The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 272: You Shall Worship the Lord Your God (2024)
Episode Date: September 28, 2024“You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve.” Taking a look at the first commandment, we see how we are called to love and worship God above all else. The Catechism also list...s the ways in which we may potentially fall into sins against faith, hope, and charity. Fr. Mike elaborates on these violations and reminds us that while it may seem overwhelming, God loved us first, and we must trust in him. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2083-2094. 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 Toward Our Heavenly Home.
This is Day 272, we're reading paragraphs 20-83 to 20-94.
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 lastly, you can click follow or subscribe on your podcast app for daily
updates and daily notifications.
Today is day 272.
As I said, long promised paragraphs 20, 83 to 20 94.
We're beginning the 10 commandments.
We've had so much prep work.
We had so much stuff to talk about, to get us ready to look at the deck of log,
right?
To get us to look at the commandments.
Remember everything we're going to talk about today and for ready to look at the decalogue, right? To get us to look at the commandments. Remember everything we're gonna talk about today
and for the next quite a few number of days,
everything has to do with relationship with the Lord.
Every single piece of what we're gonna talk about
for the next number of, well, actually,
well, is this a shock, right?
The whole catechism, I think for the last 272 days,
it has had everything to do with the Lord
and our relationship with him.
But keep this in mind, you and I are made for and called to the heights of holiness.
You and I have been brought into a relationship with our Heavenly Father, with the God who
made the universe.
He has revealed Himself to us.
He has revealed how He's calling us to live.
The first thing He asks, the first thing He live and the first thing he asks the first thing he commands the first thing
He he tells us is you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart with all your soul and with all your mind
the first commandment is
Essentially that you shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve
So we're gonna talk about this first commandment for the next number of days
In fact, we have it broken down into a quite a few things
20 things is that that's a technical term,
meaning I can't think of a better word than things.
But we're gonna talk today about this first piece.
You shall worship the Lord your God,
and him only shall you serve.
That worship the Lord your God is the first part.
And there's some aspects of this.
How does that relate to faith?
How does that relate to hope?
And how does that relate to charity?
In fact, what are the ways that we can sin against faith in this regard? What are the
ways that we can sin against hope in this regard? And what are some of the
ways we can sin against love or charity in this regard? Now tomorrow we'll look
at him only shall you serve and then some more things after that, but this
first step of just recognizing that when it comes to you shall worship the Lord
your God, there are ways in
which under the categories of faith hope and love that we can violate this first
of all commandments that we should worship the Lord your God and so in
order to walk into this we want to walk in with hope who I can't walk in this
with faith and we definitely want to walk into this with love and so we call
upon the God who loves us Father in heaven
You are good. You are God. You've called us into relationship. You've made us for relationship. You've made it possible
You've made this relationship possible by the life death and resurrection of your son Jesus Christ
You've given us access to you by the power of your Holy Spirit
In this moment Lord God we ask that you please help us always to avoid
the assaults against faith, the sins against hope, and the sins against love.
Help us always to walk powerfully in faith, hope, and love.
Help us to always walk humbly in faith, hope, and love.
Help us to always walk trusting you and worshipping you alone in faith and in hope and in love.
We make this prayer in the mighty
name of Jesus Christ our Lord in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit amen. It is day 272 we're reading paragraphs 2083 to 2094.
Chapter 1 you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all
your soul and with all your mind. Jesus summed up man's duties toward God in this saying,
You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.
This immediately echoes the solemn call,
Hear O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord.
God has loved us first.
The love of the one God is recalled in the first of the ten words.
The commandments then make explicit the response of love that man is called to give to his
God.
Article 1, the first commandment.
I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of
bondage.
You shall have no other gods before me.
You shall not make for yourselves a graven image or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above
or that is in the earth beneath
or that is in the water under the earth.
You shall not bow down to them or serve them.
It is written,
You shall worship the Lord your God,
and Him only shall you serve.
You shall worship the Lord your God,
and Him only shall you serve.
God makes Himself known by recalling His all-powerful, loving, and liberating action in the history
of the one He addresses, saying, I brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house
of bondage.
The first word contains the first commandment of the law.
You shall fear the Lord your God, you shall serve Him. You shall not go after other
gods. God's first call and just demand is that man accept Him and worship Him.
