The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 196: Conversion of the Baptized
Episode Date: July 15, 2023We continue our examination of the Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation. Fr. Mike explores that interior conversion, or conversion of the heart, is a radical reorientation of our whole life. Conver...sion is so much more than just going through the motions or checking off the boxes. He emphasizes that interior conversion and repentance requires an active hatred for sin. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1427-1433. 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. 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.
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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
through 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 this is day 196.
We are reading paragraphs 1427 to 1433 as always I am 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 catechism of the church.
You can also download your own catechism in your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash cyy and you can click follow or subscribing and podcast that for daily updates and daily notifications.
Does today is day 196 for closing in on that that 200 the historic mythical fabled 200
mark we are getting closer and closer by the day.
Today 196 okay you guys so yesterday we started talking about the sacrament of reconciliation
and sacrament of conversion, sacrament of penance, confession, forgiveness, as we said, reconciliation. But today we're going to highlight the reality
that this is truly a call to conversion. Every time we approach the Lord, we're called to convert,
we're called to transform our minds. Metanoia is that Greek word, which means a transformation
of the mind that changed the way, not just we act, not just our external behaviors,
but to allow our hearts to be changed,
our minds to be changed, to allow ourselves,
really truly where we find ourselves deeply
in our hearts, that to be changed.
So we're talking today about the conversion of the baptized,
right?
So obviously there's a call to conversion
by everybody, for everybody, to, by Jesus, for everybody,
before baptism, but also after conversion, after baptism.
We're called to continually be converted.
That's the second conversion we're gonna talk about today,
as well as interior penance.
And that recognition again, interior penance
is a radical reorientation of our whole life.
If you wanna have a definition, that's what it is.
That's what the Catechism offers us in 1431.
Interior repentance is a radical reorientation of our whole life. So that's what the Catechism offers us in 1431. Interior repentance is a radical reorientation
of our whole life.
So that's what we're gonna talk about today.
It's a challenge.
And so let's call upon the Lord
and just ask for his help today.
Father in heaven, we give you praise, we thank you.
We give you glory.
You are good, you are God, and you call us.
You call us not just to be good, you call us to be like you.
You don't just call us to say no to certain things in our lives.
You call us to say no to our very selves.
You call us to deny ourselves, pick up our cross, and follow after you.
Help us to have hearts that are like your heart.
Help us to love what you love. Help us to hate what you hate.
Help us to be like you.
I'm going to ask this in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Amen. And the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
It is day 196.
We are reading paragraphs 1427 to 1433.
The conversion of the baptized.
Jesus calls to conversion.
This call is an essential part of the proclamation of the kingdom.
The time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is at hand.
Repent and believe in the gospel.
In the Church's preaching, this call is addressed first
to those who do not yet know Christ and his gospel.
Also, baptism is the principal place
for the first and fundamental conversion.
It is by faith in the gospel and by baptism
that one renounces evil and gains salvation,
that is,
the forgiveness of all sins and the gift of new life.
Christ's call to conversion continues to resound in the lives of Christians.
This second conversion is an uninterrupted task for the whole church who, clasping sinners
to her bosom, is at once holy and always in need of purification and follows constantly
the path of penance and renewal.
This endeavor of conversion is not just a human work, it is the movement of a contrite heart
drawn and moved by grace to respond to the merciful love of a God who loved us first.
St. Peter's conversion after he had denied his master three times, bears witness to this.
Jesus' look of infinite mercy drew tears of repentance from Peter,
and after the Lord's resurrection,
a threefold affirmation of love for him.
The second conversion also has a communitarian dimension,
as is clear in the Lord's call to a whole church repent.
St. Ambrose says of the two conversions that,
in the church, there are water and tears,
the water of baptism, in the church, there are water and tears, the water of baptism,
and the tears of repentance. Interior penance. Jesus is called to conversion and penance,
like that of the prophets before him, does not aim first at outward works,
saccloth and ashes, fasting and mortification, but at the conversion of the heart, interior conversion.
but at the conversion of the heart, interior conversion. Without this, such penances remain sterile and false. However, interior conversion urges expression in visible signs, gestures, and works
of penance. Interior repentance is a radical reorientation of our whole life, a return, a conversion
to God with all our heart, an end of sin, a turning away from evil, with repugnance toward
the evil actions we have committed. At the same time, it entails the desire and resolution
to change one's life, with hope in God's mercy and trust in the help of His grace.
