The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 117: The Church Is Catholic (2024)
Episode Date: April 26, 2024We continue our examination of the four marks of the Church with today’s mark: catholic. Fr. Mike explains that “catholic” means that the Church is universal in two senses. The first is that Chr...ist is fully present in her, and so receives the fullness of the means of salvation. Second, it goes out to all peoples; everyone belongs. Today’s readings from the Catechism are paragraphs 830-838. This episode has been found to be in conformity with the Catechism by the Institute on the Catechism, under the Subcommittee on the Catechism, USCCB. 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 Catechism in a Year podcast,
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in scripture and passed down
through the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we will read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
in God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
It is day 117, we're reading paragraphs 830 to 838.
I am using the, as always, Ascension edition
of the Catechism, which includes the foundations
of faith approach.
Of course, you can follow along with any recent version
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
You can also download your free Catechism
in a year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash C-I-Y, and also you can click click follow or subscribe your podcast app for daily updates and daily
notifications today day 117 we're going starting at paragraph 830 to 838 we're
gonna talk about the fact that yesterday was the church is holy two days before
the church is one and today we're talking about the fact that the church
is Catholic member these four marks of the church one holy Catholic coming in
a couple days apostolic
But today the church is Catholic. So the question is what does Catholic mean?
So the very first paragraph 830 says the word Catholic means
Universal in the sense of according to the totality or in keeping with the whole so and then it goes on to say the case
So what that what's that universality mean? Well, how is the church Catholic? And there's two ways.
First, the church is Catholic
because Christ is present in her.
So it is the fullness of the means she received from Jesus,
the fullness of the means of salvation.
That's universal in totality, according to the whole, right?
Secondly, the church is Catholic
because she's been sent out by Jesus
on a mission to the whole of the human race.
So it's Catholic in these two senses, right? Universal in two senses. One is it has the fullness
that in keeping with the whole, the fullness of revelation, fullness of grace, fullness of the
fullness of the means of salvation. Secondly, the church is Catholic because she's meant to go out
to the whole world. Does that make sense? So that's, I think that's a really important distinction.
We're going to hear about those in paragraphs 831 and 830 going backwards
Then it will go on to say how each particular church is Catholic and the catechism is going to define
What particular church means so in paragraph 833?
This is just kind of a heads up is it as we're coming the paragraph 833 says the phrase particular church
Which is first of all the diocese that that's a particular church
or if you're not in the latin right the aparchy so the phrase particular church is basically for
most people who are listening to this is the diocese it refers to a community of the christian faithful
in communion united of faith and sacraments with their bishop ordained in apostolic succession
so that's every diocese throughout the world.
You're going to find that community of Christian faithful and communion of
faith and sacraments. So we profess the same thing.
We worship the same way with their bishop ordained in apostolic succession.
That Bishop has to be an apostolic succession going all the way back to,
you know, of course the apostles. We're going to talk about that and what that,
what that looks like, how they're united with the Pope, right?
That's paragraph eight 34, how those particular churches are fully Catholic when they're united to the Church of Rome the Pope in Rome
But going on it just there's some really incredible quotes here from St
Ignatius of Antioch who goes all the way back to like 107 110 somewhere in there from Irenaeus of Leon who goes all the way
Back to I think the middle of the first century or second century, like year 130,
somewhere in there.
And St. Maximus the confessor,
who's the latest person we're quoting today,
other than Pope Paul VI,
Maximus the confessor goes back to I think the seventh
century, Pope Paul VI is from the 1960s.
But we go all the way back recognizing that from the very
beginning, the Christians, all Christians understood
that they were united with the Church in
Rome. And that one of the quotes here from Ignatius of Antioch, again 107, 110
somewhere in there, was that particular churches are fully Catholic through
their communion with one of them. The Church in Rome, and the quote is, the
Church in Rome presides in charity. So the Church of Rome is seen as the one
that presides. Last note before we start reading, to listen to this, the big
question is, well who belongs to the Catholic Church and we're gonna hear
that there are three kind of I might say distinctions or three groups of people
who belong to the Catholic Church but rather than tell you right now what that
is listen and then we'll talk about it after this as I said it's we're day 117
let's start a prayer as we dive into these readings today about the church
being Catholic.
Father in heaven, we thank you.
We thank you and give you praise.
We thank you for the gift of faith and hope and love.
We ask you to please increase our faith so that we can trust you all the more.
Not only trust what you have done, but also trust what you are doing.
Give us hope not only to belong to you today
But to belong to you in the future and give us love
The love that will never end love that will last and endure and be alive forever in heaven Lord
God we ask you to give us these incredible gifts of faith hope and love
Keep us deeply rooted in you and your heart. He was deeply rooted in you, in your heart. Keep us deeply rooted in
your church. We make this prayer in the mighty name of Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
Today is day 117. We're reading paragraphs 830 to 838.
