The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 239: The Formation of Conscience
Episode Date: August 27, 2023Together, with Fr. Mike, we unpack the formation of our conscience. Fr. Mike emphasizes that a well-formed conscience is one that is both “upright and truthful.” He also highlights the idea that a... well-formed intellect is vital to having a well-formed conscience. We cannot just say something is either right or wrong, we have to understand why we think that. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1783-1789. 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.
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in the 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 the 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 239.
We are reading paragraphs 1783 to 1789.
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,
any year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
You can also click follow or subscribe
on your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications today. It's going to be the day.
It's a second time I made that joke. I don't even know what the song is from the 1990s. Day 239
and it is 1783 to 1789. It even followed through on the joke. It's today is going to be the day I'm
going to make it back to you. Is that like, I don't know, it's a British band. I can't remember. Anyways, day 239. Good
and discreacious. We're talking about conscience. We've been talking about conscience for a
little bit now and we're going to continue to talk about the formation of conscience. In
the fact that we already said this before is that we have a right to act in conscience
and in freedom. So as to personally make moral decisions, that's what we have. No one
can force us to do something. And yet, conscience has to be formed.
It can't be forced, but it has to be formed.
It can't be coerced, but it has to be formed.
And so, what is it informed with?
It's informed with not only the intellectual formation.
Our conscience is also formed by personal formation.
What I mean by that is, we all know what it is to know the right thing, but to do the wrong
thing, right?
We know what it is to have the intellectual knowledge about this.
But conscience, remember, conscience is different.
It's distinct from simply intellect and distinct from simply will.
It's a whole kind of, I want to say, other thing.
And so, yes, conscience is a reasoned action, so it's intellectual.
But we realize this also action, meaning it's connected to the will.
Because of that, we recognize that the formation of conscience isn't merely
intellectual formation. It's also, you say, like, I don't know, moral formation, really in so many ways.
Because, again, let's go back to this. We're gonna say this a couple times today.
It is one thing to know the right thing to do, and it is another thing to do it.
For our conscience to be formed well, we have to be the kind of people who are formed
not only in knowing the good, but also choosing the good.
And so we're going to talk about that today as well as some other things.
The fact that education of conscience is a lifelong task and some other things like this.
Okay, in order to dive into today, hopefully this has been,
last couple days have been, hopefully a real big blessing,
but also maybe even a challenge.
And maybe that's even a good thing, right?
Sometimes I keep going back,
oh I'm sorry guys, you know, this is kind of a tough thing,
but maybe that's a good thing.
Maybe it's true that it is important for us
to do hard things and to face hard truths and hard teachings and actually
let the Holy Spirit not only console as we said before, but also let the Holy Spirit
convict.
And so we're going to pray for that grace today as we pray.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and we call upon your name.
We call upon the name of your son Jesus Christ.
We ask for your Holy Spirit to be sent upon us this day that we can truly know the good.
And our minds be formed, our intellects, our reasons,
be reason, be formed to the truth,
but also that our will is conformed to the good,
that also we have the strength to do the good,
not simply know the good, but to choose the good.
And so we ask you, please, Lord,
God, console our conscience where we need to be consoled, convict our conscience where
we need to be convicted and help us to become the kind of people that can live in this world,
this complicated and complex world like saints. And you're name we pray, amen. And the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and the Holy Spirit, amen. Today is 239. We are reading paragraphs 1783-1789.
The Formation of Conscience. Conscience must be informed and moral judgment enlightened. A well-afformed
conscience is upright and truthful. It formulates its judgments according to reason and conformity with
the true good, willed by the wisdom of the Creator.
The education of conscience is indispensable for human beings
who are subjected to negative influences,
attempted by sin to prefer their own judgment
and to reject authoritative teachings.
The education of the conscience is a lifelong task.
From the earliest years, it awakens the child
to the knowledge and practice of the interior law
recognized by conscience.
Prudent education teaches virtue.
It prevents or cures fear, selfishness, and pride.
Resentment arising from guilt and feelings of complacency, born of human weakness and
faults.
The education of the conscience guarantees freedom and engenders peace of heart.
In the formation of conscience, the word of God is the light for our path.
We must assimilate it in faith and prayer and put it into practice.
We must also examine our conscience before the Lord's cross.
We are assisted by the gifts of the Holy Spirit, aided by the witness or advice of others,
and guided by the authoritative teaching of the church.
To choose and accord with conscience.
Face with the moral choice.
Conscience can make either a right judgment in accordance with reason and the divine law,
or on the contrary, an erroneous judgment that departs from them.
Man is sometimes confronted by situations that make moral judgments less assured and decision difficult.
But he must always seriously seek what is right and good and discern the will of God expressed
in divine law.
To this purpose, man strives to interpret the data of experience and the signs of the
times assisted by the virtue of prudence, by the advice of competent people, and by the
help of the Holy Spirit and his gifts.
