The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 136: Questions of Resurrection
Episode Date: May 16, 2023Together, with Fr. Mike, we unpack some of the questions surrounding the resurrection of the dead. The Catechism clarifies who, how, and when each person will rise from the dead, body and soul. We als...o examine how we are already somewhat in participation with Christ’s death and resurrection through our Baptism. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 997-1004. 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 the 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 to our heavenly home.
This is a 136. Congratulations, you guys made it to day 136. We're reading paragraphs 9 and 97 to 1000 and 4.
You guys, we just cracked into the quadruple digits. So congratulations, as always, I'm using the ascension edition of the
Catacism, which includes the foundations of faith approach, but you can follow along with any recent version of the
Catacism of the Catholic Church. You can also download your own catacism and your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash cyy.
And lastly, you can click follow or subscribe on your podcast app for daily updates and
daily notifications.
It is day 136.
Honestly, it's not a big, it's not a small thing.
Yes, quadruple digits.
This is unprecedented in the history of humanity.
I don't know if that's true, but we're reading, you know,
get all the way into the 1000s.
Here we are in the first day of the 1000s.
It's amazing.
Today, yesterday we talked about the resurrection of the body
and how Christ's resurrection and ours is,
it's for we get to participate in the resurrection
of Jesus Christ.
Now today we have some questions and some questions.
Actually, I like almost every
paragraph here talks about the questions and answer to the questions. For example, paragraph 997
is, well, you talk about rising from the dead. What is rising exactly in paragraph 998? Question,
who will rise in paragraph 99? How? How does this even happen? And then 1,000 even talks about like
this, how exceeds our imagination our imagination this how exceeds our understanding
It's accessible only to faith paragraph one thousand and one is when when this this all happened and this is really remarkable
I just love these questions. What is rising? Who will rise? How will they rise and when will they rise?
Great questions. It's almost like back to the Baltimore Catechism where that's the question and the answer
We get today. We get some questions and answers. When we dip into paragraph 1000 and 2,
2004, we're really looking at what is it to rise with Christ. What are we expecting? And this is
so remarkable. Now tomorrow, we have to talk about dying in Christ and the meaning of Christian death.
Because death is transformed by Jesus Christ. Yes, It's a consequence of sin, but it's been transformed by Jesus Christ today.
We get to look at the rising.
Of course, what is death?
It's separation of the soul from the body.
And yet we have hope, we have hope, that Jesus Christ, in the power of His resurrection,
our bodies and our souls will be reunited.
And to God's glory, we'll be reunited in such a way that we can give God glory,
body and soul, and eternity in heaven.
So we're praying for that.
Let's pray right now.
Father in heaven, we pray.
In the name of your Son, Jesus Christ,
we give you thanks.
We ask you by the power of your Holy Spirit
to receive our thanks and praise
for all that you have done for us.
All you've done for us, and Christ,
all you've done for us, the power of your spirit, all that you have done for us. All you've done for us and Christ, all you've done for us, the power of your spirit,
all that you have done for us, that we don't even know, Lord God.
There's so much that we do not know.
Not only what you've done for us in the past, but also what you have to store for us in
the future, there's so much that we do not know.
And so we just give you praise ahead of time.
Give you praise for the resurrection of Jesus Christ that you've accomplished already.
We give you praise for our future resurrection Jesus Christ that you've accomplished already.
We give you praise for our future resurrection.
We ask you, God, please help us to live in such a way that we come to the resurrection
of glory, that we come to the resurrection of life and not to the resurrection of judgment.
Help us to live in such a way, saying yes to your grace.
For all eternity, we can praise and glorify you.
We can love you with everything we are. Help us to begin that today. In Jesus' eternity, we can praise and glorify you, we can love you with everything we are.
Help us to begin that today.
In Jesus' name we pray.
Amen.
In the name of the Father, in the Son, in the Holy Spirit.
Amen, as I said, it's day 136 of reading paragraphs, 997-2004.
How do the dead rise?
What is rising?
In death, the separation of the soul from the body, the human body decays, and the soul
goes to meet God while awaiting its reunion with its glorified body.
God in His Almighty Power will definitively grant incorruptible life to our bodies by
reuniting them with our souls through the power of Jesus' resurrection.
Who will rise?
All the dead will rise.
Those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the
resurrection of judgment.
How?
Christ is raised with his own body, as he said, see my hands and my feet, that it is I myself.
