The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 234: Freedom and Responsibility (2024)
Episode Date: August 21, 2024The Catechism gives us an overview of what it means for humans to have freedom, as well as some of the ramifications of that freedom. It introduces us to the countercultural notion that true freedom i...s to choose the good—the “freedom” to choose evil is merely the abuse of freedom. Fr. Mike ensures that we understand imputability and culpability because questions about intention, ignorance, and other social factors will be the hinges upon which swing the doors of sin. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1730-1738. 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
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is day 234.
We were reading paragraphs 1730 to 1738.
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 a year reading plan by visiting
ascensionpress.com slash C I Y.
And you can click follow or subscribe to your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications because
you made it today today two three four day two hundred and thirty four we were
reading paragraph seventeen thirty seventeen thirty eight about man's
freedom yesterday we talked about that were made for beatitudes right we're
made for that fullness of blessing today we recognize that we've been given
freedom and and there's something so powerful about that because freedom comes with
Responsibility like what I know but but we have the capacity to choose good
We have the capacity to choose evil and because we have the capacity to do this
We have the responsibility to do this that makes sense the last couple days. We went through the entire article
Today, we're only gonna do a part of the article. We might call it a particle.
I don't know what I'm saying, but we're going to talk about the reality that because we're given
freedom, we have the responsibility to live like God. We have the responsibility to use that
freedom, to exercise that freedom by doing good, by choosing the good. That means we're responsible. I
know, I know, but what a great gift. Tomorrow we'll talk about human freedom
in the economy of salvation, like when it comes to freedom and sin and threats to
freedom, but today we're talking about that power we have, the capacity to choose
good or evil. And so because of that, because we need God's help, we need
God's grace, let us call upon him now in prayer. Father in heaven, we give you
thanks and praise and thank you again and thank you so much for your goodness.
Thank you so much for bringing us to this day, for bringing us to this moment.
Thank you for giving us an intellect to think. Thank you for giving us a will
that we can choose. Thank you for creating us an intellect to think thank you for giving us a will that we can choose
Thank you for creating us in your image and likeness and conferring on us this dignity and this power
Thank you for the power
To do good. Thank you for the power to choose the good
Help us to always always turn away from evil help us to always always turn towards you and in turning
towards you and experience that the attitude experience that blessing experience that fullness
that is you and that fullness that comes from choosing you give us this power because lord
we often find ourselves too weak to choose give Give us the power to do the right.
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 234, we are writing paragraphs 1730 to 1738.
Article 3. Man's Freedom.
God created man a rational being, conferring on him the dignity of a person who can initiate and control his own actions.
God willed that man should be left in the hand of his own counsel, so that he might
of his own accord seek his Creator and freely attain his full and blessed perfection by
cleaving to him.
St. Erneus wrote, Man is rational, and therefore like God.
He is created with free will and is master
over his acts.
Freedom and Responsibility
Freedom is the power rooted in reason and will, to act or not to act, to do this or
that, and so to perform deliberate actions on one's own responsibility. By free will,
one shapes one's own life. Human freedom is a force
for growth and maturity in truth and goodness. It attains its perfection when
directed toward God, our Beatitude. As long as freedom has not bound itself
definitively to its ultimate good, which is God, there is the possibility of
choosing between good and evil, and thus of growing in perfection or of failing
in sinning. This freedom characterizes properly human acts.
It is the basis of praise or blame, merit or reproach.
The more one does what is good, the freer one becomes.
There is no true freedom except in the service of what is good and just.
The choice to disobey and do evil is an abuse of freedom and leads to the slavery of sin.
Freedom makes man responsible for his acts to the extent that they are voluntary.
Progress in virtue, knowledge of the good, and accesis enhance the mastery of the will
over its acts.
Impudability and responsibility for an action can be diminished or even nullified by ignorance, inadvertence, duress, fear, habit,
inordinate attachments, and other psychological
or social factors.
Every act directly willed is imputable to its author.
Thus, the Lord asked Eve after the sin in the garden,
what is this that you have done?
He asked Cain the same question.
The prophet Nathan questioned David in the same way after he committed adultery with
the wife of Uriah and had him murdered.
An action can be indirectly voluntary when it results from negligence regarding something
one should have known or done, for example, an accident arising from ignorance of traffic
laws.
An effect can be tolerated without being willed by its agent, for instance, a mother's exhaustion
from tending her sick child.
