Saint Aidan Catholic Church - Livonia, MI
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  • Discover
    • About >
      • About Us
      • Sacraments
      • Our Patron Saint
      • Church Tour
      • PRES Plan
    • Schedule
    • Contact
    • Register
    • Livestream Masses
    • Follow Us on Social Media
    • Groups >
      • Women of St. Aidan
      • Men's Club
      • Men's Prayer Group
      • Christian Services
    • Links
  • Grow
    • Become Catholic
    • Bible Studies >
      • Matthew
      • Women's Bible Study
    • Families
    • Retreat
    • Breakfast with Santa
    • Sacrament Prep >
      • Baptism
      • Reconciliation & Holy Communion
      • Confirmation
    • VBS
    • Children's Liturgy of the Word
    • Staff Articles
  • Service
    • Pray
    • Recently Deceased
    • Assistance
    • Christian Services
    • Volunteer >
      • Volunteer Requirements
  • Give
    • Electronic Donations
    • CSA
    • Endowment
    • RMD QCD IRA Contributors
    • Annual Report

Loving Relationship Is Fundamental to Happiness

5/26/2024

 
C.S. Lewis once observed: “Human history [is] The long, terrible story of Man trying to find something other than God which will make him happy.” How fortunate for us, then, to celebrate the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity this weekend. God, in revealing to us His inner nature, shows us that He is love; that relationship is fundamental. Being in a loving relationship with God and out fellow man will bring us happiness.

​Because we are made in the image of the Trinity, love, family, friendship, society and the Church are essential to us, at the very core of human existence. God is a family, a conversation, a play of speaker, spoken and speech. In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God (John 1:1). By insisting that the Word is God, John implies that the Divine Persons are not together as “ball bearings in a bucket,” but rather as interacting and overlapping fields of force.

As John’s Gospel unfolds, we see how this influences our approach to creation. All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being (John 1:3). This is a radical statement. In the creation accounts prior to the Judeo-Christian, the cosmos and humanity were said to be brought about through violence between the gods and the manipulation of pre-existing matter. In Genesis and the Gospel of John we see something entirely different - creation from nothing. The true God doesn’t manipulate, dominate, or wrestle into submission anything outside of Himself, but rather through an entirely generous and nonviolent act of love gives rise to all of finite reality. God is the one who wills to love in freedom.  God is free to be gracious. The cosmos is nestled nonviolently in the community of the Trinity.

This in turn influences how all creatures relate to each other. Since the cosmos is centered in God, all finite things, no matter their tremendous differences, are ultimately linked. All creatures are like islands in an archipelago: separate on the surface yet connected at the depths. This is the basis for the Church’s interest in social matters. Brought into relationship with the Trinity through Baptism, we have the duty to transform the various aspects of this world into a Christian vision of creation. The Trinity is a gathering force; the Persons of the Trinity are not closed in on themselves; there is an openness; we are invited to enter into relationship with them! Catholic social teaching emerges from the truth of what God has revealed to us about Himself. God’s very nature is communal and social. God the Father sends His only Son and shares the Holy Spirit as His gift of love. God reveals Himself to us as one who is not alone, one who is relational. Therefore, we who are made in God's image share this communal, social nature. We are called to reach out and build relationships of love and justice.

David J. Conrad

Trinity Sunday (Reprise)

5/26/2024

 
The Responsorial Psalm for today, Trinity Sunday, is Psalm 33: “Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.” We celebrate the threefold gift that is our God today. The Psalm reflects the First Reading from the Book of Deuteronomy in which Moses reminds us of all God does for us (and did for the Jews).

​The Second Reading of St. Paul to the Romans reminds us that what Christ says in the Gospel of St. Matthew is true: he is always with us—the proof is the presence of the Holy Spirit.

The Gospel tells us we are baptized in the name “of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit”. We experience the triune love of God every time we bless ourselves or anyone or anything. The three readings for today (Trinity Sunday) speak of God the Father, the Spirit placed within us and Jesus always with us. Today we celebrate one of the profound mysteries of our faith. We have been blessed by God’s grace, love and mercy with His “trio gift” of Himself.

Elaine Rendler, a well-known liturgist/musician printed this fun quiz about the Trinity in her column from “Today’s Liturgy.” Good luck on this quiz and remember: “Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own!”

Keep singing! 

​Elizabeth Dyc

1.Give three examples from today’s selection of Psalm 33 verses that illumine who our God is.

2. What symbol of the Trinity is found in the great seal of the United States? (Hint: it’s on every dollar bill.)

3. The Byzantine rite churches celebrate a different solemnity today, one that the Western church celebrates near the end of the liturgical year. What is it?

4. Name at least two flowers used to teach the doctrine of the Trinity.
​
Answers: 1. God is a creator; God loves justice and right; God is kind; God is our help and shield; God saves us from death. 2. A triangle (the Trinity) with an eye inside it (omniscience) and encircled by the sun’s rays (divinity). 3. All Saint’s Day. 4. Shamrock (Ireland), pansy (Europe), trinitaria (Puerto Rico).
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    Authors

    ​Elizabeth Dyc. Our Director of Music Ministry.

    Paul Pyrkosz. Our Youth Minister & Bookkeeper.

    ​

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St. Aidan Catholic Church
17500 Farmington Rd. 
Livonia, MI 48152
Phone: 734-425-5950
[email protected]

Weekend Mass Schedule
Saturday Vigil: 5:00 PM
Sunday: 7:30, 9:30, 11:30 AM

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