The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 198: Reconciliation with God
Episode Date: July 17, 2023We continue our examination of the sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation. Fr. Mike emphasizes that sin, above all else, is an offense against God and his Church. It damages our communion with both. ...He also unpacks how important it is that God has extended his ability to forgive sins to his apostles and their successors. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1440-1445. 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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How many names father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in your 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 Eurus brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read to the Catechism of the Catholic Church discovering our identity
in God's family as we journeyed together toward our heavenly home
This is day 198 you guys were reading paragraph 1440 to 1445 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 in a year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash
C.I.Y and you can also click follow and also also you can click follow or subscribe to your podcast app for daily updates daily notifications today
It's day 198 200 is right around the corner reading paragraphs 1440 to 1445
What we're going to talk about today we talked about penance conversion for last couple days
Today we're talking about the actual sacrament of penance and reconciliation and so
We're talking about the actual sacrament of penance and reconciliation. And so it's just only a couple of paragraphs, right?
1440 to 1445.
Well tomorrow and the following days, we'll talk about, okay, where did the sacrament come
for?
We'll talk about today where it comes from.
But how did it develop over the course of the years?
And what does a person do when it comes to confession?
That's coming up in the future.
Tomorrow, the next day, the next day.
Today, we're just gonna talk about,
okay, what is sin?
Only God forgives sins,
and that when He reconciles us, when He forgives us,
He brings us back to His heart,
but He also brings us reconciliation with the church.
Now we're gonna talk about that today.
So let's just call upon our Father,
call up in Jesus' name and pray
and probably the Holy Spirit.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and we thank you.
We thank you for the fact that while we wander away from you, while we sin, while we say
no to you, you never say no to us, you never reject us.
You never stop calling us back to your heart.
You never stop loving us.
You always want us to receive your forgiveness.
You always want to receive us back into your heart.
Help us to, in our sins, to never stay away for long.
To never stay far from you, but in our sin, we ask that you please break through with
the power of your spirit, break through with the your voice of
Of grace your voice that calls us home that calls us back to you. Help us always say yes to you, especially after
We have wandered far away
call us home today
Bring us back now in Jesus name we pray
Amen and the name of the Father and of the the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
It is day 198, we are reading paragraphs 14, 40, to 14, 45.
The sacrament of penance and reconciliation.
Sin is before all else, and offense against God, a rupture of communion with Him.
At the same time, it damages communion with the church. For this reason, conversion entails both God's forgiveness and reconciliation with the church,
which are expressed and accomplished liturgically by the sacrament of penance and reconciliation.
Only God forgives sin.
Only God forgives sins.
Since he is the Son of God, Jesus says of himself, the Son of Man has authority
on earth to forgive sins, and exercises this divine power, saying, your sins are forgiven.
Further, by virtue of his divine authority, he gives this power to men to exercise in his
name. Christ has willed that in her prayer and life and action, his whole church should
be the sign and instrument
for the forgiveness and reconciliation that he acquired for us at the price of his blood.
But he entrusted the exercise of the power of absolution to the apostolic ministry which
he charged with the ministry of reconciliation.
The apostle is sent out on behalf of Christ with God making his appeal through him and pleading,
be reconciled
to God.
Reconciliation with the Church
During His public life, Jesus not only forgave sins, but also made plain the effect of this
forgiveness.
He reintegrated forgiven sinners into the community of the people of God, from which sin had alienated
or even excluded them.
A remarkable sign of this is the fact
that Jesus receives sinners at his table,
a gesture that expresses in an astonishing way
both God's forgiveness and the return
to the bosom of the people of God.
In imparting to his apostles
his own power to forgive sins,
the Lord also gives them the authority
to reconcile sinners with the church.
This ecclesial dimension of their task is expressed most notably in Christ's solemn words to
Simon Peter.
I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall
be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
The office of binding and loosing, which was given to Peter, was also assigned to the
College of the Apostles, United to its Head.
The words bind and loose mean, whomever you exclude from your communion will be excluded
from communion with God.
whomever you receive a new into your communion, God will welcome back into his.
Reconciliation with the Church is inseparable from reconciliation with God.
