The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 211: The One Priesthood of Christ
Episode Date: July 30, 2023The priesthood of the Old Covenant among the people of Israel is fulfilled in the one priesthood of Christ. The Catechism compares the Old Testament priesthood, “powerless to bring about salvation,�...�� with the ordained ministry in the New Covenant. Fr. Mike unpacks the reality that there is only one true priest—Jesus Christ. His “priests” on earth are humble ministers. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1539-1545. 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.
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Hi, my name is 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 a year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
in God's family as we journey together toward a heavenly home.
This is day 211, we're reading paragraphs 1539-1545 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 click follow or subscribe
on your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications. Today is day 211. We're reading
paragraphs 1539 to 1545 yesterday. We started talking about these last two sacraments, the
sacraments of service sacraments of location, sacraments of mission. You might want to
call them all of those things. The grounding for all of this, of course, is the fact that we've been initiated into the
body of Christ.
We've been brought into the family of God.
We've been transformed into God's sons and daughters through baptism, strengthened by
confirmation and fed by the Eucharist.
Of course, here we are, trying to live this out.
So yesterday we started talking about these two sacraments of mission, these sacraments of
service, called Holy Orders and Matrimony.
And yesterday we further talked about how Holy Orders is divided into essentially three
degrees, the Episcopate, which means bishops, the Presbyterate, priests, and the Deaconate
deacons.
And here we are today.
We're looking at how was that priesthood realized in the old covenant?
And how is it fulfilled in Jesus Christ?
That's a pretty straightforward today, which is pretty amazing.
But also, there's some beautiful prayers here, a prayer from the ordination of bishops,
a prayer from the ordination of priests, and the prayer from the ordination of deacons
that we're going to look at.
And then, of course, everything culminates.
Everything goes back to the Old Testament
because that's how God began calling his people
in the priesthood of the Levites.
Remember, it's a tribe of Levi.
But it gets fulfilled.
Everything gets fulfilled in Jesus
and in the establishment of His church.
So we're talking about that today.
As we launch into today,
let us throw ourselves into the Father's presence
and place ourselves in the Father's presence and place ourselves
in the Father's heart as we pray.
Father in heaven, we thank you and give you praise.
We ask that you please send your Holy Spirit to bless us.
Send your Holy Spirit to bless our local bishop.
Send your Holy Spirit to bless our universal bishop, the Pope.
We ask you to send your Holy Spirit to bless the priest who baptized us.
Every priest who has ever heard our confession had fed us with the Eucharist.
Every priest who's ever given us counsel,
every deacon who's ever served in our parishes
and served our families and served us individually.
We ask you to please, in this moment,
to bless all those priests who have died,
who have gone before us, bring them into your presence,
purify them with your love so that they may dwell
in your presence for all eternity. And we ask you to please bless us, Father. In the name of your Son Jesus Christ, by the power of your Holy Spirit,
help us to be holy. Help us to be yours. Help us to love the way you love. In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, amen. It is day 211, we are reading paragraphs 1539-1545.
The sacrament of Holy orders in the economy of salvation. The priesthood of the old covenant.
The chosen people was constituted by God as a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. But
within the people of Israel, God shows one of the twelve tribes that of Levi and set it apart for liturgical service.
God himself is its inheritance. A special right consecrated the beginnings of the priesthood of the old covenant.
The priests are appointed to act on behalf of men in relation to God, to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins. Instituted to proclaim the Word of God and to restore communion with God by sacrifices and
prayer, this priesthood nevertheless remains powerless to bring about salvation, needing
to repeat its sacrifices ceaselessly and being unable to achieve a definitive sanctification
which only the sacrifice of Christ would accomplish.
The liturgy of the church, however, sees in the priesthood of Aaron and the service of the Levites as in the institution of the seventy elders a pre-figuring of the ordained ministry
of the new covenant.
Thus in the Latin right, the church prays in the consecratory preface of the ordination
of bishops.
God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
By your gracious word, you have established the plan of your church. From
the beginning, you chose the descendants of Abraham to be your holy nation. You established
rulers and priests, and did not leave your sanctuary without ministers to serve you.
At the ordination of priests, the church prays, Lord Holy Father, when you had appointed
high priests to rule your people, you chose other men next to them in rank and dignity,
to be with them and to help them in their task.
You extended the spirit of Moses to 70 wise men.
You shared among the sons of Aaron the fullness of their father's power.
In the consecratory prayer for ordination of deacons,
the church confesses, Almighty God,
you make the church Christ's body grow to its full stature as a new and
greater temple.
You enrich it with every kind of grace and perfect it with a diversity of members to
serve the whole body in a wonderful pattern of unity.
You established a threefold ministry of worship and service for the glory of your name.
As ministers of your tabernacle, you chose the sons of Levi and gave them your blessing
as their everlasting inheritance.
The One priesthood of Christ.
Everything that the priesthood of the old covenant prefigured finds its fulfillment in Christ
Jesus, the One mediator between God and man.
