The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 206: Healing the Sick
Episode Date: July 25, 2023By taking up our cross and following Christ, we gain a new way of seeing sickness and frailty. Along with this newness of vision, the Church is given the command from her founder to heal the sick. Sin...ce its beginning, the Church has anointed the sick among us, praying for their healing and salvation. Amid their sufferings, the suffering can endure, uniting themselves to Christ’s own afflictions for the sake of the Church. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1506-1513. 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 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 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
in God's families, we journey together to our Home This is Day 206, Reading Paragraphs 1506-1513.
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, I'm going fast this morning.
Wow!
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 in your podcast app for daily updates and daily
notifications. Today is day 206, we're reading paragraphs 15 to 16, 15, 13. Yesterday we talked
about illness and human life and the sick person before God, how Jesus Christ is the physician.
And also today we're moving on that Jesus invites His disciples to follow Him by taking up their
cross in their turn.
But also, Jesus gives out in the Holy Spirit a special carism of healing.
One of the reasons for healing, the miracles, the mighty works, were often accompanied
the proclamation of the gospel.
That if someone comes along and says, you know, we talked about this before many times, if Jesus himself comes along and says, I am God, people would say, well, okay, well, before I
believe you, you need to prove it. So the healings are not only in sign of God's love and care for
the poor, care for the sick, they're also signs that he is who he says he is. Similarly, he sends out
his apostles, right? He sends out his disciples and tells them to heal as well. Not only as a sign of his love and a sign of his care for all the people, but also as
a sign that the message, the message of the gospel is true.
And so that's going to be one of the signs.
And then we're going to talk today about the sacrament of the sick and how it actually
does the sacrament of the anointing of the sick actually get played out.
How it, as I played out, you know what I'm saying?
Oh, but how the sacrament of the anointing of the sick actually get played out. How does it play out? You know what I'm saying? Oh, but how the sacrament of the anointing of the sick gets preyed out.
Ha, see what I did there.
So let's in order to enter into the reading for today, paragraph 15, 06, 15, 13, let us call
upon our Heavenly Father in the name of Jesus Christ and pray in the power of the Holy Spirit
as we pray Father in heaven.
We love you and we know without without a doubt, that you love us.
We know that whether you heal us or whether you are just present to us in the midst of our
pain and midst of our suffering, we know that you love us.
Lord God, for all the moments when it's difficult, difficult to acknowledge this difficult
to accept your love as it is, difficult to accept your will.
Oh God, it's often as it is hard to not be healed.
We ask that you please come and meet us with your strength and meet us with your grace.
Help our hearts not to become hardened to you, but help our hearts to continue to melt
in your presence.
Help us always to trust you.
And I'll help us to never stay far from you,
especially when we need you the most.
In our woundedness, in our wickedness,
in our suffering, and in our sickness,
be with us this day and every day.
Help us choose you this day and every day. Help us choose you this day, in every day.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen, in the name of the Father, in of the Son, in of the Holy
Spirit, amen.
This is day 206, we are reading paragraphs 1506-1513.
Heal the Sick
Christ invites His disciples to follow Him by taking up their cross in their turn.
By following Him, they acquire a new outlook on illness and the sick.
Jesus associates them with his own life of poverty and service.
He makes them share in his ministry of compassion and healing.
So they went out and preached that men should repent, and they cast out many demons, and
anointed with oil many that were sick and healed them.
The risen Lord renews this mission, saying,
in my name, they will lay their hands on the sick
and they will recover and confirms it through the signs
that the church performs by invoking his name.
These signs demonstrate in a special way
that Jesus is truly God who saves.
The Holy Spirit gives to some a special carism of healing
so as to manifest the power of the grace of healing so as to make manifest the power
of the grace of the risen Lord.
But even the most intense prayers do not always obtain the healing of all illnesses.