The one and true God first reveals His glory to Israel. The revelation of the vocation
and truth of man is linked to the revelation of God. Man's vocation is to make God manifest
by acting in conformity with his creation in
the image and likeness of God.
St. Justin Martyr wrote,
There will never be another God, Trifo, and there has been no other since the world began
than he who made and ordered the universe.
We do not think that our God is different from yours.
He is the same who brought your fathers out of Egypt, by his powerful hand and his outstretched arm. We do not place our hope in some other God, for there is none,
but in the same God as you do, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
The first commandment embraces faith, hope, and charity. When we say God, we confess a
constant, unchangeable being, always the same, faithful and just
without any evil.
It follows that we must necessarily accept his words and have complete faith in him and
acknowledge his authority.
He is almighty, merciful, and infinitely beneficent.
Who could not place all hope in him?
Who could not love him when contemplating the treasures of goodness and love He has poured out on us.
Hence the formula God employs in the Scripture at the beginning and end of His commandments,
I am the Lord.
Faith Our moral life has its source in faith in
God who reveals His love to us.
St. Paul speaks of the obedience of faith as our first obligation.
He shows that ignorance of God is the principle and explanation of all moral deviations.
Our duty toward God is to believe in Him and to bear witness to Him.
The first commandment requires us to nourish and protect our faith with prudence and vigilance,
and to reject everything that is opposed to it.
There are various ways of sinning against faith.
Voluntary doubt about the faith disregards
or refuses to hold as true what God has revealed,
and the church proposes for belief.
Involuntary doubt refers to hesitation in believing,
difficulty in overcoming objections
connected with the faith,
or also anxiety aroused by its obscurity.
If deliberately cultivated,
doubt can lead to spiritual blindness.
Incredulity is the neglect of revealed truth or the willful refusal to assent to it.
Heresy is the obstinate post-baptismal denial of some truth which must be believed with divine
and Catholic faith, or it is likewise an obstinate doubt concerning the same.
it is likewise an obstinate doubt concerning the same. Apostasy is the total repudiation of the Christian faith.
Schism is the refusal of submission to the Roman pontiff
or of communion with the members of the Church subject to him.
Hope.
When God reveals Himself and calls Him,
man cannot fully respond to the divine love by his own powers.
He must hope that God will give him the capacity to love him in return and to act in conformity
with the commandments of charity.
Hope is the confident expectation of divine blessing and the beatific vision of God.
It is also the fear of offending God's love and of incurring punishment.
The first commandment is also concerned with sins against hope, namely despair and presumption.
By despair, man ceases to hope for his personal salvation from God,
for help in attaining it, or for the forgiveness of his sins.
Despair is contrary to God's goodness, to his justice, for the Lord is faithful to his promises,
and to his mercy. There are two kinds of presumption. Either man presumes upon his own capacities,
hoping to be able to save himself without help from on high,
or he presumes upon God's Almighty power or His mercy,
hoping to obtain His forgiveness without conversion
and glory without merit.
Faith in God's love encompasses the call and the obligation
to respond with sincere love to divine charity.
The first commandment enjoins us to love God above everything, and all creatures for Him
and because of Him.
One can sin against God's love in various ways.
In difference, neglects or refuses to reflect on divine charity.
It fails to consider its prevenient goodness and denies its power.
In gratitude, fails or refuses to acknowledge divine charity
and to return him love for love.
Lukewarmness is hesitation or negligence in responding to divine love.
It can imply refusal to give oneself over to the prompting of charity.
Ascedia or spiritual sloth goes so far as to refuse the joy that comes from God and to be repelled by divine goodness.
Hatred of God comes from pride.
It is contrary to love of God, whose goodness it denies and whom it presumes to curse as the one who forbids sins and
inflicts punishments.
All right, there we have it, paragraphs 2083 to 2094, this beginning of this first commandment.
So good.
I'm just…
You guys, there is something so powerful about how the churches have laid this out.
One of the most compelling books I've maybe ever read is a book called The Screwtape Letters
by C.S.
Lewis.
You probably are familiar with it.
In this book, C.S.
Lewis puts it in the voice of the senior tempter, Screwtape, writing by C.S. Lewis. You probably are familiar with it. In this book, C.S. Lewis puts
it in the voice of the senior tempter, Screwtape, writing to his nephew, his nephew demon, essentially
Wormwood. And in these letters, the senior tempter goes through all of the ways in which the evil one
contempt this particular person, this fictional person in this book, contempt this fictional
person to sin. It's not just one way, it's all these different ways.
