Trinity

Nature is defined by death. We cannot be sure that a being or phenomenon is natural, until it dies. Nature, of course, fills all our history, which documents the formerly alive. The supernature?

The tremendous mystery of the supernaturally living God: the Father the Creator, the Son the Redeemer, the Holy Spirit the Sanctifier, and this triune divinity reflected in the unity of the Church — who can understand this? The formula of words has been kept fairly simple, but we may nevertheless become confused, when we try to understand their schematization. But the Church has made them comprehensible for us, by her prayer. It is part of faith, one begins to realize — what cannot yet be fully understood, in the prospect of Heaven or the possibility of Purgatory or Hell. “We see through a glass, darkly,” yet can see, in first outline.

On my “Battle of the Whits.” There are, according to the “A.I. overview,” approximately six hundred neurological diseases and disorders, all of which, I would imagine, conclude at death. Each is perfectly natural. We should be content, only with a few.