Thus, St. Paul must learn from the Lord that, my grace is sufficient for you, for my power
is made perfect in weakness, and that the sufferings to be endured can mean that, in my flesh,
I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions,
for the sake of his body, that is, the Church. Heal the sick. The Church has received this
charge from the Lord and strives to carry it out by taking care of the sick, as well as by
accompanying them with her prayer of intercession. She believes in the life-giving presence of Christ,
the physician of souls and bodies. This presence is particularly active through
the sacraments, and in an altogether special way through the Eucharist, the bread that gives
eternal life and that Saint Paul suggests is connected with bodily health.
However, the Apostolic Church has its own right for the sick attested to by Saint James,
who wrote, Is any among you sick? Let him call for the elders, presbyters of the church, and let them pray over him,
anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord,
and the prayer of faith will save the sick man,
and the Lord will raise him up.
And if he has committed any sins, he will be forgiven."
Tradition is recognized in this right one of the seven sacraments.
A sacrament of the sick. The church believes and confesses that among the seven sacraments there is one especially intended
to strengthen those who are being tried by illness, the anointing of the sick.
The Council of Trent stated,
This sacred anointing of the sick was instituted by Christ our Lord as a true and proper sacrament
of the New Testament.
It is alluded to indeed by Mark, but is recommended to the faithful and promulgated by James, the Apostle and brother of the Lord.
From ancient times in the liturgical traditions of both East and West, we have testimonies to the practice of anointings of the sick with blessed oil.
Over the centuries, the anointing of the sick was conferred more and more exclusively on those at the point of death, because of this it received the name Xtreme Unction.
Notwithstanding this evolution, the liturgy has never failed to beg the Lord that the sick
person may recover his health if it would be conducive to a salvation.
The Apostolic Constitution, Sacram Uncionum in Femorum, following upon the Second Vatican
Council, established that henceforth, in the Roman right, the following should be observed.
The sacrament of anointing of the sick is given to those who are seriously ill by anointing
them on the forehead and hands with duly blessed oil, pressed from olives or from other plants
saying only once, through this holy anointing.
May the Lord in His love and mercy help you with the grace of the Holy Spirit.
May the Lord who frees you from sin save you and raise you up.
There we have it, day 206, paragraph 1506 to 1513. There are so many things just to highlight today.
Not only here's the context or here's the content of the sacrament of the Nointing of the Sick, that very end where we'll talk about that in a second, but just at the very beginning,
what happens?
Jesus Christ, 1506, invites His disciples to follow Him by taking up their cross in turn. Now, this is, Jesus has recast the vision. We talked about this yesterday, but Jesus has recast the vision
for the role of illness, the role of sickness. Now, I remember talking with a man years ago,
and he's a good man, really good man.
He was going through a lot of problems though.
He wasn't Catholic at the time, and he was experiencing a lot of, I guess, physical and
emotional, some mental illness, all these things.
And he was struggling because he was saying, okay, so I know the reasons for illness.
I know that God uses illness to correct us, right?
God uses illness to give us wisdom.
He gives us illness to make help us grow and maturity.
So God gives us illness and He allows us to experience these things
as a correction, right?
I'm living the wrong way and so God allows me to kind of get
what I've chosen in this life.
So I don't get what I've chosen in the next life.
So He allows me to experience the consequences of sin,
like, you know, suffering.
So that I can wake up and change my life.
Another one is, because he wants to mature us, right?
God wants to grow us in this understanding,
he wants to grow us in patience, wants to grow us in grace,
and the third reason that God wants to soften our hearts,
or he wants to, you know, give us,
make us more compassionate, more patient with others.
Like these were some things.
And so he was sharing with me that, he's like, well, you know,
I'm looking at my life and there's no real big change.
I can see God.
You know, I'm not living out of his will that I know of at least.
And he said, the next thing is I think I'm growing in this maturity
and trusting him more.
And also I'm growing compassion for the sufferings of others.
So there's no other thing that God can do or wants to do in this.
