Matthew 28:16-20 · The Great Commission
Our Three-Faced God
Matthew 28:16-20
Sermon
by John R. Brokhoff
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In my home town, Pottsville, Pennsylvania, where I grew up as a boy, there is the county courthouse situated on one of the hills. Arising out of the center of the building was a high tower with a clock on it. The clock had four faces to enable townspeople to see the time from any direction. As a boy, I was always captivated by the clock because I wondered whether there were four clocks each with a face or whether there was one clock with four faces. If there was one clock with four faces, it was a mystery to me how that could work.

On this Trinity Sunday we are confronted with the mystery of the Holy Trinity. Most of us react to the Trinity in terms of being frightened by God, confused by Christ, and puzzled by the Holy Spirit. Perhaps it would help us to overcome our confusion if we would consider the Trinity in terms of the courthouse clock with four faces. We can say that our God is a three-faced God: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. This God-clock does not have three separate clocks, one for each face. There is only one clock which has three faces. There is only God and Three persons as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The three are God. Each face tells us the "time" about God. We can enter into the nature of God through the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit. This is the threefold nature of God into which we are baptized. Jesus’ final direction to his church was to baptize the world in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. If we were so baptized, then we need to know what this trinitarian formula means and implies.

The Face of God the Father

The first face we see is God the Father whom we are to fear. The church was commanded to baptize converts into the name of the Father-God. In the last decade there has been so much emphasis upon the love of God that we have lost the fear of God. We are to fear God not in terms of being afraid of him but in terms of respect, awe, reverence, and adoration.

This fear of God is based upon the greatness of God. In the last few years we have been singing not "How great thou are" but how great man is. We have been putting God into man’s limitations. We have made God one of us as a friend and brother. We have been told that we should find God in human beings. God has become very human, very much like us rather than man being made in the image of God. In our liturgical language we dropped the reverent "Thou" for the familiar "You." We are building churches in the round so that we might look at each other while we worship rather than looking up to a high and distant altar as the symbol of God’s majestic presence. In our snuggling up to God and getting too familiar with him, we have lost the sense of awe, respect, reverence for the greatness of God.

This is not the testimony of the Bible’s characters in their experience with God. The Hebrews would not allow the name of God to be spoken by taking out the vowels of his name: YHWH. They gave a substitute name for God: Adonai, translated "Lord." God is so great that man is not worthy to speak the holy name of God. Again, when the ark of the covenant was moved to Jerusalem, Uzzah touched the ark lest it fall from the wagon when it went over rough terrain. When he touched the ark, he fell over dead. In the Bible man was not allowed to see God, not even Moses. The most Moses could see was the back of God. To look at the glory of God was like looking at the sun during an eclipse: It burned out your eyes to the point of blindness.

This lack of appreciating the greatness of God has affected our worship. Today the church is experiencing a crisis in worship simply because we no longer have a God worthy of worship, "worth-ship." It is when we have a God of greatness, majesty, and glory that we instinctively fall down before him in worship, awe, and adoration. How much awe is there in the average worship service today other than a child saying, "Aw, do I have to go?"

We fear God not only because of his greatness but because of his power. We have lost this concept of God because modern man has so much power. Why should we be impressed with God’s power? We Americans gloried in our military power when we rescued a merchant ship from Cambodia. Brezhnev of Russia called for a new treaty to ban weapons far more powerful, he said, than nuclear weapons. It is said one of our satellites can photograph a pack of cigarettes from a distance of eighty miles in the sky. With all that power, who wants more power, especially from God?

