The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 268: The Precepts of the Church
Episode Date: September 25, 2023God has given the Church his law as “the way of life and truth.” We, therefore, have the right to be taught and guided while maintaining a spirit of docility in love. In this, Fr. Mike reminds us ...that the Church is our caring mother. Her care extends into the five precepts of the Church, those laws establishing the very minimum needed to remain an active member of the Body of Christ. These have to do with attending Mass, receiving the sacraments, fasting, and providing for the needs of the Church. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2037-2043. 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 in God's family as we journey together our Heavenly Home, this is day 268.
We are reading paragraphs 2037 through 2043.
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
to download your own Catechism in your reading plan.
Visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, you can click follow or subscribe
on your podcast app for daily updates
and daily notifications because today, say 268,
we're eating paragraphs, as I said, 2037 to 2043.
We're continuing what we said,
talk to the person, talk to them about yesterday, right?
Church is the church, is mother and teacher.
And so I don't know if you are catching onto this,
but in this section, the church is maybe taking pains
to simply remind us that the church is good,
that the church founded by God, God who's good,
founded the church that is good.
Yes, of course, there are weeds among the wheat.
Yes, we absolutely know that.
There are sinners among the saints,
and there are times when people have abused their power. Sometimes when people have abused teaching and people and all these things. And yet, the church has
continued to teach the truth consistently in season and out of season. Sometimes the church
had needed to be louder when it was too soft and sometimes the church was needed to be softer,
when it was too loud. And yet at the same time, it always taught the truth. The church has always
taught the truth. Why? Because the church is divinely inspired, right?
Divinely founded by our divine founder, Jesus Christ himself, the second person in the Trinity,
the soul of the church is the Holy Spirit. And so we know that, yes, above everything,
even though there are sinners in the church, the church is holy, the church is holy. And so we
can always trust, we can trust the church.
And so paragraphs 2037 to the end here, 2043,
it's all about reminding us and inviting us to that reality.
I can say like that, again, inviting us to just consider
this reality, the goodness of the church.
Now last little quick thing,
we're gonna talk about the precepts of the church today.
And so there are five precepts of the church. And we have 10 commandments, we have the church. Now, last little quick thing, we're going to talk about the precepts of the church today. And so there are five precepts of the church.
You know, we have 10 commandments.
We have the eight be attitudes.
But there are five precepts of the church.
And we're going to talk about all five of those today.
And how important they are in the life of the Catholic Christian.
So as we launch into day 268, let's take a moment and call upon our Heavenly Father.
Call upon the Son of God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit,
who teaches us to pray. Father in heaven, we know that we do not know how to pray as we ought,
and we also know that our hearts are not the kind of hearts that they should be. We have cynical
hearts, we have skeptical hearts, we have hearts that have been hurt, hearts that have been hurt
by life, by this world, by strangers, hearts that have been hurt,
by those close to us.
And many of us have hearts that have been hurt
by your church.
And we ask that you please,
those hearts that have been hurt by the people around us
and by the church,
let them be healed also,
by the people around us and by the church.
Those that have been wounded by your body, help us to also be healed by your body.
Lord God, help us to not just sit in our sickness, to not just
swallow in our wounds, but above everything else, to rise above, to rise above by the help of your grace
and to once again become people who can trust. People who can trust in your love, people who can trust in your teaching, people who can trust in the fact that you continue to guide
and to guard your church. Today, as much as you did in the first days of the church,
we make this prayer in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, our Lord, Amen, the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen, it is a 268-wheeling paragraphs, 2037-2043. The law of God, entrusted to the church, is taught to
the faithful as the way of life and truth. The faithful therefore have the right to be instructed in
the divine-saving precepts, the purified judgment, and with grace, heal-wounded human reason. They
have the duty of observing the constitutions
and decrees conveyed by the legitimate authority
of the church.
Even if they concern disciplinary matters,
these determinations call for docility and charity.
In the work of teaching and applying Christian morality,
the church needs the dedication of pastors,
the knowledge of theologians,
and the contribution of all Christians and men of goodwill. Faith and the practice of the gospel provide each person with an
experience of life in Christ, who enlightens him, and makes him able to evaluate the divine
and human realities according to the Spirit of God. Thus, the Holy Spirit can use the
humblest to enlighten the learned and those in the highest positions.
Ministries should be exercised in a spirit of fraternal service and dedication to the church
in the name of the Lord. At the same time, the conscience of each person
should avoid confining itself to individualistic considerations in its moral judgements of the person's own acts.
As far as possible, conscience should take account of the good of all,
as expressed in the moral law, natural and revealed,
and consequently in the law of the Church and in the authoritative teaching of the Magisterium on moral questions.
Personal conscience and reason should not be set in opposition to the moral law or the Magisterium of the Church.
