The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 114: The Church Is One
Episode Date: April 24, 2023In this new paragraph—”The Church is One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic”—the Catechism explains how and why the Church is “One”. Fr. Mike highlights the many manifestations of the good tha...t Jesus works through the Church, and he also urges us to cling to the “visible bonds of unity” that Christ offers us. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 811-816. 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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I'm a name of Spother Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in a Year Podcast,
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in Scripture and passed
down the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is day 114, we're reading paragraphs 811-386.
As always, I'm using the Ascension Edition of the Catechism, which includes the Foundations
of Faith Approach, but you can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of
the Catholic Church.
You can also download your own Catechism any year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash cyy and lastly, you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app to get daily updates and
daily notifications.
It's day 114.
I'm reading paragraphs 811 through 816.
Okay, here we go.
This is, it's a new paragraph.
And we're going to talk about these four, what they call the four marks of the church.
The church is one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic.
So today we're going to break down that first, well, for next couple days, really, we're
going to break down.
What is it to say that the church is one?
And yet we have to understand that for the next couple days, actually, you don't have
to understand.
If you choose not to, that's fine.
I would like you to understand that the Church would like us to understand
that there are these, again, these four marks of the Church that make, I don't say make
the Church the Church, but they reveal that the Church truly is what she claims to be.
The Church is one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic. We're going to hear traces of all four of
those today, but the highlight or the kind of the focus
is the fact that the church is one.
And of course, the church is one
because of the source of the church.
In fact, paragraph 813 talks about this exact thing.
It says, the church is one because of her source.
So what is the source of the church?
Well, the source of the church is the Trinity of Persons,
the unity of one God.
The church is also one because of her founder, because
Jesus Christ, the word made flesh, established the Church. The Church is also one, here's
the third reason. The Church is one also because of her soul. Remember, we talked about this,
that the soul of the Church is the Holy Spirit. And so unity is up essence to the Church.
So again, because of her source, the Holy Trinity, which is united, because of her founder,
Jesus Christ, who's the one founder of the church, and also because the Holy Spirit himself
is the very soul of the church. Now, we're going to recognize also that there are
there's diversity in the church. So there can be a unity and a oneness, even in the midst of
diversity. We already talked about that. Remember one spirit yet many, many gifts that still exists.
But at the same time, there's a diversity, well not a diversity that threatens unity,
but there's also our things that threaten unity.
It's not diversity, it's sin.
And that's a really important thing.
Perk or Fade 14 says, sin and the burden of sin essentially constantly threaten the
gift to unity. And so we have to
maintain and strive after that unity of the Holy Spirit in the bond of peace. And so we're going to
look at what are some of those bonds of unity that enable the church to stay together. Spoiler,
the three of them that are named here today are the profession of one faith. So we stand up, we recite
the apostles' creed, we recite the apostles' creed, we recite the
nice eunch creed, we're preaching of one faith, you know, we're going through this section, this
first pillar of the catechism, is all about that profession of faith. Secondly, the common celebration
of divine worship, especially the sacraments, that's the next section we'll get to eventually.
And thirdly, the third visible bond of communion is the apostolic succession to the sacrament of Holy orders.
And basically, you know, we have the Pope, the bishops, the priests, that essentially is the third visible bond of communion, bond of unity.
And of course, and at the same time, unity only comes from God.
God is the source of the church. God is the source of the graces in the church, and God is the source of the graces in the church and God is the source of the unity of the church.
And so what we need to do is of course we need to pray.
And we launch into today, let's just turn to our Father right now.
And just since the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, that unity of the Trinity is the source.
The source of the church is unity. We just appeal and say, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, one God, we thank you.
We thank you and we praise your name I don't Holy Spirit. One God, we thank you.
We thank you and we praise your name this morning, this afternoon, this evening. Whenever
we're listening to this Lord God, we praise you now. And we ask that you please continue
to maintain that gift of unity. Please Lord God, we ask you to please continue to establish
your church in in oneness.
Lord God, we know that divisions are painful.
We know that divisions devastate.
And we know the devastation of being divided.
We know the devastation of a fracture
when the church fractures,
or when individuals, members of the body of Christ,
brothers and sisters, when we turn away.
And so we ask you to please conquer the sin that divides us and conquer the sin in each
of us that causes division.
Knit us back together in our own hearts.
Knit us back together with each other as brothers and sisters, and knit us back to you, Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit, so that we can be one body, now one church. In your name, we pray, amen. In the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, amen. Once again, it's day 114.
We're reading paragraphs 811 to 816.
Paragraph 3. The church is one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic.
This is the soul Church of Christ, which in the creed we profess to be one, holy, Catholic,
and apostolic.
These four characteristics inseparably linked with each other indicate essential features
of the Church and her mission.
The Church does not possess them of herself, it is Christ, who
through the Holy Spirit makes his church one, holy, Catholic and Apostolic, and it is
he who calls her to realize each of these qualities. Only faith can recognize that the church possesses
these properties from her divine source, but their historical manifestations are signs
that also speak clearly to human reason. As the first Vatican Council noted, the Church herself, with her marvelous propagation,
eminent holiness, and inexhaustible fruitfulness in everything good, her Catholic unity and
invincible stability, is a great and perpetual motive of credibility and an irrefutable witness
of her divine mission.