The church is Catholic. What does Catholic mean? The word Catholic means universal, in the sense of according to the totality or in keeping
with the whole.
The Church is Catholic in a double sense.
First, the Church is Catholic because Christ is present in her.
As St. Ignatius of Antioch said, where there is Christ Jesus, there is the Catholic Church.
In her subsists the fullness of Christ's body united with its head.
This implies that she receives from him the fullness of the means of salvation which he
has willed, correct and complete confession of faith, full sacramental life, and ordained
ministry in apostolic succession.
The Church was, in this fundamental sense, Catholic on the day of Pentecost and will
always be so until the day of the Parousia.
Secondly, the Church is Catholic because she has been sent out by Christ on a mission to the whole
of the human race. As Lumen Gentium states, all men are called to belong to the new people of God.
This people therefore, while remaining one and only one, is to be spread throughout the whole
world and to all ages in order that the design of God's will may be fulfilled.
He made human nature one in the beginning and has decreed that all his children who were scattered should be finally gathered together as one.
The character of universality which adorns the people of God is a gift from the Lord himself,
whereby the Catholic Church ceaselessly and efficaciously
seeks for the return of all humanity and all its goods
under Christ the Head in the unity of his Spirit.
Each particular church is Catholic.
The Church of Christ is really present in all legitimately organized local groups of the faithful,
which, insofar as they are united to their pastors, are also quite appropriately called churches in the New Testament.
are united to their pastors are also quite appropriately called churches in the New Testament. In them, the faithful are gathered together through the preaching of the gospel of Christ,
and the mystery of the Lord's Supper is celebrated.
In these communities, though they may often be small and poor or existing in the diaspora,
Christ is present, through whose power and influence the one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic
church is constituted.
The phrase particular Church, which is first of all the diocese or eparchy, refers to a
community of the Christian faithful in communion of faith and sacraments with their bishop
ordained in apostolic succession.
These particular Churches are constituted after the model of the universal Church.
It is in these, informed out of them them that the one and unique Catholic Church exists
Particular churches are fully Catholic through their communion with one of them the Church of Rome which presides in charity
For with this church by reason of its preeminence the whole church that is the faithful everywhere must necessarily be in accord as
Saint Maximus the confessor states indeed, Indeed, from the Incarnate Word's descent to us,
all Christian churches everywhere have held and hold the great church that is here, at
Rome, to be their only basis and foundation since, according to the Savior's promise,
the gates of hell have never prevailed against her.
As Pope Paul VI stated, let us be very careful not to conceive of the universal church as
the simple sum or the more or less anomalous federation of essentially different particular
churches.
In the mind of the Lord, the church is universal by vocation and mission.
But when she puts down her roots in a variety of cultural, social, and human terrains, she
takes on different external expressions and appearances in each part of the world.
The rich variety of ecclesiastical disciplines, liturgical rites, and theological and spiritual
heritages proper to the local churches unified in a common effort shows all the more resplendently
the catholicity of the undivided Church.
Who Belongs to the Catholic Church?
All men are called to this Catholic unity of the people of God, and to it in different
ways belong or are ordered, the Catholic faithful, others who believe in Christ, and finally,
all mankind, called by God's grace to salvation.
Fully incorporated into the society of the Church are those who, possessing the Spirit
of Christ, accept all the means of salvation given to the Church together with her entire organization and who, by the bonds constituted by the profession of faith, the sacraments,
ecclesiastical government and communion, are joined in the visible structure of the Church
of Christ, who rules her through the supreme pontiff and the bishops.
Even though incorporated into the Church, one who does not, however, persevere in charity
is not saved.
He remains indeed in the bosom of the Church, but in body, not in heart.
The Church knows that she is joined in many ways to the baptized who are honored by the
name of Christian, but do not profess the Catholic faith in its entirety, or have not
preserved the unity or communion under the successor of Peter.
Those who believe in Christ and have been properly paragraphs 830 to 838, which is just, it seems so profound.
I don't know if it was profound for you, but it is for me. There's so many things that
the catechism here in these brief paragraphs have clarified. For example, what does Catholic
mean? Okay, so we recognize that every Apostles Creed states one, holy, Catholic and apostolic.
And so Catholic means according to the totality
or in keeping with the whole.
And we already said this in the very beginning the intro,
but what does that mean?
Well, the church is Catholic in two senses.
First, the church is Catholic
because Christ is present in her.
And this is the key thing to hold onto.
You're gonna hear this again and again today.
You already heard it,
but you're gonna hear me repeat it a number of times.
In her subsists the fullness of Christ body with its head now
This is remarkable other other ecclesial communities right other non-catholic Christians
Have grace have truth. I mean they have many books of the Bible. We have in 73. They have 66
By and large we have they have baptism. We have six other sacraments
So they have it, we have six other sacraments, so they have means of grace, right?
