Fr Cantalamessa: Contemplating
Trinity helps overcome division
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| Second sermon for Advent 2018.(Vatican Media) |
In his second Sermon for Advent 2018, the Preacher to the
Pontifical Household continued his reflection on the Holy Trinity. The Sermon
was delivered in the “Redemptoris Mater” Chapel in the Apostolic Palace, in the
presence of Pope Francis.
By Vatican News
“The Trinity is like one of those musical triangles that
vibrates and gives forth the same sound from whatever side it is struck.” This
was one of the key notes of the Second Advent Sermon given
by Fr Raniero Cantalamessa, OFM Cap., the Preacher of the Pontifical Household.
In this “triumvirate,” he said, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, are
always “engaged in glorifying each other.” Fr Cantalamessa’s sermon revolved
around the idea of this Trinitarian symphony. “There is only one ‘place’ in the
world where the rule of ‘love your neighbour as yourself’ is perfectly put into
practice, and it is in the Trinity!”
Rublev’s Icon of the Trinity
Father Cantalamessa recalled that “the model for all
representations of the Trinity” is the icon of Andrei Rublev, written in 1425,
and reproduced in mosaic in the Redemptoris Mater Chapel. The
dogma of the Trinity, he observed, is expressed by the fact “that the three
Persons represented are distinct but closely resemble each other.” And they
“are ideally positioned within a circle that highlights their unity.” From the
icon, he said, comes forth “a silent cry”: “Be one as we are one.”
Trinity and unity
The Trinity, Fr Cantalamessa said, shows us “the true path
to unity”: “the three Persons are united but without being confused; each
Person ‘identifies’ with the other, gives Himself to the other, and sustains
the existence of the other.” All people want unity, he said, and “desire it
from the bottom of their hearts.” So why is it so difficult to achieve unity?
Fr Cantalamessa asked. “It is because we want unity of course, but . . . unity
around our point of view.” The problem, he explained, “is that
the person before me is doing exactly the same thing with me. No unity will
ever be achieved if we go about it this way; unity requires the opposite path.”
Overcoming division
The Trinity is “a living and vibrant reality,” the papal
preacher continued. It is the absolute manifestation of love: “Every divine
Person loves the others exactly as himself.” Fr Cantalamessa said that
“contemplating the Trinity truly helps us to overcome ‘the hateful divisions of
the world.’” He explained, “We can be divided on our thinking—on doctrinal or
pastoral questions that are still legitimately debated in the Church—but we
should never be divided in heart: In dubiis libertas, in
omnibus vero caritas (‘liberty in doubtful things, charity in all
things’).” This, he said, “specifically means imitating the unity in the
Trinity, which is, in fact, ‘unity in diversity.’”
Entering into the Trinity
Finally, Fr Cantalamessa said, “There is something that is
more blessed that we can do with regard to the Trinity than contemplate and
imitate it. And that is to enter into it!” Christ, he explained, “has left us a
concrete way to do that: the Eucharist.” Father Cantalamessa said that at “the
moment of Communion” the words of Christ, “I in them and you in me” (Jn 17:23)
are “actualized… in a strict sense.” In the Eucharist, he concluded, we are
offered the grace to be “table guests of the Trinity.”
Read the full homily at the website of Fr
Raniero Cantalamessa.

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