The Most Holy Trinity Sunday – 31st May 2026
Dear brothers and sisters,
Today the Church invites us to contemplate one of the deepest and most beautiful mysteries of our faith: the mystery of the Most Holy Trinity – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. One God in three Persons. And perhaps, when we hear these words, we feel that this mystery is too great, too high for us to fully understand. And it is true: the human mind can never completely grasp the greatness of God. But today’s Gospel does not ask us to solve a mystery like a mathematical problem. It invites us into a relationship of love with God.
Because at the very heart of the Holy Trinity is love.
In today’s Gospel, Jesus speaks some of the most beautiful and comforting words ever given to humanity: “For God so loved the world” It does not say that God merely tolerated the world. It does not say that God looked at humanity from a distance. It says that He loved the world. And He loved it so deeply that He gave His Son.
Dear brothers and sisters, many people grow up with the image of a cold and distant God, a God ready to punish every mistake. But today Jesus reveals to us the true heart of God: a heart that loves, that seeks out the human person, that forgives, lifts up, and never stops hoping for us. And perhaps this is what the world needs most today: to rediscover that it is loved by God.
We live in a world where many people feel unseen, unimportant, or not good enough. Many carry hidden wounds. Some have been hurt by harsh words, others by abandonment, others simply by the absence of love. Slowly, they begin to believe that they have little value. But today’s Gospel tells us something extraordinary: every single person is so precious in the eyes of God that Christ came into the world for them.
The Holy Trinity shows us that God is not loneliness, but communion. The Father loves the Son, the Son loves the Father, and the Holy Spirit is the living love between them. And we were created in the image of this God. That is why the human heart cannot live without love, without relationships, without closeness. Whenever we truly love, whenever we forgive, whenever we pray for one another or carry the burdens of the weak, we reflect something of the beauty of the Holy Trinity.

