The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 224: The Grace of the Sacrament of Marriage (2024)
Episode Date: August 11, 2024The grace of the Sacrament of Marriage provides husbands and wives the strength to love one another with supernatural, tender, and fruitful love. Fr. Mike covers the characteristics of the marriage bo...nd and the different roles of husbands and wives. He explains what it means to “be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ.” We also learn that indissolubility, faithfulness, and openness to fertility are requirements of conjugal love. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1638-1645. 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
Discussion (0)
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 224, we are reading paragraphs
1638 to 1645.
As always, I'm using the Ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes a Foundation
of the 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 and your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash C-I-Y.
Lastly, you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates
and delete notifications.
Today is day 224.
Today we're gonna talk about the effects
of the sacrament of matrimony.
Remember, there's always this section
in these seven sacraments where it's
what are the effects of the sacrament?
So what are the effects of baptism?
What does it actually do?
What are the effects of confirmation?
What does it actually do?
What does reconciliation do?
So today we're gonna talk about what are the effects of confirmation? What does it actually do? What does reconciliation do? So today we're going to talk about what are the
effects of the sacrament of matrimony. We're talking about the marriage bond, the
grace of the sacrament of matrimony. What is that grace? And also these kind of
important paragraphs 1643 to 1645. What are the goods and requirements of
conjugal love? We're just going to dip into the first three paragraphs there.
The goods and requirements of conjugal love. And so we're going to talk about all of those today in order to prepare our hearts
for big topics, personal topics, topics that are close to our hearts. We always need to ask God's
grace. We always need to ask for the grace and the help of the Holy Spirit to be able to say yes
to the Lord. So let's pray right now. Father in heaven, we give you thanks in the name of your
son Jesus Christ in praying in the power of the Holy Spirit
We ask that you please hear our prayer receive our hearts open our hearts and heal our hearts Lord God
There's so much in our lives and the cause is so much noise
so many things in our lives that can be
helpful distractions and so many things in our lives that can be
unhelpful or even destructive distractions
No, God, we ask you to please
Clear out those destructive distractions those things that take us away from what you want us to hear
Those things that take us away from what it is that you want us to do
Lord God, we ask you to please take away from our hearts all things that could rob our hearts
from love of you and love of our neighbor.
Take away from our lives all those things that could steal our hearts from you and could
cool our hearts from love of neighbor.
Lord God, I ask you on this day to please strengthen all of those couples that have
been called to the sacrament of Matthew, please strengthen them in in their love for each other strengthen them in their love for you all those couples right now in
this very moment that are struggling in their marriage struggling in their vocation we ask you
to please give them the grace of patience give them the grace of mercy give them the grace of
perseverance and give them the grace of hope. Remind them that their story is not over yet
and that there are miles to go but they don't have to walk them alone.
Lord God be with this entire community in this moment. Open our hearts and fill them with your
strength. 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 224, we're reading paragraphs 1638 to 1645.
The Effects of the Sacrament of Matrimony.
From a valid marriage arises a bond between the spouses, which by its very nature is perpetual
and exclusive. Furthermore, in a Christian marriage,
the spouses are strengthened and as it were,
consecrated for the duties and the dignity of their state
by a special sacrament.
The marriage bond.
The consent by which the spouses mutually give
and receive one another is sealed by God himself.
From their covenant arises an institution,
confirmed by the divine law, even in the eyes
of society. The covenant between the spouses is integrated into God's covenant with man.
Authentic married love is caught up into divine love.
Thus, the marriage bond has been established by God Himself in such a way that a marriage
concluded and consummated between baptized persons can never
be dissolved.
This bond, which results from the free human act of the spouses and their consummation
of the marriage, is a reality, henceforth irrevocable, and gives rise to a covenant
guaranteed by God's fidelity.
The Church does not have the power to contravene this disposition of divine wisdom.
The Grace of the Sacrament of Matrimony.
By reason of their state in life and of their order, Christian spouses have their own special
gifts in the people of God.
This grace proper to the Sacrament of Matrimony is intended to perfect the couple's love
and to strengthen their indissoluble unity.
By this grace, they help one another to attain holiness in their
married life and in welcoming and educating their children.
Christ is the source of this grace. Just as of old, God encountered His people with a
covenant of love and fidelity, so our Savior, the spouse of the Church, now encounters Christian
spouses through the sacrament of matrimony. Christ dwells with them, gives
them the strength to take up their crosses and so follow Him, to rise again after they
have fallen, to forgive one another, to bear one another's burdens, to be subject to
one another out of reverence for Christ, and to love one another with supernatural, tender,
and fruitful love. In the joys of their love and family life, he gives them here on earth a foretaste of the wedding feast of the Lamb.
