The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 108: Revealed by the Holy Spirit
Episode Date: April 18, 2023Jesus Christ established the Church, but the Holy Spirit continually sanctifies the Church with wisdom, guidance, and charismatic gifts. The Church’s mission is to proclaim and establish the beginni...ng of God’s Kingdom on earth, and we participate in this mission through charity, humility, and self-denial. Fr. Mike helps us understand the seemingly paradoxical idea that the Church is visible and spiritual, both human and Divine. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 767-771. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to The Catacism in a Year Podcast.
When we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, reveal the inscripture and pass down
through the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The catacism in a year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the catacism of the Catholic Church discovering our identity
and God's family as we journey
together toward our Heavenly Home.
It is day 108 where we are reading paragraphs 767-7771 as always I'm using the Ascension
Edition of the Catechism which includes the foundations of faith approach.
You can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Also you can download your own Catechism any year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash C-I-Y. And lastly you can click follow or subscribe or whatever you're listening to this podcast
for daily updates and daily notifications, as I said today is day 108. We were reading paragraph
767 to 771 yesterday. We talked about how the God's plan was a church, right? This is the plan
born of the Father's heart that God has always
willed that there would be this gathering of peoples that we call it the church.
Our convocation is another word that we use today in paragraph 767. Yesterday,
we also heard that Jesus Christ instituted the church. Now, we didn't talk about
the historical reality of that in the sense that I remember years ago. I think it
was a dear Abbey column, you, you remember Abigail Van Buren?
And someone wrote to a dear Abby and said, dear Abby, who founded all the churches of the world?
And so Abigail Van Buren, I think it was born,
or at least culturally Jewish,
I'm not sure if she was religiously Jewish,
but she didn't have a dog in the hunt basically.
She says, you know, well,
Confucianism was started by Confucius in this year,
and Judaism was started by Abraham in this year
And she said that Catholic Church Roman Catholic Church was started in the year 33 by Jesus Christ and
And I was like, oh my gosh. Yeah, here is this secular source just describing history
We talked about that history yesterday in paragraphs 763 to 766 without really kind of highlighting
7.63 to 7.66 without really kind of highlighting, yeah, this was a moment in time and it has changed all of reality.
We talked about them.
We talked about really about the mystery yesterday.
Now, today we're talking about how the church is, here's three points.
The church is revealed by the Holy Spirit.
So yesterday, instead of by Christ, today, the church revealed by the Holy Spirit,
second point, the church is perfected in glory, meaning here on this earth,
there's this mystery, and this is the third point as well, that the church is perfected in glory, meaning here on this earth, there's this mystery,
and this is the third point as well, that the church will be perfected in glory. This body of Christ
will be glorified, just like Jesus' actual body transformed after his death and resurrection,
right? It's a glorified body now. Well, the church being the body of Christ will ultimately be glorified,
but here the third point is the church being both visible and spiritual also is human
and divine, right?
There's human realities and divine realities.
And so because of that, we're going to live in this imperfect state.
But at the same time, a state that is buoyed up by the Holy Spirit.
So you and I, we know it is to live in the church.
We know that sometimes we're just so consoled by the power of the Holy Spirit, right?
When we go to confession, we experience God's healing, we go to mass, and we just, we're
fed by the Lord and the Eucharist.
We know that when we receive the Bible, when we receive the church is teaching in its fullness,
this is just a consolation of the Lord.
It's so good.
We also know in time what it's like to live in the church
We know that there are people in the church who fail us. I'm one of those people. I feel people all of the time even in these podcasts
I I fail and we fail each other as Christians we fail each other as Catholics
We fail each other as followers of Christ and so the body of Christ has this divine reality of course
The body Christ also has this very human reality. We have this glorious reality and also a very broken reality. We're going
to talk about both of those today. So again, these three points to keep in mind. In the church,
you know, in the start of a Jesus, but it's revealed by the Holy Spirit. Secondly, it's going to be
perfected in glory. And thirdly, the church is easy for me to say.
The church is both visible and spiritual.