Thus, a true filial spirit toward the Church can develop among Christians.
It is the normal flowering of the baptismal grace which has be gotten us in the womb of the
church and made us members of the body of Christ.
In her motherly care, the church grants us the mercy of God which prevails over all our
sins and is especially at work in the sacrament of reconciliation.
With a mother's foresight, she also lavishes on us day after day in her liturgy, the nourishment
of the Word and Eucharist of the Lord.
The precepts of the church.
The precepts of the church are set in the context of a moral life bound to and nourished by
liturgical life.
The obligatory character of these positive laws, decreed by the pastoral authorities,
is meant to guarantee to the faithful the very necessary
minimum in the spirit of prayer and moral effort, in the growth of love of God and neighbor.
The first precept, you shall attend Mass on Sundays and on Holy Days of Obligation and rest
from Survival Labor, requires the faithful to sanctify the day commemorating the resurrection of
the Lord, as well as the principal liturgical feasts honoring the mysteries of the Lord, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the saints. In the first place, by participating
in the Eucharistic celebration, in which the Christian community is gathered, and by
resting from those works and activities which could impede such a sanctification of these
days.
The second precept, you shall confess your sins at least once a year, ensures preparation
for the Eucharist by the reception of the sacrament of reconciliation, which continues baptism's work of conversion and
forgiveness. The third precept, you shall receive the sacrament of the Eucharist at least during
the Easter season, guarantees as a minimum the reception of the Lord's body and blood in connection
with the Paschal feasts, the origin, and Center of the Christian Liturgy. The fourth precept, you shall observe the days of fasting and abstinence established by
the Church, ensures the times of Ascesis and penance which prepare us for the liturgical
feasts and help us acquire mastery over our instincts and freedom of heart.
The fifth precept, you shall help to provide for the needs of the Church, means that the
faithful are obliged to assist with the material needs of the church, each according to his own ability.
The faithful also have the duty of providing for the material needs of the church, each
according to his abilities.
Right?
There we have it, paragraphs 2037 to 2043.
Before we launch into the precepts, I think there's something really, really powerful about
just taking a moment and highlighting
paragraph 2037 out of the others, they're all good as well. But there's something so powerful here.
It says, the law of God entrusted to the church is taught to the faithful as the way of truth in
life. Yeah, of course, the law of God, the way of truth in life, that's how we grow. It says,
the faithful therefore have the right to be instructed in the divine saving precepts
that purified judgment and with grace he'll wounded human reason.
So that's one of your rights.
One of your rights as belonging to the Lord, as belonging to the Father, as being an adopted
son or daughter, is the fact that you have the right to be instructed in the truth.
In order to have a real relationship, every real relationship has real
rights and real responsibilities. This is so important for us to understand. If
I'm going to have a real relationship with God, that means yes, I have real
rights. I have access to the Father. It also means I have real responsibilities.
And there are there are commandments that are placed upon me that I I have to
have to do. That's a real responsibility. But I love this this reality that the
Catechism says here
in 2037, one of those rights that you have, the one of the rights that we have as baptized Christians,
as Catholics, is we have the right to be instructed in the divine saving precepts that purify our
judgment and with grace he'll wounded human reason. I don't know if you've ever considered that
to be a right. I think sometimes, sometimes, maybe this isn't you, but maybe this is just me.
to be a right. I think sometimes, sometimes, maybe this isn't you, but maybe this is just me. Sometimes, I see that being instructed in the way of life, right, in the way of God's commands,
that's the burden, right? That sometimes can feel like that's the tension, that's the
challenge, that's the difficult part of the whole thing. And yet, you know, we're going
to talk about this in a couple of days.
We'll launch into the decalogue that the Ten Commandments, the decalogue, right?
Ten Commandments, they come out of the relationship.
In fact, when in the Old Testament it says, Lord, how I love your law.
Why? Why? Why would I love your law?
Well, because you've revealed yourself to me.
You've brought me into a relationship with you because of that, you actually care.
That's why you've revealed your law to me is because we have a relationship with each other.
And that is so powerful when we talk about the Ten Commandments or the Beatitudes or even here today,
the precepts of the Church. We recognize this all comes from the relationship that God has brought us into
a relationship with him and with each other and that it actually matters to him how we live.
And it matters to him that we know how he wants us to live, and it should matter to us too.
We should look at this and say, Lord, how I love your law.
I, as a baptized Christian, have the right to be instructed in the divine saving precepts that purify my judgment
and with grace, heal wounded human reason. That is an incredible right that I've never considered to be a right.
Maybe you've never considered that to be a right either.
And yet it is.
We also, it goes on to say, have the duty of observing the constitutions and decrees conveyed
by the legitimate authority of the church.
And even if they concern disciplinary matters, these determinations call for docility and
charity, right?
