Homily: June 15, 2025 Soemnity of the Most Holy Trinity
Today’s second reading ends with this powerful phrase: “Because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”
Today we celebrate two beautiful events: the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity and Father’s Day. So, happy Father’s Day to all our fathers, grandfathers, fathers-to-be and godfathers!
My siblings and I are incredibly blessed to have had a good Christian father who fulfilled his duties both as a father and as a Catholic. My papa was a very quiet, resilient, yet very gentle person. He loved and protected all his seven children, physically, emotionally, mentally and especially spiritually. He taught us the faith and was a great model of the traditions. He made sure we never missed Sunday Mass and took us regularly to Confession.
I was very much a “dad’s boy”, working with him daily on the farm, taking care of the animals together with him. He didn’t worry much about school grades, but he was very firm and strict with us regarding basic virtues like working hard, respect for others, especially the elderly, honesty and faithfulness. He taught me so much about nature, life, and the simple wisdom of daily living. He never raised his voice. He never picked a fight. He lived with humility and clear conscience.
Because of him, I have found it easier to understand God as a loving Father. But not all of us have been blessed in the same way. Not all of us have had a good experience with fathers in our lives. It might require us to have a bit more imagination and grace to understand the goodness and faithfulness of our God.
Yet no matter our personal experience, Jesus reveals to each of us the true Father, God the Father who never fails, who always loves, who provides sufficiently and gives generously, and who continues to pour out the Spirit of love into our hearts.
So today, we want to celebrate our God as three persons, not one. It is a mystery of faith which is not immediately easy to understand, yet it is not difficult if we just allow ourselves to simply and fully accept that our God is Love.
As Pope Francis once said: “The Feast of the Most Holy Trinity leads us to contemplate the mystery of God who unceasingly creates, redeems, and sanctifies, always with love and through love.”
This feast is instituted to remind us that at the very heart of God is a relationship of love: the Father loving the Son, the Son loving the Father, and the Holy Spirit being the bond, the fruit, the outward manifestation of that love.
As Catholics, and Christians in general, we are often very Jesus-centered. And rightly so, because Jesus died for us and remains with us in the Eucharist. However, we should always be conscious about the presence of the Father and the power of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Trinity is perfectly united, lovingly inseparable and eternally one.
God the Father made us. God the Son saved us.
God the Holy Spirit sanctifies us.
And as today’s reading reminds us, this same love has been poured into our hearts. We, being the creatures of God who is love, are invited, welcomed and drawn into this trinitarian love relationship.
Let us give thanks today for the love of God, our Heavenly Father, the sacrificial redemption of God, the Son, our Savior, and all the graces poured out on us through God the Holy Spirit.
Let us pray for all fathers, that they may reflect the heart of God, the Father in their love for all their children. And let us ask for the grace to dwell always in the wonderful love of the Holy Trinity – Father, Son and Holy Spirit, one God forever and ever. Amen.
Comments
Post a Comment