It is both human and divine.
We're talking about that today.
So let's say a prayer as we launch into this day,
Father in heaven, we thank you so much.
Thank you for bringing us to this place in time
where we get to actually touch eternity.
Thank you for bringing us to this church where
wherever we're standing in the church,
whether we stand in humble submission in whether we stand in love we stand even
In maybe a posture of skepticism or a posture of cynicism a posture of rebellion Lord God
Keep us engaged with your church
Because I don't I don't want to leave your body. I don't want to leave the family
that you have anointed and established so that you can be known and so that we can be saved.
Father, keep us close to your heart. Keep us close in your church and help us to love one another,
one another in ways that we don't yet love. We ask this all in the mighty name of Jesus Christ,
our Lord, in the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
As I said, it's day 108, we're reading paragraphs, 767-771.
The Church, revealed by the Holy Spirit.
When the work which the Father gave the Son to do on earth was accomplished, the Holy Spirit
was sent on the day of Pentecost in order that he might continually
sanctify the church.
Then the church was openly displayed to the crowds, and the spread of the gospel among
the nations through preaching was begun.
As the convocation of all men for salvation, the church in her very nature is missionary,
sent by Christ to all the nations to make disciples of them.
So that she can fulfill her mission, the Holy Spirit bestows upon the church varied hierarchic and charismatic gifts, and in this way directs
her.
Hence forward the church, endowed with the gifts of her founder and faithfully observing
his precepts of charity, humility, and self-denial, receives the mission of proclaiming and establishing
among all peoples the kingdom of Christ and of God, and she is on earth the seed and the beginning of that kingdom.
The Church Perfected in Glory
The Church will receive its perfection only in the glory of heaven, at the time of Christ's
glorious return.
Until that day, the Church progresses on her pilgrimage amidst this world's persecutions
and God's consolations.
Here below, she knows that she is in exile far from the Lord and longs for the full coming of
the kingdom when she will be united in glory with her king. The church, and through her, the world,
will not be perfected in glory without great trials. Only then will all the just from the time of
Adam, from Abel, the just one,
to the last of the elect be gathered together in the Universal Church in the Father's Presence.
The mystery of the Church. The Church is in history, but at the same time she transcends it. It is only
with the eyes of faith that one can see her in her visible reality and at the same time in her spiritual
reality as bearer of divine life.
The Church, both visible and spiritual.
The One Mediator, Christ, established and ever sustains here on earth his holy church.
The community of faith, hope and charity, has a visible organization through which he communicates
truth and grace to
all men.
The Church is, at the same time, a society structured with hierarchical organs and the
mystical body of Christ.
The visible society and the spiritual community.
The earthly church and the church endowed with heavenly riches.
These dimensions together constitute one complex reality which
comes together from a human and a divine element. As the document Sacrosanctum Consilium states,
the Church is essentially both human and divine, visible but endowed with invisible realities,
zealous in action and dedicated to contemplation, present in the world, but as a pilgrim.
So constituted that in her, the human is directed toward and subordinated to the divine,
the visible to the invisible, action to contemplation, and this present world
to that city yet to come, the object of our quest.
As St. Bernard of Clarevaux once prayed, O humility, O sublimity, both
Tabernacle of Cedar and Sanctuary of God, earthly dwelling and celestial palace, House
of clay and royal hall, Body of death, and Temple of Light. And at last, both object
of scorn to the proud and bride of Christ.
She is black but beautiful, O daughters of Jerusalem.
For even if the labor and pain of her long exile may have discolored her, yet heaven's beauty
has adorned her.
Okay, so there we have it.
Oh my gosh, okay, we're going to get to this both end.
You know, one of the things that we recognize in the Catholic Church, in the world there exists this, but especially in the Church, there exists what we call paradox.
Now, paradox is an apparent contradiction, a seeming contradiction, that actually isn't a contradiction. So, it's the both and.
Rather than either or it's both and. So, is the Church visible? Yes. Is the church spiritual? Yes. So it's both.
And it's both spiritual and visible.
