The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 204: Summary of Sacrament of Reconciliation
Episode Date: July 23, 2023In today’s nugget day, Fr. Mike reviews the major themes of the sacrament of Reconciliation. Fr. Mike emphasizes the six spiritual effects of this sacrament and reminds us of the great gift of Confe...ssion because, as the Catechism states, “to the eyes of faith, no evil is graver than sin.” We conclude today’s article with humble gratitude for God’s unfathomable mercy. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1485-1498. 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 in the 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 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 toward our Heavenly Home.
This is day 204. of the Catholic Church discovering our identity and God's family as we journey together toward a heavenly home.
This is day 204.
We are reading paragraphs 1485 to 1498.
Nuggets, and 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 Catholic Church.
You can also download your own Catechism in your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash C-I-Y.
And you can click follow or subscribe to our podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications today.
As I said, it is nuggets today from 1485 all the way to 1498.
We have nothing but nuggets today.
It is truly the whole chicken.
So we've been talking about the Sacramento reconciliation, the Sacramento independence,
the Sacramento confession for the last number of days.
Today's our final day before we launch in tomorrow to the anointing of the sick, the other
sacrament of healing.
And so as we do this recap, as we do this nugget review, let's just take a moment and call
upon the Lord.
We know this.
We know the goodness, the truth.
We know the beauty and the grace of God's forgiveness that comes to us in reconciliation,
that sacrament.
And so let's just let this be a review and let this be a thing that not only
illuminates our mind, but touches the depths of our hearts and actually even moves us by God's grace
to surrender ourselves and to submit our sins to the Lord to be forgiven. Let's pray now.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and glory. We thank you. We thank you for your love. You're unstoppable and unfailing love.
We thank you for your mercy that meets us in our misery.
Lord God, we have mercenary hearts
and you have a merciful heart.
And we ask that you please meet us in our brokenness
and meet us even in our resistance to grace,
whether that resistance be anger or frustration,
whether that resistance be self-contamination
or embarrassment, if that resistance is shame or is anger. I've got to ask you to please meet
every one of us wherever we are and bring us to your mercy, bring us to your grace and bring us
to your heart. We make this prayer in the mighty name of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, amen. It is day 204,
re-reading paragraphs 1485 to 1498. Nuggets. Here we go.
In brief. On the evening of that day, the first day of the week, Jesus showed himself to his
apostles. He breathed on them and said to them, receive the Holy Spirit.
If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven.
If you retain the sins of any, they are retained.
The forgiveness of sins committed after baptism is conferred by a particular sacrament called
the sacrament of conversion, confession, penance, or reconciliation.
The sinner wounds God's honor and love. His own human dignity as a man
called it to be a son of God and the spiritual well-being of the church, of which each Christian
ought to be a living stone. To the eyes of faith, no evil is graver than sin, and nothing has
worse consequences for sinners themselves, for the church, and for the whole world.
To return to communion with God after having lost it through sin is a process born of the
grace of God who is rich in mercy and solicitous for the salvation of men.
One must ask for this precious gift for oneself and for others.
The movement of return to God called conversion and repentance entails sorrow for and abhorrence of sins committed,
and the firm purpose of sinning no more in the future. Conversion touches the past and the future,
and is nourished by hope in God's mercy. The sacrament of penance is a whole,
consisting in three actions of the penitent and the priest's absolution. The penitent's acts
are repentance, confession, or disclosure of sins to the priest,
and the intention to make reparation and do works of reparation. Repentance, also called contrition,
must be inspired by motives that arise from faith. If repentance arises from love of charity for God,
it is called perfect contrition. If it is founded on other motives, it is called imperfect.
One who desires to obtain reconciliation with God
and with the church must confess to a priest
all the unconfessed grave sins he remembers
after having carefully examined his conscience.
The confession of venial faults
without being necessary in itself
is nevertheless strongly recommended by the church.
The confessor proposes the performance of certain acts of satisfaction or penance
to be performed by the penitent in order to repair the harm caused by sin
and to re-establish habits befitting a disciple of Christ.
Only priests who have received the faculty of absolving from the authority of the Church
can forgive sins in the name of Christ.
The spiritual effects of the sacrament of penance are
reconciliation with God by which the penitent recovers grace,
reconciliation with the church,
remission of the eternal punishment incurred by mortal sins,
remission at least in part of temporal punishments resulting
from sin, peace and serenity of conscience,
and spiritual consolation, an increase of spiritual strength
for the Christian battle.
Individual and integral confession of grave sins, followed by absolution, remains the only
ordinary means of reconciliation with God and with the Church.
Through indulgences, the faithful can obtain the remission of temporal punishment resulting
from sin for themselves, and also for the souls in purgatory.
There we have it, day 204, paragraph 1485-1498 that in brief those nuggets, as I said
beginning, we know this, this is something we've been praying about and learning about
for the last number of days.
But a couple things just to be reminded of.
When it comes to the big question, people continually ask, why do I have to go to a priest
for confession?
The answer is because that's how Jesus set it up.
That's how Jesus gave us this mystery of forgiveness, this mystery of reconciliation,
the ministry of reconciliation.
That's how He gave it to us.
As it's here in John chapter 20, verse 19, and then verses 22 and 23, that truth, that
historical fact that the Lord God Himself gave the ability, the authority
to forgive and to bind or retain at least sins to the apostles, and that passes on to their
successors. And that's just, that's how it goes. That's just, that's the gift. And again, how
we look at that reveals so much about our hearts. If I look at that and say, ah, gosh, why do I have
to do this kind of thing? I'll shock you, what the heck, this is so stupid,
I wish he didn't do this.
