Encapsulating the Incomprehensible Identity of the Holy Trinity

Encapsulating the Incomprehensible Identity of the Holy Trinity
Pastor Pete Metzger

Encapsulating the Incomprehensible Identity of the Holy Trinity

Do you know who I am? I don’t mean that like Do you know who I am? Really, I’m asking you, who am I?

What does it say on the badge? Pete Metzger – that’s my name. But is my name who I am? I tried a few different social media searches. Facebook and LinkedIn yielded the most results. There were literally hundreds of other Peter Metzgers on both.

So, if I’m not even Pete Metzger (or, at least, if that name doesn’t narrow it down enough), who am I? You could say I’m Paul’s son, Lydia’s husband, James and Franklin’s dad. But as wonderful as all those titles are, that’s a bit derivative, isn’t it? It filters out the hundreds of other Peter Metzgers you could find online, but I’m more than just the sum of all the relationships I have. I’m a person all unto myself.

You probably don’t know this, but I’m an Enneagram 5. According to Gretchen Rubin, I’m a Rebel. According to WizardingWorld.com, I’m a Ravenclaw. But while pigeon-holing me into a certain category may describe me, it certainly doesn’t define me. Have you ever gone back and retaken some of those personality tests and gotten drastically different results? Yeah, because we change. I’m not the same person I was 10, 20, 30 years ago. I’m guessing you aren’t either.

Obviously you didn’t come here today to hear all about me and what makes me distinct and different – much less special or important. I say all this to illustrate how difficult a task we have before us. Today we begin a new worship series called This Is Most Certainly True. It walks us through the three articles of the Apostles Creed and finishes the sentences that all start with “I believe ______.” Every Sunday we are going to confidently assert a certain truth about God. But that does assume that you already know an all-important answer to a very fundamental question, Who is God?

If we can’t encapsulate all of my identity using my occupation, relationships, or characteristics, then imagine how hard it will be to do the same for God.

God is not here, at least not in the same way that I am here. You can’t shake God’s hand and get a measure for the man. You can’t put God under a microscope. But even though he’s invisible, you can observe him or at least you can see some the things he does, which tell us a great deal about who he is.

King David put it this way: The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.[1] When you look at the heavens and the skies – when you look at the natural world around you – what observation can you make about where it all came from? It’s the work of God’s hands!

Look at the intricacies of the human nervous system, the fine tuning of the solar system and earth’s precise placement in it. That degree of specificity couldn’t have just happened randomly. Order doesn’t come from chaos. A tornado doesn’t whip through a lumberyard and build a house. Instead, as the writer to the Hebrews puts it: Every house is built by someone, but God is the builder of everything.[2]

Even if you don’t know him by name – even if you’ve never been introduced – just by looking at the world around you, what can you know about God? That there is one, i.e. that there is a creator, an intelligent designer, a primary cause. That he has the power and wisdom to create things well.

Still, though, God is not here. Even Creation is just a piece of the puzzle. Looking out the window can tell you something about him. Looking inside can too. The Apostle Paul put it this way in his letter to the Romans: When Gentiles, who do not have the law, do by nature things required by the law, they are a law for themselves, even though they do not have the law. They show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts, their consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts sometimes accusing them and at other times even defending them.[3]

Paul talks about our consciences. What do our consciences tell us? Whether we’ve done something right or wrong, i.e. whether we should feel proud or guilty about what we’ve done. And what does that pride or guilt imply? That there is a standard for what is right and wrong – a standard that is built into our human operating system regardless of where you grew up or what laws you were taught. There are certain things that you just don’t do, that nobody would feel good about. And where would that objective standard of morality come from if not from some higher power that is concerned with whether we do right or wrong?

If we look out the window, we can know that there is a Creator God who is powerful and wise. If we look in our hearts, we can know that that same God is just and that he holds people accountable. But that’s about it.

It’s about as much of an impression you can get of God as you got of me when you first saw me. But I can tell you this for a fact, I sure wouldn’t want to leave what you think of me to your first impression of me. I would love the chance to set the record straight, wouldn’t you? And if we care about what other people think of us, you can bet God does too. That’s why he gave us his Word – to tell you everything you need to know about him that you wouldn’t be able to know any other way.