But he did not return to an earthly life, so in him all of them will rise again with their
own bodies which they now bear, but Christ
will change our lowly body to be like his glorious body into a spiritual body.
As St. Paul wrote, but someone will ask, how are the dead raised?
With what kind of body do they come?
You foolish man.
What you sow does not come to life unless it dies, and what you sow is not the body which
is to be, but a bear kernel.
What is sown is perishable. What is raised is imperishable. The dead will be raised
imperishable. For this perishable nature must put on the imperishable, and this
mortal nature must put on immortality. This how exceeds our imagination and
understanding. It is accessible only to faith. Yet our participation in the
Eucharist already gives us a foretaste of Christ's transfiguration
of our bodies, as St. Irenaeus wrote,
Just as bread that comes from the earth, after God's blessing has been invoked upon it,
is no longer ordinary bread, but Eucharist formed of two things, the one earthly and the
other heavenly, so to our bodies, which partake the Eucharist, are no longer corruptible,
but possess the hope of resurrection.
When?
Definitively, at the last day, at the end of the world.
Indeed, the resurrection of the dead is closely associated with Christ's paracia, as St.
Paul wrote, for the Lord Himself will descend from heaven, with a cry of command, with the
arch-angels call, and the sound of the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first.
Risen with Christ Christ will raise us up on the last day, but it is also true that in
a certain way we have already risen with Christ.
For by virtue of the Holy Spirit, Christian life is already now on earth a participation
in the death and resurrection of Christ.
A Saint Paul wrote,
and he were buried with him in baptism,
in which you were also raised with him through faith in the working of God,
who raised him from the dead. If then, you have been raised with Christ,
seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God.
United with Christ by baptism, believers already truly participate in the heavenly life of
the risen Christ, but this life remains hidden with Christ in God.
The Father has already raised us up with Him and made us sit with Him in the heavenly
places in Christ Jesus.
Nourished with His body in the Eucharist, we already belong to the body of Christ.
When we rise on the last day, we also will appear with Him in glory. In expectation
of that day, the believer's body and soul already participate in the dignity of belonging to Christ.
This dignity entails the demand that He should treat with respect to His own body, but also the body
of every other person, especially the suffering. As St. Paul wrote, the body is meant for the Lord and the Lord for the body.
And God raised the Lord and will also raise us up by His power. Do you not know that your
bodies are members of Christ? You are not your own. So glorify God in your body.
There we have it. 136 paragraphs, 97 to4. I think this is just, this is incredible.
Again, it's the question-answer kind of section.
Here, what is rising?
We recognize what is dying.
Well, in dying, the separation of the soul from the body.
That happens.
The human body decays, and the soul goes to meet God while awaiting its reunion in the glorified body.
So, what is resurrection?
What is rising?
That God in His Almighty power will definitively grant incorruptible life to our bodies
by reuniting them with our souls
to the power of Jesus as resurrection,
which is remarkable.
And that question is who?
And the answer is all the dead, everyone.
Remember that scripture points this out
in John chapter 5 verse 29.
It says, all those will rise,
those who have done good to the resurrection of life, those who have done good to the resurrection of life
and those who have done evil to the resurrection
of judgment.
So everyone gets their body back.
So those in heaven,
in eternity,
in the beatific vision,
right in God's presence,
they will have their body the entire time
through eternity after the last day.
And those in hell,
separated from God,
will have their bodies
in eternity,
in hell after the last day, and everyone, everyone.
So how does this happen?
Well, it is remarkable.
It happens in Jesus.
We recognize that he will change our loley body
to be like Christ's glorious body,
into a spiritual body.
And how does that happen?
I love paragraph 1000.
The first quadruple number here is this how exceeds our imagination and understanding.
Right? It's just it's accessible only to faith. And yet we recognize this happens right now. This happens at every mass.
And this even this example is pretty remarkable that they pull this example from St. Irenaeus of Leone, which is
it's beautiful. It talks about the Eucharist. And how here's theucharist, which is made from bread and wine. It just comes from the earth. It is completely ordinary and it's good, right?
It's but it's very very normal very ordinary from the earth.
But when it is
when transubstantiation happens right when it's transformed it becomes something else.
It again looks like bread. It looks like wine, but it's now something new. It's a new substance.
It's a new whole new thing.
And so similarly, okay, you'll get your body back.
And I guess this will probably look at your body.
