The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 147: Christ’s Work in the Liturgy
Episode Date: May 27, 2023We continue our examination of Christ’s acts through the sacraments that he instituted. Fr. Mike emphasizes the importance of understanding that the sacraments are sacred signs that “make present ...efficaciously the grace they signify.” The sacraments specifically signify the Paschal mystery, Christ’s life, death, and resurrection. We also explore how the Paschal mystery cannot remain in the past. Though it occurred in time, it transcends all time and is made present in all time. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1084-1090. 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)
I'm a name of 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 to the tradition of the Catholic Church.
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
in God's family as we journey together to our Heavenly Home.
This is day 147. You guys, we are reading paragraphs 1084-1090. of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity and God's family is we journey together to our Heavenly home.
This is day 147.
You guys, we are reading paragraphs 1084 to 1090.
As always, I'm using the Ascension edition
of the Catechism, which includes the foundations of faith.
The brooch, it also includes a little red ribbon.
That's where we're at in the second pillar right now.
But you can follow along with any recent version
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church or any ribbon you'd like.
To download your own Catechism in a year reading plan,
you can visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, you can click follow or subscribe
on your podcast app for daily updates
and daily notifications.
It is day 147 reading paragraphs, 1084 to 1090,
just a couple quick reminders, easy for me to say.
As we are walking through this second pillar,
the kind of the kind of, I wanna say,
I wanna say the primary document, always gonna be scripture, obviously. If you wanna the kind of, I want to say, I want to say the primary
document, the primary document is always going to be scripture. Obviously, if you want to take a look
at those, those footnotes on every single page, virtually every page has a reference from scripture
because we get everything, you know, our data comes from scripture or data of what we believe,
our theology comes from scripture. But also in this second pillar, the document,
sacrosanctum, concilium from the Second Vatican Council
is going to be one of those big ones we referenced.
I mentioned that, you know, me yesterday,
the day before, that it's going to be a big one,
kind of like Dave Irbum, kind of Dave Verbum,
was a big one, when it comes to what we're talking about now,
it's going to be Sacrosanctum Consilium.
And so just keep that in mind.
At yesterday, we talked about how the whole thing, the whole, the
surgical life of the church, the whole liturgical work of the
church, that it is the work of the Holy Trinity.
Yesterday, specifically, is the father, source, and goal of
the liturgy today.
Is this Christ's work in liturgy?
And you can guess what's happening tomorrow, Holy Spirit, and
the church in liturgy.
But today is just a few paragraphs on what is Jesus doing? It's just remarkable to recognize that
we're going to get a couple different definitions. We're going to get a definition of sacraments,
which I'm really excited about in paragraph 1084. We're also going to get basically,
how is Christ present in the earthly liturgy? And we recognize that Jesus is present in four distinct ways in the liturgy.
We're here about that in paragraph 1088 and everything else besides.
So as we prepare our hearts to just see how is Jesus present?
How is the act of what is Christ's work in the liturgy in these next few paragraphs?
Let's just call upon our Father and call upon the name of our Lord Jesus in the power of
the Holy Spirit.
We pray, Father in heaven.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for the gift of the fact that what Jesus had done
for us, what he has done for us 2,000 years ago,
halfway around the world from any of us,
comes to us now, comes to us here in our little towns
and our big cities, in our small parishes,
in our giant churches.
Lord God, what your son has done for us, We have access to you. We have access to you. And you make yourself present,
you make the Holy Trinity present at every single liturgy, Lord God. You make yourself
completely accessible to us because you're good and you love us. And we thank you. Thank
you for everything you've done. We thank you for the pastoral mystery, the life, death and resurrection of Jesus, which
comes to us in every liturgy, especially in the liturgy of the Eucharist.
We thank you, Lord God.
Please help us to have eyes that see, right?
To help us, little Father, to have eyes that recognize your presence, your work, your
Son, your Holy Spirit in the liturgy, especially when our eyes can be so obscured by just seeing
ordinary things.
