Ex 34:4-6, 8-9; 2 Cor 13:11-13; Jn 3:16-18
Trinity Sunday is one of the most beautiful feasts of the Church. The mystery of the Trinity is not a puzzle to be solved but a relationship to be lived.
There is an old African story about three villages that stood on three hills. A severe drought struck the region. Each village had a small spring, but none had enough water to survive. The people argued and blamed one another. “Our spring is the best.” “We must protect what belongs to us.” “We cannot share.” As the drought worsened, an elderly woman suggested that the three villages dig channels connecting their springs. The people laughed at her. Why should they give away their precious water? But finally, with no other choice, they worked together. When the channels were completed, the waters flowed into one another and formed a strong stream that nourished all three villages. Years later, when children asked who owned the stream, nobody could answer. The stream belonged to all because it was sustained by all.
That story gives us a glimpse of what Trinity Sunday is really about. God is not loneliness. God is communion. God is relationship. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are distinct, yet united in perfect love. God’s very nature is not isolation but communion. The feast of the Trinity tells us that love is not something God does; love is what God is.




