Sunday, June 26, 2011

From the UCC Network: 06/26/2011 "Three"


Three

2 Corinthians 13:14

"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with all of you."

Reflection by Quinn G. Caldwell

Is there anybody else out there who doesn't get the Trinity?

Is there anybody else out there for whom 3 = 1 just doesn't compute? Anybody who fears they're the only one in church that doesn't have the triune God figured out?  If so, here’s good news:

Nobody.  Gets.  The Trinity.

Not in any rational, well-reasoned sense, anyway.  That's because God is not, finally, able to be reasoned out.  Here's what happens if you try to make the Trinity reasonable: the Athanasian Creed.  Can you say, "Uncompelling"?  Or check this link out: someone actually tried to diagram God!

Other people, of course, simply decided that since they couldn't make sense of the Trinity, they’d do away with it; just ask your cousin the Unitarian.

If you decide that the Trinity has to make rational sense, then those are pretty much your only options: either carefully ridiculous explanations and diagrams, or throwing it over altogether.

Try this instead: try approaching the Trinity with a faculty other than reason.  Like wonder.  Like awe.  Like appreciation for beauty (Google "Rublev Trinity," for instance).

Or try this: don't explain the Trinity, sing it.  Stand up right now and sing the Doxology, whatever version you know.  If it feels true when you sing praise, then it’s true enough.

Nobody gets the Trinity.  Then again, if we did, it wouldn't be God.

Prayer

Dear God, thank you for being big enough for me to worship.  Thank you for being too mysterious for me to get.  And if you ever catch me trying to diagram you, please smite my pencil immediately.  Amen.
nullQuinn G. Caldwell is Associate Minister of Old South Church in Boston, Massachusetts, and co-editor, with Curtis J. Preston, of the just-published Unofficial Handbook of the United Church of Christ.

From the UCC Network: 06/25/2011 "Happy Anniversary UCC!"

Happy Anniversary UCC!

June 25, 2011
John 17: 21

"That they may all be one."

Reflection by Anthony B. Robinson

Today is the 54th Anniversary of the United Church of Christ. Congratulations to one and all. Our denominational motto, taken from Jesus' prayer for the church in the Gospel of John, is "That they may all be one."

"Oneness" seems like something we ought to want and to achieve, and yet at least sometimes we aren't all that good at it. I am helped by a remark made by the preacher Tom Long, who said, "A congregation is the place where a person goes in order to be with people he or she may not want to be with under other circumstances." You could probably say the same for a denomination.

Maybe we have a better shot at oneness if we assume that we don't all like each other all the time and don't have to. If we just figure that being part of a church will put us in proximity to at least some people we might not want to be with under other circumstances (and who feel the same about us).

Then "oneness" isn't as much about us as it is about God. We work and worship together not because it was our bright idea, but because in God's strange wisdom God has chosen to put us together and make use of us.

It's actually one of the things I like best about the church: God puts me with people I would not have not chosen for myself and who wouldn't have chosen me. It's sort of the opposite of when kids choose up teams. In the process, I learn things and grow. I learn about my blind spots. Sometimes I learn to love people I don’t like. Sometimes we share in a common sense of hope and purpose despite our rough edges.

In this sense, it could be that our "oneness" is not so much a project we have to do or a goal for us to accomplish as it is a gift given to us, a gift given to us by God. This messy thing we call "church" and "denomination" is God's odd gift to us. Against all the odds, you/ we are, by the grace of God, one. Congratulations God, you're amazing.

Prayer

O God, Eternal Spirit, we thank you for our church, which despite its foibles and failures, is yours. Make us more truly so. Amen.

About the Author
Anthony B. Robinson, a United Church of Christ minister, is a speaker, teacher and writer. His newest book is Stewardship for Vital Congregations, published by The Pilgrim Press. Read his weekly reflections on the current lectionary texts atwww.anthonybrobinson.com/ by clicking on Weekly Reading.