Monday, June 1, 2026

United in the Trinity!

 

                                                 Trinity Sunday

 

                            Prayer

            Matt. 28:16-20 and Philippians 3:17 - 4:1

 

1st Movement:

     People can disappoint us and do things that are really hurtful for the Church.  When I was a teenager, our church got to bulging at the seems.  Our Pastor decided what he thought we needed to do (what God had told him that we needed to do!) and began to preach that every Sunday in one form or another.  He had decided that we needed to step out on faith and buy new property and build across town, selling our present facility for whatever we could get for it.  Those who did not agree with him and jump on the wagon were just not right!  They did not have enough faith!  Those who had spent their lives working to acquire the facility that we had were hanging on to material things if they were not just ready to take their losses and move on!  Those who were counting the cost were not trusting the Lord enough!  Well, he was successful at convincing a little less than half of the congregation that he was right but not enough to do it and keep us together, so he took those who agreed with him and they split off to start a new church. It matters so much for all of us the stand we take and how we take it.  Do we have all the answers?  Is there room for discussion?  As a preacher, I realize the damage I can do if I make all the decisions for people like nobody else can think for themselves or hear from God.  I realize how divisive it can be if I preach everything that I believe or everything I think is sin like there was no other way of looking at it and everybody that didn't agree with me was dead wrong!  There are so many positive things to preach about!  God can change us!  The Holy Spirit can lead us to be better than we've ever been before!  God can help us to be united in God's Spirit!  I just need to keep pointing to the one who offers change and a new life!  Here is the Trinity: God, Holy Spirit, and the one who offers change and a new life, Jesus!  I just need to keep holding up the vision of what God can do with us and through us and let the Lord do the rest!  We just need to keep going into the world with the gospel and baptizing in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit!

 

2nd Movement:

     In our Philippians scripture, Paul had a problem here.  He had people among those who he had preached the word to who were trying to undermine what he had to say. Division isn’t new! Some were saying that he wasn't really an apostle so his message wasn't really credible.  Others were saying that gentile believers needed to be circumcised!  He is calling them here, "enemies of the cross."  They were trying to undo the good that he had done and he was heartbroken about it.  If we aren't careful, any of us can be enemies of the cross.  When we get the idea that we are right on something and we don't want to let the other disagree, we need to ask ourselves why.  Is it out of love and we don't want them to be hurt, or do we just not want to be wrong?  Is it really one of the essentials that we are talking about? The Church has always had problems with disagreements.  In our scripture from Philippians, Paul lifts up Christ as that that binds us together.  As the Early Church worked to establish their theology around Christ, God, and the Holy Spirit, they developed the theology of the Trinity which says they are all God, but are different ways that we experience God. Jesus tells us in Matthew to baptize in the name of the Father, the son, and the Holy Spirit.  Here Jesus gives us a basis for the theology around the Trinity.

 

3rd movement:

     As we think about this, I like the United Methodist Church because we are not told exactly what to believe; we are free to study the Bible and come to our own conclusions as long as we believe the essentials. The theology around God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit are some of those essential Christian beliefs. Beyond that, as United Methodists, we are given much more freedom within Christians circles to search out our own salvation with fear and trembling.  Some are told exactly what mode of baptism they must use.  Some pastors would have their credentials removed if they had an “unauthorized” person help them with communion.  Some would be thrown out if they didn't believe certain things about the end times.  Some are bound to certain beliefs about tongues.  Some are bound to some extent to taking and offering communion a certain way. Some are told what they can and can’t watch on TV.  Some are told how to vote!  We are free to search out in the Bible and the Churches tradition to see what beliefs we feel the Lord would have us to have on these things.  We can be united and not all believe the same things on everything! 

 

     Communion is a good example of the uniting of the Church through the Trinity, so let’s look at communion for a moment.  We believe that the important things are that we offer Christ's table to everyone and that we encounter Christ at the table and are changed as a result of that encounter.  The debates around communion involve: should we use leavened bread or unleavened bread?  Should we use wine, grape juice or something else?  Should we use one cup or separate cups?  Do we actually encounter Christ in Spirit, does the juice and bread actually become the body and blood of Christ once ingested, or is it just a symbolic act?  Some would even argue that communion isn’t for everyone but just for Christians or even for some, just church members!

 

     Some want to say that one method is more biblical than the others.  I am glad as United Methodist that we don't have to get into that argument and that we are free to use whatever method best helps us to capture that first Lord's Supper and encounter the Lord in the reinactment of it.  We do believe in the Spiritual encounter with Christ at the table.  According to the scriptures and tradition, on that first Lord's Supper, they used one cup of wine (he took "the" cup) and unleavened bread, passing it around the table.  Some traditions still use real wine with all sipping from the same cup and unleavened bread.  That is probably the closest to the biblical way.  Although, it is not real clear as to whether they all sipped or dipped.  John speaks of dipping the bread at that meal, but he really doesn't recap the communion event.  During the Prohabition, some traditions decided, ours included, that using real wine was an unnecessary temptation for those who were or were prone to alcoholism, so they decided to start using grape juice.  Since grape juice does not kill germs, this opened up all kinds of issues.  Thus, many traditions started using seperate cups.  Some use one cup, which keeps the symbolism of the one cup which Christ used, and dipped the bread in the cup (intinction).  Christ used unleavened bread because that was the common bread at the table, so today many traditions hold to the "biblical" mode of using unleavened bread.  Others say that the common bread today is leavened bread and use leavened bread.  Getting caught up in the debate about which method is more "biblical" is really getting away from the real purpose of communion. United Methodists use most of these methods; the method is not the important issue. It is hard for me to understand why anyone would get caught up in that argument besides those who believe you should use one cup of wine and unleavened bread, but they do!

 

     In the service of communion, we can see the Trinity. We can see the different actions of the 3 parts of the Trinity: God, Son, and Holy Spirit.  God is seen in the prayer, Mercyful God …. God is seen in the Pardon, that proves God’s love toward us!  God is the one who loved us and made a way through Jesus Christ, and there is Christ the son!  In the Invitation, Christ invites to His table. In the prayer, we are freed and forgiven through Christ our Lord. It is Christ who showed us the love of God.  It is Christ who showed us how to live, and it is Christ who went to the Cross to make a way for us!  We see the Spirit in the consecration prayer: pour out your Spirit on us gathered here and by your Spirit make us one with Christ!  It is the Spirit who dwells with us and guides us in our everyday lives. As United Methodist, we are united in the Trinity at the table.  Our methods we offer communion can differ, but the main thing is that we encounter Christ at the table, and Christ changes us!

 

As we come to the table, we believe that we encounter the real presence of Christ at the table.  The elements do not become Christ, but as we take of them, spiritually, we can be taking of Christ into our lives spiritually.  The one cup (whether it is actually one cup or several cups with the same thing in them) points to the unity that we can have in Christ as we all encounter Christ at the table and let Christ change us.  As we encounter God, Christ, and the Spirit, our differences become less important and our focus on Christ becomes that that binds us as a Church. As Christ binds us and our relationship with Christ becomes the main thing, our divisions and disagreements around the non-essentials don’t seem so important!  Because we believe this is an encounter with Christ, we offer communion as our invitation to come to Christ! Thanks be to God!

 

Prayer of Confession

Service of Communion

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