The Church is one.
The Sacred Mystery of the Church's Unity.
The Church is one because of her source.
The highest exemplar and source of this mystery is the unity in the Trinity of Persons of
one God, the Father and the Son in the Holy Spirit.
The Church is one because of her founder.
For the word made flesh, the Prince of Peace, reconciled all men to God by the cross, restoring
the unity of all in one people and one body.
The church is one because of her soul.
It is the Holy Spirit dwelling in those who believe and pervading and ruling over the
entire church who brings about that wonderful communion of the faithful and joins them
together so intimately in Christ that he is the principle of the Church's unity. Unity is of the essence
of the Church, as St. Clement of Alexandria stated,
What an astonishing mystery! There is one father of the universe, one logos of the universe,
and also one Holy Spirit everywhere, one and the same. There is also one Virgin
become mother, and I should like to call her Church.
From the beginning, this one church has been marked by a great diversity which comes from
both the variety of God's gifts and the diversity of those who receive them. Within the unity
of the people of God, a multiplicity of peoples and cultures is gathered together.
Among the Church's members, there are different gifts, offices, conditions, and ways of life.
Holding a rightful place in the communion of the Church, there are also particular churches that retain their own traditions.
The great richness of such diversity is not opposed to the Church's unity.
Yet, sin, and the burden of its consequences constantly threaten
the gift of unity, and so the apostle has to exhort Christians to maintain the unity of the spirit
in the bond of peace. What are these bonds of unity? Above all, charity binds everything together
in perfect harmony, but the unity of the Pilgrim Church is also assured by visible
bonds of communion. First, profession of one faith received from the apostles. Second, common
celebration of divine worship, especially of the sacraments. And third, apostolic succession
through the sacrament of Holy orders, maintaining the fraternal concord of God's family.
The soul Church of Christ is that, which our Savior, after his resurrection, entrusted
to Peter's pastoral care, commissioning him and the other apostles to extend and rule
it.
This Church constituted and organized as a society in the present world subsists in, subsipce
seat in, the Catholic Church, which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the bishops
in communion with him. The Second Vatican Council's decree on
ecumenism explains, for it is through Christ's Catholic Church alone, which is
the universal help toward salvation, that the fullness of the means of
salvation can be obtained. It was to the Apostolic College alone of which Peter
is the head that we believe that our Lord entrusted all the blessings of the new covenant in order to establish on earth the one body of
Christ into which all those should be fully incorporated who belong in any way to the people
of God.
Okay, there we are.
There we are.
Bear Graves 800 and 11 to 816, this first kind of dipping our toe into the reality that the
church is one. In fact,
dipping our toe into the reality that the church has to have these characteristics, these marks of
the church, which are, again, one holy Catholic and apostolic. You know, there's something
pretty bold about what the First Vatican Council noted in paragraph 812. It's bold because
it's true, you know, over the past few days, whenever I've mentioned the church,
I've always kind of, I've made the point of saying,
yeah, the church is divine and human,
and in that humaneness, we're pretty broken.
We have a pretty broken reality.
At the same time, I kind of maybe have neglected the reality
that the First Vatican Council really highlights and notes
is that there's also a glorious reality.
There's also a very, very holy reality of the church
in this world.
Here's what the first Vatican Council notes in paragraph 812.
It says,
The church herself with a marvelous propagation,
eminent holiness,
and inexhaustible fruitfulness in everything good.
Think about this,
a marvelous propagation.
Yeah, the church is everywhere throughout the world.
It's amazing.
That's, I mean, it's one thing to we kind of inherit the world. It's amazing. That's, I mean,
it's one thing to we kind of inherit the church. It's another thing to realize. This didn't have to happen. Coming from 12, you know, fishermen, tax collectors and others to be a worldwide,
not just organization, but say it in a secular way, a worldwide organization that is unstoppable,
essentially, in some ways, it her eminent holiness?
Yes, there are broken people in the church,
like human like me, but there is also
this massive history of saints.
It's so often it's easy to overlook
the fact that wait a second, there has been for 2,000 years,
a remarkable, remarkable stream of saints
who have been raised up by Jesus Christ
through his Catholic church.
Forget about that sometimes. So there's something that you know, I mean, you can be proud in the
most, you know, good way, proud of the fact that white weight God has worked through history
in our church. And again, of course, there's brokenness to that history too. But we have to
recognize that as the first Vatican Council said, her Catholic unity and
invincible stability is a great and perpetual motive of credibility and an irrefutable witness
of her divine mission. I mean, you can even take the negative stance and you could say,
so we will have joked that one of the signs of the fact that the church has been established by
God and is sustained by God is the fact that the
church is made up of so many broken people and so many sinners.
And yet, even though people throughout history and governments throughout history and organizations
throughout history have tried to take down the Catholic Church and destroy her, they
have not been able to.
And we haven't even been able to destroy the church as sinners in the church.
There's something about that that maybe in a kind of half-jokey way points to the credibility and is an irrefutable witness of the church. There's something about that that maybe, in a kind of half-jokey way, points to the credibility and is an irrefeatable witness
of the church's divine mission.
