The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 214: Priests and the Presbyterate (2024)
Episode Date: August 1, 2024The Catechism moves on from bishops—the episcopacy—to priests in the presbyterate, who share in the bishop’s ministry “in a subordinate degree”, to be “co-workers”. Fr. Mike dives deep i...nto the service-leadership that priests are called to. “[A priest’s] whole life must be configured and must be conformed to Jesus Christ the high priest.” Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1562-1568. 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. 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.
Transcript
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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
through 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 our heavenly home. This is day 214, we are reading paragraphs 1562
to 1568. I am using, as always, the Ascension edition of the Catechism which
includes a 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 a year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y
and you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates in daily notifications. Yesterday
we talked about the bishops, the episcopacy as it were. Today we're talking
about the presbyterate or the presbyteracy, the priesthood essentially
and tomorrow obviously you can see where we're going with this. Deacons, today we
recognize that here are the ordination of priests co-workers of the bishops
And so what is the role and say like this? What's the dignity of the priesthood meaning?
Like what is its most sacred character? That's we're talking about here
What's the most sacred character the special character of the priesthood and then in many ways like how are priests expected in some ways?
How are they expected to live and we talked about this a couple days ago that they're expected to exercise the
divinely given power in a way that they imitate Jesus in everything how did
Jesus live out this priesthood how did Jesus live out this this ministry in
this mission well you know he obviously, he spoke the truth powerfully.
He powerfully taught. Obviously, he bound up the sick. So he healed. He had this
this mission of sanctifying and making holy, making whole again. He had a
mission of establishing and leading people, right? Jesus from the very
beginning, he called people to himself and he led them. So like we said
yesterday with the office of bishop, this triple office, right? The trimary office. I don't know if that's going to catch on. The
triple office of the bishop, which is to sanctify, to teach and to govern. The priest also participates
in that. So remember, the priests are the coworkers of the bishops. And so they form a special kind of
unique kind of brotherhood in the church. And yet's that brotherhood for what is that ministry for?
It is at the service of the people of God that teaching that sanctifying that governing is always at the service of the people of God
For the glory of God the Father so as we're gonna talk about that today in paragraphs 1562 to 1568. Let's
Let's just call to mind not just call to mind. Let's call upon our Father in heaven Heaven by praying in the name of Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit, we pray, Father in Heaven.
Thank you.
Thank you for bringing us to this day.
Thank you for giving us the gift of your grace.
Thank you for continuing to bind up the weak.
Thank you for continuing to heal our wounds.
Thank you for continuing to forgive our sins.
Lord God, thank you for continuing to give us yourself in the Eucharist.
Pouring out your Holy Spirit upon us, whenever we pray, whenever we ask you Father for your
Holy Spirit, you hear the prayer of your children and you respond with love because you are
a good Father.
We ask you, in this day when we talk about priests, we ask you to please help these priests
be good fathers. Help these priests be good fathers
Help these priests be men after your own heart help them to govern to teach to sanctify in the way that you would
We ask you to please please bless our local priests
Make them holy
Help them where they need help strengthen them where they need strengthening heal them where they need healing
Forgive them of all their sins.
Lord God, help them to be the kind of men that we need.
Help them to be the priests that we need them to be.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
In the name of the Father, in the Son,
in the Holy Spirit, amen.
It is day 214, we are reading paragraphs 1562 to 1568.
The Ordination of Priests, Coworkers of the Bishops. Christ, whom the Father hallowed
and sent into the world, has, through His apostles, made their successors, the bishops
namely, sharers in His consecration and mission. And these in their turn, duly entrusted in
varying degrees degrees various members
of the Church with the office of their ministry. The function of the bishops' ministry was
handed over in a subordinate degree to priests, so that they might be appointed in the order
of the priesthood and be co-workers of the Episcopal order for the proper fulfillment
of the apostolic mission that had been entrusted to it by Christ.
Because it is joined with the Episcopal order, the office of priests shares in the authority
by which Christ himself builds up and sanctifies and rules his body.
Hence, the priesthood of priests, while presupposing the sacraments of initiation, is nevertheless
conferred by its own particular sacrament.