Some rules apply in every case.
One may never do evil so that good may result from it.
The golden rule, whatever you wish that men would do to you, do so to them.
Charity always proceeds by way of respect for one's neighbor and his conscience.
Thus, sinning against your brethren and wounding their conscience, you sin against Christ. Therefore, it is right not to do anything that makes your brother stumble.
Alright, there we have it, day 239 paragraphs, 1783 to 1789.
There is so much good in these brief paragraphs, and so let's just kind of go back and start at the very beginning.
Information of conscience. We say this, the conscience must be informed and moral judgment and
lightened. And what is immoral conscience like?
Well, it says this, it's upright and truthful.
And that's one of the things that we can even just stop right here and say, well,
that seems very, very obvious.
And yet at the same time, it's one of those, I think, truths that is so
obvious that we can pass over it without giving it its due attention.
So a well-formed conscience is upright and truthful
And we have to ask the question. I mean, I remember listening to a man who was talking about his examining his own self
He's he was examining his there's own way of thinking and his own way of acting in this world
And he said I started paying attention to what I was saying and he said a real is and this is a smart guy
This is an intelligent man and he's he's right
But he also wasn't paying attention to his conscience.
He wasn't paying attention to,
am I actually living what I believe is true?
Am I actually saying what I believe is true?
And in fact, he said, I started paying attention
to what I was saying.
And I realized that this massive percent of the day,
I was saying things that I didn't believe were true.
You know, and well from conscience is upright and truthful. Meaning, I only say what't believe were true. You know, and the will from conscience is upright and truthful, meaning I only say what
I believe is true.
Yet, let's go back to our daily lives.
How many times are in the course of a day?
Might we just go along with something, even though we know it's not true, know it's
not good, because it's just easy to go along, or we don't say something that we know would
need it to say, or we even say something we know is false.
Again, a well-formed conscience is upright and truthful, so there's this truth to it.
It goes on to say, it formulates its judgments according to reason.
Again, remember, we talked about our intellect.
Now, important, our intellectual formation is when it comes to our conscience.
So if it formulates a judgment according to reason,
one of the things we have to have to examine,
I have to ask ourselves the question of,
I think this is fine.
You know, think about any,
you can just say like hot button issue of the day.
You might say, well, I think that's fine.
Okay, great.
Why?
Or look at something and say, I think that's wrong.
Okay, great.
Why?
And if I can't give a reason,
why I think this is good,
or I can't give a reason why I think this is bad,
then how about this?
I don't have a reason.
That is not an example of a well-afformed conscience.
I think this is fine.
Why?
Because people should just be able to do what they want.
Well, that is a reason.
Here's the next question.
Is it a good reason?
Or I think it's bad because those people should be stopped,
whoever they are.
Okay, wait, why?
Again, with so many things that we could say
in the course of any given day, again, you and I,
we probably get into conversations with people all the time
where we offer our opinion, we offer our perspective,
and we say what we think is good, what we think is right,
or we think is bad and we think is wrong.
The great question to be able to always ask,
if I have a will-affirm conscience, is the question,
do I have a reason?
Why do I think this?
Why do I think that X is fine?
Why do I think that Y is bad?
I need to have a reason.
Next, I need to have a good reason.
Goes on to say, in conformity,
the so-it's formula to the conch is judgment,
so according to reason, in conformity
with the true good
wielded by the wisdom of the creator.
And so, we recognize that what is good?
What is the good that we've been created for?
And goes on, paragraph,
this is a telegraph, 1783, every sentence is gold, though.
You guys, I just think this is incredible.
It says the education of conscience is indispensable
for human beings who are subjected to negative influences. So this idea of the noble savage, right? You have
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and some other people who would say that, you know, left to ourselves, left
on our own, we would be just fine. That it's actually culture that corrupts us. And that on our own,
though, we'd be completely fine. Well, the church says, hmm, not so much. Now, there are corrupt
of influences. That's why it says, education of conscience is indispensable
for human beings who are subjected to negative influences,
but also means that we need to be educated,
we need to actually be formed.
Because without form, I think we have a form we have no shape,
I guess, without form we have no structure, fine.
Without form, without formation,
the native influences of the world around us
will continue to take us off our axis, right? Without form, without formation, the native influences of the world around us
will continue to take us off our axis, right?
Without formation, we won't be strong enough.
We just go with the tide, we just go with the flow.
And so we recognize that, no, we're not born noble savages,
where everything we want is automatically good.
We also are born with broken hearts
and again, dimmed intellects.
So the education of conscience,
formation of conscience is indispensable because, yes,
we have corruptible negative influences.
And we're tempted by sin, even in our own self.
We, it was says this,
tempted by sin to prefer their own judgment
and reject authoritative teachings.
I mean, does that not define or describe you and I,
you and me?