A bad effect is not imputable if it was not willed either as an end or as a means of an
action, for example, a death a person incurs in aiding someone in danger.
For a bad effect to be imputable, it must be foreseeable and the agent must have the
possibility of avoiding it, as in the case of manslaughter caused by a drunken driver.
Freedom is exercised in relationship between human beings.
Every human person created in the image of God has the natural right to be recognized as a free and responsible being.
All owe to each other this duty of respect.
The right to the exercise of freedom, especially in moral and religious matters,
is an inalienable requirement of the dignity of the human person.
This right must be recognized and protected by civil authority within the limits of the common good
and public order." All right, there we have it. Paragraphs 1730 to 1738. I don't know if you guys
got jazzed up by that, but I definitely did. I love, this is just the concept, the reality,
that's just the concept,
because we live it every single day.
The reality that yes, we've been given an intellect
so we can know the good, we can know the true,
we can know the beautiful.
We also have been given this will,
and because we are rational beings with wills,
we have power, right?
We have the capacity to choose. We have freedom.
Now, so incredible.
I love even the definition of what freedom is.
Paragraph 1731, freedom is the power, right?
It's a capacity, it's an ability.
Freedom is the power rooted in reason and will, right?
Our intellects and our will to act or not to act,
to do this or that, and to sort of perform
deliberate actions on one's own responsibility.
That's the definition of freedom.
In fact, you could even make it simpler.
You could define freedom like this.
You could say freedom is not simply the ability to do whatever you want, but freedom is the
power to do what is right, right?
The power to do what you ought.
That is true freedom.
So freedom is the power to do what I ought.
Goes on to say this next line in 1731
is such an incredible, it says this,
very short sentence,
"'By free will, one shapes one's own life.'"
Please sit with that for the rest of the week.
"'By free will, one shapes one's own life.'"
There's this quote I came across as something like this,
that the child is the father of the man.
So what I'm trying to communicate is
Who we choose to be earlier on in life is who we ultimately end up becoming later in life, right?
So the child becomes the father of the man that the girl becomes the mother of the woman that
Does that make sense by free will one shapes one's own life?
That human freedom is a force for growth and maturity and truth and goodness and attains its perfection
when directed towards God or the attitude.
Now the question comes up sometimes,
paragraph 1732 answers it.
The question comes up, well,
if one of the God's gifts for us is freedom,
like the ability to choose right or wrong,
then what about heaven?
Now can you still sin in heaven?
And if you can't, doesn't that mean that
you're no longer free in heaven?
If you get to heaven and it's like,
yeah, there's no sin there.
Well, wait a second.
There's sin on earth because we have the capacity
to either say yes to God or say no to God.
So question, in heaven, are we not free anymore?
Great question, Camper.
So paragraph 1732 says, as long as freedom
has not bound itself definitively to its ultimate good, which is God, there is the
possibility of choosing between good and evil. And thus they're either growing in
perfection or failing in sinning. But there isn't that possibility in heaven.
Now does that mean we don't have freedom? No, it means our freedom has been
perfected. So if we bind ourselves definitively to God, that's heaven, right?
We're bound definitively to God, that we've chosen with our lives, God.
In heaven, we have perfect freedom.
Remember, freedom is not the ability to do whatever I want.
Freedom is the power to do what I ought, to actually have the capacity to say, that's
the good and I get to choose it and I
Choose it every time to know to know right and wrong and to say I choose the right every single time
That is true freedom
In fact paragraph 1733 goes on to point out the more one does what is good the freer one becomes
There is no true freedom except in the service of what is good and just that to sin sin is actually not to become free. To sin is to become a slave of sin.
And so in heaven you're completely free. In heaven
you become even freer, even more joyful because there's no true freedom except in the service
of what is good and just. Does that make sense? I hope it does because yes in heaven there is no sin But we're just completely free to be constantly choosing God
True the good and the beautiful to love each other and to love the Lord as we're supposed to so good and to not do that
Occasionally but to do that
perpetually rooted deeply in actual real true choice now
Because we have freedom, we have responsibility.
Per Gough, 1734 highlights this.
It says, freedom makes man responsible for his acts
to the extent that they are voluntary.
Now we recognize that responsibility for an action,
another word is culpability, right?
So imputability or responsibility,
culpability for an action,
can be diminished or even nullified.
