The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 244: The Virtue of Charity
Episode Date: September 1, 2023The greatest of all the theological virtues is charity. Fr. Mike explains that charity, or love, is to love God above all things for his own sake and to love our neighbor as ourselves. This includes l...oving our enemies and also obeying God's commandments, two actions that are not always easy. Most importantly, today's readings remind us that true charity is not loving the Father as servants in fear or as mercenaries looking for a reward but rather as his beloved children responding to him who "first loved us." Today's readings are Catechism paragraphs 1822-1829. 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 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 our heavenly home,
this is day 244, we are reading paragraphs 1822,
1829, 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
on your podcast app for daily updates
and daily notifications because today it's day 244.
As I said, we were reading paragraphs 1822 to 1829.
Yesterday we talked about the virtue of hope
before that we talked about the virtue of faith.
So guess what class we are talking about?
Virtue of charity, one thing right off the bat.
I think it's worth acknowledging that charity is love
but it's a very particular kind of love.
In paragraph 1822, it says,
charity is the theological virtue by which we love God above all things for his own sake
and our neighbor as ourselves for the love of God.
So as we launch into love, as we launch into charity,
let's call upon the God of love and that triune God, the Trinity Father, Son, Holy Spirit,
and ask Him to be with us to give
us His Holy Spirit, to give us His blessing, to give us His love in this moment. We pray, Father,
in heaven, we know that you are love. We know that you are the fullness of everything that we
desire. We know that you're the source of all love. That none of us can actually love without you
because you are love. In this moment, Lord God, we ask You to send Your Holy Spirit of charity, your Holy Spirit of love into our hearts that we can love you
above all things, that we can love our neighbor as ourselves, and that even we have the ability
the power, the virtue to be able to love ourselves because, Lord God, until we love you, until
we love ourselves, we can never love our neighbor. We definitely can't love our enemy.
So God, help us.
Help us to love you.
Help us to love ourselves.
Help us to love our friends and family, our neighbors.
And even Lord, help us to love our enemies.
Help us to love those who have hurt us.
Give us this power now.
And always we pray in the name of the Father, in the Son, in the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
It is day 244. We are reading paragraphs 18-22 to 18-29.
Charity.
Charity is the theological virtue by which we love God
above all things for his own sake,
and our neighbor as ourselves for the love of God.
Jesus makes charity the new commandment.
By loving his own to the end,
he makes manifest the Father's love which He receives.
By loving one another, the disciples imitate the love of Jesus which they themselves receive.
When Jesus says,
As the Father has loved me,
So have I loved you, abide in my love.
And again, this is my commandment,
That you love one another, is I have loved you.
Fruit of the Spirit and fullness of the law, This is my commandment, that you love one another, as I have loved you.
Fruit of the Spirit and fullness of the law, charity keeps the commandments of God and
His Christ.
Jesus said, abide in my love.
If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love.
Christ died out of love for us while we were still enemies.
The Lord asks us to love as He does, even our enemies,
to make ourselves the neighbor of those farthest away, and to love children and the poor as Christ Himself.
The Apostle Paul has given an incomparable depiction of charity. Charity is patient and kind.
Charity is not jealous or boastful. It is not arrogant or rude. Charity does not insist on its own way.
It is not irritable or resentful.
It does not rejoice at wrong, but rejoices in the right."
Charity bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.
If I have not charity, says the Apostle, I am nothing.
Whatever my privilege, service, or even virtue, if I have not charity, says the Apostle, I am nothing. Whatever my privilege, service, or even virtue,
if I have not charity, I gain nothing. Charity is superior to all the virtues. It is the
first of the theological virtues." As St. Paul wrote, so faith, hope, charity, abide
these three. But the greatest of these is charity.
The practice of all the virtues is animated and inspired by charity, which binds everything
together in perfect harmony.
It is the form of the virtues.
It articulates and orders them among themselves.
It is the source and the goal of their Christian practice.
Charity upholds and purifies our human ability to love and raises it to the supernatural perfection
of divine love.
The practice of the moral life animated by charity gives to the Christian the spiritual freedom
of the children of God.