Verses, oh my goodness, Lord, thank you so much.
Thank you so much that I know you're a God of mercy.
I know you're a God of forgiveness.
I know that you're a God who's good.
You died for me, you lived for me,
you reigned in heaven to intercede, you know,
as it says, the sun sets right under the Father,
interceding for us.
I mean, that's how good God is.
And He also gives us this opportunity,
this place that you and I can go.
And we lay down our sins, we hand over our hearts
in humility, we surrender ourselves in confession.
And we receive mediated through that ministry
of the priests mediated through the church.
God's unfathomable and infinite mercy. Again, the two perspectives we could have about the fact that God
has established the Second World Reconciliation reveals a lot about our hearts. One is a heart,
I don't want to say it like this, but one is a heart of pride. A heart that says, I don't want to have to submit myself.
I don't want to have to surrender myself.
I don't want to have to be humble before another human being.
The other is a heart of gratitude.
Heart that says, I hate sin.
God, you love me.
And so thank you for giving me all of us this gift because that's the next piece.
1488.
That hatred of sin, 1488 highlights this,
and I just think it's worth all of us
to reflect on this more.
It says, to the eyes of faith,
no evil is gravor than sin.
And nothing has worse consequences for sinners themselves
for the church and for the whole world.
I think this is important to note,
because tomorrow we're going on
to the sacrament of the anointing of the sick.
We're gonna talk about what the role sickness has
in this world that, yes, God made a world
that was completely whole and intact and good,
and there was no sickness, there was no death,
there was no suffering, and then sin breaks the world.
Original sin, we now experience a lot of evil,
we experience a lot of suffering,
and not everyone gets healed.
Even though Jesus Christ is the healer,
he is the divine physician.
And the sacrament of anointing of the sick
is oriented towards healing.
We recognize that we have to understand,
we have to, we have to see with the eyes of faith,
that there is no graver evil than sin.
Yes, suffering and death, these are things
that God did not intend. These are not good.
But we have to remember that there is a worse evil than death. There is a worse evil than suffering.
There's a worse evil than many of the the evils that you and I go through and that evil is something you and I choose.
Sin.
Nothing is graver. There is no evil graver than sin and nothing as worse consequences for the sinners themselves for the church and for the whole world
We need that that mindset as we move forward tomorrow
And that's I just one of the things I really would really wanted to emphasize today because without that mindset
What we talk about when we talk about healing what we talk about when we talk about Jesus Christ entering into our lives and truly giving us
These sacrients of healing we're gonna think well, no, but if a person isn't physically healed,
then it doesn't really matter.
Again, we're gonna address those questions
and those issues later on.
But to set us up, well, I think it's important for us
to be reminded.
I'll say one more time, there is no evil,
graver than sin.
And nothing has worse consequences for sinners themselves
for the church and for the whole world than sin.
It's the worst thing in the world.
We also went on to talk about how this movement
of return to God called conversion,
it wasn't entailed, entails sorrow for
and a horns of sins committed like,
I'm sorry for this and I hate my sins,
the firm purpose of sinning no more in the future
and then revealing the sins.
To the place, and of course, in Absolution,
we get these graces.
We get, this get this amazing gift
that God gives us, what are the effects? There are six effects, six spiritual effects of the
Sacrament of Penance. Number one, because we didn't cover these in bullet form. This is the last
thing we're going to cover. The six bullets, it's like many nuggets in the nugget of 1496.
The six spiritual effects of the Sacrament of penance are. First, reconciliation with God,
which the penitent recovers grace, so good.
Two, reconciliation with the church.
Number three, remission of the eternal punishment
incurred by Moral Sense.
Remember that eternal punishment?
Hell?
That is, Jesus takes care of that, amazing.
So remission of that eternal punishment, due to sin.
Four, remission at least in part
of temporal punishments resulting from sin. So yes, we do penances, we have indulgences and
whatnot for the continued remission of temporal punishment, temporal consequences
due to sin, but confession itself also has that entailed. Number five, peace and
serenity of conscience and spiritual consolation. That's important because
some people will say, I went to confession, I didn't feel anything.
That's okay, I would say that's wonderful.
That is wonderful.
Be at peace with that.
Be at peace with the fact that I went to confession
and I didn't, I wasn't overwhelmed by any feelings
of serenity or any spiritual consolation.
I was just like, oh, okay, here we are. Wonderful.
That is a gift. Yet peace with that. In the sixth, a spiritual effect of sacrament of penance is
an increase of spiritual strength for the Christian battle. It gives us strength to move forward.
Just like the Eucharist not only feeds us and unites us closer and closer to Jesus Christ into
the church. It also helps us in the battle against sin.
Reconciliation. It fortifies us. It gives us an increase of spiritual strength for the Christian battle. And we absolutely, you and I, we need that. We need that. And we get it every time we ask
God for this. And that's an crazy thing. We get it every time we come before the Lord in the
sacraments or in prayer. He answers. He hears our prayers. And he answers our prayers right now.
I invite you, please pray for that spiritual strength to engage in the Christian battle.
Not sometimes I picture it like, I'll be the warrior out there,
let's we're going to do it. And sometimes it's like, okay, Lord, actually in the spiritual battle,
you're going to need to be my shield. You're going to need to defend me because I know
how weak I am. So please, give me that increase in spiritual strength to engage in spiritual
battle.
I am praying for you guys, please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike, I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.