And sometimes we can be overwhelmed by that, right?
As we went through faith, hope, and charity,
all these aspects, these ways in which we can sin
against faith, like voluntary doubt or involuntary doubt,
incredulity, heresy, apostasy, schism,
all those ways we can sin against the first commandment
with regard to faith, and then hope, and then love,
it can seem overwhelming at times.
But we also recognize that, yeah,
the evil one is like that.
Even our hearts are like that, right?
Our broken hearts, our good hearts, but broken hearts are like that.
There's not just one way that we can turn away from the Lord.
I think GK Chesterton said something like this.
He said, there's only one angle at which a person can stand upright, but there are many,
many angles at which a person can fall.
That's a paraphrase of GK Chesterton, but it's the truth.
And so when it comes to this first commandment,
we need to recognize this.
This is so important.
Paragraph 2084 highlights this.
It says, God makes himself known
by recalling his all-powerful, loving,
and liberating action in the history
of the one he addresses.
Because what does he say?
Here's what the Lord God says in the book of Deuteronomy.
He says, I brought you out of the land of Egypt,
out of the house of bondage.
This is so important.
The context that God is giving for obedience to him
is that he's already initiated, right?
He's the one who acts first.
In fact, 2083 says that.
God has loved us first.
This is so important.
And because God has loved us first,
because as he said to the people of Israel,
he said, I'm the one, I'm the one who brought you
out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.
Therefore, you shall fear the Lord your God,
you shall serve him, you shall not go after other gods.
God's first call and just demand
is that man accept him and worship him.
This is just, so often people ask,
we've talked about this before,
like why does God demand worship?
He doesn't demand worship because he needs it at all.
He doesn't need to stroke his ego.
He doesn't, I mean, he makes it clear.
How many times has God make it clear in scriptures
that like, no, I don't need your sacrifice of your bulls.
I don't need your sacrifice of your flocks
or any of these sacrifices.
I don't need any of those things.
Ultimately though, we do.
Why, why does God command that we shall worship Him alone and have no other gods?
Because our hearts, as a Protestant scholar once said, our hearts are
idol-making factories. We make idols out of everything and those idols enslave us.
Those idols take everything from us and give us nothing in return and God knows
that about us. He knows that our hearts are so broken that we make an idol out of anything and everything. And so what
does God say? I want you to be free. I liberated you. I'm bringing you into relationship with
me. Therefore, you shall have no other gods. In fact, be on guard against all those other
small things, even good things that you want to make into a God, that you want to make
into the source of your being,
you wanna make into that center of your gravity.
Refuse to do that, refuse to take these good things
and make them ultimate things.
Here is God who reveals, I am the one ultimate thing.
And yet, here's all the ways we can do this.
So let's go through a couple of them,
if not all of them, because they're all so good.
You guys, when I go through RCIA and we go through this,
oh my goodness, the students at the university are like,
Father, we can read this.
I'm like, yeah, but they're all so good.
You guys, I'll be as brief as possible
because it's so good.
Okay, so ways that we can sit against faith
with regard to this first commandment.
So voluntary doubt.
What is that?
That disregards or refuses to hold as true
what God has revealed
and the church proposes for belief. Yeah, I know what you teach, Lord. Church, I know what you teach.
I refuse it. That's voluntary doubt. Involuntary doubt refers to hesitation in believing. You know,
sometimes we balk at it, right? Sometimes we just, I'm not sure. Or difficulty in overcoming
objections connected with the faith. Or also anxiety aroused by its obscurity.
So often, you know, I'll ask the question,
so often other people ask the question like,
oh wait, how does that work?
Remember when we were talking about the Holy Trinity,
or we were talking about the dual natures of Jesus,
that Jesus is one divine person
with a divine and human nature,
two natures, human and divine,
and say, ah, that's, how, how does that work?
How, or even more recently, here's the action of grace.
So God is the source, at the same time we're still free.
And we can have a little bit of anxiety aroused
by the obscurity of I don't realize, I don't understand.
How does that work?
That's okay, involuntary doubt is that hesitation,
it's that struggle, it's those difficulties.
