The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 262: Habitual and Actual Grace (2024)
Episode Date: September 18, 2024Without God’s help, we can do nothing. The Catechism delves into grace today, explaining how grace works and helps us achieve our supernatural vocation to eternal life. Fr. Mike unpacks the differen...ce between habitual and actual grace and reminds us that God is always the initiator of all our spiritual efforts. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1996-2001. 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
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is day 262, we're reading paragraphs 1996 to 2001.
As always, I'm 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 on day 262, you can be the one person on day 262 who subscribes or follows your podcast app for daily updates, daily notifications.
Think about that.
Maybe you're that one person who got all the way to day 262 and still hasn't subscribed.
You know, some people subscribe on day 365 and I think that's wonderful, but maybe you'll be the only one.
Think about it. Pray about it.
Today, as we read paragraphs 1996 to 2001,
we're gonna talk about grace. You know yesterday we talked about justification.
This is incredible. Remember paragraph 1994 yesterday? It says, justification is
the most excellent work of God's love made manifest in Christ Jesus and
granted by the Holy Spirit. So incredible. In fact, we talked about this and
highlighted it at kind of at the end how St. Augustine had said
his opinion was that the justification of the wicked
is a greater work than the creation of the heaven
and earth because heaven and earth will pass away
but the salvation and justification of the elect
will not pass away.
This incredible, incredible work of God's love,
grace today, we talk about this.
How does justification happen, right?
Well, justification, the most excellent work of God's love.
How does justification come about? Well, our, the most excellent work of God's love. How does justification come about?
Well, our justification in paragraph 1996, our justification comes from the grace of God and grace is favor
It's free and undeserved help that God gives to helps us respond to his call
Become children of God his adopted children partakers of the divine nature eternal life incredible
That's we're talking about today grace. so, as you're listening to this today,
sometimes the perspective is that Catholics
do not pay as close attention to grace as other Christians.
That might be the case for individual Catholics,
but that is not the case
when it comes to the church's teaching.
We recognize that we absolutely are indebted to the Lord
for this free and undeserved gift,
this free and undeserved help that none of us,
none of us could ever merit this,
and yet is still given to us by a God who loves us,
by the God who loves us.
And so we're gonna talk about,
there's two kinds of grace we're gonna talk about.
One is habitual grace or sanctifying grace,
and the other is actual graces.
We're gonna talk about that.
Also, we're actually gonna be giving a third kind of
the way God gives grace, which is prevenient grace
in that last paragraph, paragraph 2001.
Before we launch into that,
let's launch into our Father's heart
by calling upon the name of his son, Jesus.
We pray, Father in heaven,
we do pray in the name of your son, Jesus.
We pray that you receive our gifts,
that you receive our talents,
that you receive our time,
that you receive our attention.
Oh God, how great of a gift it is
that you give us this world
and fill it with so much life and so much goodness.
The least that we can give you right now is our attention.
The least that we can give you is
when we look at this world you've created,
when we look at these lives that we're surrounded by,
we look at our life, the life you gave us.
The least we can do is be attentive to it.
The least we can do is notice.
Lord God, help us to notice what you've done in our lives.
Help us to recognize your grace, help us to avoid sin,
avoid the distortion of your good,
help us to avoid the absence of your good,
help us to avoid evil,
and help us to do this by the power of Your grace.
We make this prayer in the mighty name of Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
It is day 262.
We are reading paragraphs 1996 to 2001.
Grace Our justification comes from the grace of
God.
Grace is favor, the free and undeserved help that God gives
us to respond to His call to become children of God, adoptive sons, partakers of the divine
nature and of eternal life. Grace is a participation in the life of God. It introduces us into
the intimacy of Trinitarian life. By baptism, the Christian participates in the grace of
Christ the head of his body. As an adopted son, he can henceforth call God Father in union with the only Son.
He receives in the life of the Spirit who breathes Charity into him and who forms the Church.
This vocation to eternal life is supernatural.
It depends entirely on God's gratuitous initiative, for He alone can reveal and give Himself.
It surpasses the power of human intellect and will as that of every other creature.