Alright, there we are, paragraph 1440 to 1445, talking about what sin is only God forgives sins, reconciliation with the church, challenging at the same time, so
consoling. Let's, let's look at this. Okay. So it says here, sin is above all in
offense against God, a rupture of communion with him. Of course, at the same
time, it damages communion with the church.
Let's pause in this for just one second.
One of the things that here, the church gives us this definition, sin above all else.
It's not, no one gets, it's someone got hurt.
You know, sometimes you have people who say things like, well, no one was hurt.
How can that be wrong?
It didn't affect you.
Why do you, why does it matter?
At the same time, we know that something isn't wrong
because someone got hurt.
A thing as a sin is not because someone was damaged.
The thing is a sin above all else
because it was prohibited by God or commanded by God
and I didn't do it.
So sin is above all else and offense against God.
It's a relationship.
It's relational. That's one of the reasons why I will always come back
to my, I guess, maybe it's my personal definition
of sin or my personal expression of what a sin is.
Sin is saying basically, saying to God,
God, I know what you want.
I don't care.
I want what I want.
God, I know what you want, but I want what I want.
And just choosing, I'm gonna do what I wanna do.
Why is that the heart?
I think it's a heart because it's an offense against God.
It's the sense of, it's not an accident, right?
It's not a mistake.
It's not, I had to.
It's, I know what you want.
And I'm going to choose my will over your will.
I'm going to choose me over you.
I'm going to choose myself over love. And so it's a rupture of communion with God.
I turn away from Him and say, me, not you.
I think it was the Asluest who had said that those in heaven will forever, will forever
sing the words to the Father, Son, Holy Spirit, die will be done.
And those in hell are the ones to whom the Father says, okay, die will be done.
It's either us saying to the Father that I will be done
or it's God saying, yeah, you get what you want,
you got what you've chosen, your will.
But it's not only an offense against God,
it also at the same time damages communion with the church.
This is one of those things that I think it's mostly,
it's so helpful for us if we could wrap our minds
around this reality, so much would change.
I mean, our approach to the church would change, our approach to reconciliation would change.
If we can understand that when you're baptized, you and I were baptized, we were brought
not only into this incredible relationship with God the Father.
We're mating to God's sons and daughters, his adopted sons and daughters.
We have temples of the Holy Spirit.
We partake of the divine nature, all these transformations, but also we're brought into the family of God, we're brought into the body of Christ,
we're made members of the church, which is truly a family and is truly a body.
Therefore, when I sin, particularly when I sin in a mortal way,
not only am I causing a rupture and my relationship with God, and also causing a rupture in my relationship
my communion with the church.
And both are incredibly serious and both are required forgiveness and they require reconciliation.
And I think that there's a grace of knowing the depths of my ascend.
There's a grace of knowing the depths of my sin.
There's a grace of knowing, as I've said, no to the Lord,
and here's what I've done.
I've separated myself from God.
I've cut myself off from the source of all life.
There's a grace of knowing that and letting that pierce our hearts.
There's also an incredible grace of knowing that I don't belong to myself.
Not only do I belong to God himself,
but I'm a member of his family. I'm a part of his body, I'm a part of this church, and when I say
no to the Father, and I say no to the church, I'm creating a division with me and God and me and
the church. Therefore, I need reconciliation with the church as well as reconciliation with the Lord.
And that comes from God, as it says in 1441 and 1442, only God forgives sins.
And yet what Jesus has done, we know this in 1442, we know this through Scripture.
When Jesus has done, He has extended His power to forgive to human beings. He's given his apostles and their successors
the power to exercise this ministry
of forgiveness and reconciliation
to the apostles and their successors,
which is remarkable.
Remember we talked about how forgiveness
is a release you from your debt.
So, if it just kind of by way of review,
I've ever give someone what we're saying is,
okay, you owe me X, whatever
X is. I forgive you, meaning not like I'm going to trust you completely again, not that
we're all good in the sense of our relationship has been restored. But in the sense that I'm
not going to wait for you to pay me back, you owe me something and justice demands that
you would pay that. But since you are either maybe unwilling, maybe unable to pay me back,
I'm just going to release you from your debt.