This conversion of heart is accompanied by a salutary pain and sadness sadness which the Father's called, anime crotiatus, affliction of spirit,
and komponko cordis, repentance of heart.
The human heart is heavy and hardened.
God must give man a new heart.
Conversion is, first of all, a work of the grace of God who makes our hearts return to
him.
Restore us to thyself, O Lord, that we may be restored.
God gives us the strength to begin anew.
It is in discovering the greatness of God's love that our heart is shaken by the horror
and weight of sin and begins to fear offending God by sin and being separated from Him.
The human heart is converted by looking upon Him whom our sins have pierced.
As St. Clement of Rome stated, let us fix our eyes on Christ's blood and understand how
precious it is to his Father for poured out for our salvation.
It has brought to the whole world the grace of repentance.
Since Easter, the Holy Spirit has proved the world wrong about sin, that is, proved that
the world has not believed in him whom the Father has sent. But this
same spirit who brings sin to light is also the consolar who gives the human heart grace for
repentance and conversion. Gosh you guys today, here we are day 196 per
guffs, 1427 to 1433. This just, I don't know if you are getting the sense it is beautiful, powerful,
convicting.
The recognition that here we are, all of us, whether you're baptized or not, we are
called to be converted, we are called to deny ourselves, pick up our cross and
follow after Jesus. We are called. Here it is, to renounce evil and gain salvation.
This is paragraph 1427, that Jesus calls us to conversion and I love this.
There's the first group of people
right who have never met Christ, never encountered the gospel. That's the first conversion. And of
course, where we experience that conversion, where it really happens, where this change happens,
is by faith in the gospel and baptism. If we, what do we do there? We were announced evil and we
we gain salvation. But then this next step is probably where a lot of us find ourselves in paragraph 1428 and following where Jesus continues this call to have our hearts radically reoriented,
continues in the lives of all of us in lives of Christians. It says here in 1428 that this is an
uninterrupted task for the whole church. Now, to think about this for a second,
you know, you can say,
when do your conversion happen?
You know, this is something we say,
you know, when I talk to our students,
a lot of times they have an encounter with the Lord
that radically re-orients and changes their lives.
And so they'll talk about,
well, I had my first conversion here,
or I had a second, a deeper conversion later on.
You know, in fact, there's one of our focus missionaries.
Now, she works with us here at UMD.
She'll say things like,
well, my first conversion in college,
my first conversion was I was converted
to the community that I found, right?
I met this group of Catholic Christians
who loved the Lord.
So that was her first encounter of Jesus was in community.
And then she said, I was in that community.
And then a year later, that's what she said.
I had a conversion to Jesus in the Eucharist.
It was, you know, noting,
she was using the same word conversion to identify these the Eucharist. It was noting, using the same word, conversion,
to identify these movements of her heart,
like a radical reorientation.
From solo, I'm just kind of doing my life on my own to,
oh, I'm part of the Catholic church.
And then later on, is, okay, I'm living my life.
And then later on to in the Eucharist,
oh, wow, I have found the source of my life.
And now I'm gonna center my life around him, around Jesus in the Eucharist. And so this conversion, wow, I have found the source of my life. And now I'm going to center my life around him, around Jesus and the Eucharist.
And so this conversion, right, is a radical reorientation.
We talked about that in paragraph 1431.
Interior repentance is a radical reorientation of our whole life.
And this is, as it says, an uninterrupted task for the whole church.
And of course, this is not just an exterior work,
it's not just a human work.
In fact, it says here that, yes,
there are saccloth and ashes,
there's fasting and modification.
Those things actually are present, of course.
