The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 203: The Purpose of Indulgences
Episode Date: July 22, 2023Fr. Mike expands on the purpose of indulgences and clarifies why the Church has the authority to provide indulgences. We also learn about the role of the Communion of Saints in our strive for holiness... and the different liturgical forms and elements of the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1474-1484. 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.
Transcript
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I'm your name's 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 to the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism in the years brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read that the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
and God's family is we journey together toward our heavenly home, this is day 203, we're reading paragraphs 14, 74 to 14,
and 84 are taken away all the way to the nuggets.
At the end of this section on reconciliation,
as always, I'm using the ascension edition of the Catacism,
which includes the foundations of Faith of Roach.
You can follow along with any recent version
of the Catacism with 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 click follow or subscribe in your podcast after daily updates and daily notifications.
As I said, today is day two, three reading paragraphs, 1474 to 1484.
Today, we're going to talk about some more stuff about the communion of saints and obtaining
indulgences.
We started indulgences yesterday.
We're also going to go through like, what's the actual celebration of the sacrament of reconciliation,
sacrament of penance?
Like what's the form?
What's the matter?
Like what's going on during that celebration
of the sacrament of reconciliation?
So two things here, again, indulgences,
finishing up indulgences,
and then how do we actually go to confession?
How does that take place both here in the West
as well as little kind of notes about
how it might happen in other liturgies
or other liturgical traditions, not just the Latin, right, but maybe the Byzantine liturgy.
We might have a little sprinkle of some some flavor in there.
So as we launch into today, just call upon God and just place ourselves in God's presence,
knowing that He is the father of mercies.
He is the God of all goodness.
And He is the one who forgives our sins through his son
in the power of the Holy Spirit.
Let's pray.
Father in heaven, we praise you and glorify your name.
We thank you so much.
Again, let our time begin with praise.
Let thanksgiving and praise go up first.
Help us to praise you when we are thriving, and when it's easy to forget you. Help us praise you when we are struggling, and it's easy to forget you.
Help us praise you when we are struggling and it's difficult to see you.
Lord God, help us to praise you when we need your mercy
and help us to praise you when we have received your mercy.
Help us in this day to walk in grace,
help us this day to recognize that we are not alone.
We are surrounded by the great cloud of witnesses,
the church,
and help us take that next step.
Whatever that next step is,
to grow closer and closer to you and your sacred heart,
your merciful heart.
In Jesus' name we pray.
Amen. And the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen. It is day 203.
We're reading paragraphs 1474 to 1484.
In the communionion of Saints
The Christian who seeks to purify himself of his sin and to become holy with the help of
God's grace is not alone.
The life of each of God's children is joined in Christ and through Christ in a wonderful
way to the life of all the other Christian brethren in the supernatural unity of the mystical
body of Christ as in a single mystical person.
In the communion of saints, a perennial link of charity exists between the faithful who
have already reached their heavenly home, those who are expiating their sins in purgatory,
and those who are still pilgrims on earth.
Between them there is, too, an abundant exchange of all good things.
In this wonderful exchange, the holiness of one prophets others, well beyond the harm
that the sin of one could cause others.
Thus, recourse to the communion of saints lets the contrite sinner be more promptly and
efficaciously purified of the punishments for sin.
We also call these spiritual goods of the communion of saints, the church's treasury, which
is not the sum total of the material goods which have accumulated during the course of the
centuries.
On the contrary, the treasury of the church is the infinite value which can never be
exhausted, which Christ's merits have before God. They were offered so that the whole of mankind could
be set free from sin and attain communion with the Father. In Christ, the Redeemer himself,
the satisfactions and merits of his redemption exist and find their efficacy.
This treasury includes as well the prayers and good works of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
They are truly immense, unfathomable, and even pristine in their value before God.
In the treasury too are the prayers and good works of all the saints.
All those who have followed in the footsteps of Christ the Lord and by His grace have made
their lives holy and carried out the mission the Father entrusted to them.
In this way, they attained their own salvation, and at the same time, cooperated in saving
their brothers in the unity of the mystical body, obtaining indulgence from God through
the church.
An indulgence is obtained through the church, who, by virtue of the power of binding and
losing, granted her by Christ Jesus, intervenes in favor of individual Christians, and opens for them the treasury
of the merits of Christ and the saints to obtain from the Father of Mercies the remission
of the temporal punishments due for their sins. Thus, the Church does not want simply to
come to the aid of these Christians, but also to spur them to works of devotion, penance,
and charity.
Since the faithful departed now being purified are also members of the same communion of saints,
one way we can help them is to obtain indulgences for them, so that the temporal punishments
do for their sins may be remitted.
The celebration of the sacrament of penance.
Like all the sacraments, penance is a liturgical action.
The elements of the celebration are ordinarily these, a greeting and blessing from the priest,
reading the word of God to illuminate the conscience and elicit contrition and an exhortation
to repentance.
The confession which acknowledges sins and makes them known to the priest.
The imposition and acceptance of a penance, the priest's absolution, a prayer of thanksgiving
and praise, and dismissal with the blessing of the priest.
The Byzantine liturgy recognizes several forms of absolution in the form of invocation
which admirably express the mystery of forgiveness.
The priest's praise made the same God, who threw the prophet Nathan forgave David when he
confessed his sins, who forgave Peter when he wept bitterly.
The prostitute, when she washed his feet with her tears, the publican, and the prodigal
son, through me, a sinner, forgive you both in this life and in the next, and enable
you to appear before his awe-inspiring tribunal without condemnation, he who is blessed forever
and ever, amen.
The sacrament of penance can also take place in the framework of a communal celebration,
in which we prepare ourselves together for confession and give thanks together for the
forgiveness received.
Here, the personal confession of sins and individual absolution are inserted into a liturgy
of the Word of God with readings and a homily, an examination of conscience conducted
in common, a communal request for forgiveness, the Our Father, and a Thanksgiving in common.
This communal celebration expresses more clearly the ecclesial character of penance.
However, regardless of its manner of celebration, the sacrament of penance is always by its
very nature a liturgical action, and therefore an ecclesial and public action.
In case of grave necessity, recourse may be had to a communal celebration of reconciliation
with general confession and general absolution.
Grave necessity of this sort can arise when there is imminent danger of death without sufficient
time for the priest or priests to hear each penitence confession.
Grave necessity can also exist when, given the number of penitents, there are not enough
confessors to hear individual confessions properly in a reasonable time, so that the penitence
through no fault of their own would be deprived of sacramental grace or holy communion for
a long time.
In this case, for the absolution to be valid, the faithful must have the intention of
individually confessing their grave sins in a time required.
The Diasis in Bishop is the judge of whether or not the conditions required for general absolution exist.
A large gathering of the faithful on the occasion of major feasts or pilgrimages does not constitute a case of grave necessity.
Individual, integral confession and absolution remain the only ordinary way for the faithful
to reconcile themselves with God and the church, unless physical or moral impossibility
excuses from this kind of confession.
There are profound reasons for this.
Christ is at work in each of the sacraments.
He personally addresses every sinner, my son, your sins are forgiven.
He is the physician tending each one of the sick
who need him to cure them. He raises them up and reintegrates them into a fraternal communion.
Personal confession is thus the form most expressive of reconciliation with God and with the church.
Right? Then we are update 203 paragraphs 1474 to 1484. That's a chunk. We sometimes have the very brief paragraphs,
but today we did not. Today we got to go through a lot of stuff, including recognizing that
when we seek to be forgiven of our sins, when we seek to become holy with the help of God's grace
or not alone, so important. Paragraph 1474 highlights this. The Christian who seeks to purify himself of his sin and become holy with the help of God's
grace is not alone.
And this paragraph 1474 connects us profoundly with paragraph 1484, the very last one we
heard.
Why?
Because we recognize that we're not just individual Christians, kind of automatons.
We're not on our own.
We are individuals, yes, of course, and God loves us as if we only want to exist. And yet,
what is he done? He has brought us not only into individual personal relationship with him,
he has brought us into communion with his church. He has brought us into the community of the
faithful. He has brought us into the communion of saints. And so this recognition is,
man, the what we do affects other people.
