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Trinity Sunday – 'I am with you all days'

The Octave of Pentecost is Trinity Sunday – the commemoration of the heart of the Catholic religion.

Fr Henry James Coleridge SJ's avatar
Fr Henry James Coleridge SJ
May 30, 2026
Cross-posted by Father Coleridge Reader
"For Trinity Sunday:"
- S.D. Wright
Image from Fr Lawrence Lew OP. As partners with The WM Review, who are Amazon Associates, we earn from qualifying purchases through our Amazon links. Check out how far we have got with Fr Coleridge’s Life of our Life series.

The Octave of Pentecost is Trinity Sunday – the commemoration of the heart of the Catholic religion.

Editor’s Notes

Pentecost marks the end of the great cycle of the liturgical year that began on Septuagesima (or Advent, depending on one’s reckoning). From Trinity Sunday – the Octave of Pentecost – the chronological life of Our Lord ceases to dominate the Sundays of the temporal cycle. It is fitting, therefore, that the Roman Liturgy recounts on this day one of Christ’s final acts before his Ascension.

The Gospel on Trinity Sunday recounts Our Lord definitively commissioning his Apostles to bring the Gospel to all nations, and promising to be with them until the end of time. This event forms the foundation of the Church’s life.

Each Evangelist closes his Gospel with a slightly different emphasis, which we will see as we progress through the parts of this chapter.

Following the sections, we are providing a bonus article relevant to this feast.


Before the Ascension

The Passage of Our Lord to the Father

Chapter XVI
St. Matt. xxviii. 16-20; St. Mark xvi. 14-18; St. Luke xxiv. 44-49.
Story of the Gospels, § 180
Burns and Oates, London, 1892


Part I: What Trinity Sunday tells us about the Church’s indefectible authority

Image: Fr Lawrence Lew OP.

Christ’s final command was to teach, govern and sanctify all men, until the end of time. On Trinity Sunday, the Church recalls this – not as a memory, but as her living mission today.

  1. What Trinity Sunday tells us about the Church’s indefectible authority


Part II: What St Luke reveals about the Church’s mission and the Holy Ghost

St Luke, Scan by NYPL, Public Domain.

St Luke closes his Gospel with a beginning: the fulfilment of prophecy, the command to preach repentance, and the promise of power from on high.

  1. What St Luke reveals about the Church’s mission and the Holy Ghost


Part III: Why does Saint John seem to end his Gospel twice?

Fr Lawrence Lew OP.

St John affirms Christ’s divinity, bears personal witness, and hints at truths too great for the world to contain. His final word is a call to believe, and to find eternal life in the Name of Jesus.

  1. Why does Saint John seem to end his Gospel twice?


BONUS ARTICLE

Faith and Mystery: how to explain the Holy Trinity simply

Image Wiki Commons.

The dogma of the Holy Trinity is absolutely central to Christianity, but many do not know why we believe it, or that it is expressed in the Gospels themselves.

  • Faith and Mystery: how to explain the Holy Trinity simply


‘Totem Pope’—Does the mere election of a pope fulfil Christ’s promises?

Image generated by ChatGPT.

What does Christ mean when he says “I am with you all days”? This article discusses why this is more than a promise that the Church would always exist in the world:

  • ‘Totem Pope’—Does the mere election of a pope fulfil Christ’s promises?


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