And coming from a Catholic perspective,
I was able to point out that Jesus does give a fourth,
essentially a fourth reason as it were for suffering
that he allows us to experience illness.
And that is because it's redemptive,
that we recognize that sometimes God doesn't take away the pain,
doesn't take away the sin.
And even St. Paul talks about this, right?
It's in paragraph 1508.
It says that St. Paul must learn.
Remember, St. Paul, he begged the Lord.
He said, I, how many times I came before the Lord and I begged him to take this thorn
in my side away from me.
And we don't know what that thorn in his side was,
but he begged the Lord to do it.
And instead, he didn't get the healing he wanted,
but he got the response from the Lord,
saying, who said, my grace is sufficient for you.
My grace is enough for you.
For my power is made perfect in weakness.
Even more, we recognize that St. Paul goes on to teach
not only the collotions, but also all of us.
He says, in my flesh, I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body that is the church.
Think what that. In my flesh, I complete what is lacking in Christ's sufferings for the sake of his body,
the church. No, jump out the second years ago. You wrote a encyclical called
Selvivichi Dolores, which is on human suffering. And he asks the question, wait a second.
So what's lacking in Christ's afflictions?
So like, what is lacking in the suffering of Jesus?
I don't know if you've ever thought, if you've ever come across this, Colossians chapter
one, verse 24, where St. Paul says, in my flesh, I complete what is lacking in the sufferings
of Christ.
So what's lacking in the sufferings of Christ?
What's lacking in Christ's afflictions?
The answer, jump hall gives, is nothing, nothing.
And this is Jeff Gavein's taught me this. He introduced me to solve it if he should do Loris where John Paul
teaches this. What's lacking in the surface of Christ? Nothing. Because John Paul goes on to say,
though, I'm paraphrasing, he says, but so that you and I might participate in the mystery of Christ's redemptive work of this world.
He extends to us a sliver of his cross so that you and I can be co-workers.
We can participate with Jesus in the salvation and redemption of the world.
So in my flesh, in your flesh, in our sufferings, we complete what is lacking in the suffering
of Christ, what's lacking?
Nothing.
But Jesus Christ, because He wants us to not only participate, He doesn't just want us to share in His glory.
He also wants us to share in His affliction. He doesn't just want us to share in His resurrection,
He wants us to share in His crucifixion. Why? Because He knows that not only, I mean, why is the big question,
and the answer is mystery. But there's many things that happen to us
as we carry that cross.
Maybe the most important is,
at the heart of it, we become more like him,
who didn't avoid his cross.
He didn't run away from his cross,
but he embraced his cross out of love for his father
and love for us.
And so we get to do that when we embrace our cross
with the heart of Jesus, our heart becomes more like him. When we embrace it out of love for us. And so we get to do that when we embrace our cross with the heart of Jesus,
our heart becomes more like Him. When we embrace it out of love for the Father, out of love
for our fellow man, we become like Him. And that's the entire point. Yes, God has extended
His grace to heal to the apostles and to the disciples and to Christians now. There
are some people, a charism of healing. Some people have a charism of healing.
That happens right now.
I don't know if you know this.
God still heals today.
There are people that God,
oh man, I've come into contact with people who have done this,
people who have been healed,
people who have been given that gift
of the ministry of healing, it's amazing.
But not everyone gets healed.
Everyone does have the opportunity though, to unite our
sufferings to Jesus. And sometimes again, why does God allow this to happen? Well, there's
a bunch of reasons. And one of those reasons is, as I said, you were dumped of suffering,
and there's the correction, there's the maturity, there's the softening of our hearts. I think there's something about all of this that, you know, my good pal, C.S. Lewis, he
had written about this in the book, The Problem of Pain.
You know, C.S. Lewis wrote three books on the mystery of suffering, the mystery of evil
in the world.
One was in essay.
He approached this from three different perspectives.
One is intellectually, the other is kind of imaginatively,
and the third is just gut punch emotionally.
And the intellectual approach was the problem of pain.
