Sermon for Trinity Sunday. May 26th, 2024
Readings:
In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord sitting on a throne, high and lofty; and the hem of his robe filled the temple. Seraphs were in attendance above him; each had six wings: with two they covered their faces, and with two they covered their feet, and with two they flew. And one called to another and said:
“Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts;
the whole earth is full of his glory.”
The pivots on the thresholds shook at the voices of those who called, and the house filled with smoke. And I said: “Woe is me! I am lost, for I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips; yet my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts!”
This morning, we begin by hearing the story of Isaiah’s encounter with God. “In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord sitting on a throne.”
You probably don’t need to worry too much about who King Uzziah was right now. We could talk about that in Bible study sometime. What you should understand though, is that King Uzziah was old. He had been on the throne for 52 years, so his death would have been one of those moments in time that people remembered. It is very much like when Queen Elizabeth died a couple years ago. It didn’t matter who you were, or how you felt about her, it was a moment in history that was significant. It was a point in time, in our collective lives, that we remember. It is a time marker. It’s funny how you can remember one thing, because of something else that happened at the same time. That is a time marker. Our lives are often filled with time markers. The bible is filled with them too.
And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed.(And this taxing was first made when Cyrenius was governor of Syria.)
You know that time marker. You hear it every year on December the 24th. It is how Luke begins the story of Jesus’s birth. The story isn’t about Caesar or Cyrenius; the story is about the Son of God, but this, Luke says, is when it happened.
There was another time marker that you heard last week from the Book of Acts: “when the day of Pentecost had come.” Pentecost was an established Jewish feast, but it also happens to be when the Holy Spirit descended upon the disciples. The feast helped the disciples to remember when this encounter with the Holy Ghost happened.
These time marker details can seem insignificant. They can seem like a distraction from the story, but they aren’t. They are a reminder to us that the God we meet in the bible, is a God that we encounter in real time, our time. Human time. We have met the eternal God in human time, on this earth. The little details are there to say: this happened. This is when it happened. This is a moment, where we encountered God, in our lives and not just in our imaginations.
In the year that King Uzziah died…In the year that the old king, King Uzziah, the King of Judah, died, Isaiah says that he saw the true king, the heavenly king, the Lord, alive and sitting on his throne. Isaiah has this encounter with God. He sees a reality that is impossible to comprehend, much less explain. Strange creatures with six wings. And there were clouds of smoke, and the Lord wore a glorious robe, and the creatures around the throne were saying: “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of Hosts, heaven and earth are full of his glory.” It was a magnificent, wondrous vision. If that happens to sound a little like a mass to you, then GOOD! That image is what all of this is meant to invoke. We are meant to feel, like Isaiah, that we are in the presence of a transcendent God, who is both right here in front of us, and at the same time bigger and more glorious than we could ever imagine. We are meant to recognize that the God of eternity has come to meet us at this time and in this place.
That is what Isaiah saw: God coming to meet him. And he can’t even imagine why this is happening. Why him? “I am lost,” he says, “I am a man of unclean lips, I come from people of unclean lips.” Who am I? Isaiah is saying, who am I? Why should I be having this vision? I don’t have all the fancy words to go out and tell people what I just saw. Who would believe me? I’m not that holy or special. I am not worthy to share this vision or talk about this encounter. And just then, one of those strange creatures grabs a coal from the altar, flies over to him and he touches that burning coal to Isaiah’s lips, and he says to him: now you are! Now you are worthy. God has cleansed you of your sins. God has made you worthy. God has made you holy. And then Isaiah hears God ask the question: “whom shall I send, who will go for us?” And Isaiah says, “Here am I, send me.” Isaiah probably still isn’t sure how he is going to talk about this glorious God to an unbelieving world, but he’s willing to do it. He is willing to tell the story, no matter how unbelievable it seems. That is what having an encounter with God can do to you; it can make you get over yourself; it can send you out into the world with an unbelievable story on your lips.
Incidentally, there is a traditional and old prayer that is a part of the Latin mass that some priests still say before proclaiming the gospel, or at least I do. If you ever wonder what I am saying at the altar before I proclaim the gospel, it is this prayer:
Cleanse my heart and my lips, O Almighty God, Who cleansed the lips of the Prophet Isaiah with a burning coal. In Thy gracious mercy deign so to purify me that I may worthily proclaim Thy holy Gospel. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
The prayer is a little reminder that the God that Isaiah encountered, is the same God that the disciples encountered in Jesus Christ, the God that the gospel reminds us “so loved the world that he gave his only son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.” The gospel also reminds us that that is the same God that countless, countless faithful people have encountered in at times subtle and at times dramatic experiences of the Holy Spirit. Encounters that give us the chance to be born again, born anew, born from above. The prayer is a reminder that the God that Isaiah saw seated on the throne, is the same God of the Gospel that we proclaim.
And likewise, all those time markers that we find in scripture and sometimes casually skip over as if they were unimportant details in the text, they are reminders that the God of the bible is a God that is encountered. Our God is a God that is encountered in this world. Sometimes in very real and physical things. Our God is not a God of logical theory or human design; We would never invent something as impossible to grasp or explain as the Holy Trinity. We talk about God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, because that is the God that we have met in this world, that is the God that we have encountered, not just in thoughts and ideas but in real time and in real places. This isn’t a God that always makes sense, or that is easy to understand, but this is the God that we have met. This is the God we believe in.
Our God may be transcendent and glorious, and impossible for us to fully explain or grasp, and yet, our experience of this God has taught us that this is a God who longs to live in a close and intimate relationship with each one of us. This is a God who loves. This is a God who forgives and purifies. This is a God who calls, and this is a God who sends.
Do we want a God that is less than that? Do we want a God that is a product of the human mind or of human philosophy, or do we want a God that walks with us, and meets us, in this world, in encounters that happen in human time, in human history? What would be the point of having a God that looks good on paper, if we never actually get to meet him?
I’m not here to try and explain the Holy Trinity to any of you this morning, for which you may all breath a sign of relief, but I do want you to have an encounter with the God who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. I want you to know that this God is alive and well, and that this God still has saving love for you. Now, you may not have a vision like Isaiah did, but the Lord who was sitting on the throne when King Uzziah died, was still sitting on the throne when Queen Elizabeth died, and is still sitting on the throne today, even in this moment. So let us gather for a few moments and place ourselves before the throne with the countless throngs of the faithful, with prophets and saints from every age, let us join our voices with theirs in giving thanks and praise to the God who comes to meet us. And then, when we have offered God our praise, and we hear God ask who will go into the world to tell the story of his love, faithfulness and forgiveness, may we join our voices with the prophet Isaiah and also say: “here am I, send me.”