But Lord God, you use ordinary things in an extraordinary way.
You use ordinary things to give us extraordinary grace.
You use ordinary things to give us yourself.
And so help us have eyes to see and a faith that receives and worships and loves
you. In Jesus' name we pray, amen to the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen. We are on day 147. We are reading paragraphs 1084 to 1090.
Christ's work in the liturgy. Christ glorified. Seated at the right hand of the Father and
pouring out the Holy Spirit
on his body which is the Church, Christ now acts through the sacraments he instituted
to communicate his grace. The sacraments are perceptible signs, words and actions accessible
to our human nature, but the action of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit, they make
present efficaciously the grace that they signify.
In the liturgy of the church, it is principally his own paschal mystery that Christ signifies
and makes present.
During his earthly life, Jesus announced his paschal mystery by his teaching and anticipated
it by his actions.
When his hour comes, he lives out the unique event of history which does not pass away.
Jesus dies, is buried, rises from the dead,
and is seated at the right hand of the Father once for all. His Paschal mystery is a real event that
occurred in our history, but it is unique. All other historical events happen once, and then they
pass away, swallowed up in the past. The Paschal mystery of Christ by contrast cannot remain only in the past because by his
death he destroyed death and all that Christ is, all that he did and suffered for all men,
participates in the divine eternity, and so transcends all times while being made present
in them all.
The event of the cross and resurrection abides and draws everything toward life.
From the time of the Church of the Apostles,
Zacro-Santom canchillium states,
accordingly, just as Christ was sent by the Father,
so also he sent the Apostles, filled with the Holy Spirit,
this he did so that they might preach the gospel to every creature
and proclaim that the Son of God by his death and resurrection
has freed us from the power of Satan and from death and brought us into the kingdom of His Father.
But He also willed that the work of salvation which they preached should be set in train
through the sacrifice and sacraments, around which the entire liturgical life revolves.
Thus there is in Christ, by giving the Holy Spirit to the apostles, entrusted to them
His power of
sanctifying. They became sacramental signs of Christ. By the power of the same Holy Spirit,
they entrusted this power to their successors. This apostolic succession structures the
whole liturgical life of the church and is itself sacramental, handed on by the sacrament of
Holy orders.
Is present in the earthly liturgy.
To accomplish so great a work, the dispensation or communication of his work of salvation,
Christ is always present in his church, especially in her liturgical celebrations.
He is present in the sacrifice of the Mass, not only in the person of his minister, the
same now offering through the ministry of the priests, who have formerly offered himself
on the cross, but especially in the Eucharistic species.
By His power He is present in the sacraments so that when anybody baptizes, it is really
Christ Himself who baptizes.
He is present in His Word since it is He Himself who speaks when the Holy Scriptures
are read in the church.
Lastly, He is present on the church praise and sings.
For He has promised
where two or three are gathered together in my name, their MI, in the midst of them.
Sacrissantum Consilium states, Christ indeed always associates the church with himself
in this great work in which God is perfectly glorified and men are sanctified. The church
is his beloved bride who calls to her Lord and through Him
offers worship to the eternal Father, which participates in the liturgy of heaven.
Sacrosanctum Consulium further states, in the earthly liturgy, we share in a foretaste of
that heavenly liturgy which is celebrated in the holy city of Jerusalem toward which we journey
as pilgrims, where Christ is sitting at the right hand of
God, minister of the sanctuary and of the true tabernacle.
With all the warriors of the heavenly army, we sing a hymn of glory to the Lord, venerating
the memory of the saints we hope for some part and fellowship with them.
We eagerly await the Savior, our Lord Jesus Christ, until He, our life shall appear,
and we too will appear with him in glory.
Okay, so there it is, day 147.
Beargav, 10, 84 to 10, 90. Oh my goodness gracious, you guys, holy smokes. This is just...