Those don't have to be deadly sins. Involuntary doubt is that hesitation, it's that struggle, it's those difficulties. Those don't have to be deadly sins.
Involuntary doubt is just… but to acknowledge it is really important.
If I deliberately cultivate doubt, it can lead to spiritual blindness where I refuse
to see even the evidence God gives for himself, even the evidence that is given for the truth
of this.
In fact, I don't know if I mentioned this recently, I came across a little video of someone, it was a young woman
who was an atheist and she said that even if God were to show himself in the
sky, you know, as tall as Mount Everest and say, yes I'm real and I'm
the same God of the Bible, she said I would not, I would not follow him.
I would not believe in him. I would not give my life for him. I would not give my heart
to him. And it's like, okay, that kind of doubt has gone so far
that she's saying, even if it was proven to me
that he is who he says he is,
blindness, deafness, a hard heart.
Sometimes we can ask Pharaoh back in the day, right,
in Egypt, how in the world all these plagues
and Moses right in front of him does all these miracles.
How could he not submit?
Like how could he not realize what was going on?
Because that's what can happen.
Voluntary doubt and involuntary doubt cultivated
can lead us to spiritual blindness and hardness of heart.
So moving on.
Incredulity is the neglect of revealed truth
or the willful refusal to assent to it.
So incredulity is not like, wow, I can't believe that story you just told me
about how you met your long lost neighbor on the slopes of Vale, Colorado,
or something like that.
And that's, that's incredulity is the neglect of revealed truth or the
willful refusal to assent to it.
So that sense of like, yep, I know what you're teaching.
I know what the teaching is of the church.
I know what the teaching is of the church.
I know what the teaching is of the Lord.
I'm just gonna neglect that.
I'm just gonna kind of refuse to assent to it,
which is dangerous, super deadly.
Heresy, this is an important one,
just because I think it's helpful for us to understand
what heresy is and what it's not.
Oftentimes, let's go back to my students,
our students on campus, so often,
as they're getting into their faith
and someone says something that's erroneous, right,
an error, they'll say, ah, heretic, or that's heresy.
Like, okay, it might be an error,
but heresy is very specific.
What is it?
It's the obstinate, okay,
that means that I've been corrected,
but I'm not gonna be corrected, right?
It's obstinate.
Post-baptismal denial,
so it means only Christians can be heretics.
A Jewish person can't be a Christian heretic. You have to, you post-baptismal denial so it means only Christians can be heretics a Jewish person can't be a Christian heretic
You have to you post baptismal denial
So someone who's actually brought into the church of some truth which must be believed with Catholic and divine faith
So something it's not just an opinion not just a theological theory
But something that actually is a part of the doctrine part of the dogma some thing truth
Which must be believed with divine and Catholic faith. So keep that in mind.
And likewise, it's an obstinate doubt,
remember, not just I got it wrong,
but obstinate doubt concerning the same.
Apostasy is when someone totally turns away
from the Christian faith,
total repudiation of the Christian faith.
So I no longer want to be associated with Christ,
I no longer want to be associated as a Christian,
that's apostasy. Schism is refusal to submit the Roman pontiff to
the Holy Father, right, or to the members of the church subject to him. So back in
1054, the Great Schism, where East and West split. That's schism. Yes, it just
took however long to go through Sins Against Faith, but let's keep trucking
along because hope, this is really remarkable.
Despair and presumption are two ways which one can sin against hope.
Let's, let's highlight this in paragraph 20 90.
It says when God reveals himself and calls man, we cannot fully respond to the
divine love with our own powers.
We must hope that God will give him the capacity to love God in return and to act in conformity with the commandments of charity. So
what is hope? Hope is the confident expectation of divine blessing and the
beatific vision of God. So that's confident expectation of divine blessing.
That is that, yes, I am weak. God, but you're strong. I'm a sinner, but God,
you're merciful. So we can sin against this hope in two ways. Despair is one of the ways. By despair, a person ceases to hope for his personal salvation from God
or a person ceases to hope for help in attaining God's forgiveness of his sins.
And despair is contrary to God's goodness, to his justice, and to his mercy. So keep that in mind.
It's that sense of like, I am beyond God's help. If you ever find yourself in that place of discouragement, I'm beyond God's help.
That's a sin of despair.
It's not meant to add sin upon sin, but it is to say
the church highlights that this is despair to cease to hope for God's help.