But the thing the gospels are oriented towards,
though even the prophets are oriented towards,
though Jesus is called conversion,
is oriented towards is the conversion of the heart, right? Interior conversion. Because if I do all the things, like I go through all the steps,
I check all the boxes and sometimes that's what it can look like. Our faith is, right? Sometimes our
faith feels like I'm literally just going through the motions. I'm checking off the boxes. You
said that I need to go to confession at least once a year or when I've experienced mortal sin. You
said that I need to receive all the communion at least once a year.
I go to have Mass every Sunday.
Okay, fine.
I'm doing those things.
I'm checking the boxes.
I'm going through the motions.
As it says here in the catechism, those actions, including all penances, remain sterile
and false without interior conversion, without changing our heart or even say less, allowing our hearts to be changed.
Let's look at this.
How many times do we go into prayer,
expecting to leave prayer changed?
How many times do you and I show up for mass?
And we actually anticipate, by the end of this mass,
I will be different.
By the end of this mass, my life will be altered.
Now, maybe not radically re-altered,
but at the same time, like I'm expecting, that by the time I get to the end of this mass, I'll be altered, now maybe not radically re-altered, but at the same time, like I'm expecting
the by the time I get to the end of this mass, I'll be different.
I'll be changed verses.
Oh, I think a lot of us show up.
I think a lot of us, we tend to show up and say, okay, this, I'm, and even if we're happy
to be there, like even if we know that here I am to worship, we know that the heart of religion
is worship, part of worship is sacrifice.
I'm here to have communion with Jesus and the Eucharist.
Yeah, I'm here to pray. But how many of us show up, not expecting at all, that by
the end of this mass, by the end of this prayer time, I'll be changed. God will have altered my heart.
He will have done something in me that is new. And yet that's our call. Remember, the second conversion is an uninterrupted task for the whole church at all times.
We are called, and not only that, it's an act of grace.
We recognize this.
It is an act of grace to love the Lord with all of our heart that we can't do that on
our own.
None of us can do that on our own.
We need God's help to even turn to God.
It's nuts.
In paragraph 1431 goes on to say,
so what does that conversion look like?
Okay, well, turn to God with all our heart.
Okay, and end of sin.
That's part of conversion and end of sin.
It's not just falling more and more in love with Jesus.
It's also letting our actions be changed
and end of sin,
turning away from evil.
With repugnance towards evil actions we've committed.
That's a critical part of conversion is hatred for sin.
You know, of course, sometimes what can happen to us, we can be tempted in our looking
back over our lives.
They can be tempted to beat ourselves up over our past sins.
Now, there's a big difference between learning from one's past and living in one's past, right?
There's a big difference between being stuck back there
and continuing whenever I mind-mine goes to that,
I beat myself up versus I go back and I say,
Lord, I once again renounce that sin, Lord, I once again,
let it go, I once again place it under your dominion.
This is one of the prayers that you and I can make.
You know, I think probably a lot of us will look back over our past. And maybe that past is more recent
than we'd like. But to look back at our sins and say, Oh, God, I can't do anything to
change that. This is, this is what I've chosen. This is what I've done. This is part of my
story. I place that, that part of my story. I place that, that, that, and I place that
evil under your dominion. I place, I let you God be the Lord, not only of my present and my future.
I let you God be the Lord of my past, be the Lord of that brokenness, be the Lord of the
wounds that I can't go back and undo.
I place them under your dominion.
And that's so, so powerful that helps us have a repugnance for sin, to not live in the
past, but to learn from the past and move forward, it goes on to say,
at the same time, this conversion entails the desire and resolution to change one's life.
The desire resolution to change one's life, you know, sometimes we, we're going to talk
about going to confession in the next couple of days.
This is the section about that, about confession.
When we go to confession, we have to have at least, at the minimum,
we have to have some desire to change from sin to grace, right? We have to have some kind of
desire to turn away from sin and to resolve to live a life of grace. And so that's part of
conversion. Here it says this. It goes on to say, with what? With hope in God's mercy and
trust in the help of His grace. I know I'm going line through line here, a word by word,
it's so important because every word matters. They mean something so important. So yes,
I have a desire and resolution to change my life, but I need this. I need hope in God's
mercy and trust in the help of His grace. Because if you've ever gone to confession once,
you probably have gone to confession more than once. And if you've gone to confession more than once, you've ever gone to confession once, you probably have gone to confession more than once.
