The God Who Never Works Alone
We often try to make God fit into neat theological boxes, but Trinity Sunday reminds us that some truths are simply too alive to be flattened into simple formulas. This message takes us back to the very beginning in Genesis, where we discover something breathtaking: before humanity drew its first breath, God existed in relationship with Himself. The Spirit hovered over the chaos, the Word spoke creation into being, and relationship was woven into the fabric of reality itself. This isn't just ancient history—it speaks directly to our loneliness epidemic today. We live in a world more connected than ever yet feeling more isolated than before. The Trinity reveals that we were created by a relational God who exists in love, not out of deficiency but out of overflow. When Jesus gave the Great Commission, He didn't ask us to explain the Trinity perfectly; He invited us to baptize people into this living reality. The challenge we face is moving beyond information transfer to actual embodiment. We can know Scripture and still not love our neighbor. We can quote theology and still have shriveled souls. The call is to teach people how to live—how to forgive, show mercy, carry one another, and love people who don't look, vote, or think like us. The closer we move to God, the closer we should move to one another, because discipleship cannot happen in isolation.