We're going to get to that in just a second.
But the first thing, paragraph 767 and 768 are so powerful.
I don't want to just gloss over them.
It talked about this very first line, when the work which the father gave the son to do
on earth was accomplished.
So here's Jesus.
He did all that work, the work of salvation, the work of establishing a church, the Holy
Spirit was sent on the day of Pentecost in order that he might continually sanctify the
church.
Now, this is, I think this is just bananas.
It's so good.
Here's Jesus Christ to establish that kingdom.
Remember, the promise from the ages was that God would give through Abraham and through
his descendants the world, this kingdom God would give through Abraham and through his descendants the world this
kingdom that would blast the world forever. Jesus establishes that kingdom. But also God then
sends the spirit, remember we talked so often in the last bunch of days about how the mission of the
son and the mission of the spirit are the same mission. This is part of that. So on Pentecost,
the Holy Spirit was sent in order that the
Lord might continually sanctify the church. And so this is the thing is God did not leave
us orphans. He did not just say, okay, here's a loose organization of some people. You were my
disciples. I taught you a bunch of stuff. Now go do your best. Now they did go do their best.
But they did their best with the power of the Holy Spirit, with the inspiration of the Holy
Spirit, with the guidance and wisdom of the Holy Spirit, and that it's so important.
We do not do this on our own.
The church has the Holy Spirit as her very soul.
Now it goes on to say, I love this, paragraph 768, so that she can fulfill her mission.
The Holy Spirit bestows upon the church these two things.
Very hyrarchic and charismatic gifts.
And I think this is so important.
What are hyararchic gifts?
Well, there could be a number of things, but there are things like the gifts of Holy
Order.
We have the gift of the Pope.
We're going to talk about that later on.
We have the gift of bishops, apostolic succession.
We have the gifts of priests and deaconate.
There's a hierarchy here.
So we have those gifts, hyararchic gifts. And because of those all together, we have the gifts of priests and deaconate. We have these, there's a hierarchy here. So we have
those gifts, hierarchy gifts. And because of those altogether, we have the Magistrian, we have
written tradition, and oral tradition. But also there are charismatic gifts. And charismatic gifts,
you know, Charism comes from the grace word, carries, which means essentially is grace. So these
charismatic gifts are these free gifts, well, all gifts from the So these charismatic gifts are these free gifts,
well, all gifts from the Lord are free, but these free gifts from the Lord that he uses to build
up his church. Now you and I have experienced, have received charismatic gifts. You and I,
if you have the Holy Spirit in you, did you have a charismatic gift, some gift that God has given to
you to build up the body of Christ,
to build up the church.
Those gifts are things like the charismatic gift of faith, charismatic gift of counsel,
charismatic gift of knowledge, of words of the Lord, of mighty works, of miracles, of
tongues, like all those are charismatic gifts.
You might not have all of them, but there is in you these charismatic gifts, most likely.
And if you don't necessarily notice them or recognize them or know if you have them,
pray to the Lord for them, because here's what God has done. So that she can fulfill her mission.
The Holy Spirit bestows upon the church these gifts in this way, director. Now with these
charismatic gifts, we're meant to build up the church,
the Holy Spirit working through us to build up the church.
Then very next line is just so powerful in 768
that we're gonna move on,
but it's this, hence forward, from now on, the church.
Endowed with the gifts of her founder,
who is her founder, Jesus,
and faithfully observing his precepts of charity,
humility, and self-denial.
So Jesus has these precepts, right, of love, of humility, self-denial.
So we observe those things.
We again, to highlight this, we're in doubt with the gifts of Jesus.
And now we're faithfully observing his precepts of love, humility, and self-denial.
Then here's the church that receives the mission of proclaiming and establishing among all peoples
the kingdom of Christ and of God. She is on earth, the seed and the beginning of proclaiming and establishing among all peoples the kingdom of Christ and of God.
She is on earth, the seed and the beginning of that kingdom.
And this is just so incredible. Why? Because God wants to draw all men to Himself.
God wants to bring every person into this kingdom.