So, a teach-ableness in love and the so important for us.
We also have not just the right, we have the responsibility,
not just have the right to know the truth,
we also have the duty, the responsibility of observing
the church's teachings.
And we have to, that's what we're called,
our call to live, and so important.
Now, the church teaches us in so many different ways.
And it goes on in paragraph 2038 to note that
some of the greatest teachers have been among the humblest,
right?
Some of the greatest, most incredible minds
that have just passed on the truth of God
have been among those humblest that have been used
to enlighten the learned and those in the highest positions.
And this is so true in the history of the church,
just to study some of the saints is to realize that,
yes, there are some great minds and also some really powerful people, right?
So here's a great mind.
Saint John Paul the Great, right?
Saint John Paul the Second.
Great mind also, the Pope, right?
So here's the highest position you could possibly have inside the church.
So there's an example, but also we also have people who have talked to Saint John Paul
the Second.
So as an example, Saint Mother Teresa, right, of Calcutta.
There's a, she's a great example of someone
who would not necessarily be considered the most learned.
She was very wise, right?
But not necessarily in book knowledge.
She didn't have, I don't know how many degrees she had her,
if she had any degrees other than the ability
to be able to teach high school.
And yet, and also, what was her role?
What was her position?
Her position was, yes, she's a founder
of her religious community, and that's amazing.
But founders of a religious community
that lives among the poorest of the poor in India,
that is a pretty low spot.
And yet, when John Paul looked at St. Mother Teresa,
he saw St. and learned from her.
Because that's the truth.
It saints learned from each other
regardless of their roles,
regardless of their position.
We're gonna talk about the fact that we need each other.
I mean, that's what we're talking about here
in paragraph 2039.
It says,
Ministries should be exercised
in a spirit of fraternal service
and dedication to the church in the name of the Lord.
And so, yeah, we wanna serve dedicated to the church
in the name of the Lord at the same time,
our conscience should avoid confining itself
to an individualistic consideration
in its moral judgments of the person's own acts.
Meaning, I don't just look at my own self.
I don't just have that narrow view that says,
well, this is right for me in this case.
What I have to do is as far as possible,
my conscience should take into account the good of everyone.
As far as I possibly can, should take into account the good of everyone. As far as I
possibly can, should take into account the good of everyone is expressed in the moral law,
natural and revealed, and consequently the law of the church and the authoritative teaching of
the Magistarium on moral questions. This is so important. So personal conscience, in my reason,
right, should not be set in opposition to the moral law or the Magistarium of the church.
Like, I need to do whatever I can to avoid setting myself up as it's majesty of the church. Like I should, I need to do whatever I can to avoid
setting myself up as it's me versus the church.
The church teaches this, but I believe this contrary thing.
As much as I possibly can, I need to avoid that.
And I can avoid that by asking questions.
I can avoid that, not by saying,
well, here's where you stand, here's where I stand.
But by saying, okay, Lord, where is your church teaching?
Why is the church teaching this?
How am I called to live this out?
And then to ask those questions in the spirit of docility,
the spirit of love, the spirit of trust
that we keep talking about,
but not a spirit of skepticism,
and not a spirit of cynicism.
Now, last thing, that's why we need that spirit
of filial spirit toward the church.
Like, okay, the church is my mother,
and I as a beloved and devoted son
of such a mother, that's my approach. That's the way I approach. Teach me and guide me.
The last thing I said is the precepts of the church. Now these are so important. In fact,
the precepts, it says, they're obligatory, right? We have to do this. The obligatory character
of these positive laws, decreed by pastoral authorities, right? This is the church has to
create this. You say, where's this in the Bible?
We'd say, it's not necessarily anywhere per se
in the Bible, although the hints are there.
But we'd say, this is what the church has formulated
and this is the discipline of the church
that is required for what.
It's meant to guarantee to the faithful
the very necessary minimum in the spirit of prayer
and moral effort.
They've got this, these five things
are the very minimum in the spirit of prayer and moral effort. These five things are the very minimum
in the spirit of prayer and moral effort
in the growth of love of God, of God and neighbor.
So what that means is, if I'm not doing these things,
I am not spiritually alive, right?
So keep this in mind.
These five precepts, even though all of these are only
the teachings of the church, no, no, no, no, no,
this is the church which has authority, right?
The authority of God Himself who says, these are the precepts, the necessary minimum
in the spirit of prayer and moral effort.
If I don't do these minimum, my spiritual life is flatlined.
My spiritual life is dead.
My moral life is dead.
These are the, okay, I kind of want to emphasize this enough.
So where are they? Number one, basically you shall attend Mass on Sundays in Holy Days of Obligation and rest from
Survival Labor. That's it. Number one, if I fail to do this, if I choose to neglect to do this, choose to do something other than this.
