Sunday, June 3, 2007

Trinity Sunday: The Artist of Life

A Sermon from Romans 5:15

A few weeks ago in my sermon I referred to Rob Bell who wrote the book, “Velvet Elvis.” Bell begins this book using a reference to a velvet Elvis he has in his basement. He goes on to talk about the emerging church, Christianity in the 21st century, and how life and faith are like art – the work is never really complete once and for all. There will always be another piece of art. Someone else will take this idea and recreate it with some new expression. And like art, faith is a process of God revealing God’s self over and over in new ways. We never have the complete picture of who God is.

The famous 20th century artist, Picasso, was deeply impacted by devastation of the Spanish Civil War. In response Picasso’s work became a response to the war, (Cubism) they became abstract and distorted, depicting the world as if there were no God. Without God, without the divine vision, everything was wrong.



For many people art is decoration, something we hang on our walls or sit on our coffee tables to adorn our homes. The purpose of art is adornment.

But for others art is an end within itself. Art in this way is intended to be a commentary on our lives and world. This is true of the work of Picasso and Dali and all the great artists; their work is a statement about the world we live in.

For several years now this icon
has been hanging in our narthex. An icon, unlike art, is not intended to comment on the world we live in. Nor is the icon intended to be just an adornment on the wall. Rather icons are intended to express something of the divine, of the nature of God. The spirituality of iconography is to help us see beyond the world to a place where God resides. The icon is not a picture of God. Rather, the icon is intended to draw us into prayer, and through prayer we come to know something of the essence of God.

This icon is of the Trinity, using Old Testament imagery of the angels that came to Abraham at the Oaks of Mamre. This icon was written by Andre Rublev in the 15th century in Russia. The Russian icons have a very different look and feel from the Byzantine icons. Russian icons are softer, less harsh in the angles and expressions.


In this icon the angels are gathered around a table beneath an oak tree. The middle angel is robed in purple with a blue cloak. Another angel is robed in gold. And the third angel is watching them. The wings of each angel is touching the wings of the others.

The angel in the middle represents Jesus. The purple inner garment represents his divine nature – purple being the color of royalty in the ancient world. The blue outer garment represents his human nature and the world.

The angel in gold represents God, gold being the color of the ultimate ideal, holy and good. The wings of God overlap the wings of Jesus, they are of one essence.

The angel on the left is the Holy Spirit. The outer garment is green, a light green, like new leaves, representing life. The Spirit brings about new life, breathes new life. The wings of the Holy Spirit touch the wing of Jesus but do not overlap. This is because the Eastern Church does not abide by the idea, as stated in our Nicene Creed, that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the father and the son. For the Eastern Church the Holy Spirit proceeds only from God. All of which is a long story that I will save for another sermon.

The fact that the wings of Jesus and the Holy Spirit touch emphasizes the sameness of their nature. The inner garment of God and the Holy Spirit is blue. Humans were made in the image of God, which this blue garment represents – created by God, given life by the Holy Spirit. Jesus, who is divine, puts on the robe of humanity which makes him both human and divine.

This icon points us to see one of the ways we humans strive to know God. The Trinity is just one way we attempt to unpack the complex nature of who God is and how God expresses God’s self into the world and into our lives.

Today the Church celebrates Trinity Sunday. It always falls on the Sunday after the feast of Pentecost. The most important thing about this day is that it points us think about how God lives in our lives and our world. Ultimately God is mystery. But a mystery doesn’t give us much to work with. So, for faiths that come from the Abrahamic tradition, meaning Judisim, Christianity, and Islam, God is relational.

The Christian faith describes this relationality: as God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. All three expressions are of God and tell us something about the nature of God. Christians have wrestled for centuries attempting to unpack this. Suffice it to say that God comes to us as a Being who desires to be in relationship with us. And we claim to know God most fully in and through our relationships with others. This means our relationships with family and friends, but also our relationships outside our immediate family and community. How do we welcome and care for the other people in our world?

The way we here at St. Hilary’s are striving to do this is in part through our work with refugees. Now this may seem a bit abstract, the idea of knowing God through our work

with refugees. But it actually fits in nicely with the concept of the Trinity as way of knowing God in relationship. I have used art today in an effort to show how artists express the world around them through their medium. Art is not just room decoration. I’ve also talked about how our faith is like art. Faith is not static. Living life and exploring faith means that our faith is like a work in progress. And I’ve used icons to show how prayer leads us into the nature of God. Icons are tools for prayer, and it is through prayer that we come to know something about God. Having a glimpse of the nature of God we begin to see how God calls us to love one another.

What I want unpack about our work with refugees is how we are bringing together, into one ministry, an aspect of our world today with our understanding of the nature of God.

We know God as one who cares deeply for all of creation. And we know Christ as the example of God, showing us how we can be more like what God desires of us. And we know the Holy Spirit as that expression of God that brings our efforts to life. In caring for refugees we are responding to a significant problem in our world today. The millions of people have been displaced by war, violence, and fear of death. These people have lost everything, family, home, country.

Recently we gave refuge to a family from Rwanda. They stayed with us for about six days. It was a time of profound gift. They came to us tired and worn. We gave them a place to rest and renew their hope and energy.

Two examples will stay with me. One was the day I took over for the children a few toys. These included two used scooters that belonged to my kids when they were younger. A few tennis rackets and balls, some wiffel balls and some soccer balls. The look of sheer delight on the faces of these kids cannot be described. They laughed with glee and ran off to play immediately. For the next few days we saw them glide with ease across the parking lot on those scooters.

The second example took place on the day they left. As we were packing them up and loading up the truck I told the kids that they could keep the scooters and other items I gave them. They in turn gave me this picture. (Will try to take photo of picture and upload it) It is a simple piece of art work. It is not a masterpiece created by some famous artist. Nor is it a grand and ancient icon. But I think it reflects this family and through them something about the nature of God. I suspect they had several of these and gave them to people along the way who helped them find their new life.

This picture will always represent to me the spirit of abundance, for even as this family had nothing but a few suitcases of clothes, they came bearing gifts. The picture will always remind me of the immense generosity of God and how we are to give in response from the treasure we have. For it is in giving that we come to know the depth of God as God is active in this world. As Paul says in his letter to the Romans: from the depth of our suffering we come to know endurance and from our endurance we come to know the fullness of our character and our character produces hope. And from hope we come to know the fullness of God’s love poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit. And from this place, filled with God’s love, we become the face of Christ to a broken world. Not just a portrait of God to adorn our walls, but a pathway into the very heart of God.

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