The grace of Christ is the gratuitous gift that God makes to us of His own life, infused
by the Holy Spirit into our soul to heal it of sin and to sanctify it.
It is the sanctifying or deifying grace received in baptism.
It is in us the source of the work of sanctification.
As St. Paul wrote to the Corinthians, Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.
The old has passed away, behold, the new has come.
All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself.
Sanctifying grace is an habitual gift, a stable and supernatural disposition that perfects
the soul itself to enable it to live with God, to act by His love.
Habitual grace, the permanent disposition to live and act in keeping with God's call,
is distinguished from actual graces, which refer to God's interventions, whether at
the beginning of conversion or in the course of the work of sanctification.
The preparation of man for the reception of grace is already a work of grace.
This latter is needed to arouse and sustain our collaboration in justification through
faith and in sanctification through charity.
God brings to completion in us what He has begun, since, as St. Augustine said, He who
completes His work by cooperating with our will, began
by working so that we might will it.
St. Augustine further stated, Indeed, we also work, but we are only collaborating with God
who works, for His mercy has gone before us.
It has gone before us so that we may be healed, and follows us so that once healed, we may
be given life.
It goes before us so that we may be called called and follows us so that we may be glorified
It goes before us so that we may live devoutly and follows us so that we may always live with God
For without him we can do nothing
All right there we have it paragraphs 1996 to 2001, you know talking about grace
We're talking about something that I think in so many ways it feels so abstract.
Like, okay, God's grace. I know that it's a gift. I know it's unmerited. I know it's free. I know it's undeserved.
But what is it? Right? What is grace?
So let's highlight this. Grace is favor. The free and undeserved help that God gives us to respond to His call
to become children of God, to be His adopted sons, to partake in his divine nature and eternal life.
That's the free and undeserved help that God gives us to be able to do this thing that's
impossible.
God has made us to do something that's impossible.
Grace is the power of God Himself that makes this possible.
In paragraph 1997 it highlights, grace is a participation in the life of God.
Now think about that. So sometimes I think of grace as like it's a thing, and it is. It is the life of God.
Here in paragraph 1997, it is also described as an action. Grace is an action. Grace is a relationship.
Grace is a participation in the life of God, and it introduces us into intimacy of Trinitarian life.
It's just so incredible that by baptism we all participate
in the grace of Christ as an adopted son. Because of grace we can forever call God father in union
with the only son and we receive the life of the Spirit who breathes love into us and who forms the
church. So grace again is that power that God gives us. There's that favor that that free and
undeserved help that God gives us so we can respond to His call.
And it's also a participation in the life of God.
Now, remember this, paragraph 1998 highlights this so importantly.
The vocation that you've been given, right?
The call that God has on your life is to be His forever, eternal life.
That is what they call supernatural.
So no matter what we do, no matter how strong or wise or good we could be on the natural level,
we could never reach this supernatural level. That's one of the reasons why paragraph 1998
highlights that this vocation to eternal life that is supernatural depends entirely on God's
gratuitous, just gracious and free and abundant initiative.
For God alone can reveal and give himself, right?
We can't claim God if he doesn't let himself be claimed.
We can't grab onto someone
who doesn't let himself be grabbed onto.
God alone can reveal himself.
God alone can give himself.
And it's so, so important.
It goes on to say in paragraph 1999, it says,
the grace of Christ is the gratuitous gift.
Remember, we keep using those terms, gratuitous gift.
The grace of Christ is the gratuitous gift
that God makes to us of his own life.
So some ways you can think, okay, what is grace?
Grace is the very life of God.
Grace is the very life of God,
infused by the Holy Spirit into our soul to heal it of sin and to sanctify it. God through his gift in baptism, he made us
partakers of the divine nature. The sanctifying grace is in paragraph 2000
that highlights this. It's a habitual gift, a stable and supernatural disposition
that perfects the soul itself to enable it to live with God and to act by His love.
Okay, so remember we talked about how virtues are habitual gifts.
So what do we mean there?
Well, we don't mean habit in the sense of like whenever I'm driving my car, I automatically
habitually just turn on my right turn signal when I'm coming up to a corner where I'm
going to turn.
It's not like that in the sense of it's just out of habit.
