Lorraine Cavanagh writes a short meditation on Trinity Sunday (June 11) ...
‘A threefold cord is not
easily broken’ writes the sage, Qoheleth, author of the book of Ecclesiastes, a
book full of impenetrable conundrums, tensions and contradictions. Much of what
he writes resonates with despair and a general sense of the futility of human
existence. Qoheleth is a prophet of doom. Or perhaps he is only that kind of
prophet insofar as he is a teller of fables.
Fables must strike fear if
they are to convince. Hence, the nightmarish depictions of Heinrich Hoffman,
the 19th century psychiatrist and author of Struwwelpeter, and the fate of Conrad, the ‘little suck-a-thumb’
who falls prey to the ‘great long-legged scissorman’. Also, the morality tales
of La Fontaine; Qoheleth would have approved of La Fontaine’s tale of the vain
fox who lost his luscious piece of cheese by succumbing to flattery.
Qoheleth is concerned, for
the most part, with the falling apart of social and moral infrastructure and
with a society’s falling away from God. But he also writes as an individual,
for other individuals. So, he is a prophet for our times. We live in an
individualistic age, where the right of the individual has, for a couple of
decades at least, ruled over the considerations of the needs and interests of
the ‘other’. These days, individuals who sense that other individuals are
claiming the same rights as themselves have also sensed a certain safety in
numbers. What we are seeing as the relentless ascendance of the far right in Europe
and America is the product of this solidarity of self interest.
We also love brinkmanship
and being taken to the threshold in both fiction and television drama, and,
more worryingly, in politics and international affairs. News is now documentary
drama, preceded, more often than not, by health warnings. Perhaps we are still
a little in thrall to Struwwelpeter
and, for all our declared freedom of the individual, also slightly in thrall to
the vicarious thrill of stern religion. Religious fundamentalisms are
invariably coloured with a vermilion streak of violence which can be
disturbingly seductive.
This ostensibly religious
violence, and the fascination which it holds for a growing number of people
(even, one suspects, if they are not themselves overtly religious) also
translates into the dangerous ideologies of certain political strongholds, both
here and abroad. Religion and politics, when corrupted, make for a dangerously
potent mixture. In some cases, there is an almost erotic appeal to the more
extreme collective manifestations which it releases. Think only of the recent
displays of military and nuclear egocentricity in North Korea, the modern
equivalent of Emperor worship.
To state that both
religion and politics are prey to corruption is to state the obvious. What is
perhaps less obvious is the fact that a serious battle for the ultimate good to
prevail in all religions, and in politics, is being fought from the centre
ground, both theologically and spiritually. While these two disciplines should,
and often do, work together, it is the spiritual which concerns most people,
even if they do not consider themselves to be particularly religious. There is
a sense that something else is going on ‘out there’ at a more ‘abstract’ level,
whatever you happen to believe about God.
Trinity Sunday invites
Christians to consider what they really believe about God and, by implication,
what they believe their religion should be for the world. But what Christians
often fail to pick up on, as they say the Creed on Trinity Sunday, is that
belief alone is fairly ineffectual when it comes to facing down religious and
political extremism. In fact, it can cause religion itself to become toxic. Like
any organism deprived of light or oxygen, belief needs the nutrients which come
with head-heart thinking if it is to mature into what we call faith. It needs to
be informed by intelligent love.
Perhaps this is where the doctrine
of the Trinity is helpful, both for Christians and for anyone trying to make
sense of religion and of its place in the world of today. The Trinity is a
depiction of intelligent love. It is the love of three ‘persons’ constantly
renewed and energised within the one ‘substance’. It is not about three divine
individuals with a shared common interest.
Christians, and those of
other faiths, might say that human beings need to think of themselves and
others as made in the image and likeness of God. The Trinity invites us, as
persons, to see ourselves as caught up in the dynamic energy of that love. We
are caught up in God himself. This is the love which brings life in its fullest
sense to all human beings and which renews the face of the earth. Standing
against religious and political fundamentalisms begins with being prepared to ‘stand’
in that love, bound up in the three-fold cord of the Trinity, whatever the cost
to the individual.
Lorraine Cavanagh’s acclaimed
new book (Church Times), Waiting on the Word: Preaching Sermons That Connect People With God, is out now in paperback, priced £12.99.

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