And if you've gone to confession more than once,
you've probably gone to confession
for the same thing more than once.
And so it's really easy to get discouraged
to become despairing maybe even over,
can I really change?
Do I even, do I, you maybe even,
as you're listening to this, you might even think,
wow, do I even desire to change?
Do I even desire God's life? Do I even desire this because I keep turning back to this sin? What even think, wow, do I even desire? To change, do I even desire God's life?
Do I even desire this because I keep turning back to this sin?
What does that mean about my heart?
Well, it means you have a broken heart.
That's just, that's us.
We talked about concupacence the other day.
This being, I'm inclined to sin.
There's things in my life that shouldn't be.
There's things in my life that are evil and I want them.
That's crazy, but that's me.
And so I need hope in God's mercy and trust in the
help of His grace, or else I'll be so discouraged by looking at my own sins, so discouraged looking
at my own faults in the way that I continue to mess up in the same old ways that I might just give up.
that I might just give up. And here's the truth, we must never give up.
You must never give up.
We have part of conversion, his hope in God's mercy and trust in the help of his grace.
And yes, that will cause a pain in our heart, right?
That's the compunction, the salutary pain and sadness.
That's the hurt, but better to have a heart that's hurt than a heart that's hardened.
This is so important for us.
It's better to have a heart that's hurt by our sadness over our sins, our grief over
our sins than a heart that is hardened.
Thurard got 1432 says, the human heart is heavy and hardened.
Therefore we have to have a new heart.
And so God's grace makes our hearts return to Him.
God's grace gives us a new heart.
I love this. It is in discovering the greatness of God's love that our heart is shaken by the
horror and weight of sin and begins to fear offending God by sin and being separated from him.
This is so important. Wow, discovering the greatness of God's love. Our heart becomes shaken
by the horror and weight of sin, and
moves us to do it, moves us to love God, to hate sin, and to love God even more. Again,
we said at the beginning of this day that the goal of the Christian life is not just to
become good, not just to become a nicer person or less jerky. The goal of the Christian
life is to become like Jesus. The goal of the Christian life is to become like the Father.
That is an act of grace.
But to become like the Father, I have to turn away from the things that
that he hates, right? To become like the sun, Jesus, our Lord, and Savior,
I have to be, I have to turn away, I have to make the decision.
I have to have to desire and resolve, save your after-be, after-turn away, after-make the decision, after-after-after-desire and
resolve, to turn away from the things that make my heart not like his.
And this is the work of a lifetime.
Therefore, be patient, be patient with yourself.
Be patient with yourself.
Because this is the work of a lifetime at the same time.
Be patient.
But do not procrastinate. Be patient, but act
now. There is no time like the present. All we have is now. So in this moment, I invite
us all, call to mind, to call to mind, what are the things in my life that have led me away
from Jesus? What are the things in my life that if they stay there, I will never be like him. And to even now, or to say Jesus in your name, I repent of the sin. Even right now,
wherever you are, be able to pray that prayer, Jesus, in your name, I repent of name the
sin. And the name of Jesus, I renounce this sin. And the name of Jesus, I even renounce
the thing that leads me to this sin. And the name of Jesus, I renounce the curiosity that brings me to this sin.
In the name of Jesus, I renounce the situations that bring me to this sin.
In the name of Jesus, I renounce the near occasion of sin.
Right now, I invite you as you come to the end of this episode today, day 196.
Just take a moment to pray. I know you might want to go on to the next thing.
Just take a moment to pray. I know you might want to go on to the next thing, just take a moment to pray.
This is gonna be the uninterrupted task of our lives,
the second conversion, and in that prayer,
in the name of Jesus, I renounce whatever that sin is.
Let that be our prayer today.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.