And so it goes on to say 1475, in this communion of saints,
a perennial link of charity exists between the faithful who have already reached
your heavenly home, those saints in heaven, those who are expiating their sins
and purgatory, obviously, those in purgatory, and those who are still pilgrims on
earth. Between them, there is an abundant exchange of all good things,
recognizing, oh my goodness gracious,
not only can the saints and heaven intercede on behalf of us, not only the saints and heaven can
they pray for those souls in purgatory, but we can also pray for the souls in purgatory. In fact,
let's highlight this. I mentioned yesterday, I think it was yesterday, and that, yes, before the
body, one one member suffers, we all suffer with them. One-one member is strength and a rejoices. We all rejoice.
That's true, 100% true. But even more pointedly, we need to understand. It says in 1475,
in this wonderful exchange, the holiness of one profits others well beyond the harm that the
sin of one could cause the others. Does that make sense? So, recognizing that, yes, the holiness of
the saints in heaven and growing holiness of the holy ones in that, yes, the holiness of the saints in heaven, in growing holiness of
the holy ones in purgatory, right?
The suffering ones in purgatory, that benefits us more than like a sinner rejecting God
can hurt us.
Does that make sense?
There's limits to the way an individual can hurt the body, but in some ways there's
almost no limit to the ways that a holy person can benefit the body.
Does that make sense?
That's just so beautiful, again, to say it like this, in this wonderful exchange that
we're all linked, right?
The whole body of Christ in heaven, in purgatory and on earth.
They call that the church trampant, the church suffering, and the church militant.
The church on earth, here we are, the church militant, the church in purgatory, the church
suffering, and the church in heaven, the church trampant.
But one church, one body, in this wonderful exchange, in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in the church in meant to be remedial. Every time we sin gravely, we have eternal consequences for that sin, separation for God eternally, right? Hell, and we have temporal consequences due to sin.
Because of that, our hearts become attached to sin. Our hearts become attached to things
like the creation rather than the creator, right? We love created things more than we love
God in so many ways. And so, you know, purification, penances, and in fact, indulgences, they
heal us from that. Remember, you have four aspects to an indulgence. So the first is the action
itself, say for example, you don't pray the stations of the cross or praying the rosary.
Secondly, receiving holy communion. Third, going to confession within a week or so of that
indulgence itself. And fourth, interseeding on behalf of the Holy Father.
Now those four aspects like what makes them special?
Here's what makes them special. Well obviously Holy Communion special on its own
confession is special on its own are prayer for anyone a special on its own. All of them individually have power, right?
What gives them the
have power, right? What gives them the capacity, what gives them the ability to have a plenary indulgence, right? To remove all temporal punishments due to sin or even partial. What gives them
the ability to do that is the authority that Jesus extended to the church. This is so important.
It's because Jesus Christ extended his authority to the church when he
gave the church leaders the power of binding and losing. That is the key. It is
actually, it's so humble of the Lord God that he gives to human beings who are
flawed and faulty and make a bunch of mistakes, gives them the capacity, the
ability to declare, okay, do these things and
through the power and the grace of the Holy Spirit, working through the church, you have
a partial or a plenary indulgence, which is just incredible.
Now you can ask this, we're talking about indulgences for two days.
What's the big deal with indulgences?
It's like, what's the problem with them?
Well, there's two-fold problem that sometimes people will have.
One is people sometimes will point to, they'll say, well, there was the selling of indulgences and that doesn't
seem right, that doesn't seem fair, that doesn't seem just. And they are correct. In fact, the church
never taught that it was okay to sell indulgences. That was never a thing. At the same time, let's go
back and let's look at the context. So we recognized yesterday, we talked about there's the thing you do for the indulgence
or across the board.
You have acts of penance.
You have a works of charity.
You have certain prayers you could do.
All of those things are like, okay, do this thing.
It costs you something, right?
Dibests you have something, does you have your time?
It increases your prayer life.
It helps others.
Whatever that thing is.