It points that out so that
that we're reminded of is unstoppable mercy, His unstoppable love for you.
You can never despair of the salvation of any person in this life, because God is faithful,
and God will forgive any sin we ask Him. Next is presumption, but there's two kinds of presumption.
This is fascinating. Two kinds of presumptionption Either we presume upon our own capacities meaning that I can save myself without God's help. That's one one way
It's like no God. I got this. Don't worry about it. I don't need your grace
That's one form of presumption deadly
The other kind of presumption is it presumes upon God's almighty power and his mercy basically saying I can sin all I want
You know what?
God is good. God's merciful. God will take
me back and just kind of sinning without any kind of sense of the seriousness of this without
any sense that in order to actually be forgiven, I need to repent of my sins. So there's two
presumptions. One is basically I don't need God. And the other is I've always got God
in my back pocket. He'll always take me back. I don't even need to come back for him to take me back.
Does that make sense?
Okay, so despair and presumption, last thing, charity.
There's a bunch of words here under the article of charity.
So how can we sin against God's love?
Well, one is indifference.
And I don't want to have to go into all these things,
but one is indifference.
Am I indifferent to God's love?
Do I fail to consider his goodness or deny God's power?
In gratitude, how many days, moments, I go through life where I'm just, I'm ungrateful?
Luke warmness. Remember what Jesus said in the book of Revelation. Those people who are Luke
warm, he said, you're neither hot nor cold. And since you're neither hot nor cold, but Luke warm,
I want to vomit you out of my mouth.
Lukewarmness is a hesitation or negligence
in responding to divine love.
Ascedia, or spiritual sloth,
goes so far as to refuse the joy that comes from God
and to be repelled by divine goodness.
One of the ways that there's this incredible book
called The Noonday Devil about Ascedia.
And it came out a number of years ago,
and it just is so powerful.
It's just one of those that you can read through
and pray on and look at yourself.
And one of those ways you can define Asidia
or describe spiritual sloth is the idea that,
okay, God, I know you put me here.
I'd rather be somewhere else.
I wanna be somewhere else doing something else,
as opposed to in this moment,
God is calling me to engage him in this moment.
So if you're a parent and you need to engage your children to engage with their children,
if you're a spouse and you're like I'd rather not talk to my spouse but I know I'm called to,
to actually engage with them is to fight against Asidia, fight against loathe. If it's time to pray
and I think of everything in the world I need to do other than pray. That's the temptation towards Assyria, temptation to not respond to God's love, not to respond to the joy
that comes from God. Lastly is maybe an obvious one but hatred of God. And
hatred of God, you think how is that possible? It is very possible even for
people whose lives are blessed. Sometimes we think about hatred of God when it
comes to those people who have difficult lives. It doesn't just have to be those
people who have experienced tragedy. I know many of you
have experienced great tragedy in your life and you've not given into that
temptation of hatred toward God. Why? Because of your humility. Because you
recognize, okay God, yes I don't understand what's going on. I know God
this is not fair. This is not just. is not good that I'm good what I'm going through and
Yet I trust you and yet you are God and I'm not
hatred of God comes from pride
It is contrary to the love of God whose goodness it denies and who it presumes to curse as the one who forbids sins and inflicts
punishments But this is God's prerogative, right? God's prerogative is
to forbid sins. In fact, God's love is that He forbids sins. Going back to the
very beginning, God forbids sins because He loves us. God commands us to love Him
because He loves us and He knows this will give us the most life. And He
inflicts punishments because, yes, this is what good dads do. They are able to
lead their children to truth and to goodness and to strength.
And when the children turn away, a good father, a good parent allows their child to get what
they've chosen. And this is what a good father does, to embrace humility is to realize, okay,
God, you are God. I'm not I might give in to to being in sorrow
I might give in to being confused about this
But I'm not gonna give in to hatred
Now again, these are you just started you guys we just started tomorrow
I'll talk about the fact that him only shall we serve that only the Lord shall we serve and there's ways in which
God calls us to what to adoration to prayer to sacrifice what how does this relate to promises and vows we'll look at all of those
tomorrow in the next few days you guys it's a lot but it is good because God is
good and I'm so grateful that we were on this journey together all the way to day
272 little 272 kind of little numerical palindrome today I am praying for you
please pray for me my name is father Mike I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.