Divine love is ecstatic and communicative.
--Dr. Wendy Wright,
Heart Speaks to Heart:
The Salesian Tradition
The truth is, even the most introverted among us long for companionship. We are not made for isolation. Deep down, we know we are only fully ourselves when we are in relationship to others. If we reflect on the happiest moments of our lives, most will involve moments spent with friends and family. Despite living in an age of heightened individualism, something within us insists that we are not islands.
And this longing for relationship reflects something even truer of God. At the very heart of God’s nature is not isolation, but communion. God is not a solitary being; He is a Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, united in a perfect, eternal relationship of love. This divine community is not closed or exclusive, it is radically open. The love shared between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit overflows and reaches out to include us. Jesus speaks intimately of His Father and of the coming of the Holy Spirit. He reveals that God’s deepest desire is not distance but closeness, not detachment but union.
This sacred mystery is captured in our painted panel by Laurent Girardin, created around 1460 in Lyon, France. The painting depicts the Holy Trinity in a striking composition: God the Father, wearing a papal tiara and a richly embroidered cope of crimson velvet adorned with gold pomegranate patterns, supports the crucified Christ, His Son, with the Holy Spirit hovering above as a dove. The grandeur of the Father’s vestments, paired with the profound suffering of the Son, creates a tension between majesty and sacrifice. Surrounding them are radiant cherubim. This artwork invites us not just to look upon a theological truth, but to stand in awe of a divine relationship: a communion of love that calls us not into isolation, but into the very heart of God Himself.
--Fr. Patrick van der Vorst
Image & quotation source 2: https://christian.art/daily-gospel-reading/john-16-12-15-2025/
Quotation source 1

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