My Mother the Trinitarian:
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A Trinitarian ChurchLet's imagine a community of Christians who see the Trinity, first and foremost, not as a doctrine about God, but as an invitation to live in certain way. Some of them might believe in the Trinity in a literal way; while some might understand it primarily as a metaphor for divine multIplicity, however understood. Some might say In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, while others might say in the name of the Mystery, the Compassion, and the Breathing. They accept these differences and don't argue very much about them. But what is important to them is what we can call a Trinitarian way of Living. I'll call it the third way. Can the Trinity Flow Again?My first challenge in writing this book will be to persuade you that there is anything here worth considering at all. With so many urgent practical issues facing spiritual humanity, why waste time with the Trinity, a doctrine that most of the world (and even much of Christianity) regards as contrived and irrelevant? It takes a real stretch of the theological imagination to claim that it was ever a part of the original Jesus teachings or that it does a single thing to clarify or enhance these teachings. In fact, the eminent twentieth century theologian Karl Rahner has claimed that if the Trinity were to quietly disappear out of Christian theology, never to be mentioned again, most of Christendom would not even notice its absence! InnovationJust as a binary system is by nature stable and symmetric, a ternary system is asymmetrical and inherently innovative. Unlike a pendulum, it cannot come to equilibrium within its own orbit; it seeks its stability in a new plane, through a resolution that is at the same time a new arising. It corkscrews its way through time, matter, form – whatever plane is at hand – in a role of uncertainty and new combinations, the whole of which (not merely the top of the pyramid) is the fullness of divine reality. Trinity is a Poem
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God as Three SistersWhen I hear the Haden Triplets sing their harmonies, I think of what the Holy Trinity might sound like at a Tiny Desk concert: three in one and one in three. If the Tibetan Buddhists can chant three notes at the same time, then surely one God can sing with three voices. And if the voices happen to be three persons, well, I can live with that; but I don't really think it's necessary to think that. It's enough to say three voices singing in unison tells us something about God. HarmonyAs I see things, three voices singing in harmony are an invitation to imagine, to hope, that we humans can dwell in creative community with one another, keeping our differences while holding on to each other in caring, non-suffocating ways. We can sing together, too. Our singing can consist of coordinated acts of kindness and creativity, courage and compassion, delight and sharing. Jews call it shalom; Muslims call it salam; Christians call it peace. The spirit of this peace is fluid and changing which means that you can never fix it in a single frame and say gotcha. Self-Surpassing PerfectionThe process philosopher Charles Hartshorne is well-known for having proposed that (1), at any given moment in the history of the universe, the divine reality is perfect love, and also that (2) in the next moment, God's love is more perfect than it was in the previous moment, because something new has been felt by God that did not exist before, namely our own new experiences. Thus the Trinity flows becomes more than it was. Could this be something of what Cynthia Bourgeault means when she says that the familiar static triangle of Father-Son-Holy Spirit generates new patterns of itself? If so, process philosophers would further emphasize that these new patterns are divine responses to the creative advance of the universe itself. They begin in God, as they do for us, not by an act of the will, but by an act of deep listening. When we listen to the world in prayer, we are participating in the listening. Jesus and Novelty“As we actually taste the flavor of what he's teaching, we begin to see that it's not proverbs for daily living, or ways of being virtuous. He's proposing a total meltdown and recasting of human consciousness, bursting through the tiny acorn-selfhood that we arrived on the planet with into the oak tree of our fully realized personhood. He pushes us toward it, teases us, taunts us, encourages us, and ultimately walks us there.” “As we actually taste the flavor of what he's teaching, we begin to see that it's not proverbs for daily living, or ways of being virtuous. He's proposing a total meltdown and recasting of human consciousness, bursting through the tiny acorn-selfhood that we arrived on the planet with into the oak tree of our fully realized personhood. He pushes us toward it, teases us, taunts us, encourages us, and ultimately walks us there.” Novelty, Wonder, and Love
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