As Tertullian once wrote,
How can I ever express the happiness of a marriage joined by the Church,
strengthened by an offering, sealed by a blessing,
announced by angels, and ratified by the Father?
How wonderful the bond between two believers, now one in hope, one in desire,
one in discipline, one in the same service!
They are both children of one Father
and servants of the same Master,
undivided in spirit and flesh,
truly two in one flesh.
Where the flesh is one,
one also is the Spirit.
Conjugal love involves a totality, in which all the elements of the person enter, appeal
of the body and instinct, power of feeling and affectivity, aspiration of the spirit
and of will.
It aims at a deeply personal unity, a unity that, beyond union in one flesh, leads to forming
one heart and soul. It demands indissolubility and faithfulness in definitive mutual giving,
and it is open to fertility. In a word, it is a question of the normal characteristics
of all natural conjugal love, but with a new significance which not only purifies and strengthens them,
but raises them to the extent of making them the expression of specifically Christian values.
The Unity and Indissolubility of Marriage.
The love of the spouses requires, of its very nature, the unity and indissolubility of the
spouses' community of persons, which embraces their entire life, so they are no longer two, but one flesh.
They are called to grow continually in their communion through day-to-day fidelity to their
marriage promise of total mutual self-giving.
This human communion is confirmed, purified, and completed by the communion in Jesus Christ,
given through the sacrament of matrimony.
It is deepened by lives of the common faith and by the Eucharist received together.
The unity of marriage, distinctly recognized by our Lord, is made clear in the equal personal dignity which must be accorded to man and wife in mutual and unreserved affection.
Polygamy is contrary to conjugal love, which is undivided and exclusive. Okay, there we have it, paragraphs 1638 to 1645. Wow,
there's so much beauty here and there's so much goodness, but also we recognize
there's so much challenge here as well. So, from the very beginning here, 1638,
from a valid marriage, there's a bond that's one of the effects
of sacrament matrimony.
There's a bond between the spouses,
which by its very nature is perpetual and exclusive, right?
It goes on and on and on.
It goes last until death, perpetual, and it's exclusive.
It is a bond that is only between the husband and wife.
That's why the very, very last note of this section
in paragraph 1645, the very last line,
talks about how polygamy is contrary to conjugal love, which is undivided and exclusive.
So it starts out by talking about, yes, it is perpetual and exclusive and it ends by
saying it is undivided and exclusive.
Very very important for all of us.
Going on to say, furthermore, in a Christian marriage, the spouses are strengthened and
as it were consecrated for the duties
and the dignity of their state by a special sacrament.
So we recognize that marriage on its own is not just a piece of paper.
It's not just a declaration of love.
Although you get a piece of paper and you've declared your love, those things exist.
What is it?
It is a special sacrament instituted by Christ that gives grace.
By that very sacrament, you have the grace to do what? It says in 1642 that Jesus is the source of this grace
but He dwells in them and does what? Gives them the strength to take up their crosses and so follow Him.
Remember, this is a sacrament of discipleship. It's a sacrament of following after Jesus. It's a sacrament of service, a vocation.
Okay, so what does Jesus call us to do? He says if you want to be my disciple,
deny yourself, pick up your cross and follow me.
And so every person, every couple who's entered into
a sacrament of matrimony, Christ dwells in them
and gives them the strength to take up their crosses
and follow him, which is amazing.
But also, we recognize that we don't do it perfectly,
so it goes on to say in 1642,
to rise again after they have fallen,
to forgive one another, to bear one another's burdens
Also to be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ
We'll talk about that in a second to love one another with supernatural tender and fruitful love
This is the the grace of the sacrament
This is the effects of the sacrament you have have a special strength, a special strength that comes from Jesus
to take up your cross and follow Jesus,
to rise again after you've fallen,
to forgive one another,
to bear one another's burdens,
to be subject to one another out of reference for Christ,
and also to love one another with a supernatural,
tender and fruitful love,
which is a high call.
It's what I'm saying, This gift is also a challenge. This grace also means
that you're gonna have to do things that are impossible for humans on their own,
right? Impossible for us to do on our own. Yes, marriage exists on the natural order,
but we're talking about the supernatural order of grace. Everyone who's listening to this, who has been married, you know that it requires supernatural
grace to be able to every day say yes to every day, take up your cross every day, rise again
after you've fallen to every day, forgive one another. And that call again is so huge and that call as we know is so important.