Did you know that today is a special day? Yes, it’s our Open Air Fair, and that’s fun and exciting, but it’s also the festival of the Holy Trinity, a truth about God that believers have celebrated from the very beginning. On the first page of the Bible you hear things like this:

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.[4]

Already “God” and “the Spirit of God” are placed side by side. The Apostle John helps us fill in the gaps. He says, In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.[5] That “Word” is Jesus, and so you have “God,” “the Spirit of God,” and “Jesus” all cooperating in Creation right on the first page of your Bible.

Father, Son and Spirit are all God, but how many Gods are there? God tells us, through his prophet Moses: Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one.[6]

So we have this profound mystery – a single God, but Father, Son and Holy Spirit are all God, without that single God being divided into three parts and without those three people being blended into one. That’s the Trinity in a nutshell. It’s enough to make your brain do cartwheels. I can’t explain it, and yet it is absolutely essential for your faith and life.

Over the next several weeks you’re going to hear a breakdown of what each of those three people of the Trinity have done and continue to do for you, primarily in the realms of creation, salvation, and faith. But what I want you to know about the Trinity today, while we’re still considering all of them at the same time, is simply what God tells us about himself in His Word.

As a name, “Pete Metzger” might not tell you much about who I am as a person. But the name God uses for himself is much more illuminating. He is The Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation.[7]

It’s a bittersweet name, isn’t it? That last part is kind of scary. What will he do to the guilty? Punish them. And who are these guilty people? They’re you. They’re me. Your own conscience has told you as much. You’ve had moments when you’ve known instantly that those words never should have come out of your mouth. You’ve had moments when you’ve known that that was not the way to treat your wife or your husband or your kids or your parents. You’ve had moments when you’ve known that you didn’t do what you were supposed to do, e.g. when you’ve left someone hanging, when you could have helped but you didn’t, when you failed to live up to the expectations you have for yourself, let alone the expectations God has for you.

You deserve to be punished. Your own conscience testifies against you. God will not fail to ensure that justice gets done. But, that same holy, just God is also compassionate and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in love, forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. And just as each member of the Triune God had his hand in the creation of the world, so also each had his hand in your salvation.

The Father looked on a sinner like you and loved you so much that he was willing to sacrifice his one and only, truly perfect Son to save you. The Son loved his Father and you so much that he was willing to be that sacrifice, i.e. to die on the cross sinless in your place, i.e. to have God’s righteous justice fall on him, so that you could be forgiven and saved. And it’s the Holy Spirit who works through His Word to teach you that precious truth, to kindle in your heart life-saving faith to believe that what Jesus did was for you.

That’s who God is. That’s what he’s done for you. And that’s why we confess his name. Because his is the only name under heaven by which we must be saved.

We don’t do all this because it’s fun. There are international children’s festivals down the street you can go to to have fun. We don’t do all this because the people wearing lanyards are the nicest people in St. Albert. They’re great, but lots of other people are too. We do this, we come here, week after week, month after month, to know our Triune God – to know the ways we’ve fallen short of deserving his love, but the ways he still loves us and forgives us and restores and empowers us to face each new day with his compassion and grace, and his power and wisdom.

That’s why almost every single Sunday, we confess the Apostles’ Creed or another one very much like it, because that’s who our God is, and that’s what he’s done for you. And if you know nothing else about this great, big old Book – if you haven’t listened to a single word I said – I want you to know the profound truth of who your God is in plain language that even children can understand, the fundamental truths of the Divine in a simple but complete explanation of his incomprehensible identity. He is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit united in holiness and love for you. And he promises you that it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved.[8]

This is most certainly true. Amen.