Now you can imagine that here here do this penance,
you know, fast for the next five Fridays, and you have an indulgence, I'm not sure if
that's one, but just saying, you know, so that's one. Okay, that's good, because I'm disciplining
myself, I'm removing myself from attachments. Or I could say, like I've said five times
now, pray the stations of the cross in the church on a Friday. Okay, that could be a way of
growing my relationship with the Lord, becoming more attached to him unless attached to things, or it could be, you know, donate X amount to charity. In that case,
I'm not only divesting myself of some things that might be attached to, but I'm also helping
my brothers and sisters. And so we take that last one. Whenever we associate the spiritual life with
money, there's always a danger. The danger is people can often think that they're buying their way
into heaven. And yet, what's the whole point of this? The whole point is almsgiving. Remember Jesus
even highlights the reality and the goodness of giving alms, of giving material goods for the benefit
of others, and that if that's money, that's giving money for the benefit of others. That could look
in a certain light like a person is purchasing their way into heaven or they're buying holiness now add to this the indulgence that could be like okay
Here's a penitential act. Here's a prayer act or here is a charitable act. Here's almsgiving and
You know what the church needs some help. We're building this church in Rome called St. Peter's Basilica and we need a lot of money to build this church
so in Rome called St. Peter's Basilica, and we need a lot of money to build this church.
So the church using her authority,
of binding and loosening can say,
if you donate to the building of the church in Rome,
St. Peter's Basilica, that, you know, sidebar,
for hundreds, hundreds of years,
anyone can come and enjoy beauty and pray there.
So it's not in building a Pope's private house.
You're building this incredible church
for the use of all of the church, as well as people outside the church. Okay, do you
can associate that and say, okay, if you donate to the building of this church, there's
an indulgence attached to that. What does that sound like? If you're skeptical, if you're
cynical, if you're maybe a little suspicious, what does that sound like? What sounds like
you're buying grace. You sound like you're buying an indulgence. The church is asking for
some money and if you give this money, you'll get this indulgence.
It sounds a lot like purchasing a spiritual good.
Yet we know that purchasing spiritual goods
is absolutely prohibited by the church and by scripture.
And so the church, when the church offered this,
did not think that, but you can imagine
how people saw it like that.
Does that make sense?
And so, there's didn't sell indulgences,
but it could look like from suspicious eyes
or skeptical eyes or cynical eyes.
Or for even those on the outside, it could look like,
and even a little bit on the inside,
it could maybe even feel like it feels like I'm,
if I give money to the church,
they're giving me this spiritual good.
Yet that was never the intention of the church.
The second part of this, second reason
why some people, non-Catholic Christians, would have beef with, we'll say like that, beef
with indulgences is this vision of salvation, this vision of justification and sanctification
that is once and for all, right? It's kind of one and done. Is that sense of that I've
been imputed righteousness? The God has simply
declared me righteous. And so no matter what I do, I don't grow in or lose my righteousness.
I don't grow in justification. I don't grow in sanctification. There are some people
who would say that that is the case. Now, others would not all non-Catholic Christians
think that. But some could say, no, it's one saved, always saved.
And because of that, you don't need indulgences. Because of that, listen, God has imputed his grace on
you. Now, as Catholics, we believe that we don't have this imputation of grace upon us. It's more
intrinsic. It's in us that we have to either cooperate with it or we refuse to cooperate with it.
That God gives us His grace. And yes, we either say yes to it on a regular basis and we
grow in His grace or we say no and we either stop growing or we fall away from God's grace.
Because of that, we need these gifts, right?
Because the church has given us the gifts of indulgence, the church has given us the
gifts of penances
that actually do some merit.
They actually do something in our lives.
Because of this, Jesus Christ, I believe,
has given us the sacrament of reconciliation,
the sacrament of penance.
That leads us to the last point.
The celebration of the sacrament of penance,
we went over the, how it goes, right?
You come into the confessional typically.
There's a greeting and blessing of the priest,
reading the word of God to like illuminate your conscience,
elicit contrition.
The confession itself, which acknowledges sins,
makes them known to the priest,
the acceptance of penance, and then the priest's absolution.