Now at the same time there is this call to be subject to one another out of reverence
for Christ.
That comes from St. Paul's letter to the Ephesians chapter 5 and it's so interesting,
it's fascinating.
Whenever you read St. Paul's letter to the Ephesians, specifically chapter 5, sometimes
people kind of cringe where it says, wives be submissive to your husbands and everything out of reverence for Christ and
There can be some elbows that are in the pews. There can be some eye rolls
There can be some hesitation in this in that sense of like, okay
What is it in us that hesitates when it says your wives submit to your husbands and everything as to the Lord?
What is it that's happening? Actually not just what's happening in us
But what do we think St. Paul is saying
when he says, wives, submit to your husbands
in all things as to the Lord?
Well, a couple things.
There is a recovery in some ways, I think,
of this notion that here is the husband
who is the head of the family,
and here is the wife who's invited to,
in fact, or as you might say, commanded to,
submit to her husband.
What does that really mean?
Well, I love the fact that the Catechism quotes the beginning of St. Paul's letter to Ephesians
chapter 5 verse 20, this section is verse 21, where he says actually the whole section begins
with St. Paul saying, be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ. So submit to one
another out of reverence for Christ. So husbands and wives both mutually
have this mutual call for submission.
And what is submission?
What is it to submit?
Well, it's to place yourself
under the mission of the other person.
And so this is why this is so important.
This is why from the outside, it can look very hostile,
it can look like tyranny.
From the inside, hopefully, hopefully from the inside,
it makes sense.
Why?
Because I will never submit myself.
I will never put myself under the mission of someone
I don't trust, right?
I would never put myself under the mission of someone
that I don't share their vision for the world,
I don't share their mission.
So St. Paul writing to spouses saying,
submit to one another out of reverence for Christ,
have this mutual submission.
It has, I think at
its basis a mutual trust first I mean honestly from the outside if you were
to say hey submit to one another out of reverence for Christ or from the outside
wives be submissive to your husbands and all things as to the Lord like wait a
second whoa that sounds way out of line but from the inside when you know I was
talking to a couple about this
just the other day and she, the bride was just like, yeah, you know, I really want to submit to
my future husband. I got to really, but she said, but it seems so interesting because I have some
Catholic family, some Catholic friends who they have this idea that he has to always lead and I
have to be kind of like a little church mouse kind of a situation. Like, okay, that's not, that's not
what scripture is saying here. That's not the invitation or the picture that the catechism is even painting right
here. The picture it's painting is one of mutual submission.
So basically I would say it like this is you submit to the other person because
you place yourself under their mission because you trust their mission,
because you trust them. But beyond that, you know,
it's so interesting because again and again,
you have a lot of Catholics who maybe,
or some other Christians, who will say that,
no, the husband, the father's the head of the house.
He's the leader, he's called to lead.
And so I'd say, okay, yeah, that's right.
And that is, again, recovering a biblical view
of what, of marriage.
But then they stop there.
They stop thinking in Christian terms. They stop thinking in Christian terms.
They stop thinking in biblical terms and think,
okay, so if the husband is the head of the house,
that means that he's in charge.
That means that what he says goes.
That means that he makes the big decisions.
That means that he'll go down the line.
He's like, wait a second, wait a second, wait a second.
You're just appealing to a Christian vision
of what it means to be a husband.
Okay, he's the leader, the head of the house.
But then you stop on the Christian vision of what it means to be a husband. Okay, he's the leader, the head of the house. But then you stop on the Christian vision
of what it is to lead.
The Christian vision for a husband and wife
is that husband is the head of the home, right?
Okay, head of the family.
He's the leader.
But then we have to also have,
what is the Christian vision for what it is to be the head?
What is the Christian vision for what it is to lead?
Jesus is the head of the church.
He leads, right?
What does it look like to be the head as Jesus?
What does it look like to lead as Jesus?
Is that dominating?
Is that being served?
Is that being weighted upon hand and foot?
Is that being the, okay, you guys, everyone stand back.
Dad's here, I'm making all the decisions.
I'm in charge now. No, no, no, no. The head, our okay, you guys, everyone stand back. Dad's here, I'm making all the decisions. I'm in charge now.
No, no, no, no.
The head, our head, Jesus Christ,
he races to the bottom, right?
His leadership is how can I be of service?
That's all it is.
He leads by laying down his life.