Doesn't that describe us?
Is that we're tempted by sin to prefer our own judgment?
I think this is okay, why?
Because I want to do it.
I mean, that's how many times we think,
oh, no, there's nothing wrong with that, why?
Because that's what I do.
Okay, let's stop.
We have to pause.
Remember, when it comes to the formation of conscience,
we formulate our judgments according to reason. always be willing and able to ask that question and answer that question, why?
I think this is okay, why?
I think this is wrong, why?
I know I've said that probably five times today, but I think, man, if we want to keep
it simple, that is one way to keep it simple.
Nagualanian paragraph 1784 says the education of conscience, lifelong task,
absolutely. From the earliest years, it awakens the child to the knowledge and practice of the interior law
recognized by conscience. Remember we talked about how conscience, you know, Romans chapter 1,
St. Paul says, yeah, there's written on the human heart, there's a right and wrong, there's a sense of
right and wrong written on the human heart. And the formation of conscience, education of conscience, awakens us to this knowledge and the practice of the interior law recognized by conscience.
And this is the thing, not just the knowledge, but the practice of the interior law. So I was
saying at the very beginning, the kind of the intro, we realize, yes, from conscience is formed
by reason, right? It's exercised by our will.
There are so many times when I know, I intellectually know this is the right thing to do, but my will
is not strong enough to do it.
In fact, I think it's CS Lewis, who gives some kind of example along those lines.
I'm not going to look it up.
I'm just going to give you my remembrance of it, my memory of this.
As he talks about, there, you could have someone who has been taught
all of the virtues, but raised by thieves. Like someone who's been taught, like, no, these
are what the virtues are, but they've been raised in a way that, no, you don't have to choose
those virtues, but you know all of them. That person could have incredible intellectual knowledge
of, here's what the good is, but they've been raised to basically operate according
to utility or operate according to preference rather than operating according to the true
good.
And here's what it says here in paragraph 1784.
It says this education awakens the child to knowledge and practice of the interior law
recognized by conscience.
What we have to every one of us has to do is, again, like we're doing now, which is,
I want to learn. I want to learn what the good is. I want to learn
what I need to choose. What virtue is? I want to learn what God's law tells me about
the right way to live. But also, every one of us, again, remember, this is not merely about
data transfer, but this is about transformation. That they're not just trying to information
transfer, but transformation. So it's not just I'm getting this intellectual formation
But as I'm getting this intellectual formation, how do I put this into practice?
How do I actually choose this with my very life?
We have to exercise both if we really want to have the education information of conscience now
I love what this ends goes on to say prudent education teaches virtue
It prevents or cures fear
In education teaches virtue, it prevents or cures fear.
So, it prude in education, like education in virtue of the conscience, formation of the conscience,
that I know the good, and I've actually been strengthened
to do it, it prevents or cures fear.
Cures selfishness or pride, resentment from arising from guilt,
in feelings of complacency, born of human weakness and faults.
I think
this line is worth taking to prayer, where it's worth reflecting on.
You're just realizing, oh my goodness, if I had a growth in virtue, again, this growth
in virtue, education and conscience would be, I know the good and I have the ability to
choose the good.
What would that do?
Well, there's so many things in our lives that cause us to fear,
that cause us to have resentment, that cause us to be selfish, to cause us to be prideful.
But if I, if you and I, if we knew the good and we chose it,
I think a lot of it in so many ways, we would experience what true freedom is.
I think a lot in so many ways, we would experience what true freedom is.
In so many ways, the things that scare us, the things that hold us back, the things that elevate us with false pride, or they fill us with this resentment arising from guilt,
they might even be cured.
And I think that is, it's worth it to realize,
weight to this education in our formation of conscience,
isn't just so that I feel bad about everything now.
Like again, that's sometimes we think that, sometimes we think that if I learn all the
moral laws and moral commandments from the Lord that now I'm just going to feel guilty
about everything.
Well, yes, that's true in as much as if I learned the commandments, but then didn't keep
them.
Yes, I would feel very guilty.
But if our education, information, and conscience would help us learn the good,
the true, the beautiful, and actually choose and live the true,
the good and the beautiful. How amazing would that be? It's
fact, the last line in paragraph 1784 says, the education of
conscience guarantees freedom and engenders peace of heart.
Again, that that's you and me. That's us. When we actually do what we
know is the right, a guarantees freedom and engenders peace of heart. And we get this education,
not only from our reason, not only from good arguments, but we have the philosophers who talk
about virtues and we have saints who talk about virtues, but the formation of conscience in the Word of God is light for our path.
Some of that, one-nineteen talks about that.
The Word of God is light for our path.
And I love how it says, we must also examine our conscience before the Lord's cross.
We must also examine our conscience before the Lord's cross.
What does that mean?
Well, here's what it means for me.
