Source: orthodoxroad.com |
Dear Parish Faithful,
Today, January 14, is the Leave-taking of Theophany. We celebrated Great Vespers yesterday evening to commemorate our "farewell" to this glorious Feast. As a complement to the fulsome and festal Liturgy on Sunday, the service yesterday evening was almost kenotic in its simplicity. I would to simply add a short reflection on one of the main themes of the Feast. In the Troparion, sung many times over the course of the last few days, we sing and hear: "When Thou, O Lord, was baptized in the Jordan, the worship of the Trinity was made manifest ..." This is implicit in the Gospel narratives of the Lord's Baptism, and the Troparion reviews those narratives to make clear what the Gospels are implicitly revealing:
"For the Voice of the Father bear witness to Thee, and called Thee His beloved Son; and the Spirit, in the form of a dove, confirmed the truthfulness of His words ... "
The God that we believe in and worship is the one living God Who is the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. This is the faith of the Orthodox Church, and the faith that through the Church is revealed to the world. To live and abide in the Orthodox Church is to live and abide in the presence of the Holy Trinity. And, we hope, in eternity! We express this faith every time that we recite the Nicene Creed, either in our liturgical assemblies, or in our personal prayers. (One of the reasons, that we begin our personal prayer with the Trisagion: "Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal ... O, most Holy Trinity, have mercy on us ...").
In America, in the latest Gallop Poll of 2022, when asked the straightforward question: "Do you believe in God," 81% of Americans professed believe in the existence of God (an all-time low by the way). Upon further questioning, it seems as if part of that group of positive respondents are somewhat agnostic. Be that as it may, my own question that I would put to that 81% is: Do you believe in the Holy Trinity? I would be very curious to hear the response to this particular question. Speculating, I would not count on 81%! To answer, "Yes, I believe in God" can, upon further inspection or elaboration, yield all kinds of ideas about God that could very well sound rather vague and unclear.
That is far different than acknowledging that God is unknowable in His essence, and that God "dwells in light unapproachable" (I Tim. 6:16). God's trinitarian inner being is unknown to us - "For thou art God ineffable, inconceivable, incomprehensible, ever-existing and eternally the same ..." (From the Holy Anaphora in the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom) - and we affirm this glorious mysterion with a sense of humility and wonder. Yet, to acknowledge the ultimate mystery of God, is not to succumb to any kind of vagueness or agnosticism about who God is. It is God who has revealed His eternal trinitarian nature to us, and as St. John of Damascus has said: God has revealed to us exactly what we need to know about God. And that is that God is the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as revealed at the Baptism of the Lord. Theophany means the "manifestation/revelation of God."
My point is not at all to be critical at the possible vague theism of others, but to keep us aware of the revelation of God that we enjoy and respond to with faith within the grace-filled life of the Church. I would like to think that in my personal confession of faith, I can also clearly affirm the words of St. Gregory the Theologian: "When I say God, I mean the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit."
O, most Holy Trinity, glory to Thee!