world that doesn’t love Him. To save a world that
turns away from Him to sin.
Who does that?
What category of this world does that fit into? That’s who God is,
Nicodemus. That’s what God does. He’s not a God of laws, rules, and demands,
but of fathering, caring, and saving. And you’ll see that when you see His Son
lifted up like that bronze serpent in the wilderness was for Israel - the Son
of God lifted up on the pole of the cross. Look at Him, see your God there for
you, believe that He is there for you and your sin, and you will live. Eternal life.
I wish John would have
told us more of their conversation! What Nicodemus said next.
But maybe he didn’t say anything. Maybe he was just in awe of all that he had
just heard, how utterly different and mysterious and beyond anything in this
world. But John does tell us this - that Nicodemus saw Jesus on
the cross, that he helped to take Him down and bury Him (John
19:39), and that Nicodemus actually defended Jesus a bit (John
7:50). Like maybe by water and the Spirit he had
been born again, born from above, born of God, without having to climb back
into his mother!
And so it is with us. The
Spirit, who like the wind, works when and where God wills,
has worked in you. And the when and the where is where God has told us:
in His Word, in His Word combined with the water of Baptism, and in His Word
combined with the bread and wine of the Supper. How
that works is mysterious and beyond our understanding - like the wind. How
the Word and Spirit works in hearts, how the Word and Spirit works as we
proclaim the Gospel and the forgiveness of sins, how the Word and Spirit
works as we pour the water of Baptism and eat the Body and Blood of Christ in
the Supper - but work He does. Begetting children of God, sustaining us
with His life and forgiveness, and keeping us in His care. Probably not how we
would do it, if it were up to us. But good. God working His eternal good in and through these ordinary ways and
means.
Which - like with who God
is - all we do is proclaim these things, His works and ways, and stand in awe.
That we can stand in the presence of God, and that God
wants us here with Him! That while we cannot tame or control
God, we can trust Him and His Word. In
all parts of our lives. Following His will and His ways, loving,
forgiving, and serving, giving and helping generously and sacrificially and
confidently. For if He sent His only-begotten Son for us to die for us - if He
would do that for us, will He not along with Him give us everything else we
need (Romans 8:32)?
So that’s what we
proclaim this day we celebrate the Holy Trinity. And what we proclaim, we live.
That’s why, as the Athanasian Creed said, it is necessary
to think of God as Trinity. Not just so we know the right answer on a
final exam we have to pass to get into heaven! But so we know what God has done
for us - God the Father, who sent His beloved Son, who gave us
His Spirit, to save us and give us this new kind of life to live. If God
is not a Trinity, then that didn’t happen, couldn’t happen. But it did.
A mysterious, not-like-this-world God, acting in a mysterious,
not-like-this-world - but GOOD - way. Being good, giving His good, for you. To raise you with His Son to a new and eternal life.
Which
is also mysterious. For what is an eternal life like?
How can we think of life without end? We can’t. But again, we can trust. That
as the one who gives it is good, so will it be. And so we are. Good, not
because we’ve done it, but because He has.
So this we proclaim. This
we trust and believe. This we live. And this is our joy! A
good God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, working and giving His goodness to us.
So this day we joyously
proclaim:
Blessèd be the
Holy Trinity and the undivided Unity.
Let us give glory
to him because he has shown his mercy to us
(Introit).
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+)
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.