Okay, I don't know if you caught it, but there are a number of different authors who
contributed to the writing of the catechism.
And, you know, the creed was written,
I think beautifully.
It sings, it's beautiful, it's poetic.
It's, I mean, so clear and concise.
This, whoever the team was who wrote this section,
it's amazing, so far, it's just incredible.
Go, okay, so here we go, 10 paragraph, 1084.
Let's highlight this.
Oh my goodness gracious, I said
they're gonna give us a definition of the sacraments. We recognize that Jesus,
who has seated at the right hand of the Father, and he's pouring out the Holy Spirit on his body,
which is the church, he now acts through the sacraments he instituted to communicate his grace.
So what are sacraments? Middle of paragraph 1084. The sacraments are perceptible signs.
Okay, words and actions here in the parentheses parentheses, perceptible signs accessible to our human nature
by the action of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit. They make present efficaciously the grace that they signify.
So we recognize this, right, that every sacrament is a sacred sign that causes what it signifies.
Every sacrament is a sacred sign that causes what it signifies. Every segment is a sacred sign that causes what it signifies. I'm not sure if
we've talked about this before, but we'll talk about it now. We recognize, okay, what's
a sacred sign? Well, you know what we know what a sign is. A sign is like, okay, there's
a stop sign on the corner right outside my house here. Now, that sign signifies, stop here.
Okay, great, but it doesn't, it doesn't cause you to stop, right? I have demonstrated this
many times. Just kind of rolled right through. But you can imagine a sign, a stop sign that actually caused what it signified.
A signified stops, you can imagine that you pull up to the corner and regardless of
what you want to do, the sign actually caused you to stop.
It would be a sign that caused what it signified.
So here we have the sacraments.
And they're sign, sacred signs that cause what they signify. Because of the action of Jesus and the power of the Holy Spirit, they make present
efficaciously the grace that they signify. So baptism, what's it's a sign of? It's a sign of
washing. Well, it actually does wash away original sin. Baptism also was sign of new birth,
right, as giving birth of dying and rising. So it actually does make us into new creatures,
right? It actually does make us into God's sons and daughters. The sign of reconciliation, right? Confession
is a sign of God's forgiveness. It actually causes God's forgiveness, right? It's efficacy.
We participate efficaciously that mercy of God is present efficaciously. It actually does
forgive our sins. The sign of signs, the Eucharist is the sign of Jesus as presence. It actually is Jesus
as presence, right? And it's just so remarkable. You know, the sign of matrimony is to become
one flesh, will actually to actually truly become one flesh. And this is just so, so amazing
that by the action of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit, the sacraments make present
efficaciously the grace that they signify.
Now, later on, we're going to highlight this, the Paschal mystery.
Paragraph 1085 is very important for us because we recognize that in the Liturgy of the
Church, it is principally Jesus' Paschal mystery that he signifies and makes present.
What is that?
His life, death and resurrection.
This is so incredibly important.
Jesus dies, is buried, rises from the dead,
is seated at the right hand of the Father once for all.
That happened one time.
The Paschal Mystery is a real event
that occurred in our history,
but it's the most unique event in the world,
because, as it says in 1085,
all other historical events happen once
then they pass away.
The Paschal Mystery of Christ by contrast
cannot remain only in the past,
because by his death he destroyed death
and all that Christ is,
all that he did, he suffered from,
and it participates in the divine eternity.
So why, what do you mean by that?
Well, okay, what is Jesus doing?
When he's suffering, when he's dying,
when he's rising, when he ascends to heaven?
He is offering all of that to the Father.
He's offering himself to the Father.
This is so important. He's offering himself to the Father. This is so important.
He's offering Himself to the Father.
He does not cease offering Himself to the Father in eternity.
And so this event that occurred in time, once for all, right?
Occurs in eternity constantly.
It transcends all times while being made present in all times.
And just man, they think about this. That moment
in time, which now exists in eternity transcends all times while being made present in all times.