It is hard to describe God’s infinite power which makes man’s power puny. We see God’s power sampled in nature: a hurricane, a tornado, or an earthquake. On Good Friday, 1964, there was an earthquake in Alaska. It was so terrific that mountains fell five feet, and a ridge of mountains moved laterally seven feet. The ocean floor in an area 480 by 178 miles rose fifty feet. This is just the tip of the iceberg of God’s power. Because we have forgotten about God’s power, we have lost confidence in the power of prayer by which God’s power becomes effective. When we appreciated God’s power, the hour of prayer was called the hour of power. In the light of God’s power, we ask, "Is there anything too hard for God?" God is able to fulfill his promises and to answer our prayers. We may think a human problem or a human need is impossible of solution, but God is able to do the impossible. Prayer is the means of getting God’s power applied to our human needs.

Our fear of God is based upon God’s holiness. On traditional altars were the words, "Holy, Holy, Holy." These words reminded worshipers of the otherness of God. To be holy is to be different. God is totally different from man. God is absolute purity, absolute goodness, absolute perfection. Man is totally the opposite. This means that man is a sinner and needs to confess and repent. Because God was considered dead, man lost his sense of sin. Menninger felt it necessary to write a book for clergymen, Whatever Became of Sin? If God is non-existent, then there is no sin. Man is accountible to no one. He makes up his own morality and whatever he thinks is right is right for him and no one dare challenge or judge him. Sounds very modern and familiar, doesn’t it? As a result, we have dropped the custom of going to confession. The Roman Church made a national survey of members over age seventeen and learned that two out of three said they had not gone to confession in the past two months. Non-liturgical Protestants do not even bother to have confession and absolution as parts of their worship services. Why should we confess if we have nothing to confess to a God who has been robbed of his holiness?

Biblical characters gained a sense of sin when they confronted a holy God. At the burning bush, Moses was told to take off his sandals, symbolic of his dirtiness. When Isaiah saw God on a high throne and heard the song, "Holy, Holy, Holy," he fell down and confessed his sins. When Peter realized who Jesus was, he fell on his knees and cried, "Depart from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man." Because we have lost the holiness of God, we no longer fall on our faces and cry, "God, be merciful to me a sinner." The news media reported that prostitutes in Paris took over a church and refused to leave it until their demands were met to stop police harrassment in terms of fines for plying their trade. They were pictured lying on the floor in front of the chancel. They were not crying, "God, be merciful to us sinners" but were defiant and wanted their rights to sin openly and freely! That is characteristic of our times. It is time to recover the holiness of God. Then we will fear his wrath and judgment. We will confess our sins and beg for mercy. Having received mercy, we will have reason to thank and praise him.

The Face of God the Son

In the second place, we see the face of God the Son whom we are to love. Jesus told us to win converts by baptizing them in the name of the Son. God is not only Father but he is also equally God the Son in Jesus Christ. You see, the God as Father we have been considering is far beyond us, totally other from us. God the Father is really incomprehensible and unapproachable. Man needs Jesus as God in a human being. When we know God in Jesus, we not only fear but love him.

We can love him because he reveals God the. Father. By his own reason and with his puny mind man cannot comprehend the nature of God. It is like St. Augustine who was trying to understand the Trinity. In a dream he saw a little boy on the seashore trying to empty the ocean into a small hole with a sea shell. He asked the child what he was doing, and the lad answered, "I am just emptying the ocean into this hole." Augustine laughed saying, "You can never do that!" Then God said to him, "Indeed? And you would empty the mysteries of the Infinite God with the little dipper of your thoughts?" Jesus is God in person. He brings God down to man’s comprehension. He becomes concrete and specific, a God who can be heard and touched. We need Jesus to reveal God the Father to us, or we would never truly know God.

We love God, too, because Jesus is the mediator between this awesome God and man. God is too great to be approachable. Who can stand in God’s holy presence? Who dares to look at God? Who has the right words to say to God? It is utterly impossible for sinful man to get close to God. That is why man needs a mediator, a go-between God in Jesus. Jesus takes our petitions to the Father. Jesus stands as our Advocate when we appear for judgment. Jesus makes all things right between God and man.