Through that sacrament, priests by the anointing of the Holy Spirit are signed
with a special character and so are configured to Christ the priest in such a way that they
are able to act in the person of Christ the head.
Whilst not having the supreme degree of the pontifical office, and notwithstanding the
fact that they depend on the bishops in the exercise of their own proper power, the priests
are for all that associated with them by reason of their own sacerdotal dignity.
And in virtue of the sacrament of Holy Orders, after the image of Christ, the Supreme and
Eternal Priest, they are consecrated in order to preach the gospel and shepherd the faithful
as well as to celebrate divine worship as true priests of the New Testament.
Through the sacrament of Holy Orders, priests share in the universal dimensions of the mission
that Christ entrusted to the Apostles.
The spiritual gift they have received in ordination prepares them not for a limited and restricted
mission, but for the fullest, in fact, the universal mission of salvation to the end
of the earth, prepared in spirit to preach the gospel everywhere. It is in the Eucharistic cult, or in the Eucharistic assembly of the faithful, Synaxis, that they
exercise in a supreme degree their sacred office.
There, acting in the person of Christ and proclaiming His mystery, they unite the votive
offerings of the faithful to the sacrifice of Christ their head, and in the sacrifice
of the Mass they make present again and apply until the coming of the Lord to the sacrifice of Christ their head. And in the sacrifice of the Mass, they make present again and apply until the coming of
the Lord, the unique sacrifice of the New Testament, that namely of Christ offering
Himself once for all, a spotless victim to the Father.
From this unique sacrifice, their whole priestly ministry draws its strength.
The priests, prudent cooperators of the Episcopal College and its support and instrument, called
to the service of the people of God, constitute together with their bishop, a unique sacerdotal
college, presbyterium, dedicated, it is true, to a variety of distinct duties.
In each local assembly of the faithful, they represent, in a certain sense, the bishop,
with whom they are associated in all trust and generosity.
In part, they take upon themselves his duties and solicitude and in their daily toils discharge
them.
Priests can exercise their ministry only in dependence on the bishop and in communion
with him.
The promise of obedience they make to the bishop at the moment of ordination and the
kiss of peace from him at the end of the ordination liturgy mean that the bishop considers them his co-workers,
his sons, his brothers, and his friends, and that they in return owe him love and obedience.
All priests who are constituted in the order of priesthood by the sacrament of order are
bound together by an intimate sacramental
brotherhood. But in a special way, they form one priestly body in the diocese to which
they are attached under their own bishop. The unity of the Presbyterium finds liturgical
expression in the custom of the presbyter's imposing hands after the bishop during the
rite of ordination. All right, there we are. Paragraphs 1562 to 1568.
Now, there's a lot of big words.
I get it.
There's a lot of things that if you've never been
to an ordination, you might be thinking,
sorry, what?
What is happening here?
I get it.
Let's go back to the very beginning.
I think this is so beautiful, so powerful.
Even if I wasn't a priest,
I'd be doing backflips over this
because this is the love of God the Father, this is love of God the Son, this is the love of God
poured out to us. That's what priests are supposed to be, that's what the bishop is supposed to be.
It's the love of God poured out for us. So what, why? Because Jesus wants us, he wants all of us
to be holy. Jesus wants all of us to come into contact with him and with the Father. He wants all of us to be filled with the Holy Spirit. Therefore, here is Jesus,
whom the Father hallowed and sent into the world. He has, through his apostles,
made their successors, the bishops namely, shares in his consecration and mission.
And so here are the bishops priests who are sent out into the world to extend
and continue the mission of Jesus, the ministry of Jesus, who wants all human
beings to know God the Father, wants all human beings to come into contact with the Father,
to have a relationship with the Father. And I think this is just so, so powerful. So moving on,
we recognize yes, bishops are the ones who share in the fullness of holy orders. They share in the
fullness of Christ's high priesthood. Also though, the priests,
nevertheless, they share their own particular sacrament, right? Through the sacrament,
that sacrament of holy orders, priest by the anointing of the Holy Spirit, they're assigned
with a special character and configured to Christ the priest in such a way that they also,
like we said yesterday with the bishop, are able to act in the person of Christ the head, right?