He no longer stands before God as a slave in Surval fear or as a mercenary looking for
wages, but as a son responding to the love of him who first loved us.
St. Basil the Great wrote, "...If we turn away from evil out of fear of punishment, we are in the position of slaves.
If we pursue the enticement of wages, we resemble mercenaries.
Finally, if we obey for the sake of the good itself and out of love for him who commands,
we are in the position of children."
The fruits of charity are joy, peace, and mercy.
Charity demands beneficence and fraternal correction.
It is benevolence.
It fosters reciprocity and remains disinterested and generous.
It is friendship and communion.
St. Augustine wrote,
"'Love is itself the fulfillment of all our works.
There is the goal.
That is why we run. We run toward it, and once we reach it, in it, we shall find rest.
Alright, and there we have it. Day 244 paragraphs 18 to 22, 1829. All about love, all about charity.
And let's just go back to the definition that we're given at the very beginning of this paragraph, 1822.
definition that we're given at the very beginning of this paragraph 1822. Charity is the theological virtue. We remember we had the cardinal virtues, the human virtues,
justice, prudence, temperance, fortitude, and now we have these three theological virtues,
Faith, Hope, and the greatest of these. Love. So here we are. Charity is the theological virtue,
by which we love God of all things for his own sake and our neighbor as ourselves for the love of
God. Now, we're going to get to the last couple paragraphs of this section in just a second, because
as you probably noted, the next couple paragraphs just unfold that Jesus makes this charity
the New Commandment.
Jesus makes love the New Commandment.
So remember, he's asked, what are the greatest of all the commandments?
And Jesus makes it very, very clear.
All paraphrase, love God with everything you have, and love your neighbor as yourself.
And so this is very important, not only that, but love is the fulfillment of the commandments.
In fact, love and command, this is man, gosh, this is so important for us to understand.
I mean, you've already interiorized this, maybe you've heard this before, but have we
really, have we really taken it in?
We recognize there are a couple of things that indicate whether or not love is present and scripture gives them to us
So I believe it's John the beloved in one of his letters. He writes he says how can we love God the God?
We do not see if we do not love the brother we do see so taking care of those around us that is it's a sign
That we are loving God. So if I how do I know if I love God or not? Well, one of them is am I loving my neighbor? Am I even striving to love my neighbor?
The other here, Jesus makes it so critically clear,
here in paragraph 1823, when he says,
this is my commandment that you love one another,
is I have loved you, he even goes on to say,
abide in my love, if you keep my commandments,
you will abide in my love.
Jesus makes a very, very clear connection
between obeying his commandments,
obeying the commandments of God and loving God
and loving him.
So if I want to have a personal relationship with Jesus,
that's a great phrase, that's a great term,
that's a great way to express what we want to have.
If I want to have a personal relationship with Jesus,
I must strive to obey what he has said.
I must strive to obey the commandments.
And this is just, it's not optional, right?
It is a sign and it's not optional, right?
It is a sign and it's a way, right?
It's a sign of our love for God and it's a way that we love God.
If you love me, you will keep my commandments.
If you don't love me, you will not.
I mean, that's essentially what we're going in.
And of course, none of us are perfect, but to strive, to realize, I can't just love God
in my desires or my affections.
I have to actually love God in my actions.
This is so, so critical in these couple of ways.
One, how can I say, I love the God, I do not see.
Or how can I say, I love the God, I do not see.
If I do not love the brother, I do see.
Okay, that's important.
But also, if you love me, you'll keep my commandments.
We have to strive to obey the Lord's commandments.
That's one of the reasons why we have this third pillar
of the Catechism.
Okay, so love is not this kind of way out in the ether.
Love is not just in the heart.
Love has to.
It must.
It must be translated into action, right?
So we have affection, right, with an A. And that's affective love.
I love affective love.
I love affection.
I love feeling like I love God.
100% so good.
But what God is calling us to is effective love with an E.
An effective love is love that moves, it's love that acts, it's love that isn't just in the
affection, it's not just in my heart, it's not just in my emotions or my feelings, it is in my
actions, it's in my life, and so that's so so important. That's again, one of the reasons why
that church gives us this third pillar, it's life in Christ, how to actually live in Christ.