[1] Psalm 19:1

[2] Hebrews 3:4

[3] Romans 2:14,15

[4] Genesis 1:1,2

[5] John 1:1-3

[6] Deuteronomy 6:4

[7] Exodus 34:6,7

[8] Romans 10:10

Drink Deeply of the Life-Giving Water of Jesus, Your Rock

Drink Deeply of the Life-Giving Water
Pastor Pete Metzger

John 7:37-39

37 On the last and greatest day of the festival, Jesus stood and said in a loud voice, “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink. 38 Whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them.” 39 By this he meant the Spirit, whom those who believed in him were later to receive. Up to that time the Spirit had not been given, since Jesus had not yet been glorified.

Drink Deeply of the Life-Giving Water of Jesus, Your Rock

Did you see the connection? Do you know why, on Pentecost Sunday, of all days, I didn’t say a word about the Holy Spirit in my children’s message, but talked exclusively about Moses in the wilderness? I wouldn’t blame you if you didn’t, because it’s hidden in the details. The first 9 words of our Gospel for today set the stage for us: On the last and greatest day of the festival.[1]

Jesus was in Jerusalem for the Festival of Tabernacles. It was an eight-day celebration of God’s providence during the 40 years that the Israelites spent wandering in the wilderness after being set free from 400 years of slavery in Egypt. For eight days, faithful Jewish believers would vacate their comfy homes and set up booths in their backyards, as a reminder of the vagabond survival of a whole generation of Israelites, who – despite being in a barren wasteland for 40 years – were nevertheless blessed every day to find bread miraculously appear on the ground, quail run through their camp, and water in the unlikeliest of places.

In fact, it was that water that became a special feature of the festival. On days 2-8, the priests would lead a procession from the Temple in Jerusalem to the Pool of Siloam, draw water, carry it back to the Temple, and pour it at the base of the altar as a visual reminder of how God continually provided for his people.

Can you picture it? The priests with their pitchers of water pouring them at the base of the altar. The sound of water gushing out and trickling down the paving stones. The people remembering Moses striking the rock with his stick in the desert and water pouring forth. And Jesus blurting out in a loud voice, “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink.”[2]

If it were anybody but Jesus, that’d be sacrilegious. But because it is him, it’s as if a switch got flipped and the scene centuries in the making suddenly jumps into sharp focus. It had always been about Jesus. Jesus had always been the thing that people were missing. Jesus had always been the thing that people needed the most. Jesus had always been the answer that God was eager to give because Jesus is freedom and life and forgiveness and love.

What do you thirst for? What gaping hole persists in your life? What need drives you to your knees in your better days, or causes you to clench your fists in your lesser days?

There’s nothing wrong with having a need. That’s the wilderness of the world we live in. We’re not in heaven yet. So, it’s unsurprising to continue to get bad news about the health of your parents or grandparents. It comes as no shock at all that there’d be conflict even between family and friends. We should only expect to continue to have reasons to worry about how we’re going to continue to take care of ourselves and our families.

It’s what we do with that need that can become a problem. Oftentimes it comes down to a choice either to circle the wagons or circle the drain, and both keep us from finding the satisfaction that can only come from Jesus.

Something happens, so you put your nose to the grindstone. You’re just going to push your way through. But for how long, and at what cost? I commend the effort, but are you strong enough? Can you singlehandedly turn the tide of your life? Can you will yourself to a better life? And what’s happening while you’re trying? What relationships are you letting wither on the vine – your kids, your spouse, your parents, your God? When you try so hard, where is your trust in the Lord? When you put all your hope in yourself, what happens when you inevitably let yourself down?

Then you circle the drain. You let out a constant refrain of complaint. Woe is me! What did I do to deserve this? Why is everyone else letting me down? Why is God letting me down? And the more you allow the grievances to accumulate, the more you play the victim in your life, the more you betray the dis- and the malcontent you harbour in your heart.

Thirst is only natural in the wilderness of the world we live in. It becomes a problem when we complain about it or seek to quench it on our own, which is what makes Jesus’ invitation such welcome music to our ears: “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink.”[3]

Who is Jesus speaking to? Thirsty people like you. People like you who come to him empty-handed in every sense of the word. People like you who have gaping holes in your life and in your heart, who have real need physically and spiritually. People like you who have no answers, only problems, but who find in Jesus not only providence but patience and forgiveness and life and love.