Jesus serves as our redeemer. He makes sinners acceptable to God the Father. God is not only love but also justice. When God’s laws and will are defied, there is a price to be paid. Justice must be satisfied. In our time we have forgotten there is such a thing as the wrath of God. The wrath of God is the justice of God being applied to sinful man. The very integrity of God forces satisfaction to be made of crimes committed. How can man ever repay God? How can man make it up to God for his many sins? It is impossible. God the Son comes to our rescue. He paid the price of our sins on the cross. Now man is accepted, justified because God the Son died in man’s place and made full satisfaction to fulfill the demands of a just God. Here we see the love of God in that while we are sinners Christ died for us. It is out of this love for us that we learn to love God in return.

The Face of God the Spirit

Now we look at the third face of God, the Spirit. If God the Father is unknowable and approachable, and if God the Son has left earth and is seated at the right hand of the Father in glory, where does that leave man in his relation to God? He is as bad off as before Jesus came. If we should stop there, God would be a distant, incomprehensible, and unapproachable God. In that case, woe is man! To answer this need, Jesus promised that God would come to believers as Spirit, the alter-ego of Jesus, the comforter, and advocate.

This means that God is immanent in the person of the Holy Spirit. To have the Spirit is to have God in us, in our hearts, minds, and persons. God is not to be found in nature, only evidence of his reality. God is not to be found in social events or historical acts. We can see only evidence of God. You see, God is a Spirit and only man can have the Spirit. Man is body and soul. The soul is within the body. Within the soul is the Spirit. The soul is like a container for a spirit which may be the good or the bad spirit. When the spirit is bad, we say we are devil-possessed. When we have a good spirit, we have the Holy Spirit. One of the heresies of our day is the idea that God is present in nature, social events, and in all people. The truth is, God is present in the world to the extent that his Spirit is present. Man as a human being does not come with the Holy Spirit. Thus, Jesus taught that a man must be born again, born of the Spirit.

Two men were rushing to catch a plane. One of them knocked down a little boy and his puzzle was scattered on the floor. He stopped to help the boy pick up the pieces and restore the puzzle. The other man was urgent in telling him to come or they would miss the plane. When the puzzle was together, the lad asked, "Mister, are you Jesus?" Today most people would answer, "Yes." The truth is that the man was only a man. He was not Jesus. He was a man with the spirit of Jesus, with the Holy Spirit that made him helpful.

The wonderful good news about this truth of God the Spirit is that God can be closer to us than hands and feet. We do not have to look for God or desire him to come to us. In the person of the Spirit, God is truly with us and in us. It is God in Spirit who works in us to help us, to guide us into truth, to motivate us to do good, and to give us gifts by which we serve God. In 1 Corinthians Paul tells us what those gifts of the Spirit are. In Galatians he lists nine fruits of the Spirit. By virtue of those gifts and fruits of character, you have God in you. You have the Spirit. Speaking in tongues is not the only way to tell whether the Spirit is present. It is far more important to have the Spirit in terms of gifts of service and fruits of virtues than to be able to speak gibberish which may be meaningful to the speaker in tongues but is totally a mystery to all hearers. It is important for us to know and realize that the good we do and the virtues we possess are the work of the Spirit. Only God can make man good, and he does it by the Spirit. This has practical consequences for a society that is saturated with crime and corruption. The only way to gain a better society is to bring people to God that the Spirit might make them good, even like unto God. The ultimate answer to our crime is the birth of the Spirit in the hearts of all men.

After considering the greatness and transcendence of God, do we not come to the same conclusion as Paul did in Romans? When we think of the goodness and power and holiness of God, we are overwhelmed with his majesty. With Paul we sing a doxology: "O the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable are his ways! For who has known the mind of the Lord; or who has been his counselor? Or who has given a gift to him that he might be repaid? For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen." When we think of God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, we want to explode and shout with joyous praise: "My God, how wonderful thou art." Today we go home saying the words of Jude: "... to the only God, our Savior through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority before all time, and now and for ever. Amen."

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Jesus ... Who?, by John R. Brokhoff