Again, and this doesn't come from ourselves.
So this can sound a little bit self-aggrandizing.
It's like, oh, hey, we won, we're the part of the winning team,
join our team, everyone.
It's not that.
In fact, paragraph 813 highlights this fact
that the church is one.
Why?
Not because of any one of us,
but because of her source. We talked about this already. These three sources of the church's unity.
First being the Trinity, God himself. Secondly being the second person of the Trinity. The fact that
Jesus Christ is historically speaking and theologically speaking, the founder of the Catholic Church.
And third because the Holy Spirit is the soul of the church. And so for us to maintain that the Catholic Church has this one holy Catholic
napastolic nature to it, these marks to it, and to highlight that the church is
one is not meant to be like beating our chest and kind of or puffing our chest
out and being arrogant about this. It simply highlights the fact that we've
received this from the Lord God Himself. We've been brought into the Catholic Church by the Lord God himself, the Trinity,
the second person of the Trinity, the third person of the Trinity, and here we are at the same time.
Paragraph 814, which highlights the diversity of the Church that in the midst of unity,
there is diversity, which, and I love it how it says, which comes both from the variety of God's
gifts. Right? Remember one spirit, but different gifts, manifestations of that spirit, different gifts,
and the diversity of those who receive those gifts.
It's so remarkable, again, the Catechism goes on to say,
within the unity of the people of God.
So that's this unity of the church that is one throughout the world,
in multiplicity of peoples and cultures is gathered together.
And among those churches members, there are different gifts, He's won throughout the world a multiplicity of peoples and cultures is gathered together.
And among those churches members, there are different gifts, different offices, different
conditions, different ways of life.
And this is a richness of the church's diversity, which is remarkable.
In fact, there is a quote here that's right in the middle of paragraph 814 and is a quote
from that document on the church Lumin Gensium.
And it says this, it says, holding a rightful place in the communion of the church.
There are also particular churches
that retain their own traditions.
You might think, what does that mean?
Well, it means the fact that there is the Latin church
and most of us are very familiar
with the Latin church of the Latin right,
that it would be throughout, basically,
I would say I don't want to exaggerate,
but most of Europe, most of North and Central
in the South America, but it's the Latin right.
But they're also our Eastern right churches, Catholic churches.
They're also Ethiopian right, Catholic churches.
They're also Maranite right, Catholic churches.
And so there is a diversity even in the midst of the way the mass is celebrated according
to these different rights that are still in union with the church.
Now there are some that broke off and are not in union with the church,
but within the church, there is still
are also particular churches
that retain their own traditions.
And though they don't threaten the church's unity,
and diversity doesn't threaten the church's unity,
what does, well, it highlights here, sin does.
Sin is the only thing that threatens the church's unity.
And so we have to hold on to
these, not just the idea of unity, but these visible bonds of unity. And because we have to be
able to test this, I can't just say, well, I don't feel united with you. Therefore, we're not
united. Or someone can't point to me and say, well, you seem different or diverse in whatever
way. Therefore, you can't be united. There have to be visible bonds of unity that
establish this piece, right? We have to maintain the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace.
And we already highlighted these at the very beginning, but I want to highlight them once again
as we conclude. These visible bonds of unity will, first of all, is charity. First of all,
is love, of course, which binds everything together. But the unity of the pilgrim church, right, the church on earth is assured by these visible bonds of communion. One is the profession of faith that we do
believe the same things. It's one thing to say, like, you know, I was baptized Catholic, I was
baptized Christian, but do I profess that one faith? If I don't, if I alter it, or if I subtract
something from it or add something to it or distort it, then okay,
there's a division there. Secondly, it's common celebration of divine worship, especially of the
sacraments. As I said, we're going to head into the section on the sacraments in a number of days
from now, but we're going to get there. And this recognition that that's a part of our unity,
coming together, especially in the Eucharist, is a remarkable sign of unity. And thirdly, apostolic
succession through this sacrament of Holy Orders, that apostolic succession is a sign, a visible
sign of the Church of Unity. In fact, the Catholic Church can go back and trace all the popes back
all the way back to Peter, every one of your bishops, you can trace all the way back to the apostles.
We know that they all come from that unbroken line
of apostolic succession.
That reality is so important
for the maintaining of unity
because the church is one
and that is one of the signs of God's presence is unity.
And one of the signs of God's absence or maybe one of the signs of God's presence is unity. And one of the signs of God's absence, or maybe one of the signs of the evil ones presence,
is division.
And so we have to, we have to, of course, pray against that.
We have to work against that, work against division, and work for unity.
It's one of the reasons why, at the end of every one of these episodes, I always invite
us, please pray for each other.
Well, I want to, sometimes I forget, to ask us to pray for each other. Well, I want to sometimes I forget to ask us to pray for each other
because we have to pray for each other because it's not just enough to kind of be semi-quasi
united in our hearts or united in our minds, but we need a real unity. If we're really going to be a witness of God's love to this world, the Holy Trinity is truly united. And so God's
church has to also be truly united. So brothers and sisters,
let us 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.