Jun 12, 2014
The Trinity is a mystery. (Popular translation: The Trinity is a complicated, inexplicable – and not particularly exciting or spiritually relevant – doctrine.)
The Trinity is indeed a mystery, but not in the sense of being a giant theological puzzle, but – according to the theological meaning of the word “mystery” – a reality so rich, bright, multifaceted, and all-encompassing that we can never fully take in.
There are many ways to begin to understand the Trinity. The starting point, I propose, is the historical life and ministry of Jesus of Nazareth.
The first thing we notice is Jesus’ intimate relationship with the God of the Old Testament, who was hitherto rather remote and distant. The term Jesus used to address this God was abba, a word which means something like “dear father.” The first disciples learned to call God “Father” from observing the intimate way in which Jesus prayed.
This intimacy with the Father is the reason Jesus came to be called “Son of God” by his followers. His life and ministry were seen as God’s human presence. The Gospel of John succinctly summarizes this truth: “The Word was made flesh. He lived among us, and we saw his glory” (1:14). This led the Council of Nicaea to proclaim in 325 that Jesus himself is God.