What it means is, in my life I recognize, maybe you can recognize this too.
I recognize that I can give myself a pass.
Well, that wasn't so bad.
Like whether there was that thought, that moment of jealousy, the moment of selfishness,
the moment of anger, whatever the thing was, moment of self-righteousness, think of all
the things we could choose in the course of any normal day.
Make okay, that wasn't so bad.
No big deal.
But examined before the Lord's cross,
say, oh, he put that to what love looks like.
Here is Jesus on the cross.
Here is God who actually deserves all of our honor,
all of our love.
He deserves all glory and more.
And here he is pouring himself out in love. Okay, so now my conscience needs to be examined before
that kind of love. Also, on the flip side, at the same time, at the same time, same side of the
or different side of the same coin, I examine my conscience which could convict and condemn me.
My own examination, my conscience could condemn me.
But examined in the light of the Lord's cross, I realize, but he took the condemnation
upon himself.
Here's, yeah, my sins, my guilt.
That condemns me, but his mercy frees me.
So we also have this.
We have this double a way that we examine our conscience before the Lord's cross.
All right, couple last things. To choose a chord with one's conscience,
paragraph 1786. It says this,
face with the moral choice, we can either make a right judgment
accordance with reason and divine law or in the contrary,
or only judgment. Right, we know we can do that.
Yet, paragraph 1787 highlights this, this reality.
It's not always simple. It's not always straightforward.
It's not always easy. He says, man is sometimes confronted by situations that make moral judgments less assured
and decision difficult. And that is true. We can find ourselves not only where it's complicated,
but also how to do the right thing in the situation would be very, very costly.
Yet we must always seriously seek what is right and good and discern the will of God expressed
in divine law.
So yes, we're going to find ourselves in a complicated world and complex decisions that are not always super easy and
Decisions that can become very very difficult and yet to this purpose. We strive to interpret the data of experience and the sign of the times
Assisted by the virtual prudence the vice of competent people help with the Holy Spirit and his gifts.
And yet we basically the church is saying yet we have to try and we're going to try this by the virtual prudence, the advice of competent people, the help of the Holy Spirit and his gifts.
And yet we basically, the church is saying,
yet we have to try, and we're gonna try this,
what we're doing, what?
By, we're formed by God,
the God of the light of God's law,
and the will of God expressed through the church,
and also interpret our experience.
As we grow in wisdom, we grow in experience,
hopefully we're growing in wisdom,
and then also the advice of competent people,
and the help of the Holy Spirit and his gifts.
And that is so key. We're going to continue to talk tomorrow about erroneous judgment. What is that?
When we make those, we make a wrong judgment of conscience. We make a wrong decision. At the same time,
we realize there are things that apply in every case. And these are the last three kind of like,
these are statements, these are essentially rules that are always true. They always apply in every case.
Number one, one may never do evil, so that good may result from it.
Always true.
Even in a complex world, one may never do evil, so that good may result from it.
Now, sorry, I know I said this would be the end, but let me give an example.
Sometimes people have this complicated, I actually remember, one of my sisters said, one
point, I said, okay, what about this?
What if there was someone who kidnapped all
every member of the family and you had it talking to me.
She said, and you had to shoot one of us.
So the rest of us will go.
That's what the kidnapper said.
That if you kill one of us, everyone else can go free.
And if you don't, then they're gonna kill all of us.
Which one would you choose?
And I remember thinking, is it because you think I'll choose you?
Like, no, I love you.
But I was like, I would choose nobody.
Said, then you'd be killing all of us.
No, that's not true.
The kidnapper would become the murderer.
Like, right, I wouldn't be killing any of you.
No, but if you killed one of us,
then everyone else would go free.
And I'll be like, yeah, but one may never do evil.
So the good may result from it.
I may never kill one of my siblings
so that my other siblings could live, right?
Because the evil action is on the murderer.
I'm not going to take that evil action upon myself even to save someone else, right?
Because that would always be wrong when I never do evil, so the good may result from it.
That's second rule, the golden rule.
Whatever you wish that men would do to you, do so to them.
And the third rule is this charity always proceeds by way of respect for one's neighbor
in his conscience.
Here's the quote from Matthew 7, verse 12.
This is the quote, thus, sinning against your brethren and wounding their conscience,
you sin against Christ, therefore, it is right not to do anything that makes your brother
stumble.
It's right not to do anything that makes your brother stumble.
That's called scandal.
We could actually cause our brothers, our sisters, our little ones to stumble.
We must never, ever do that.
I know it's a lot to ask, but at the same time, we have to be up to the challenge, and up
to the task because the Lord is calling us to this.
We can't do it on our own.
Remember, the keep church keeps saying, we do this by the Holy Spirit, by His grace, and
by growing in the gifts in life of the Spirit.
That's what this is all called.
It's called the life in Christ, life in the Spirit.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
you