Well, one love.
Okay, love and do what?
Well, love and do what you will,
but if you love God, you want to do what he's asked.
Okay, now, it goes even further,
and this is the massive challenge.
In fact, this is the challenge that,
I don't wanna speak for you,
I may be for anyone else.
I, I, maybe like to overlook this one,
because Jesus makes it very clear
that if we're going to love, we're going to love our neighbor.
Okay, duh, that makes sense.
We're gonna love our neighbor, we're gonna love
the person who is near us.
Have a friend who says, when Jesus says to love your neighbor,
I think he really means that.
He means the person who lives next door,
literally a person who lives next door, how often do we ignore our neighbor at the person who lives next door?
And so he has this ministry in which it's called love that neighbor.
And so they invite people over to a barbecue to it, some kind of meal at least once a week just go up and down the block.
Hey, if you're interested, come on over to our house and try to get into relationship with their neighbors because
the reality and this is his line,
you can only really love people within, I think he says, 10 feet of each other.
I can't just love someone in the distance or someone in my affections like, oh, I love
those people over there, but I don't actually not really in their lives.
It's very difficult to actually love anyone like this.
So it says here, 1825, we are called to love, make ourselves the neighbor of those
farthest away, to love
children and the poor as Christ himself.
But here's the biggest challenge.
The one that, as I was alluding to, I like to ignore.
Maybe you like to ignore this as well.
Jesus commands us.
He asks us to love as He does, even our enemies.
Jesus asks us to love our enemies, which is easy to say and it is so difficult to do.
It's something that we actually can't do
without the Lord's grace.
And yet at the same time, if we don't, we're nothing, right?
First Corinthians, love is patient and kind,
love is not jealous or boastful,
love is not arrogant or rude, the whole thing.
St. Paul goes on to say, if I have not charity, right?
If I have not love, I am nothing. This is so important, the whole thing, and St. Paul goes on to say, if I have not charity, right, if I have not love, I am nothing.
This is so important, whatever my privileges,
whatever my service or even virtue, whatever I do,
if I do miracles, if I have not charity, I gain nothing.
And so, this is one of those virtues
that we cannot exempt ourselves from.
This is one of those virtues that we can't ignore.
This is one of those virtues that we can't pick and choose.
This is one that we have to strive for.
Now keep this in mind.
None of us is going to do this perfectly.
But I have a friend, her name is Sarah Swaford, and Sarah says this.
She says, I'm going to strive.
Not for perfection, because perfection does not exist, but I'm going to strive.
I'm going to strive after the Lord, because I can always strive.
Not for perfection, because perfection doesn't exist.
I mean, yes, there's perfection, because perfection doesn't exist.
I mean, yes, there's perfection in the theological sense, but you know what I'm trying to say.
Did not heap coals on yourself and say, I must not love God because I fall into sin.
All of us have broken hearts.
All of us have broken lives and situations.
All of us are going to fall into sin.
But it's that trusting in the Lord to have mercy on us, that loving the Lord and wanting
the mercy, that is the key.
And here's how we're going to end this little section.
paragraph 1828 says this, it says, the practice of the moral life animated by charity, right?
Animated by love, gives to the Christian the spiritual freedom of the children of God.
So trying to live that moral life, animated by love, gives to us, gives to you the Christian. The spiritual freedom of the
children of God. Now, it goes on to say, the next sentence is so powerful. It says this,
he no longer stands before God as a slave in survival fear. So we don't approach God and say,
okay, what else does he want me to do? How much more does he want me to serve him? This sense of,
we do not approach God as a slave out of survival fear, but also it says, it's so good, or as a slave out of servile fear, but also it says, it's so good, or as a mercenary looking for wages.
And how many times we do this?
How many times would we say, okay, actually I do approach God.
I approach God just with that fear.
I approach God with the sense of not fear of God
in the good sense, but servile fear.
Servile fear, which I'm afraid of God.