And it's just incredible. So then what does Jesus do in order to communicate that grace,
what he's done for us to all times to us, he gives the ability to the apostles, not just
a preach.
He does that, definitely gives them the ability to preach the gospel to every creature,
but he also wanted the work of salvation, which they preached to be continued to the
sacrifice and sacraments.
And so what does he do?
Well, we know this in John chapter 20, that's one of the moments in John chapter 20 where Jesus, he's risen from the dead and he breathes on the Holy Spirit
and he says, peace be with you. As the Father sent me, so no, I send you, receive the Holy
Spirit, those who sins you forgive are forgiven, those who sins you hold bound are held bound.
He's given, he's entrusted to the apostles his power of sanctifying and they become sacramental
signs of Christ, right?
Efficacious.
They're actually, they're not just kind of like
over a little reminder, they're actually
efficacious in the fact that they communicate
the grace of Jesus Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit,
which does that make sense?
I just, oh my gosh, you guys, so exciting.
Lastly, well, maybe lastly, almost lastly,
paragraph 1088.
Jesus is present.
He's always present in his church.
He's always present in the church,
especially in their liturgical sacraments, celebrations, right?
Did Jesus is present in the sacrifice of the mass
in the person of the minister,
so that the priest is, Jesus is present
in the person of the priest.
That's one way he's present.
He's especially present in the Eucharist. and that we're going to talk about that so fully
that Jesus is exceptionally present, especially present in the Eucharist.
He's present in the sacraments so that when anybody baptizes, this really Christ himself
of baptizes, you might not be ordained listening to this.
If you ever baptize someone, it would be, we would say it's actually Jesus who baptizes
through you. So it's really Christ Himself. Jesus is present,
Christ is present in the Word. So when the Holy Scriptures are proclaimed, there he is. And also,
Jesus is present whenever two or three gathering in his name. So we have this. Jesus is present in
the person of the minister. He's present most above all in the Eucharist. He's present in his word when it's proclaimed and he's present in the gathering among the people when they gather in his name.
Which is, isn't that incredible? Just near these four ways in which Jesus Christ is present to us and not only this, this last little note.
Oh my goodness gracious. Okay, you guys, I said this a thousand times right good disgraceous or while we cuz that we paragraph 1090
What are we doing in the earth through the liturgy?
Well, we're going to mass. Mm-hmm. That's good. What are we doing in the earthly liturgy?
Well, what's happening is the father is being glorified and the people of God are being sanctified
hugely important
This is this is it every every single time you go to mass God is being glorified perfectly glorified and human beings are being sanctified, hugely important. This is it. Every single time you go to mass, God is being
glorified, perfectly glorified, and human beings are being sanctified. But the earthly liturgy is also
a share in the foretaste of what the heavenly liturgy is occurring there. That basically we are
joined at every single mass, we are joined. With Jesus Christ, sitting at the right hand of God the Father.
We are joined with all the warriors of the heavenly army.
We see the him of glory to the Lord.
We venerate the memory of the saints and we hope for some part in fellowship with them.
We eagerly await the Savior.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, and so he, our life shall appear and we too, will appear with him
in glory.
That is for the future.
That's happening right now in eternity.
And that's for the future where we get to participate
fully in that and heaven God willing.
But think about this, the next time you go to Mass,
which might even be today,
we're participating in that already here on Earth.
The earthly liturgy participates in the liturgy of heaven.
And this is not something you have to wait to do.
You actually could even do this today, or maybe tomorrow.
What a gift.
Holy smokes.
What a gift.
God wants us to be part of this.
Anyways, man, we have a long journey ahead of us, which is awesome tomorrow.
We're talking about the Holy Spirit and the church in the liturgy.
And then again, we keep going off to the races because this is our life.
This is how God wants us to become holy. And this is how God
has asked us to come to contact with Him on a regular, maybe even daily basis. Oh man, you guys,
I'm praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God
bless.
you