There is goodness in all ecclesial communities,
all non-Catholic churches.
There's a reality that there's goodness.
But what we're saying when we say the church is Catholic
is that in her subsist the fullness of Christ's body
with its head, and I love how it goes on to say
in paragraph 830, this implies that she received from him the fullness of the
Means of salvation which he has willed do with what is that that means correct and complete profession of faith
Full sacramental life right so not just one sacrament or two sacraments, but all seven sacraments
ordained ministry and apostolic succession one of those pieces here
We just have to highlight is the fullness of the means of salvation.
I don't know if I mentioned this like yesterday or the day before, but I recently had one of our students
who's not Catholic and she came up to me after one of our classes.
We were talking about the faith and she said, so I'm a Christian, I'm not Catholic.
Why should I be Catholic?
I mean, if you're saying I have God's Christ, if you're saying that I have the Bible, the Word of God,
if I can grow in holiness as a non-Catholic Christian, why would I become Catholic? I mean, if you're saying I have God's Christ, if you're saying that I have the Bible, the Word of God, if I can grow in holiness as a non-Catholic Christian, why would I become Catholic? And it's a really great question.
And the short answer in so many ways, well, there's a number of answers. One answer is, well,
here when it comes to the Catholic Church, we have received from Jesus the fullness of the means of salvation,
which means not just the correct profession of faith,
but the complete confession of faith.
That's really important, right?
If you know something about the one you love,
but there's more to know about them,
wouldn't you want to know more?
You want to be able to say something about God,
wouldn't you want to be able to say
all there is to say about God,
knowing that that is not only complete, but going on from there you have sacramental
life it's the yeah we have access to the Father's heart through baptism well
once you also want to have access to God's grace that he's given to us
through the other six sacraments you know total seven total in all would you
want that and even ordained ministry to the apostolic discussion, I mean there's that sense of, well, do I want adequate means of
salvation or do I want the fullness of the means of salvation? That's
maybe the first question I have to ask. The second, of course, we talked
about before when we recognized that there are wounds to the unity of the
church and that wound is sin. That it's not a great and glorious thing that the
church is divided. That Jesus' prayer from and glorious thing that the church is divided that
Jesus's prayer from his heart was that we would be one
So that's another reason to be able to say actually I want to be part of that one church
Go moving on so the verse first the church is Catholic because Christ is present in her the fullness of the means of salvation
Secondly, this is Catholic because she has been sent out by Christ on a mission to the whole of the human race. That there is no one who doesn't belong in the Catholic Church.
Every single person belongs in the Catholic Church. In fact, again, that same night when that young woman asked me about,
like, why would I be Catholic if I already have grace in my ecclesial community, in my non-Catholic Church?
Someone else had kind of said something similar they said. So it seems to me that I was raised Catholic.
It seems to me that some people don't belong in the Catholic Church.
And there are so many misunderstandings.
There are so many things that people misunderstand
about the Catholic Church.
One of them is that.
We recognize the Church is Catholic
because everybody belongs, everyone.
That there's no background, there's no ethnicity,
there's no language barrier,
there's no temptation towards there's no language barrier, there's no temptation
towards sin that excludes anyone. There's no history of brokenness that excludes anyone
from God's embrace. The Church is Catholic because everyone belongs there. Remember what
Jesus said about the mustard seed? That it's the smallest seed that grows into this large
tree, and every bird of the air can find a home. Every bird of the air can
find a nest in its branches. Everyone belongs. So moving on from there, the
church is Catholic for those two reasons. Next, each particular church is Catholic.
Again, there's something so powerful about recognizing, okay, that phrase
particular church means first of all the diocese. Great, but this is important to
understand. A diocese is what?
Is a community of the Christian faithful,
okay the community, Christian faithful,
in communion of faith, meaning we profess the same thing
and sacraments, meaning that we worship the same way,
with their bishop ordained in apostolic succession.
Again, that's what a particular church is.
That is what a diocese is.
Now, 834 highlights, particular churches are fully Catholic
through their communion with one of them meaning the church of rome
Which presides in charity remember that that phrase which presides in charity comes back from the very beginning of the 100s
from saint ignatius of antioc
Knowing from the very beginning they already noted that the church in rome has a unique role
That presides in charity over the other dioceses, over the other churches.
And that goes on to say, for with this church, by reason of its preeminence,
the whole church, this church being the church of Rome, the whole church, that
is the faithful everywhere, must necessarily be in accord.
And that's from a guy named St.
Irenaeus, who was living around the year 130.
And so going all the way back to the beginning, you have these church fathers
who are professing this union union we have to have all the
particular churches have to have a union with that particular church in Rome
which is just remarkable I think it's pretty pretty important now let's move
on who belongs to the Catholic Church I said I would talk about this at the very
end I love this who belongs to the Catholic Church the first two words in
paragraph 836 all men all human beings all people it says who belongs to the Catholic Church the first two words in paragraph 836 all men
All human beings all people it says who belongs to the Catholic Church. Well
everyone all men are called to this Catholic unity of the people of God and
And to it in different ways belong or are ordered and this is just I think this is beautiful
I think this is powerful again. It's Catholic meaning it's for everyone. So first of all the Catholic faithful
Secondly others who believe in Christ and finally all mankind called by God's grace to salvation
So this is kind of like I want to say three tiers but the kind of ways in which people
Belong to the Catholic Church. So paragraph 837 says fully incorporated into the society of the church are those who a
possessing the spirit of Christ B
Accept all the means of salvation given to the church together with her entire organization. So you've accepted
All the sacraments given given to the church together with her entire organization. So the whole church up. I'm like, yep
I'm on board and who goes on to say by the bonds constituted by the profession of faith the sacraments
And who goes on to say, by the bonds constituted by the profession of faith, the sacraments, ecclesial government and communion. So these four areas, the profession of faith, we all profess the same faith.
The sacraments, we all worship the same way.
Ecclesial government, we acknowledge the rule of, you know, the hierarchy essentially there.
There's a governing order in the church.
And communion, are joined in the visible structure of the church of Christ who rules her through the Supreme Pontiff and the bishops,
the meaning through the pope and the bishops.
And that's just if you want a definition of,
okay, who is Catholic?
That, that defines it.
That's an incredible definition.
Now I might claim to be Catholic,
but if I'm rejecting any of those things,
I reject some of the sacraments,
I reject the profession of faith,
then I'm living in this irregular relationship. I'm not fully, I'm imperfectly in relation
to the Church. Even if I am in perfect relationship right now, I can step out. In fact, that second
to last sentence of paragraph 837 says, even though incorporated into the Church, meaning
anyone who's been brought into the Church, baptism, Holy Communion, confirmation, even though incorporated into the Church, meaning anyone who's been brought into the Church, baptism, Holy Communion, confirmation, even though incorporated into the Church,
one who does not however persevere in charity is not saved.
Meaning I can turn away, I can leave the Church.
In fact, the last sentence is just powerful.
It says, he remains indeed in the bosom of the church, but in body, not in heart.
And I have to ask myself, is that me?
Can I find myself?
Yep, I show up.
But I kind of pick and choose.
I show up and I'm kind of,
I see the church as this buffet
and I reject some things I don't like
and I accept some things I do.
I can remain indeed in the bosom of the church,
but in body, not in heart.
I am called, all of us are called to persevere in love.
And if I don't persevere in love, I am not saved.
This is really important.
All the sacraments are free gifts.
Baptism, new life in Christ is a free gift.
None of us did anything to deserve it.
None of us earn it, but we can reject it.
And that's a scary thought we'll talk about later on
some more, but the last line I wanna highlight
is paragraph 838.
It says this, the church knows that she has joined
in many ways to the baptized who are honored
by the name of Christian, but do not profess
the Catholic faith in its entirety,
or have not preserved unity or communion
under the successor of Peter.
So that would mean, you know, all those non-Catholic
Christians who are baptized, but aren't Catholic,
as well as those who have all the seven sacraments
but are not Catholic, like for example,
the Orthodox churches.
And it says this, it says,
those who believe in Christ and have been properly baptized
are in a certain though imperfect communion
with the Catholic Church.
Meaning, as we said before,
all Christians, we see them as brothers and sisters.
All Christians, we see them,
those who are baptized and have faith as sons and daughters of the father
So we're in a certain relationship, but we're not in a perfect relationship
now when it comes to the Orthodox churches that relationship is so
Profound that as it says here it lacks little to attain the fullness that would permit a common celebration of the Lord's Eucharist
little to attain the fullness that would permit a common celebration of the Lord's Eucharist.
There is so much similarity between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Churches that it's just
that there's little that would have to happen. In fact, I remember hearing something about John Paul II or Pope Benedict both having such a
longing for the the East and West to be united once again, for the two lungs of the church to once again breathe fully in unison
And so we pray for that unity and tomorrow again. We're gonna talk about the church and non-christians
What is our relationship with the Jewish people with Muslim people with with other?
non-christian religions
We're gonna talk tomorrow about some of those big questions. But today today we just recognize that
The church is Catholic meaning God has given
that the church is Catholic, meaning God has given the church the fullness of the means of grace, of sanctification, and the church is called to go out to everyone,
that there is no one who does not belong in the Catholic Church. No one is
excluded, no one is disqualified, everyone is not just welcomed, everyone is invited
because God longs for us to have the fullness of His grace. God longs for us to have the fullness of his grace.
God longs for us to be able to say fully yes to him and all that he's revealed
about himself. And so we just pray. I'm praying for you. Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.