The Christian tradition considers Melchizedek, priest of God most high, as a prefiguration
of the priesthood of Christ, the unique
high priest after the order of Malkizadek.
Holy, blameless, unstained. By a single offering, he is perfected for all time those who are
sanctified, that is by the unique sacrifice of the cross. The redemptive sacrifice of Christ
is unique, accomplished once for all. Yet it is made present in the Eucharistic sacrifice of the Church.
The same is true of the one priesthood of Christ.
It is made present through the ministerial priesthood without diminishing the uniqueness of Christ's
priesthood.
Only Christ is the true priest.
The others being only his ministers.
Alright, there we are, barragraphs.
15, 39 to 15, 45.
We have this going all the way back.
You know, if you are familiar with the Old Testament,
if you're familiar with the Bible in a year
or just with the Bible itself,
you recognize that here,
if you remember, from the very beginning,
where were the priests?
And now, obviously, we have,
I'm in the very, very beginning,
we have Cain and Abel, right?
In the first chapters of Genesis,
and what are Cain and Abel doing?
They're offering sacrifices.
Cain offers a sacrifice, Abel offers a sacrifice.
The sacrifice of Cain is not accepted.
Sacrifice Abel is accepted.
And so you see these people are,
they themselves are offering sacrifice.
They don't have a priesthood,
but really quickly after this,
a couple chapters after this,
we see Abram coming
back from the defeat of the kings. He finds this mysterious character named Melchizedek.
And in the very first chapters here of Genesis, I mean we're talking in chapter 14 of Genesis,
you have Melchizedek, and he is the king of Salem, and a priest of God most High. So,
Abram coming back from the again, from the defeat of the kings. He meets Melchizedek and on Mount
Moriah, Melchizedek, this mysterious priest and king, right? He's a priest king. He offers
a sacrifice of bread and wine on the top of Mount Moriah. And Abraham gives him a tenth
of everything. He blesses Abraham and Abraham gives him a tenth of everything. Now, later
on, he's mentioned in the book of Psalms,
he's also mentioned, most explicitly,
in the letter to the Hebrews, as being a unique kind of priest
because we recognize that the Jewish people understood,
well, let's go into this.
The here is Milky Zadek, King and Priest.
Right, so he, as the Hebrews says,
his priesthood is kind of a tunnel in some ways that it's not necessarily rooted
in genealogy.
The way that the Hebrew priesthood is Jewish priesthood is rooted in genealogy.
After this, it's so interesting.
Originally, the fathers of each family would be like the priest of the family.
So as an example, at the Passover, the father of the family would be the one who would
offer the sacrifice of the Lamb.
And yet what happens after the Passover?
What happens after the Passover is Jewish people are released from slavery in Egypt.
They go through the Red Sea, God saves them again and again, and then they get to Mount
Sinai, and Moses goes up to receive the Ten Commandments from the Lord Himself, comes down, and here,
the people are worshipping the Golden Calf, this false worship. Because of this, and because only the
tribe of Levi were the ones to fight against the people who were doing their worship, then it was that priest would only come from the tribe of Levi.
So it was rooted in, you know, I was a genealogy, a rooted in genetics.
It was rooted in that one family became okay.
That's the family we're priests come from. So even if you were of a different tribe, and you really really wanted to be a priest
It didn't matter because you were not of the tribe of Levi. That was super incredibly important. That became the new
new distinction.
Okay, keep this in mind.
Originally, the father of the family was the priest of the family.
That gets lost in some ways when it comes to the issue
with the golden calf.
And now it's only the Levitical priest to it.
It only comes from that tribe of Levi.
Now, both of those things are important
to understand because what happens in the New Covenant, well the New Covenant priests once again
are established as the fathers. That's one of the reasons we call them Father. One of the reasons
why only men can be priests, we'll talk about that in the days to come. But we recognize that
priesthood is rooted in Fatherhood. A later on, because of sin, priesthood is not just rooted in fatherhood, priesthood is
rooted in this Levitical priesthood.
So they were appointed to offer to act on behalf of men in relation to God to offer gifts
and sacrifices for sins, which could never be enough.
In fact, paragraph 1540 goes on to talk about this, that yes, they were instituted to proclaim the Word of God and restore communion with God by
sacrifices and prayer, yet this priesthood nevertheless remains powerless to bring about salvation.
Only the sacrifice of Christ would accomplish this, and yet we recognize that in the new covenant,
there is this connection between the new covenant priesthood and the old covenant priesthood, with the priesthood in Jesus Christ and the priesthood of the Levites or the
Levitical priesthood.
And this is all connected, this is all mixed together.
So originally, fatherhood, you also have this Levitical priesthood that's consecrated
for a certain purpose, a dedicated purpose to act on behalf of men in relation to God,
to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins.
You also have this priesthood of Malkizadak.
Remember, here is this priest of God most high.
Jesus is in some ways, he is the fulfillment of the fatherhood.