Just like here's craze resurrected from the dead,
looked like Jesus.
But different, right?
New transformed, some kind of a new thing.
How does that happen?
Well, again, mystery.
And then the last question in paragraph 101,
when and the answer, of course, it doesn't happen now.
Like right now, there aren't people in heaven with their bodies.
Correction, of course, there are, but not everyone.
Who has their body in heaven?
Well, we believe that Jesus.
So Jesus' body is in heaven.
We also believe that Mary has been assumed in heaven,
body and soul.
So we believe that there is a male body and a female body in heaven.
There's also, you know, people like maybe Elijah,
who was taken up
to heaven in a whirlwind and then if I re-chariot, right? Maybe even Enoch who's talked about in the book
of Genesis that he was no more. And so part of the way interpreting that could be that Enoch was
assumed in heaven as well. But for the most part, those are four bodies, maybe three that are in heaven
now. Everyone else does not have their body
yet. We get that back on the last day at the end of the world. Now, we look forward to
that right now, right? That if you're male, you will have a male body, an eternity. If
you're a female, you will have a female body, an eternity. This is, you'll have your body,
an eternity, but transformed. We'll talk about maybe that, what's that transformation
look like? What does Christ's body look like in eternity?
And what will yours look like in eternity? We're looking forward to that, but also we recognize that because of baptism, we're already participating in this.
paragraph 1,000-2 says this, says from a virtue of the Holy Spirit,
Christian life is already now on earth a participation in the death and resurrection of Jesus.
And so paragraph 1,000 to 3 says, United with Christ by baptism,
believers already truly participate
in the heavenly life of the risen Christ,
but it remains hidden, right?
And yet at the same time,
we have been incorporated into the body of Christ.
And when we rise on the last day,
we also will appear with Him in glory.
And so because of that, we treat our bodies differently.
And because of that, we treat other people's bodies differently.
Knowing that your body's not just a husk, right?
Your body's not just a shell, it's not a cage,
it's not a trap, it's not arbitrary.
But you are your body, your body is you.
And your body is destined to endure in eternity
when you get it back in the last day. Again, either to glory in heaven or to eternal shame in hell.
And because of this, we are invited, we're commanded, in fact, to glorify God in our
body, to recognize that other people have a dignity, not just their soul, not just their
intellect, if a dignity in their body, how we treat other people's bodies matters.
That if you are your body, what you do with your body matters.
And so we conclude right now today, of course, with this quote from St. Paul's letter to
the Corinthians.
The body is meant for the Lord and the Lord for the body, right?
The body's not, it's not a bad thing.
It's a good thing.
And God raised the Lord and will also raise us up by His power.
Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ?
You are not your own.
So glorify God in your body right now.
Wherever you're listening to this, this is a remarkable item.
This is awesome.
Whether you're driving in your car, walking, maybe out for a run, maybe you're stuck in
your bed, maybe you're sick, maybe you're unable to move your body.
Recognize this.
A, the Lord will give you a resurrected body.
That will be able to move.
That will be able to run. We'll be able to move, that will be able to run,
will be able to jump, will be able to do all the things
you wish your body could still do.
That body is coming, I'm telling you right now,
this is, well, we believe when we profess
and we proclaim that resurrected body will be given to you.
But right now, even if all you can do is lay in a bed.
Even if all you can do is sit in your car right now, even if all you can do is limp.
Everything you do in your body can glorify the Lord.
Just even scratching your face, even just blinking.
Everything you do can glorify the Lord.
So blink for the Lord's glory.
Alright?
Walk for the Lord's glory.
Smile at someone for the Lord's glory. All right. Walk for the Lord's glory. Smile at someone for the Lord's glory.
Lay in that bed and experience a lack of strength in that body. And let that be for the Lord's glory.
Everything we do in our body is meant to be for his glory. As St. Paul says, So glorify God in your body, no matter what you do.
And as we're praying for today,
I just put a gift today, my gosh,
the gift of just you have a body right now listening to this.
Glorify God is you listen.
And let him be glorified in eternity
as he gives us back our resurrected bodies.
Let's pray for that. Pray for each other.
Because there's something about this that requires faith.
Something about this that demands that we recognize, God, you're going to do something
in me, something through me that I cannot even understand understand or imagine I can just trust, I can just trust you.
Let's pray for each other that we continue to walk in trust and glorify God in our bodies.
I am praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God
bless.
you