If there are things like ignorance,
I didn't know what I was supposed to do
or I didn't know how to do it.
Inadvertence, I didn't mean to do this,
this was not my intention.
Duress is a thing that can affect culpability, right?
If I'm under duress, sometimes there's things that we do
out of fear or even habit.
Sometimes even inordinate attachments
or other psychological or social factors, they reduce our culpability. So again as it
says in 1735, we're gonna talk about this more later on, but responsibility for an
action can be diminished or even nullified by those factors. Yet every act
directly willed we are culpable for, that we are responsible for all those
actions. Remember that what is sin? Sin is God, I know what you want me to do,
I don't care, I'm gonna do what I wanna do.
So in order to have a sin,
I have to have knowledge that this is a sin
and I have to have freedom to be able to not choose it.
Right, so I have the intellect, I have the knowledge,
and I have the will.
So I have full knowledge and I have free will.
If that's been affected, right,
it could be diminished or nullified because
now I didn't know or I didn't mean to this now at the same time an action
paragraph 1736 can be indirectly voluntary when it results from
negligence regarding something I should have known or something I should have
done so it says example is for example an accident arising from ignorance of
traffic laws.
Like if you're driving, you should know the laws of the road.
Like I'm going through a school zone and I just,
I didn't know, I didn't pay attention to any of that.
But you're driving, therefore it's your job to pay attention.
So it's indirectly voluntary if there's an accident
because I should have been paying attention.
Does that make sense?
Always remember that in order for a person to be culpable or responsible for their actions, they have to have knowledge and will.
They have to know it and choose it. So paragraph 1737 highlights this. It says,
a bad effect, right, the consequence here is not imputable, a person is not culpable, if it was not willed as an end or as a means of an action.
So, example, a death a person end or as a means of an action.
So example, a death a person incurs
in aiding someone in danger.
You're trying to help someone and you die in the process.
Well, we don't call that suicide.
That is I was trying to help, I was trying to save lives
and in the process my life was ended, right?
In the process I died.
That's not the same thing as, as I said,
as ending one's own life on purpose.
Remember, for a bad effect to be imputable,
it must be foreseeable and the person, the agent,
the person choosing, must have the possibility
of avoiding it.
For me to be culpable of a bad effect,
it's be foreseeable and the agent has to have
the possibility of avoiding it.
And the example they give, as is the case
of manslaughter
caused by a drunken driver, you say, well, at the moment,
like I wasn't choosing, you know, in the moment
of drunkenness and driving, I wasn't,
didn't wanna hurt anybody.
Okay, but the moment I picked up the alcohol,
I'm opening myself up, the moment after drinking,
I'm now driving, that is foreseeable.
And that is preventable as well
So as we continue to move forward
Just keep these two things in mind because these are gonna be kind of like the the two hinges that the door is gonna swing on
always in order for someone to be culpable they need to have knowledge and
Free will right I need to I need to know the thing and I need to freely choose to do the thing
For both the praise and the blame right for both the merit or the reproach for both the thing and I need to freely choose to do the thing. For both the praise and the blame, right? For both the merit or the reproach,
for both the good and the bad,
I need to know and also choose.
So this is gonna keep this in mind
in freedom and responsibility.
When I'm looking at myself, my examinations of conscience,
I have to ask that question, okay, did I know it
or should I have known it?
Did I choose it or was there other factors
that were moving me and I did not I did not choose this freely now
And so that's part of what we do at the end of every day when we have that
Examination of conscience or that consciousness examine or we look at ourselves and say, okay
If I did this thing rightly or wrongly I chose good or I chose evil
Did I know and did I freely choose?
It's one of those pieces where we have to,
if we're gonna exercise our freedom,
we also have to be willing to take responsibility.
Does that make sense?
Oh man, these paragraphs, I had to tell you,
I don't know if you could tell in my voice all day today,
but I'm so excited about them,
but I have to say that in my excitement,
I don't know if it made any sense.
I honestly, you might just have to go back
and re-listen to the actual content
of what the Catechism says from paragraph 1730 to 1738,
because it's so good, and I just got all riled up about this,
and I just wanted to go nuts, and so I apologize
if today was, what is he saying?
You are a crazy man.
That might be the case, I totally understand but I also
Appreciate your grace. Thank you for your patience and your forgiveness and thank you for coming back tomorrow
I am praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless