The Trinity
Drama
Lectionary Scenes
56 Vignettes For Cycle C
Theme
The Trinity. What a mystery, especially to our finite minds. Is it possible to understand?
Summary
Three Christian friends try to understand the concept of the Trinity.
Playing Time
3 1/2 minutes
Setting
A church
Props
None
Costumes
Contemporary, casual
Time
The present
Cast
WAYNE
DOUGLAS
STEVE
WAYNE:
(WAYNE, DOUGLAS AND STEVE ENTER) You know what my question is going to be, don't you?
DOUGLAS: Probably the same question I have.
WAYNE: About the Trinity?
STEVE: That's it. We can never hope to understand it, can we?
WAYNE: I'm not sure.
DOUGLAS: I can't grasp the fact that there are three of them.
STEVE: God, the Father, and the Holy Spirit were persons to Jesus, separate persons.
WAYNE: But they are all God. Think how that concept must have confused the early church fathers.
DOUGLAS: It's doing a pretty good job on us.
STEVE: Well, let's think about it. We know what a person is.
WAYNE: A person is an individual. The essence of an individual.
STEVE: It's one's self.
DOUGLAS: One's being.
STEVE: Good. Now, what about "nature"?
WAYNE: "Nature"? Let's see. "Nature" is the ... I don't know.
STEVE: Isn't it what makes up a entire group?
DOUGLAS: Like human nature?
STEVE: Right.
WAYNE: Why is this important?
DOUGLAS: Well, I was thinking, God is not like us. We have human nature.
STEVE: And God has God nature.
WAYNE: Divine nature.
STEVE: Divine nature. Right.
DOUGLAS: So, that will help us to understand the Trinity if we understand the similarities between human nature and divine nature.
STEVE: Let's hope it does.
WAYNE: So, what is "nature"?
STEVE: "Nature" is the total of all characteristics of the group.
WAYNE: That sounds good.
DOUGLAS: So, "nature" is the characteristics of the group and "person" of the essence of the being.
STEVE: Okay, now we know that God has divine nature.
WAYNE: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit all have divine nature.
STEVE: Right. And yet they are three individual persons.
DOUGLAS: Just like us. We're three individual persons and we all have human nature.
STEVE: We're like God in that way because we're made in His image.
WAYNE: Exactly.
We have characteristics in common as humans.
STEVE: Minds, souls, and so forth.
DOUGLAS: Wills.
STEVE: And God has characteristics of divine nature. All three persons have the same characteristics -- eternal -- loving -- kindness ...
WAYNE: And each one of them has those same characteristics.
DOUGLAS: Right. They're co-equal.
STEVE: Therefore they cannot be three different gods. Just one God.
WAYNE: Three persons.
DOUGLAS: Just like us.
WAYNE: Wouldn't it be better to say we're just like them?
STEVE: That's for sure.
DOUGLAS: They must communicate and enjoy it. They are complete within themselves.
STEVE: Do you know what? I have a headache. I wonder if God gets a headache.
DOUGLAS: If He does, I bet we gave it to Him.
The Trinity. What a mystery, especially to our finite minds. Is it possible to understand?
Summary
Three Christian friends try to understand the concept of the Trinity.
Playing Time
3 1/2 minutes
Setting
A church
Props
None
Costumes
Contemporary, casual
Time
The present
Cast
WAYNE
DOUGLAS
STEVE
WAYNE:
(WAYNE, DOUGLAS AND STEVE ENTER) You know what my question is going to be, don't you?
DOUGLAS: Probably the same question I have.
WAYNE: About the Trinity?
STEVE: That's it. We can never hope to understand it, can we?
WAYNE: I'm not sure.
DOUGLAS: I can't grasp the fact that there are three of them.
STEVE: God, the Father, and the Holy Spirit were persons to Jesus, separate persons.
WAYNE: But they are all God. Think how that concept must have confused the early church fathers.
DOUGLAS: It's doing a pretty good job on us.
STEVE: Well, let's think about it. We know what a person is.
WAYNE: A person is an individual. The essence of an individual.
STEVE: It's one's self.
DOUGLAS: One's being.
STEVE: Good. Now, what about "nature"?
WAYNE: "Nature"? Let's see. "Nature" is the ... I don't know.
STEVE: Isn't it what makes up a entire group?
DOUGLAS: Like human nature?
STEVE: Right.
WAYNE: Why is this important?
DOUGLAS: Well, I was thinking, God is not like us. We have human nature.
STEVE: And God has God nature.
WAYNE: Divine nature.
STEVE: Divine nature. Right.
DOUGLAS: So, that will help us to understand the Trinity if we understand the similarities between human nature and divine nature.
STEVE: Let's hope it does.
WAYNE: So, what is "nature"?
STEVE: "Nature" is the total of all characteristics of the group.
WAYNE: That sounds good.
DOUGLAS: So, "nature" is the characteristics of the group and "person" of the essence of the being.
STEVE: Okay, now we know that God has divine nature.
WAYNE: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit all have divine nature.
STEVE: Right. And yet they are three individual persons.
DOUGLAS: Just like us. We're three individual persons and we all have human nature.
STEVE: We're like God in that way because we're made in His image.
WAYNE: Exactly.
We have characteristics in common as humans.
STEVE: Minds, souls, and so forth.
DOUGLAS: Wills.
STEVE: And God has characteristics of divine nature. All three persons have the same characteristics -- eternal -- loving -- kindness ...
WAYNE: And each one of them has those same characteristics.
DOUGLAS: Right. They're co-equal.
STEVE: Therefore they cannot be three different gods. Just one God.
WAYNE: Three persons.
DOUGLAS: Just like us.
WAYNE: Wouldn't it be better to say we're just like them?
STEVE: That's for sure.
DOUGLAS: They must communicate and enjoy it. They are complete within themselves.
STEVE: Do you know what? I have a headache. I wonder if God gets a headache.
DOUGLAS: If He does, I bet we gave it to Him.