This essay, just breaking it down and saying,
what is this, how do we understand this intellectually?
The imaginative presentation of the problem of pain
or the mystery of evil and how God can use it
as redemptively is in a book called Till We Have Faces.
It's a novel, it's fiction, it's probably one of my favorite
novels of all time, Till We Have Faces.
And the third book, the one that processes grief,
processes suffering on a gut level is his personal journal
called A Grief Observed that he kept after his wife,
Joy, had died.
And that one is just, it's just, it's just really raw.
It's like, again, it's a gut punch.
But when C.S. Lewis was writing the problem of pain, he has this quote, and the quote is,
I think it's just, it's fascinating.
It might help us today before we move on to the heart of the 19 of the sick.
He says this.
He says, we can ignore even pleasure.
But pain insists upon being attended to.
God whispers to us in our pleasures,
speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains.
It is his megaphone to rouse a deaf world.
No doubt, pain as God's megaphone is a terrible instrument,
it may lead to final and
unrepented rebellion. But it gives the only opportunity the bad man may have for amendment. It
removes the veil. It plants the flag of truth within the fortress of the rebel soul. We talked
about this yesterday, how, you know, pain, suffering, illness, it reminds us that we're fine,
it reminds us that we're limited, It reminds us that we're limited.
It reminds us that this life will not go on forever.
And sometimes that's God's megaphone to rouse a drowsy and deaf world.
Now, the church does come and meet the sick.
We want the church.
We want the sick to not know that they're abandoned.
And so as I mentioned yesterday, too, the letter of St. James,
chapter 5, there's the heart of the sacrament of anointing of the sick, where St. James writes,
this is the Bible. It says, is any sick, are any among you sick? Let them call for the elders or
presbyters of the church, let them pray over them, anointing them with oil, the name of the Lord,
the prayer of faith will save the sick man, and the Lord will raise him up. If he committed any sins, he will be forgiven.
And that's one of the seven sacraments. And so what is this? It's a true and proper sacrament.
This is, remember, Jesus would reach out and touch the sick. He would come into contact
with the sick. And this is one of the ways Jesus extends his healing. He extends his
healing ministry where he reaches out through the body of Christ and touches
the sick through the anointing of the sick. And so we have this as it says, extreme
function. And so what happens, it's given to those who are seriously ill, we'll talk about that
tomorrow, they were given to those who are seriously ill by anointing them with the forehead on the
forehead and the hands with blessed oil, saying, only once that is holy andointing may the Lord and His love and mercy help with the grace
of the Holy Spirit, may the Lord of freezer from sin save you and raise you up.
You know, this is such an incredible, incredible grace.
If you've received the anointing of the sick, it is a gift to you.
If you've been there when your loved one has received the anointing of the sick, it
is so, so consoling and such a blessing, and I am so grateful to the Lord.
Not only for all the times that people I love
have received the anointing of the sick,
particularly at the hour of death,
just so grateful to the Lord,
but also grateful that the Lord has called me to be a priest
and has given me the ability to be there for many people.
And you know, my role as a college chaplain,
I don't do the anointing of the sick as often as
as some of my brother priests do.
But those men who just, well, in the middle of the night
at any time of the day, will just,
will leave their warm beds and go through the darkness,
go through the night, go through the cold,
to be at the bedside of any sick person.
I'm so humbled by my brother priests who
constantly and just with no regard for self. They show up. It's amazing. If you
ever received that sacrament of anointing of the sick or someone you love in
the middle of the night or in the most weird time. I'm just so grateful, right?
So I'm so grateful.
I'm not one of them.
I get, I'm only occasionally get to do
the pointing of the sick.
It's a grace every time.
I am an awe.
I am an awe and I am humbled by my brothers
who will continually show up.
And so let's pray for them.
I honestly, let's pray for those priests.
We get called on day and night.
And pray for all those who are sick.
So, especially those who suffer alone.
And just know that I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.