And so, okay, I'm gonna be careful. I don't step outside the boundary because I I'm afraid of God. And so, okay, I'm going to be careful.
I don't step outside the boundary because I'm just afraid of God.
Or as a mercenary looking for wages,
meaning I'm going to do this not because I love anyone,
but just because either I want to avoid hell,
or because I want this reward at the end.
And it will be motivated by that.
We can move still, right?
Our commandments, we can still follow them? But the Christian will strive
for this. Strive to be animated by love of God. This is actually summarized in the act of contrition.
It goes like this, it says, oh my God, I am hardly sorry for having offended you. And I detest all my
sins because I dread the loss of heaven and the pains of hell. But most of all, because they have
offended you, oh God, who are all good and deserving of all my love.
Goes on to say, I firmly resolved with the help of that grace
to confess my sins to pen and sent them in my life.
But catch this.
It says, I detest all my sins,
because I dread the loss of heaven.
Right, so there's a fear right there.
And the pains of hell, but most of all,
because they offend you, my God,
who are all good and deserving of all my love.
This is actually expressed in that quote by St. Basil.
It says, if we turn away from evil out of fear of punishment, we are in the position of
slaves.
Okay, so out of fear of punishment, it's not bad, right?
If we turn away from evil, that's always a good thing.
But I'm doing this as a slave.
We're going to talk about the Prodigal Son in just a second.
So put a pin in that.
If we turn away from evil out of fear of punishment, we're in the position of slaves.
If we pursue the enticement of wages, we resemble mercenaries.
And how many times we do that?
I pursued the enticement of wages.
I resemble mercenary.
One of my favorite, favorite quotes that I, is hard to find from CS Lewis.
I think it may be a poem that he wrote.
But it says something along the lines of, I've always had nothing but a mercenary heart. I've always had nothing but
a mercenary heart willing to sell my soul to the highest bitter, willing to give my love
to the highest bitter. And I can sometimes look at myself in this and think, yeah, that's
me. I, there are many times when I choose the good because, man, I don't want to go to
hell or I choose the good because God has promised something.
God has promised heaven, God has promised Himself,
God has promised these blessings.
That's not bad, it's not bad, it's just not perfect
to contrition.
Of course, God is so good, God is so humble
that even accepts our imperfect contrition.
But St. Basil goes on to say, finally,
if we obey for the sake of the good itself
and out of love for him who commands,
we are in the position of children. And this is the last thing I said, put a pin in the
Prodigal Son. The Prodigal Son is an incredible parable, obviously. But it's a parable, not just
about the son who runs away and comes back as he's hungry, and he's received by the Father.
It's also a parable about the older son. In fact, someone might even say, you might even make the case,
that the parable of the prodigal son is mostly about the older son. Well, we'll just share it. It's about both sons. The younger son who goes and loves the life of sin, comes back to the father and
receives by the father is celebrated by the father restored to his place as a son of the father,
but also the older son. At older son, what does he say?
As he's resentful of his father's love for his younger brother, the older son says
to his father, look, all these years I have slaved for you.
You can hear the father.
He thought there's no say this, but it's there between the lines.
All these years I have slaved for you.
And yet you never even gave me a kid to feast on with my friends.
Imagine the father saying this,
I never wanted you to be a slave.
I never wanted you to slave for me.
I just wanted a son.
I never wanted a slave.
I just wanted a son.
And this is so often, if we have this guilt hanging over our heads of like,
God always wants more.
He always wants more.
He always wants more.
Then our vision of God is no different than the world because that's what the world wants,
right?
The world wants us to simply perform, perform, perform, perform.
And our worth is based off of our performance.
But here's the father who says, essentially, I don't want you to slave.
I've never wanted you to slave.
I want a son. I want to be able to work shoulder to shoulder with my son, not you to slave. I've never wanted you to slave. I want a son.
I want to be able to work shoulder to shoulder with my son,
not with this slave.
But it's interesting, right?
He says, all these years, I've slave for you.
And at once did you offer a kid for me to feast on with my friends?
Now, keep in mind the celebration welcoming the younger son back.
The father was there. The father was celebrating.