I don't even have to think about it. Habitual here simply means that term like stable. This is a permanent
disposition. So habitual grace, sanctifying grace, is the habitual permanent disposition to live and
act in keeping with God's call. And that's so important. You were given, if you were baptized,
you were given this sanctifying grace and that imparts a permanent character on us.
We're transformed into his children in a saving way
where we become incorporated into Christ through adoption.
And through that adoption, we share in his sonship.
We become God's beloved sons and daughters.
Of course, however, we can lose sanctifying grace
because the presence of sanctifying grace at baptism
is not permanent in the sense that it will never go away on its own. And how do we lose sanctifying grace. Because the presence of sanctifying grace at baptism is not permanent
in the sense that it will never go away on its own. And how do we lose sanctifying grace?
Well, we lose sanctifying grace when we sin. We lose sanctifying grace when we choose to
walk away from our Father's house and live in mortal sin. It's not any kind of sin,
just mortal sin. So sanctifying grace, it's meant to be the thing we say yes to that perfects
our soul and enables us to live with God
Think about it like this. I this is a really really bad analogy and I apologize for others right away
Imagine that at some point
It's made possible through science and technology to actually
fly to the sun
The sun obviously being very very warm would be, I don't know why anyone would want
to go there, but let's say you could.
In order to live that close, or even be, exist that close
to the sun, there would have to be some kind
of special suit, right?
Some kind of special thing that you'd be wearing
that would protect you from the heat, the light,
the intensity of the sun, because without this special suit, it would destroy you in a heartbeat, and light, the intensity of the sun because without this special suit
it would destroy you in a heartbeat, even less than a heartbeat.
That is like us in God's presence.
You and I, we can't get any closer to the sun without being destroyed.
How in the world would we get close to God without being destroyed?
So one way you can envision this is,
yeah, God gives us this special suit
and we put on this special suit
and it protects us from the intensity of divinity.
It protects us from the intensity of the divine life,
that goodness, that holiness.
You could also say it like this,
grace actually changes us into a new
creature and that change perfects the soul and enables us to live with God. So
it's not a suit anymore. This is actually something that you've been
changed from the inside out. That in your baptism and in your yes to grace, what
you've been doing, you can transform to a beloved son or daughter.
In fact, remember that term deification or that phrase, partaker in the divine nature.
Now internally, you're a new creature.
You're the kind of being now who could live in the presence of the sun without a suit.
Does that make sense?
And so it's not this kind of like covering that you have over you.
That's not it at all.
You've been transformed by sanctifying grace
in this stable supernatural disposition
that enables you and I, all those baptized,
enables us to live with God,
to actually in some mysterious way to abide in his presence and to not be destroyed,
but to belong there.
Imagine to belong there.
Now, of course, God wants every one
of his beloved creatures,
everyone he made in his image and likeness.
He wants all of us to say yes to that.
He wants all of us to experience sanctifying grace
through baptism.
And yet you and I, if you've been baptized,
we are experiencing that grace, that habitual grace.
Now, this is different and grace, that habitual grace. Now this is different
and distinguished from actual graces. Actual graces are those with catechism paragraph
2000 calls, God's interventions, right? Where God steps in. Here is a moment of grace. And
so we can think of these in so many different ways. And actual grace might be something
like I am trying to figure out what God wants for my life. And so I'm in prayer, I'm asking
God, please show me the next step, show me me the path and at some point it's very clear. Oh, this is the next step
Okay, that's an actual grace. That's one again the term one of God's interventions
Another time could be I need the supernatural gift of counsel a supernatural gift of understanding or wisdom or even healing like maybe even mighty works
Or miracles. Those are all examples of actual graces
Which refer to God's interventions at the beginning of a conversion or in the course of the work to sanctification
So those actual graces those charisms some of them make us holier and others of them are given to us
So that the church can be built up and so it's incredible
So habitual grace that sanctifying grace given to us at baptism
Actual graces are all throughout the course of our life that help us what?
That help at the beginning of conversion or in the course of the work of sanctification as we become more and more like Jesus.
Paragraph 2001 talks about it kind of like you might say a third kind or third mode, a third way of being of grace.