Spiritual life, dead. So 10 Mass on Sundays in Holy Days of Obligation, rest from Survival Labor. Number two, second precept, usually confess your sins at least once a year. So basically going to confession, sacrament of reconciliation, at least one time a
year in order to guarantee that I'm prepared to receive Holy Communion. Number three, usually
receive the sacrament of the Eucharist at least during the Easter season. So back in the day,
there were people who understood the beauty, the dignity, the power, the holiness of the Eucharist
because they experienced, they realized how good the Eucharist is. They didn't receive communion ever. They never received
the Holy Eucharist until a Pope came along and said, okay, listen, people, Jesus truly said,
this is my body, take of it, and eat it, all of you. And so you have to receive the Holy
Communion at least once a year during the Easter season. That is the precept.
Number four, you still observe days of fasting and abstinence
established by the church, which might sound burdensome to you until we realize that there
are approximately two days of fasting in the church and a couple days of abstinence.
So days of fasting are Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
Those are the two days of fasting and the days of abstinence abstaining from meat again,
Ash Wednesday and Good Friday and then all the two days of fasting and the days of abstinence, abstaining from meat, again, Ashwin's day and good Friday, and then all the Fridays in Lent. Now, it used to be the case
that it was all Fridays throughout the course of the year. And the church in the 1960s has said,
okay, yes, those days of opponents Fridays are always days of opponents unless there's some kind
of salamnateer big high feast on that day, but every Friday's a day of penance, you're free to
choose your penance on every one of those days except for the Fridays during Lent. On those days, the church
still reserves the right to say that's a day of abstinence, abstaining from meat and the fifth
precept, which is you shall help to provide for the needs of the church. What's that mean? That
means that the faithful are obliged to assist with the material needs of the church each according
to his own ability.
All of these are doable, right?
That's the thing is like any person, virtually any person,
at any given time can accomplish all of these.
That's why it's the minimum requirements
for our lives to be, our spiritual lives to even be alive.
So even when it comes to providing for the needs
of the church, you someone could say,
I knew it, the church is asking for all my money.
Actually, the church is not asking for that. Remember in the Old Testament, in the Old Covenant, a 10th, a 10th of everything you had,
where it was to go to the Lord. At least 10th of everything you had was to go to the Lord.
Here's the church. The Catholic church says,
Well, give according to your ability, which means you get to decide if that
according to your ability is a tenth of a tenth, right?
If you're if what you can give according to your ability is a tenth of a percentage
You get to actually choose that
The church says, okay, you decide, but you have to give something you have to contribute to the needs of the church
Why because this church yes is holy its divine it also lives in this world
You know, I think it was Matthew Kelly who came who revealed that were discovered.
I don't know what it was. He maybe discovered and then revealed that something like 80 plus percent are funded activities and
parishes are funded by six or seven percent of the parish.
Think about like 80 to 90 percent of what happens in any given parish is
funded by six or seven percent of that parish and
The remaining 15 to 20 percent are funded by the remaining 93 to 94 percent of the of the parish
You know in so many
Non-Catholic churches they have incredible staff. They've incredible programs
They are they're able to help so many people and it's
amazing and a lot of non-catholic churches. Imagine if we actually did this fifth precept.
If every person in the pew, every person who's registered, every person is going to mass,
was saying, actually, no, I'm going to provide for the needs of the church,
according to my ability. Imagine what we could do in this world. Imagine the good that even your local parish could do.
Matthew Kelly even, he proposes the question,
he says, if it is 6%, what would change if it was seven?
Like honestly, if 6% of the parish is providing
for 80% to 90% of what the church does,
what if we just increase that by 1%?
How much more could the church do?
You know, often we complain, ah, the youth ministry and my parish is no good.
You know why?
Because you can't hire a youth minister because no one's giving.
Or the music in our church is so bad.
You know why?
I can't hire a good musician because no one's giving.
All these kind of these things, you know, it's not all connected to money.
But in so many ways ways there is this,
mmm, a struggle that many of us have in parting with our money.
And maybe it's because I don't trust the people who are taking care of the money.
That's a real thing. But maybe it's just, I haven't thought about it.
I think most people are not necessarily stingy.
They're just not generous because they haven't thought about it.
So, here's the invitation.
To have precepts of the church, think about it.
All these five precepts, again as they said, are the minimum requirement for a spiritual
life and spiritual growth to be alive.
And all five of them are doable right now, right away.
We can do them immediately.
So here's my prayer.
I'm praying that you and I take these first steps that we, like we said the other day,
Nunk Chepi.
Let us begin.
And just take up our cross, follow up to the Lord, and begin in these small, small ways
that the church has said is what we must do in order to have a faith that is alive.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me. My name's Father Micah.
Can I wait to see you tomorrow?
God bless.