The whole community there was
celebrating the return of the younger son. But the older son, he doesn't want the father to celebrate.
He doesn't want to even celebrate with the father. He says, you never even gave me a kid to feast
on with my friends. He doesn't even want to feast. He doesn't even want to celebrate with his father.
He stuck. He stuck in this place of maybe a mercenary heart,
maybe a servant's heart, a slave's heart,
and his father wants him to be his son.
And he wants his son to see him as his father.
And this is the invitation for all of us.
Now, I already said last thing,
but this is kind of the last of the last things.
You might say, Father, what's the difference?
So you said before that love, charity, right? The virtue of charity has to be in action or has to, has to be effective,
not just affective. And then you said, though, that our relationship with the Father is
not performative, right? It doesn't have to perform. Yes. So is that a contradiction?
Right? Is that a dichotomy? How are those two things true at the same time? Whether
true at the same time, because it's not same time because it's not what I do,
it is how I do it.
So yes, God calls us to follow His commandments.
He calls us to work.
He calls us to do these certain things
to follow His commandments, to love our neighbor.
But He calls us to do it in such a way,
what, in what's the way as a son, as a daughter?
But I always think about it like this.
And maybe I share this in the Bible in a year because it's just one of the most beautiful
ways to imagine what the Father's vision of his, both of his sons would be to life with
the Father, life with his sons.
It wouldn't be that the sons are on perpetual vacation.
It wouldn't be the sons are on perpetual spring break.
Like, yeah, you're, you're a child of the father, living in the father's house.
So just, hey guys, sleep in, do whatever you want.
Let me take care of everything.
No, it's that sense of the father saying,
I want to work shoulder, this is our family,
this is our household, this is the place we need to run.
And so what I want to do is I want to work with you.
Not as a slave, but this image of,
okay, I'm so sorry, this is going on,
but just like picture of this non-first century
Middle Eastern house, but just maybe your house.
Here's the son, older son, he's upstairs.
And here's the father, he's up, he's moving around,
he's making breakfast, he's making the coffee,
and he's waiting upstairs.
He's like, he's waiting till his dad goes out
into the fields until he comes down.
When he comes down, he sees his little note,
and the note says, here's all the things
you need to do today.
And so the son's like, yeah, that's fine.
Whatever, I'm gonna go do this,
things my dad's asking me to do. He does them the sun's like, yeah, that's fine. Whatever.
I'm going to go do this things.
My dad's asking me to do.
He does them like a slave.
But that's not what the father wants.
Imagine what the father wants.
The father's image is, yeah, he's downstairs.
He's making breakfast.
He's putting the coffee on.
And the older son comes down and they get to have breakfast together.
They get to have a cup of coffee together.
They get to talk about the date together.
And the older son gets to say to his dad, hey, what are we doing today?
And the father gets to say, okay, here's what we're going to do. First, we're going to go out to the back 80. We're
going to take, we're going to have to plow some stuff here. But you know, there's that fence.
What do you think about that fence? And the older son gets to say, I think we need to fix that.
We need to take care of this other thing first. And they're talking about this. And they're planning
their day together. And then they go out to work. Now, in both cases, there's a list of things
they need to do. But in the second case, they're doing it together.
They're doing it so differently.
It's done as a beloved child of the Father.
And that's the motivation.
So here in the Catechism here, on the virtue of charity, it makes it so absolutely clear.
The practice of the moral life.
Again, we have to do what God asks us.
We need to follow His commandments.
The practice of the moral life, animated by charity,
or animated by love, this relationship with the Father
gives to the Christian the spiritual freedom
of the children of God.
You're no longer before God is a slave, so about fear.
You're no longer as a mercenary, looking for wages,
but as a son responding to the love of the one
who has first loved us.
Does that make sense?
I just, I love it.
Man, I wanna live like that. And Man, I want to live like that.
And I think you want to live like that too.
It's not easy at the same time.
That's what the Father wants.
So let's do that.
I'm praying that that happens for you today.
Please pray for me.
I am praying for you.
My name is Father Mechek,
and I'll wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
you