Remember, in persona Christi capetis, that's that term. Now, they don't have the supreme degree.
The bishops are the ones who share in that fullness
of the priesthood of Jesus Christ.
Nevertheless, they are given their own special,
what they call sacerdotal dignity.
So if you know Spanish, you know that sacerdote
is Spanish for priest.
And so you'd be like, oh yeah, sacerdotal,
makes sense, priest, got it. But if you don't know Spanish, know Spanish then you might saying sacerdotal dignity that doesn't make any sense. Well, it refers to priestly dignity
What does that mean? Well talks about in paragraph 1564 that in virtue of that sacrament of holy orders
The priests are consecrated in order to do what? To preach the gospel, to shepherd the faithful,
as well as to celebrate the divine worship
as true priests in the New Testament.
Let's go back to those.
They're consecrated to preach the gospel.
Oh, that sounds like teaching.
To shepherd the faithful, oh, that sounds like governing,
as well as to celebrate divine worship
as true priests in the New Testament.
That sounds like sanctifying.
Yes, you would be right, priest, prophet, and king.
That role that we recognize all Christians have
by the virtue of their baptism
and that the bishops have
by virtue of their ordination to the episcopacy,
priests also participate and share in the same role
of priest, prophet, and king,
of sanctifying, of preaching, and of governing, of leading.
And so in that leading, remember, keep in mind,
the leading is the lens of service.
Always the leading is through the lens of service.
Now, paragraphs 1565 and 1566 highlight a couple things.
The first thing in paragraph 1565,
that priests are called to preach,
just like St. Paul says, in season and out of season.
So they have this mission that goes goes on to say it's not
a limited and restricted mission. It's meant to, this ordination prepares them, it's meant to prepare
them for the fullest, in fact, universal mission of salvation to the ends of the earth, prepared in
the spirit to preach the gospel everywhere. And so this is something that that every priest needs
be reminded of, that that his mission that's been entrusted to him is to be lived out, to be carried out in season and out of season.
It needs to be carried out with his whole life. And not to be limited to just one area of his life, but his whole life must be configured and must be conformed to Jesus Christ, the high priest. And Jesus of course, the call for every Christian, right? All of us are called to conform our lives to Christ.
But there's this, again, this unique way
that we have to live out that mission with every breath.
We have to live out that mission every moment.
Now I'm saying that as a priest,
and I'm saying that as someone who doesn't do it.
I mean, I want to.
I recognize this is the high call,
one of the high calls that I fail to live up to,
but I want to because I hear it here,
and I hear the voice of Jesus in the scriptures and
In speaking to us through the church saying like that's the call so say yes to this. So here I am saying
Okay, guys, let's do this knowing that I need to do it myself paragraph 1566 also
Highlights the fact that here is member the office of sanctifying
It's in the Eucharist that the priests exercise in a supreme degree their sacred office.
So what are they doing?
They're acting in the person of Christ
and proclaiming his mystery.
They're uniting the offerings of the faithful
to the sacrifice of Christ their head.
And in the sacrifice of the mass,
they make present again and apply
until the coming of the Lord,
the unique sacrifice of the New Testament.
Jesus himself offering himself once for all
as that spotless victim to the Father.
And that is so powerful.
This is this, ah man, the great mission.
And what's basically what it is,
is what's happening at every Mass.
When you show up for Mass and participate,
you're offering yourself, remember,
because you participated in the priesthood of Jesus as well,
the baptismal priesthood, the kingdom priesthood.
So the ministerial priest, he's acting, he's uniting your offering of the
faithful to the sacrifice of Jesus himself. And once again, how Jesus sacrificed his body and blood,
soul, divinity, that action of his offering himself is once again presented and offered to the Father.
He's offering not only Jesus, he's offering himself and he's offering you to the Father, he's offering not only Jesus, he's offering himself and he's offering you
to the Father in the power of the Holy Spirit with Jesus Christ, the great sacrifice, right?
