Lord's Day Reflection: 'The Light we resist, the Love we seek’
As the Church celebrates the Solemnity of the Most Holy
Trinity, Fr. Marion Nguyen, OSB, offers his thoughts on the day’s liturgical
readings under the theme: “The Light we resist, the Love we seek”.
By Fr. Marion Nguyen, OSB*
To reflect on Jesus’ words in John 3:16–18 is to enter a
mystery in which God’s initiative precedes every human response: “God did not
send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be
saved through him.”
On this feast of the Holy Trinity, these words reveal not an
abstract principle but the living movement of God himself: the Father who loves
and sends the Son, the Son who enters into our condition to heal, and the Holy
Spirit who opens the human heart so that this saving light may be received and
bear fruit.
What is disclosed here is not a doctrine added onto
salvation, but the very life of God made visible in Christ, a love that goes
forth, seeks the lost, and draws the wounded into communion.
To receive this teaching is to see oneself not in a harsh
mirror of accusation, but in a light that reveals and heals. It is a light that
does not flatter nor wound for its own sake. It shows what is broken so that it
may be restored. In a cultural moment shaped by constant self-construction and
anxious forms of self-justification, these words unmask our illusions without
humiliating us.
They disclose a God who does not approach the world
primarily as judge standing over a defendant, but as the One who, in the Son,
enters into our condition to heal it from within, and who, in the Spirit,
enables us to receive that healing.
Augustine helps us to recognize this divine disposition in
Christ. In his Tractates on the Gospel of John, he repeatedly presents the Lord
as physician rather than prosecutor: Christ comes not to harm the sick, but to
heal them; and the tragedy lies not in the absence of medicine, but in its
refusal.
The incarnation itself is the Father’s nearness enacted
through the Son: God does not remain distant from wounded humanity but draws
near in order to restore it. The cross, then, is not first the expression of
divine chastisement, but the depth of divine solidarity with a suffering world,
and the Spirit is the hidden work of God within us, making that saving nearness
effective in the depths of the heart.
When Jesus speaks of condemnation, therefore, he does not
describe first an external sentence imposed from without, but the interior
drama of a heart that turns away from the light. “This is the judgment,” John
will say a few verses later: “the light has come into the world, and people
loved darkness rather than light” (Jn 3:19).
Judgment is not something added after revelation; it occurs
within it. The light has come into the world, and the human heart must answer
it. What saves also judges, because it reveals what we love and what we resist.
Every person knows the fear of being seen too clearly; the
Gospel tells us that in Christ, such seeing is not condemnation but mercy. The
encounter with Christ is already crisis, because the Son is the light sent by
the Father, and that light both discloses and invites, while the Spirit
silently enables the heart to open, though it may still resist.
Those who refuse belief are not portrayed as arbitrarily
excluded, but as freely turning away from the source of life. This is not meant
to soften responsibility, but to name it more precisely: the human heart is
capable of resisting its own healing. Sin, in this context, is not merely
external violation but a disordered turning of the will that prefers a lesser
light to the true one.
Why does this refusal persist? Augustine names the root as
pride, that deep and subtle desire to be self-sufficient, to define oneself
without dependence on God.
It is the ancient temptation to be one’s own origin. From
this stance, grace can feel less like gift and more like threat, because it
exposes our inability to save ourselves. The resistance to Christ is often not
indifference but the struggle to relinquish control.
And yet beneath this resistance lies another truth Augustine
helps us see more clearly: the human heart is not neutral, but ordered toward
God. Even when it turns away, it does not lose its direction. It carries within
itself the mark of its origin, and therefore a kind of inner gravity that draws
it back toward the One in whom it can rest.
Our anxieties and disquiet are not simply emotional states,
but signs that we have not yet arrived at our proper end. We are made for
communion, and nothing less can hold us in peace.
To enter into healing, then, is not to collapse into
self-rejection, but to step into truth. Humility is the courage to abandon
pretence and to stand before God without disguise. It is the recognition that
life cannot be self-generated or self-redeemed.
To see this is to admit that I have preferred darkness in
the past. This is not despair; it is the beginning of healing-permitting the
medicine to work, and allowing the Spirit to open the heart to receive what the
Father has given through the Son.
At that point, salvation is no longer an abstraction. It
becomes communion with the living God. The love that eternally flows from the
Father through the Son in the Holy Spirit begins to draw the human person into
itself. The Physician does not remain outside the wound; he enters it, so that
healing may begin from within.
The light that judges is the same light that heals, because
it reveals both the truth of what we are and the truth of what we were created
to become. To remain in this light is already to begin to live the life of the
Trinity.
* Abbot of St. Martin Abbey—Lacey, Washington
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/church/news/2026-05/gospel-reflection-solemnity-most-holy-trinity.html

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