And so because of that, here is this church that exists in order to live in charity, humility and self-denial.
And we've been given the mission of proclaiming and establishing among all peoples the kingdom of
Christ and of God, and just remarkable. Now, the last thing, second or last thing, at the same time,
the church will receive this perfection only in the glory of heaven. That's paragraph 769.
We recognize that, as I mentioned before, just as Jesus' body is resurrected and
is glorified in heaven for all eternity, the body of Christ on earth, yes, it will be,
will glorified. But it has to go through, you might even say, the same process that our
King went through. The body of Christ has to go through the same process that the head went
through. Meaning, we have to experience this the same process that the head went through. Meaning,
we have to experience this rejection, persecutions, we have to experience the great trials. It says
this, the church, and through her, the world will not be perfected in glory without great trials.
And so here's the church that we have to embrace, rejection, we have to embrace the ways in which
the world hates us.
Jesus said that, he said, the world will hate you.
The world's hated me.
It will hate you as well.
We have to experience this.
It's not a matter of triumphalism.
It's a matter of humble.
Gosh, what is it?
Humble service.
In some ways, being strong enough to allow yourself to be stepped on.
Now, I'm not saying that is a good counsel for every individual, right?
Because there are times when someone has to say, like, actually, my dignity is so, is such that,
no, you should not step on me. That's why the grace of the martyr is so powerful.
The grace of the martyr is not someone who couldn't do otherwise.
It's not someone who didn't, who couldn't stick up for themselves.
The grace of the martyr is someone who had the power to fight back,
but for the sake of Jesus chose not to. And this is something really
important for us to know because we have to have this balance, right? We have to, I know,
I know we kind of took a curve here, but we need to understand this. We need to have this balance
between knowing
your great dignity and knowing that in the midst of great dignity, no one has a right to abuse you.
No one has a right to use you. No one has a right to step on you. There are times, though,
when we say, okay, for the sake of Christ, for the sake of the love of my brothers and sisters,
I will allow them to step on me so that Christ may be known and glorified.
I will allow them to step on me so that they can know the love of God. Again, very big difference
between I'm a doormat and I'm laying down my life. Does that make sense? I hope it makes sense.
Okay, so just want to wrap that up here. Now, the last big piece here is the mystery of the church.
That we, yes, we see the church with our eyes.
At the same time, there is so much that we don't see.
And I love this dichotomy here, not dichotomy.
The paradox.
We already said this before.
In the last paragraph, 771, it says this, this paradox.
The church is both a society structured with hierarchical organs.
That's one.
And the mystical body of Christ.
So we have the hierarchy, right?
We have all these offices in the Vatican, and we have perishes throughout the world.
We also have the mystical body of Christ.
It is a visible society and spiritual community.
It is the earthly church and the church in doubt with heavenly riches.
So there's both of these things and they get, this is articulated so powerfully in that document from the Second Vatican Council,
Sacro-Santum Consilium, as it says. The church is, this is the last word here. The church is
essentially both human and divine, visible, but endowed with invisible realities, zealous and action, and dedicated to contemplation.
Present in the world but as a pilgrim. So constituted that in her the human is directed toward and
subordinated to the divine, the visible to the invisible, action to contemplation, and this present
world to that city yet to come, the object of our
quest. And that's just so, so powerful and so real. I think it's so important for everyone
who has to understand this because of the fact that yes, we live in a, in this broken world.
And because of that, this church experienced wounds, experiences wounds at the same time.
We're made for another world. And this church experiences the consolation and the grace of being buoyed up
guided directed field by the power of the Holy Spirit at every single moment and that's the reality of our lives. Oh man
So I don't know sometimes it's hard sometimes it's difficult to be in this in this earthly reality at the same time
That's where you've been called that's where I've been called and this church a
That's where you've been called. That's where I've been called. And this church,
a earthly reality, human reality, but also a spiritual reality and a divine reality. And this church is to what you have been called. And
where I've been called. And so we need to pray for each other. I am praying for you.
Please pray for me, my name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.
you