I'm not going to wait around waiting for you to pay me back.
Therefore, I release you from your debt. Great.
That's forgiveness.
There is another step in that step of reconciliation is now a relationship has
been restored.
Our relationship has been made to new in an incredible way.
So, the example I think I had given is someone borrows your car.
And when they borrow your car, they get in a wreck and they direct costs you $1,500.
And they say, I can't pay it.
You're like, okay, I'll pay that.
I'll pay what you owe.
And then I'm not gonna make you pay me back
because I release you from your debt.
But I'm also not gonna let you borrow my car again.
There's not such a thing as forgiveness
without reconciliation.
Same kind of thing like someone could,
me have hurt you by gossiping.
Maybe they hurt you, maybe they hurt you physically.
You can say, okay, I release you from your debt
because of what you said, there's a
damage that justice would demand that you pay me back or what you did physically.
There's justice would demand that you pay me back.
If I forgive you, I release you from what you owe me.
But I'm not going to trust you again.
I'm not going to have a relationship with you.
You said those things about me.
You did that thing to me. I don't need that relationship with you.
And also, we're not called necessarily to reconcile with everyone in that same sense,
where we bring them back into our trust.
What the church does, and this is the credit, incredible, because what God does though, what
God does is he does bring us back into reconciliation.
He does bring us back into relationship with him.
The God when he forgives us, he also restores us in our place in his body.
He restores us in our place in his family.
And he does this through the ministry
of the sacrament of reconciliation and penance,
which is just remarkable.
Of course, why can we even say that?
Why can we even claim this?
Well, but Matthew chapter 16, Jesus makes it very clear
that he gives hands over to Simon Peter in his office.
I give you the keys at the King of Heaven.
Have Heaven, would you bind on earth
to be bound in heaven, whatever you lose on earth
shall be loosed in heaven,
and also give that to the College of Apostles,
the other apostles with Peter at his head.
And that ability was given to the other apostles with Peter at its head.
And that ability was given to the other apostles too, as well as to their successors,
what's that mean?
What does it mean to bind and loose in period of 1445?
It says, the words bind and loose mean,
whomever you exclude from your communion
will be excluded from communion with God.
whomever you receive a new into your communion,
God will welcome back into his.
This is so important for us.
Because it highlights the fact that God has not only extended
the ability, the power that he alone can do, right?
The alone can forgive sins, but he gives this ministry of forgiveness, this ministry of
reconciliation to the apostles and their successors, right?
The bishops and priests, but also that he gives them this authority that is, if we've ever,
I don't know if you've ever thought about this, the authority of whomever you exclude
from your communion will be excluded from communion with God.
And whomever you receive a new interior communion, God will welcome back into his.
There's something so powerful about the authority that Jesus Christ has given to his church.
It's a scary authority, right?
It is, I think, any kind of authority in some ways can be intimidating.
It can be scary because the more authority one has, the more responsibility to use that
well a person has been given.
But the last line of the entire reading for today, reconciliation with the Church is inseparable
from reconciliation with God.
You were brought into the Church at your baptism.
You were brought into right relationship with God at your baptism.
Therefore, to be brought into right relationship with God, again, after sin, would also entail
being brought into right relationship with the church.
This is so important for us to understand.
And to interiorize, it is easy.
It's easy to say, I sinned against God,
I'm gonna go to God.
It is more difficult to say,
I've sinned against God and against the body of Christ
on earth and against his church on earth.
And therefore, I will go to God and I will also go to his church.
Yet this is how Jesus established this.
Tomorrow we're going to talk about how do we actually do this?
How does this get exercised?
How do we take those steps?
But right now, I just invite all of us to open our hearts through this reality.
That when God gives us His forgiveness, He gives us forgiveness through
His church and He gives us forgiveness in order to reconcile us not only to Him and His
heart, but also to His body, the church on earth. I hope that makes sense. Hopefully this
wasn't like a totally chaotic and confusing day. It was one of those kind of days for me.
I'm just like, wow, let's, let's try to muddle through the best weekend. And here we are.
The end of day 198.
You guys, I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Michael.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.