Those Israelites in the desert were grumblers and complainers. They were always the victim in their own stories and they let God know about it. But what did God do about it? Did he have Moses raise that rod in judgment? No. He lifted it in mercy, and with patient forbearance he supplied their need. He didn’t strike the people down for their sin. He struck the rock and gave them life.

And do you know what that rock that gave the Israelites life was meant to symbolize – the same water-giving rock the Jews were celebrating at the Festival of Tabernacles? Paul tells us: They all ate the same spiritual food and drank the same spiritual drink; for they drank from the spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that rock was Christ.[4]

This whole festival that Jesus was in Jerusalem to celebrate was about Jesus being the answer to our greatest need, which goes deeper than food and water and the air we breathe. It touches spirit and salvation and eternal life. Our sin threatened to separate us from our God forever and throw us into an eternity away from him where we would long for a drop of water to cool our thirsty tongues. But he sent his Son to pour out his blood in love on the cross to quench our thirst and satisfy our need, to forgive your sin and assure you of a salvation that does fill the gaping void in your life.

You didn’t get the diagnosis you were looking for. Come to Jesus and be filled with a life that will not end in death, but will continue in heaven, where there is no weakness or pain or cause for tears, but life in your Lord forever.

You can’t enjoy the company of the person you care about because of the conflict that has sprung up between you. Come to Jesus and receive full reconciliation with your God, who keeps no record of wrong but who credits you with his perfect Son’s perfect righteousness and therefore also a perfect relationship with your Father in heaven and all those he calls his own.

You still worry about how you’ll be able to provide for yourself and your family. Come to Jesus and receive in him your daily bread – the health and the life that he gives you, the skills and abilities he’s bestowed on you, the opportunities he lays before you. And know that a day will come when the Lamb at the centre of the throne will be your light and your life forever.

Anyone who is thirsty, come to Jesus and drink. Whoever believes in him, rivers of living water will flow from within them.[5] That’s God’s promise to you. And that’s the secret Spirit at work within you.


 

It’s Pentecost Sunday. I’ve only said the word “Spirit” twice in this sermon so far. And you know what? I don’t think he’d mind. Do you know what the Holy Spirit’s whole job is? It’s to point you to Jesus. That’s why he allowed Peter and his friends to speak all those different languages – not so that they could say how great the Spirit is, but so that they could declare the wonders of God,[6] i.e. so that they could talk about Jesus to people who didn’t know him yet.

That’s why the Spirit gives different kinds of gifts to different kinds of people – not so that you can pat yourself on the back and flaunt your wisdom, eloquence, or compassion, but so that by your wisdom, eloquence, and compassion you can point others to Christ, so that the Spirit can enable them to say, “Jesus is Lord,”[7] just as he has enabled you to say that.

And this pouring out of the Spirit isn’t some measly performative gesture we only make once a year. Jesus calls it rivers of living water that will flow from within you. There’s no scarcity of the Spirit. We’re not in a drought without him. Jesus promises and delivers an abundance of his Advocate.

You don’t need to be able to speak in tongues to know that the Spirit wells up inside you. The fact that you’re here is all the evidence you need. The confession we’ll share in another minute is an expression enabled by the Spirit within you. The faith at work in your life every day is further proof, as you recognize the intrusion of temptation, resist the sinful desires of your flesh, and put into practice the fruit of the Spirit among the people in your life (e.g. love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control).

Rivers of living water flow from within you, and your heart is not a drain; it’s a fountain. Your heart isn’t where the Holy Spirit goes to evaporate; it’s where he goes to overflow so that so many more can hear and know the wonders that God has performed for you in Jesus your Saviour.

Do you see the connection now? The rock is Christ. The water is the Spirit abundantly at work in your heart and in your life, and it’s the Father who in love gives you both a rock-solid foundation, and rivers of living water to provide you faith and life in abundance now and forever. Amen.


[1] John 7:37

[2] Ibid

[3] John 7:37

[4] 1 Corinthians 10:3,4

[5] John 7:38

[6] Acts 2:11

[7] 1 Corinthians 12:3