He's fulfillment of the living of priesthood
and he is the fulfillment of the order of Malkizadak
or the priesthood of Malkizadak.
In fact, again, Hebrews talks about this
and says that here is Jesus. He's a high priest after the order of Malkizadak. In fact, again, Hebrews talks about this and says that here is Jesus.
He's a high priest after the Order of Mikeshdek. He is holy, blameless, unstained,
and by a single offering, he is perfected for all time those who are sanctified, again,
that single offering being his unique sacrifice on the cross. And so here is Jesus who fulfills
all of these prefigurements of the old covenant priesthood, fatherhood, the physical priesthood, and the priesthood of Malkizadek
in Jesus Christ.
He fulfills all of it.
He is the one priest, and this is,
we're coming to an end here,
but this is kind of really important.
I run this camp in the summertime for junior high
and high school students,
and one of the things we'll do is we have like a three-year cycle,
and every third year, we talk about the mass.
We talk about like everything we've been talking about
during this whole section on the sacraments. and every third year, we talk about the mass. We talk about like everything we've been talking about
during this whole section on the sacraments.
At one point, I asked the junior high, high school students
how many priests are there in the world?
And of course, originally some of them are like,
I don't know, thousands or millions or something like that.
Hop a couple hundred, I don't know.
But then there's the one kid who always says,
one, there's only one, and that's exactly right.
How many priests are there?
There is one priest.
And this is so important for us to understand.
Paragraph 15.45 highlights this.
Just like how at the cross,
the redemptive sacrifice of Christ is unique.
It's accomplished once for all.
That has happened once.
Yet that same sacrifice, the redemptive sacrifice of Jesus
is made present at every mass, right? That same sacrifice, the redemptive sacrifice of Jesus, is made present at every
mass, right? That same sacrifice, once for all, is made present in the Eucharistic sacrifice
of the Church. Every time we celebrate the mass, we're not re-sacrificing Jesus. We're
really representing that one sacrifice, once for all. In the same way, Jesus is priesthood. There is one priesthood of Christ. There is one priest.
And yet that priesthood of Jesus is made present through the ministerial priesthood. So every
priest you meet, that's not another priest. That's someone who is participating in and making
present the one priesthood of Jesus Christ.
And it doesn't diminish the uniqueness of Christ's priesthood.
There's a quote, same time as Aquinas
building off of Hebrews chapter eight says,
only Christ is the true priest,
the others being only his ministers.
So if someone were to ask you, how many priests are there?
In the Catholic church,
how many priests are there in the world?
The answer is one.
There is one priest.
Jesus is the one great high priest.
There are many ministerial priests.
Those are people who, again, these ministers who participate in Christ priesthood.
And then, of course, there is kingdom priests.
All of us, everyone baptized, is called to participate in Christ's priesthood
in a very unique way as well.
Now, this is going to be highlighted in the next couple days.
And so, one of the things I want us all to keep in mind, remember we said
this yesterday the day before, not everyone gets to participate in holy orders, not everyone
gets to participate in the sacrament of matrimony, but all of us who have been baptized, we
are participating in the priesthood of Jesus. You get to participate. If you're a layperson,
you get to participate in the priesthood of Jesus in a unique way, that's the kingdom of priests, a nation,
a holy nation, a royal people,
people set apart for the Lord God.
If you're a priest listening to this,
a ministerial priest who are busy blessing me to this,
incredibly, you get to participate
in this priesthood of Jesus in a unique way as well.
And so the highlight of all of this is the more and more,
you and I exercise, either our kingdom priesthood
or the ministerial priesthood of Jesus.
The more and more we get to make present
the great high priesthood of Jesus.
The more you and I say yes to Christ in this way,
the more he is made present and the more he is made known.
It's one of the reasons I've said this before,
I'll say it again,, one of the reasons why
when we skip mass, we don't get the chance to exercise that priesthood.
When I show up, we exercise that priesthood and God is that much more glorified,
and the world is that much more sanctified.
When we're willing as kingdom priests to offer the pains of our day, to offer the joys
of our day, to offer our loves and our losses, to offer our tears, to offer our suffering
with the Lord, then we get to exercise that priesthood in union with the one unique priesthood
of Jesus Christ. This is not just the thing for the
past, this is a thing that is completely present right now in this moment. You are living,
right now in this moment. You are a living embodiment in some ways. You are living extension
of the priesthood of Jesus because of your baptism. And if you're, again, as you're listening to this, as a bishop, as a priest, or as a deacon,
you are in a unique way, that living extension
of the unique priesthood of Jesus.
Right now, in this moment.
And so to be able to just pray in this moment
and say, okay, God, use this moment then.
Let this moment be in a moment of sacrifice,
let this moment be in a moment of worship,
let this moment be a moment where you are glorified and the world is sanctified.
Because we get to participate in the one unique priesthood of Jesus.
I hope that makes sense.
I don't know, makes sense to me and it's just amazing.
Incredible.
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.