It says this, the preparation of man for the reception of grace is already a work of grace.
It says this, the preparation of man for the reception of grace is already a work of grace.
So let's go back to this.
Wait, the preparation of a person
for the reception of grace is already a work of grace.
This was a term that back in seminary they said,
this is called prevenient grace.
It's before I say yes,
before I make any move towards the Lord,
he has already moved towards me.
Before you and I even have the idea, you know what I should do? I should press play on the catechism in here. Before you and I even have the idea
You know what I should do
I should press play on the catechism in here before you and I ever have the idea of you know
I should go to confession
It's this prevenient grace right this this grace that moves us and arouses in us a
Desire to collaborate with God a desire to even reach out to him. This is one of the things we have to always remember
We only respond. God always initiates. When it comes to any growth in grace, when it comes to
any growth in holiness, when it comes to any prayer, every time you and I have ever said yes to mass
or prayer or confession or doing any good work, that's always because God initiated it. God was
the one who moves first. That's always a response.
And this is what we're gonna hear
in the fourth pillar of the catechism,
we talk about prayer,
is that prayer is always a response.
Actually, even the life of grace is always a response
because yes, there is sanctifying grace,
that permanent, habitual, stable disposition.
There's actual graces, but there's also prevenient grace.
That grace that works on us, moves us,
and arouses in us while we're still maintaining our freedom.
Again, keep that in mind.
While still maintaining our freedom,
that grace arouses this desire to start.
Arouses the desire to say yes to God.
And think about how dependent we are.
This is amazing.
I don't know how any of us could fall down that,
or walk down that path of pride when we realize,
wow, Lord, even my small good, the small good that I do,
is because you put that desire in me,
and you actually prepared me,
and you gave me the power to do that good.
There is so little room in any one of us,
because God always wants to work.
I love this, again, this quote from St. Augustine,
at the very end, there's two quotes from St. Augustine
here at the end in paragraph 2001.
It says that God brings to completion in us
what he has begun, here's the Augustine quote,
since he who completes his work
by cooperating with our will
began by working so that we might will it.
Again, the God who brings this to completion
is also the God who initiated the whole thing.
And this beautiful, I mean, this really, really beautiful
longer quote here in paragraph 2001
is where we're gonna end.
St. Augustine, he says,
indeed, we also work,
but we are only collaborating with God who works.
Why?
For his mercy has gone before us.
Yeah, we work,
but we're only collaborating with God who works
because his mercy has already gone before us. His love has already gone before us. It has gone before us so Yeah, we work, but we're only collaborating with God who works, because his mercy has already gone before us.
His love has already gone before us.
It has gone before us so that we may be healed
and follows us so that once healed,
we may be given life.
It goes before us so that we may be called
and follows us so that we may be glorified.
It goes before us so that we might live devoutly
and follows us so that we may always live with God for without him
We can do nothing that is that is in so many ways the gospel right?
That is the good news that without God we can do nothing. But here's the great news. God's here and he's moving
He's starting he's initiating right and he's giving us the power to continue. He's giving us the power to respond
He's even as the power to complete his good work
because he is the one who's doing it.
He completes his work by cooperating with our will,
began by working so that we might will it.
That's amazing.
So tomorrow we're gonna continue to talk about the grace,
but also we're gonna talk not just about grace,
we're also gonna talk about free response.
The fact that we do remain free.
And this is, I think, really, really beautiful
because as we talk about grace one last time,
not one last time, but in this little section here,
we're talking about the different kinds of grace.
We have sacramental graces,
we have other special graces or charisms.
I kind of mentioned some of those charisms earlier
in this particular episode when I talked about
some of the charisms of, say, mighty works or miracles,
praying in tongues, those kind of things,
are charisms, a kind of grace that is given to us so that we can build up the kingdom of God build up the body
Of Christ the church on earth
So incredible talk about that tomorrow the day after that we're talking about a thing called merit
Which I think is whenever I read the catechism
I always read this section on merit because it's just it I think it's pretty powerful and I think you're gonna find it
Pretty powerful too, but that's in a couple of days from now tomorrow, more on grace today.
You guys, I'm praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.