You know, in prayer of Thanksgiving and praise,
et cetera, you can see that in 1480.
I love the Byzantine liturgy, form of absolution.
So cool in 1481, you can go back and pray with that
if you ever want to.
But a couple of things, in 1482 to the end,
and I know we're getting along a little bit here,
1482 to the end, it talks about the fact that
there is a Sacramento reconciliation
that can take place in the framework of a communal celebration.
Basically, I don't know if you've ever been
to a a reconciliation service, right?
Where basically everyone comes at the same time,
and you, again, you do have that proclamation of the word. You do have maybe a homily that happens. You have
an examination of conscience. Everyone goes through and then everyone goes to individual
confession. The important part here is that it highlights the fact that, yeah, reconciliation
or second and a penance is illitergical action. Therefore, it's an ecclesial and public
action. That is not just here on Saturday afternoon,
one person goes into the box,
quote unquote, into the box with the priest.
That's also illitergical action.
That's also a ecclesial and public action.
But sometimes when we get together
all as a group, as a parish, as a family,
that we come together and go to confession together,
there's something really visibly powerful about that.
It highlights the fact that we are one, we are one body, we're one family, one parish.
It's this kind of a really cool thing.
At the same time, the church goes on to say in 1483 and 1484, goes on to say that only
in cases of grave necessity, you might be able to have communal celebration of reconciliation with general confession and general absolution.
That's where people just kind of all say, basically, we're all guilty, we're all guilty of all these sins, they don't name them necessarily individually, and then the priest gives general absolution to everyone gathered there.
That is only in cases of, it says grave necessity. And it says, it highlights that, yeah, grave necessity can happen when there's imminent
danger of death without sufficient time for the priests or priests to hear the penance
of confession.
Imagine D-Day.
And here it is, they just get announced, okay, this morning, we're getting on these
transports and going over to Europe.
And there's thousands of you soldiers and there are free priests.
Okay, that is the perfect example of the need for and the execution of general absolution.
That's perfect.
That's an example.
Graved necessity can also exist, it says here, when given them number of penitents, there
are not enough confessors to hear individual confessions properly in a reasonable time.
The penitents, through no fault of their own, would be deprived of the sacramental grace
of holy communion for a long time.
In that case, for the absolution to be valid, the faithful must have the intention
of individually confessing their grave sins
and the time required.
Now, the bishop is the only one who can judge
whether or not the conditions are required
for general confession,
for general absolution exist.
And so, like, okay, that makes sense
because we had a communal prayer service,
we had a gathering for like, Divimacy Sunday, and yeah, that makes sense because we had a communal prayer service. We had a gathering for like
Divinercy Sunday and
Yeah, there were only like two priests and there were a hundred people and so the at the priest just gave us general
Obsolution
The last line in 1483 says a large gathering of the faithful on the occasion of major feasts or pilgrimages does not
constitute a case of grave necessity so So the priest most likely does not
and would not have the authority
to offer a general absolution
and he would not be in the right
if you were to do that.
So keep that in mind.
It is incredibly, incredibly rare
whether to be general absolution happening.
If it's happening in your parish
that is one of the things like maybe
like just kind of ask your priest
if he's read paragraph 1483,
or I don't know, I don't wanna tell you what to do on that one,
but recognize that even if it's offered,
it's very, very rare.
It's only in cases of grave necessity.
And also, under the authority of the Dossess and Bishop,
he's the judge whether or not the conditions required
for general absolution actually exist.
Okay, you guys, wow, what a day. Holy smokes.
One of the longest days yet, but at the same time, what a gift, right?
We're part of the body of Christ.
The recognition that there are such things as indulgences and the church gives us access to those
those graces through prayer, fasting, almsgiving, uniting our prayer to the church,
recognizing that Jesus Christ established His church and gave her the authority to bind and to loose.
And we get to experience that treasury, the treasury of grace that God gives us every
time we approach the throne of his mercy.
This academic reconciliation tomorrow, we have nugget day, and then the next day we have
anointing of the sick, we keep on trucking along.
You guys, I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Micah. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.