
Menu 


  • The Bible in a Year
  • The Catechism in a Year
  • Podcasts
    • Let Love
    • Ask Fr. Josh
    • All Things Catholic
    • Catholic Classics
    • Every Knee Shall Bow
    • Girlfriends
    • Sunday Homilies Podcast
    • The Fr. Mike Schmitz Podcast
    • The Jeff Cavins Show
    • The Tightrope
    • La Biblia en un Año
  • Videos
    • Fr. Mike Schmitz
    • Sunday Homilies
    • Fr. Josh Johnson
    • Jackie and Bobby Angel
    • Franciscan Friars of the Renewal (CFRs)
    • The Bible Timeline Show (with Jeff Cavins)
    • The Bible Timeline Show (with Jeff Cavins)
    • Encountering The Word: Year A
  • Articles
  • Prayers
  • Shop

The Perpetual Mystery of the Trinity

by David Kilby | Jun 6, 2018 | Discovery | 1 comment

The Father, Son and Holy Spirit. It rolls off the tongue so naturally that we hardly give it a second thought. But as common as it may be for us to make the Sign of the Cross, the tradition only hints at the mystery—perhaps the greatest of mysteries.

If we look at the Bible as a love story between God and humanity, the way God reveals himself to us through salvation history is more profound than any classic novel, blockbuster movie, Broadway play or epic poem. It is in so many ways the love story from which all others come.

The Old Testament is a saga between God the Father and humanity that spans centuries. He chooses the Israelites as his people, the nation through which he will bring his son into the world. The prophets told these chosen people that the day will come when a Messiah will free them from bondage. But few knew that the bondage the prophets spoke of was that of sin and that through Christ’s followers this freedom would be offered to everyone in the world. The ways of God were a mystery then, as they remain today.

After Christ’s Ascension he sent us the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. We relive the story every year through the liturgical calendar, but what if we viewed the Trinity in a different way; not as just a doctrine or tradition, but as a perpetual font of truth that never runs dry as it draws us deeper into love for God?

Through the Bible God slowly revealed himself, first as Father, then as Son and then as Holy Spirit. The Church teaches that the Holy Spirit is the love between the Father and the Son. But this is still only a simplified understanding of God. It’s as good as we can do this side of heaven. There is still so much more. As St. Augustine once shared, our minds can’t fully comprehend the Trinity any more than a bucket can hold the entire ocean.

This is the most important lesson for me to learn and remember on this Solemnity of the Holy Trinity. God is always mysterious, not mysterious as if he is lurking around trying to evade people, but mysterious like a bottomless ocean that we’re constantly discovering new things about.


This article was first published on The Great Adventure Blog—Ascension Blog’s former home—May 31, 2015. For more information on Great Adventure Bible studies, click here.


1 Comment

  1. Student on June 1, 2015 at 7:13 am

    The immensity of space does make us wonder in amazement, but it does not deter us from making further study and exploration to understand the universe better. Surely God is much much more limitless, more mysterious than space. God knows our inability or incapacity to comprehend him, such that He become one of us to give us a gateway to his inner self of Trinity. As it is it is hard to understand another human being how much more for a divine being? Both takes work, To be stop from trying to understand as with others human being, is a measure of how much we love of God.

    Reply

Submit a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discovery
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Praying with Scripture During the Last Days of Advent
Praying with Scripture During the Last Days of Advent

On December 17 the Church begins the second part of Advent, in which she focuses more intensely on the immediate preparation for the Feast of Christmas and the Lord’s Nativity. The Masses and Liturgy of these days are amazingly rich and beautiful in their scriptural...

Five Ways St. John Paul II’s Theology of the Body Can Change the Way You See Your Body
Five Ways St. John Paul II’s Theology of the Body Can Change the Way You See Your Body

Meet Shannon Whitmore, a homeschooling mom with a passion for sharing the truth of God’s love for the human person and the beauty of the vocation to marriage and family life. She is also the Ascension author of See Yourself as God Does: Understanding Holy Body Image...

Virtue in a Modern World
Virtue in a Modern World

Meet Andrew Whitmore, a theology professor, husband, father, and author of Ascension’s Saintly Habits: Aquinas’ 7 Simple Strategies You Can Use to Grow in Virtue. In this blog, Andrew shares his perspective on virtue, why living a virtuous life is worth pursuing, and...

About Us

Careers

Newsroom

Frequently Asked Questions

Fair Use & Licensing

Contact Us

Shipping Policy

Return Policy

Resellers & Distributors

Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
© 2025 Ascension Press. All rights reserved.
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow