The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 128: Unique Calls to Holiness
Episode Date: May 8, 2023The Lord calls everyone to live a life of surrender, and we have been looking at the various ways God calls people to grow in holiness. Religious life includes the public profession of vows of poverty..., chastity, and obedience; members of secular institutes dedicate themselves to living in the world and helping to sanctify it. We also learn that those in societies of apostolic life devote themselves to a particular apostolic purpose without religious vows. These calls to holiness are gifts to the Church and the world. Today's readings are Catechism paragraphs 925-933. 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz, and you're listening to the Catechism Any Year Podcast,
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in Scripture and passed
down to the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism Any 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 at its day 128 reading paragraphs 925-933, 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 and your reading plan by visiting ascentrumpress.com
slash cyy if you did.
If yours looks like mine, this is the last day
of this page, which is awesome. It's great. Also, you can click follow or subscribe
on your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications. Today is day 128. So yesterday
we talked about the aromatic life, right? Hermits, we talked about consecrated virgins
and widows. Today, we're talking about two more aspects, actually a couple different aspects,
religious life, secular institutes and societies of apostolic life.
So, I guess that's three things.
What are those things?
That's a great question, camper.
Religious life is, is I understand this?
Religious life are those communities.
I mentioned them yesterday, like the Benedictines, or like the Franciscans, or like those people
who are caramelites.
Like those religious communities, sometimes they're a men, sometimes they're a women,
but they live the evangelical councils, they have a fraternal life, I know, you know, the brotherhood
or sisterhood, letting common, and they give witness to the union of Christ in the church,
kind of like yesterday, we talked about how consecrated virgins or anybody consecrated to the Lord
gives witness to the union of Jesus and the church. We have secular institutes, which are different.
So those can include priests
at times that they can include, they include consecrated people, but they are typically lived
in the world. So secular institutes are, I mean, gosh, there's, I think, man, 30 different secular
institutes, 50 different secular institutes in the United States alone. And they're basically community
communities that are dedicated to the Evangelical Council's
member, Poverty Chastity of Idiots, but they also live those councils.
They live their mission in the world.
And so rather than living in a convent, rather than living in a monastery, even sometimes
not even living in community, sometimes these people in secular institutes simply live intentionally, even if they don't live
necessarily in community. And then lastly, we have societies of apostolic life made up of people
who don't necessarily take, well, actually, they don't take, they don't make public religious vows,
right? They don't, they don't make that profession of those evangelical councils in a public way.
But they're dedicated, typically, to the service of the people around them. They're dedicated to the service of the church in a very specific way.
Typically, on these societies of apostolic life, they arise because the founder or the
founders had seen some kind of need in the world, or they saw some kind of need in the
church, and then they created this society in order to address this need.
So it could be a need for teaching.
And so they created this society
of people who were dedicated to that mission. It could be a need for reaching out to the
poor and serving the poorest of the poor. That could be a society of apostolic life. So it's
typically, again, without vows, without public religious vows, although they are dedicated
to the eventual Evangelical councils, but they don't make those see it again, consecrated life.
And lastly, we're gonna conclude with
why all this in the first place.
Consecration and mission, basically,
the whole mission of consecration,
the whole reason for consecration
is to proclaim the King, Jesus Christ,
who is coming into the world.
And so that's what we're praying for today.
That's what we're learning about today.
That's what we're gonna pray for right now. Ooh, Lord, about today. That's what we're going to pray for right now.
Oh, Lord, let's call upon the Lord right now.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and glory.
We thank you so much for this day.
We thank you for the gift of your life.
We thank you for the gift that you've placed a call on every one of our lives.
That first call that you've placed on our lives is to belong to you, is to be yours, is
to be holy, is to let you make us into the saint that you've created and redeemed us to be.
Lord God, today, we do give you permission.
We give you permission to make us into the saint that you've called us to be by, first
of all, by receiving your love.
We give you permission to love us today.
We also give you permission, and we ask that you please lead us today.
Help us to take the next step, whatever the next step is that you want in our lives.
And we ask, Lord, that you please bless all of those people committed to the
Apostolic life, all the societies of Apostolic life.
We ask you to please bless all those secular institutions, those people living in the world
and serving in the world.
We ask you to please bless all those in religious life.
Please help them be faithful to their vows and help them to be united with you, the object of their affection and the lover
of their lives. In Jesus' name we pray, amen. And the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. Once again, it is day 128. We're reading paragraphs 925-933.
Religious life. Religious life was born in the East during the first centuries of Christianity.
Lived within institutes canonically erected by the Church, it is distinguished from other
forms of consecrated life by its liturgical character, public profession of the Evangelical
Councils, for Turnalife led in common, and witnessed given to the Union of Christ with
the Church.
Religious life derives from the mystery of the church.
It is a gift she has received from her Lord.
A gift she offers as a stable way of life to the faithful, called by God, to profess the
councils.
Thus, the church can both show forth Christ and acknowledge herself to be the Savior's
bride.
Religious life in its various forms is called to signify the very charity of God in the
language of our time.
All religious, whether exempt or not, take their place among the collaborators of the Dhaasis and Bishop in his pastoral duty.
From the outset of the work of evangelization, the missionary planting and expansion of the church require the presence of the religious life in all its forms.
History witnesses to the outstanding service rendered by religious families in the propagation of the faith and in the formation of new churches, from the
ancient monastic institutions to the medieval orders, all the way to the more recent congregations.
Secular Institutes A secular institute is an institute of consecrated
life in which the Christian faithful living in the world strive for the perfection
of charity and work for the sanctification of the world, especially from within. By life
perfectly and entirely consecrated to such sanctification, the members of these institutes share
in the Church's task of evangelization in the world and from within the world, with their presence
acts as leaven in the world. The witness of a Christian life aims to order temporal things according to God
and inform the world with the power of the gospel.
They commit themselves to the evangelical councils by sacred bonds
and observe among themselves the communion and fellowship appropriate to their particular secular way of life.
Societies of Apostolic Life
Alongside the different forms of consecrated life are Societies of Apostolic Life whose members
without religious vows pursue the particular apostolic purpose of their society and lead a
life as brothers or sisters in common according to a particular manner of life, strive for
the perfection of charity through the observance of the constitutions.
Among these there are Societies in which the members embrace the Evangelical Councils according of the constitutions. Among these, there are societies in which the
members embrace the evangelical councils according to their constitutions.
Consecration and mission proclaiming the King who is coming. Already dedicated to him through
baptism, the person who surrenders himself to the God he loves above all else, thereby
consulates himself more intimately to God's service and to the good of the church.
By this state of life consulated to God.
The church manifests Christ and shows us how the Holy Spirit acts so wonderfully in her.
And so, the first mission of those who profess the Evangelical Councils is to live out their
consecration.
Moreover, since members of the Institutes of Consecrated Life dedicate themselves through
their consecration to the service of the church, they are obliged in a special manner to engage in missionary work,
in accord with the character of the institute.
In the church, which is like the sacrament, the sign and instrument of God's own life,
the consecrated life is seen as a special sign of the mystery of redemption.
To follow and imitate Christ more nearly and to manifest more clearly his
self-emptying is to be more deeply present to one's contemporaries in the heart of Christ.
For those who are on this narrower path encouraged their brethren by their example, and bear
striking witness that the world cannot be transfigured and offered to God without the spirit
of the Beatitudes. Whether their witness is public, as in the religious state, or less public, or even secret,
Christ coming remains for all those consecrated, both the origin and rising sun of their life.
As Luangenciam states, for the people of God has here no lasting city.
In this state, reveals more clearly to all believers the heavenly goods which are already present
in this age, witnessing to the new and eternal life which we have acquired through the redemptive work
of Christ and prelude our future resurrection and the glory of the heavenly kingdom.
Okay, so there we have it, the conclusion of these different calls we have, we experience
in the church these days, religious life, secular institutes, and societies of
apostolic life.
So hopefully we're getting a, this might seem a little confusing, but basically these are
different paths, different ways in which a person responds to the call of Jesus and is
saying, I believe that the Lord is calling me either to live in a life separated, right?
In religious life, typically it's a life lived separately.
It says paragraph 925, very clearly.
It says they live within institutes canonically
erected by the church.
So there's a canonical character to them
or legal character to them.
It's distinguished from other forms of consecrated life
by its liturgical character.
And the thing I think of when it comes to that
is I always think about the Benedictins,
kind of some history with the Benedictins.
And there's this depth of the liturgy, right?
The depth of this, the work of prayer,
especially since the Benedictines,
their kind of motto is aura at LaBora,
which is prayer and work.
But the work of prayer, like the liturgy becomes a,
the pivot, right?
The touchstone of their entire lives and their entire day.
So it's distinguished by its liturgical character. The public profession of the Evangelical
Councils member, some of these other things, some people involved in secular institutes are those who are involved in
the size of apostolic life. They might not make a public profession of the Evangelical Councils.
Religious life has a fraternal life, letting common, right, brothers or sisters, and gives witness to the union of Christ and the church.
And so that's just a really important thing.
Now, paragraph 927 highlights this, that all religious, they take their place among the collaborators of the DASIS and Bishop and his pastoral duty.
So there's a connection of here, even if there's a religious community in an area, they're connected to their bishop in a particular way. Now, the last lines in paragraph
927 highlights that history, the 2000 year history of the church, witnesses to the outstanding
service rendered by religious families in the propagation of the faith and the formation
of new churches. It's incredible. Like the ancient monastic traditions, the way in which,
as I mentioned the other day, I think, that the Benedictines preserved Western culture, Western civilization, the ways in which these communities have engaged the world and sanctified the church
is absolutely incredible. As a response typically, typically these communities, whether religious life
or secular institutes or apostolic societies, they typically are formed in response to a need
that the founder or founders, as I mentioned before, saw a need and said,
okay, we need to go here, we need to do this thing, whether that's education, service of the poor,
medicine, all those things, as I mentioned, missionary work. Now, secular institutes, the definition here
in paragraph 928, it's an institute, right, of consecrated life, in which the Christian faithful
living in the world strive for the perfection
of charity and work for the sanctification of the world, especially from within.
So they are in the world, so as opposed to some religious communities that live in a
convent or a monastery, where they remove themselves from the world, again, for the sake
of the world, where they do penance and they pray, those in secular institutes, or those
places where the Christian faithful strive for perfection
of charity and work for the sanctification of the world from within the world.
So some of those communities leave the world for the world, the secular institutes enter
into the world for the sake of the world.
And then lastly, as I mentioned before, societies of apostolic life, the definition here I think
is just worth just walking through it.
They are those members. The members don't have religious vows, but they pursue the particular apostolic
purpose of their society. The big thing I want to end today with is the last three paragraphs.
In particular, the third to last paragraph, paragraph 931, which I think is just remarkable
and it almost is like poetry. So here's this recognition that we're consigrated by the Lord,
that you are consigrated by the Lord.
And because you've been consigrated by the Lord,
whether even if you're not a religious sister or brother,
even if you're not in a society of apostolic life,
you have been consigrated.
So here's what it says,
already dedicated to him through baptism.
The person who surrenders himself to the God
He loves above all else, thereby, integrates Himself more intimately to God's service and to the
good of the Church. By this state of life, consecrated to God, the Church manifests Christ and shows us
how the Holy Spirit acts so wonderfully in her. That can be applied to anybody. It can be applied
to absolutely anybody. Of course,
in the context here, in the Catechism, is for those who are pursuing apostolic societies
or secular institutes, religious life, those consecrated virgins, and widows we talked
about yesterday, the hermits we talked about yesterday as well. But there's something
so important about every one of us are called to surrender ourselves to the God
we love above all else. It goes on to say, and so the first mission of those who profess
the evangelical councils is to live out their consecration. Now, again, I keep applying this to
us, to all of us. This in the context, of course, the catechism is highlighting those in societies
of apostolic life, secular institutes, those in religious life,
conservative virgins and widows, those hermits, and says to them, the first mission of those who
profess the Evangelical Councils is to live out their consecration. That's the first mission.
It's not to go do something. It's simply to live out this vow of chastity, poverty, and obedience.
So that's the first mission. It's kind of like we talked about a couple days ago about how the first
So that's the first mission. It's kind of like we talked about a couple days ago about how the first
way we experience a participation in Christ's kingly
office is by ruling ourselves well in this case the first mission of those who profess the Evangelical Councils of poverty-chastity obedience is simply to live out that
consecration even if they do nothing in the world the first mission is to do what they said they were gonna do to
nothing in the world, the first mission is to do what they said they were going to do, to let their lives and hearts, their actions, their mind, their love be conformed to Jesus.
Now it says, moreover, going on, since members of the institutes of consecrated life dedicate
themselves through their consecration to the service of the church, they are obliged
in a special manner to engage in missionary work.
And so it's that sense of like lead yourself first or let yourself be led first.
Let the Lord make you holy.
And then engage in that work of missionary.
Now that's to say, wait until you're perfect
and then you can start working.
But it is to say the order, the hierarchy here,
is first of all, okay Lord, I need to submit to you.
I need to let you love me.
I need to let you make me holy.
And now as you're
doing that, again, not when I'm done, when I'm holy now, when I'm all sanctified, when
I'm all perfected. But in the midst of that, then we take those next steps into the missionary
work. And that is the call for everyone who is a hermit. That's the call of everyone
who is a concentrated virgin or widow. That's the call of everyone in religious life, secular
institutes and societies of apostolic life. And I would say this, that is all of our calls as well.
Does that make sense? I hope it makes sense to you. It makes sense to me.
And if not, oh man, we'll show up tomorrow and we'll keep moving forward.
In fact, tomorrow, guess what day it is?
Well, I'll tell you, it's nugget day. Nugget day tomorrow, day 1, 29.
But today is 128 and you concluded it. You completed it and so let's braveugget Day. Nugget Day tomorrow, day 1, 29. But today is 128 and you concluded it.
You completed it and so let's pray for each other. Man, it's so important that we keep praying for
each other as we keep walking through the catacasem. I am praying for you. Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.
you