Shortly after its formation, the Massachusetts Department of
Conservation and Recreation employed a tag line describing its many
natural resources under its care: “It’s Your Nature.”
I think this phrase it one way to think of the Trinity: It’s your nature.
How is the Trinity our nature? Well, we believe we are created in the image
and likeness of God. We believe we are
the children of God. In any family, we
say “the fruit does not fall far from the tree” and “notice the family
resemblance.” The child and the parent
are of the same nature.
As children of God, our nature is the same nature as God’s. And the nature of God is three persons in one
God, each manifesting one aspect of God’s nature: creating, redeeming, sanctifying.
God cannot help but be creative. The creation we know as the universe is the
inevitable outcome of the creative God.
So is this precious gift of life we all have been given.
We find that human nature is also very creative. We may first think of “creative” people such
as artists and musicians who create works of beauty, works that can move
us. Artists cannot help but create.
We also think of our creative nature as our ability, in
love, to bring to conception new life.
This act of creation does not end with birth, but is lifelong. It is manifest in the nurturing love of
parents. It is manifest in relatives and
friends who support and sustain this nurturing environment. It continues in loving partners, and finally
in loving caretakers.
We see this creative nature also in our ability to care for
and sustain the creation all around.
If we know this creative nature shared by our God and
ourselves, we come to view in awe the many magnificent aspects of creation that
is all around.
God cannot help but redeem.
It is God’s nature to dispel darkness with light, to dispel sin with
forgiveness, to dispel death with new life.
This is why the resurrection was inevitable. Death has not power over the redemptive nature
of God.
And we, too, can redeem..
We can bring light into the darkness.
We can offer a second chance, we can offer hope, we can offer
forgiveness.
After the Marathon bombings, we saw our redemptive nature in
the numerous selfless acts of so many who assisted the victims. That so many acted to bring hope into
despair, to bring good into the chaos of evil – this is simply manifest of the
fact that we share in the same redemptive nature as God.
But, these redemptive acts are not just an option we have, a
nice thing we should do. It is what we
must do. If we do not forgive those who
have done us wrong, we are holding back, we are hindering God’s redemptive
nature from being made manifest in other’s lives. When we forgive, when we bring hope, when we
bring light, we enable God to redeem.
God cannot help to sanctity, to bring council and knowledge
and wisdom, to provide us the grace and blessings to live and grow in faith.
It is likewise our nature to guide and nurture. We do this by graciously accepting the grace
and blessings and receive and by living our faith. We do this within a community of faith, where
we support and sustain each others. We
do this by prayer.
So why do we celebrate the Solemnity of the Trinity? We are not likely the crack the age-old
mystery of one God in three Persons.
But, rather, we can reflect on the nature of the Triune God.
This is God’s nature.
It’s our nature.

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