And once for all, oh my gosh, it's so incredible. And here's how important this has to be. Here's
how essential this has to be in a priest's life. It says that last sentence, from this unique
sacrifice, their whole priestly ministry draws its strength.
Basically from offering Mass on a daily basis, their whole priestly ministry draws its strength.
What's at the heart of the priesthood? What's at the heart of the priesthood is the priestly heart of Jesus.
Who offers himself to the Father in the power of the Holy Spirit, who brings his people
and includes them in this sacrifice, in this offering. So incredible. Now as we know
the priest doesn't do this on his own. That he does this in union with his
bishop. He does this independence, not independence, but depending on his bishop
and in communion with his bishop. And I don't know if you've ever been,
again, I've been mentioned earlier,
to an ordination, priestly ordination.
There is this promise,
actually even at the diaconate ordination,
the promise of obedience they make to the bishop,
the moment of ordination.
There is this moment where you place your hands together
like you're praying,
and then the bishop takes your hands in his,
and he says, do you promise obedience
to me and my successors?
And I do is the answer to that question.
The promise of obedience, and at the end,
there's this sign of peace, this embrace typically.
This is so powerful, I love this,
at the last sentence in paragraph 1567,
it says that promise of obedience and the sign of peace,
it says kiss of peace, but it was an embrace,
there was no kissing.
The sign of peace from him at the end of the ordination liturgy, what does it mean?
It means that the bishop considers him, considers them, his co-workers, his sons, his brothers
and his friends.
And that they in return owe him love and obedience.
That what is being said here in the catechism is that, yep, there's a hierarchy here, but
it's not meant to be a business.
It's not, yeah, there's a structure here, but it's not meant to be some sterile, antiseptic
kind of a situation.
This is a family.
This is the family of God.
And so the bishop, yep, considers his priests, his coworkers, their coworkers in the vineyard,
also his sons, because he's a spiritual father to them, also brothers because we can we share in this priestly ministry and his friends. You
know what did Jesus say? Jesus who's so high above all the rest of us, I mean
infinitely high above us. Jesus is God himself speaking to human beings and he
says I no longer call you slaves because a slave does not know what his master is
about. I've called you friends. Called you friends.
And the bishop is to consider his priests his friends.
In that way that Jesus considered his disciples his friends
and it's something so powerful.
And then in return, we owe him love and obedience.
It's remarkable.
Now there's also a brotherhood in the priesthood
and that sometimes manifests itself
in really, really great ways. And that sometimes manifests itself in in really really great ways and sometimes just
Manifest itself in really thin ways
There are some dioceses that have such a massive and powerful fraternity this collection of brothers
They're bound by an intimate sacramental brotherhood, but also they have a unique even personal brotherhood some diocese again
As I said, we're just thinner. They're not it's not like the brotherhood doesn't exist but
Because it's always it's a unique. It's a mysterious. It's a sacramental brotherhood
But sometimes there's not that emotional brotherhood and so there's some priests were out there who you know
They might find themselves alone. They might find themselves out in the field and and without without brothers. I
Mean they have them but they might not you know be able to be in
Relationship with those brothers being brotherhood with those brothers
So we pray for those those priests especially we pray for those who
You know, it says from the Eucharist that's do you sacrifice the mass their whole priestly ministry draws its strength pray for those
Those priests who have have lost their fire lost their love for Jesus in the Eucharist those who have lost their love for our lady
Those who have lost their love for God's people.
We pray for them right now
because that's not what God wants for any of them.
That's not what God wants for any of us.
And yet we're one family, we're one body,
and we all have different parts.
We're different members of this body,
but we need each other.
And so let's, yeah, pray to God for those great priests
who you've had in your life.
Pray to God that they continue to be great
Priests that those who've started well end well
We also pray for those who have started poorly or have lived poorly we pray for them
To be strengthened with faith hope and love we pray for them to be renewed to pray for them
He brought back to the heart of the father
they may fall in love with God once again in love with the Eucharist and love with the people of God in love with the
sacrament of Confession,
and that they walk in the fear of the Lord
every day of their life.
Let's pray for those priests.
I'm praying for you, and please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.