He doesn't lead by saying, okay, you do this
and you do that and you do this.
He doesn't lead by being the CEO of the family.
This is so important for us because for too many, gosh,
I don't want to be on a rant right now, but too many Catholics,
too many Christians have embraced this biblical idea that the father is the
head of the household,
but they've forgotten to also embrace the biblical idea of what it is to be the
head. To be the head is to be the crucified one.
To be the head is to be the one who lays down his life. To be the head is to be the crucified one. To be the head is to
be the one who lays down his life. To be the head is the one, as I said, who races to the
bottom and serves from the bottom. Jesus Christ said, Son of man did not come to be served
but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. Okay, so that's the big question.
Fathers, husbands, are you willing to be the head husbands Are you willing to be the head?
Are you willing to do that?
Because that's if we want to keep talking about st. Paul's letter to the Ephesians chapter 5. He does say that
St. Paul says yes wives submit to your husbands and all things as to the Lord husbands love your wives as Christ loved the church
Gave himself for her handing himself over for her.
That's the call right there.
The call is, how do I lead?
Okay, well, from the bottom.
How do I lead?
From the cross.
Does that make sense?
And that's a high call.
That is so high that it's,
I don't think we're able to do that
without the grace that comes from Jesus.
So praise the Lord that paragraph 1641 and 1642
exists because by the reason of the state in life and their order, Christian
spouses have their own special gifts and the people of God and this grace
proper to the sacrament of matrimony is intended to perfect the couple's love, to
let them love even more and more like Jesus Christ. Now I'm talking a lot about
the father here, I'm talking a lot about the husband here, I haven't mentioned
anything about the wife, but okay, what is
it to follow? To follow is not to be, like the bride said, to be that mouse. Like,
okay, but let's go back to this. What is the image of the body of Christ? The
body of Christ is active. So the head of the church, right, is active and serves. He
lays down his life for his body, for his bride, the church. And the church, right, is active and serves, he lays down his life for his body,
for his bride, the church.
And the church does what?
The church is in constant relationship with our head.
We're in constant relationship with our bridegroom.
The bride, the church is in constant relationship
with Jesus Christ.
And there's this back and forth.
The church, would you ever describe the church as a mouse?
Would you ever describe the church as being this,
you know, kind of small of small ineffective lacking in power
lacking in strength lacking in responsibility lacking in the strength
to move forward and bring the kingdom of God into the world no and in so many
ways right what Jesus is the bridegroom the church is the bride the husband is
the bridegroom the wife is the bride, and neither of them are
diminished by marriage. They both have the roles and the roles are complementary
and their roles go back and forth. They're dynamic and no one in this
relationship is the mouse. No one in this relationship is the weak one, but
they're a couple equal in dignity and given the source of grace Jesus Christ himself
hopefully this makes sense the last thing i'm talking about i know here i am going on another
rant paragraph 1643 talks about conjugal love so love of husband and wife in the sexual embrace
it requires a number of aspects and these aspects is that you know appeal of the body and instinct power of feeling and affectivity aspiration of spirit and will.
So everything from the bodily attraction to the aspiration of spirit and will, this is
so good, incredible, beautiful, but also it aims at a unity.
The unity is that demands into solubility and faithfulness in the definitive mutual giving and it's open to fertility.
So there's these, we call them the four marks of God's love. We'll talk about these eventually again,
but the four marks of God's love. God's love is always free, total, faithful and fruitful.
God enters into a covenant with us, it's always free. He's never coerced into it And that's one of the reasons why that free acts that free promise of love for each other is necessary for matrimony
It's free. It's total. It is definitive self-giving. That's I give you my whole self
It is faithful
You and none other
And it is fruitful. It is open to life open to fertility
and so it is fruitful. It is open to life, open to fertility. And so if a marriage has
aspects that are working or impeding this or working against this or if the
couple does not intend these four things, they aren't entering into marriage. It
has to be free, total, faithful and fruitful. At least an openness to all
four of those things. That's required for the Sacrament of Matrimony. Okay, you
guys, I feel like I've talked a lot today.
And so I kind of talk a lot every day, don't I?
Oh man, but here we are.
Again, tomorrow we're gonna talk about
the fidelity of conjugal love, that aspect of fidelity.
And we're gonna talk about openness to fertility,
all those aspects, as well as the domestic church
in days to come.
Like, what is it to raise a family?
Well, it's to form a little house church,
a little domestic church.
And so in the days to come, we'll be walking into that.
But today I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.