The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 282: The Sunday Obligation (2024)
Episode Date: October 8, 2024Why are Catholics obligated to attend Mass every Sunday? The Catechism teaches us today about the centrality of the Sunday celebration of the Eucharist in the life of the Church. Fr. Mike emphasizes t...hat Sunday Mass is at the heart of our worship because it is the participation in the representation of the Paschal Mystery. He invites us to honor the Sunday obligation out of love for Jesus. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2177-2183. This episode has been found to be in conformity with the Catechism by the Institute on the Catechism, under the Subcommittee on the Catechism, USCCB. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in 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 282. the Catholic Church, discovering our identity and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is Day 282.
We are reading paragraphs 2177 to 2183.
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 and Year Reading Plan by visiting AscensionPress.com
slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications.
Today is day 282.
Yesterday we started talking about the Lord's Day.
We started talking about the third commandment.
Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.
We know that the Sabbath day has been transferred from Saturday, right?
That seventh day of the week to the eighth day, the first day of the week, which is Sunday,
the Lord's Day, the day of resurrection.
Because as we heard yesterday, Sunday is the fulfillment of the Sabbath.
Now, because of that, yes, we're invited into rest, in fact, we're commanded into
rest.
We're also invited slash commanded into worship.
And we recognize that the Sunday celebration of the Lord's Day and His Eucharist is at
the heart of the Church's life.
There is nothing more important that we do than the Sunday Eucharist. That is the heart of everything. It is our participation in the
representation of the Paschal mystery.
So yes, the church is called and actually commanded to take care of the poor. The church is commanded to spread the gospel.
Yes, absolutely, completely.
At the heart of that is the Sunday celebration
of the Eucharist.
Therefore, we're gonna talk about this.
It's a holy day, every Sunday,
holy day of obligation as well as some of the other days.
Now that goes back to the very beginnings of Christianity.
And so we're called, again, called slash commanded
to fulfill the Sunday obligation.
We're gonna talk about how we do that today.
And so to open our hearts,
because I know that this is one of those aspects
I mentioned yesterday when it came to rest,
which we're also talking about rest tomorrow,
when it came to rest yesterday and I said,
yeah, these are some of these things
that I'm convicted about.
They bring to the surface some challenges
that I realize, oh man, I don't do this the way I should.
You might be someone who is convicted,
very convicted, deeply convicted,
about the need, the necessity
to live up to the obligation, the commandment
to go to mass every single Sunday.
We'll talk about that today.
So open our hearts to allow our minds, our hearts,
our wills, our everything to be convicted
by the Lord's command.
So we pray, Father in heaven, in Jesus' name,
we ask you to please receive our thanks,
receive our praise, receive the worship that we owe you.
And Lord God, please send your Holy Spirit
in the name of your Son Jesus Christ
to allow us to be moved by love of you.
Jesus, you said, if you love me,
you will keep my commandments.
Lord God, help us, help us to love you
by keeping your commandment to do this,
this Eucharist in memory of you.
Help us to love you by listening to you and obeying you
in every way, but especially in this way,
by honoring your Holy Eucharist,
by honoring your Paschal mystery every single Sunday.
Lord God, please help us.
Meet us in our need, meet us in our weakness,
and give us your grace and give us your strength.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
In the name of the Father and of the, and of the Holy Spirit, amen. It is day 282,
we are reading paragraphs 2177 to 2183.
The Sunday Eucharist
The Sunday celebration of the Lord's Day and His Eucharist is at the heart of the Church's
life. Sunday is the day on which the Paschal Mystery is celebrated in light of the apostolic tradition and is to be observed as the foremost holy day of obligation
in the Universal Church. The Code of Canon Law further states, "...also
to be observed are the day of the Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Epiphany, the
Ascension of Christ, the Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ, the Feast of Mary, the
Mother of God, her Immaculate Conception, her Assumption, the Feast and Blood of Christ, the feast of Mary, the Mother of God, her immaculate conception, her assumption,
the feast of St. Joseph, the feast of the Apostles, Saints Peter and Paul, and the feast of all Saints.
This practice of the Christian assembly dates from the beginnings of the Apostolic Age.
The letter to the Hebrews reminds the faithful not to neglect to meet together, as is the habit of some, but to encourage one another.
not to neglect to meet together, as is the habit of some, but to encourage one another.
Tradition preserves the memory of an ever-timely exhortation.
Come to church early, approach the Lord, and confess your sins.
Repent in prayer. Be present at the sacred and divine liturgy.
Conclude its prayer, and do not leave before the dismissal.
We have often said, This day is given to you for prayer and rest.
This is the day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it.
A parish is a definite community of the Christian faithful established on a stable basis within
a particular church.
The pastoral care of the parish is entrusted to a pastor as its own shepherd under the
authority of the diocesan bishop.
It is the place where all the faithful can be gathered together for the Sunday celebration
of the Eucharist.
The parish initiates the Christian people into the ordinary expression of the liturgical
life.
It gathers them together in this celebration.
It teaches Christ's saving doctrine.
It practices the charity of the Lord in good works and brotherly love.
St. John Chrysostom stated,
You cannot pray at home as at church, where there is a great multitude, where exclamations
are cried out to God as from one great heart, and where there is something more, the union
of minds, the accord of souls, the bond of charity, the prayers of the priests.
The Sunday Obligation The precept of the Church specifies the law
of the Lord more precisely.
On Sundays and other holy days of obligation, the faithful are bound to participate in the
Mass.
The precept of participating in the Mass is satisfied by assistance at a Mass which is
celebrated anywhere in a Catholic rite either on the holy day or on the evening of the preceding
day.
The Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and confirmation of all Christian practice.
For this reason, the faithful are obliged to participate in the Eucharist on days of
obligation unless excused for a serious reason, for example, illness, the care of infants,
or dispensed by their own pastor. Those who deliberately fail in this obligation commit
a grave sin. Participation in the communal celebration of the Sunday Eucharist is a testimony of
belonging and of being faithful to Christ and to His Church.
The faithful give witness by this to their communion in faith and charity.
Together, they testify to God's holiness and their hope of salvation.
They strengthen one another under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
The Code of Canon Law states, if because of a lack of sacred minister
or for other grave cause,
participation in the celebration of the Eucharist
is impossible, it is specially recommended
that the faithful take part in the liturgy of the word
if it is celebrated in the parish church
or in another sacred place
according to the prescriptions of the diocesan bishop,
or engage in prayer for an appropriate amount
of time personally, or in a family, or as occasion offers, in groups of families.
Alright, there we have it, paragraphs 21, 77 to 21, 83.
You guys, as I said, there is something so powerful we have to understand.
The centrality of the Sunday celebration of the Eucharist.
Again, 21, 77, the Sunday celebration of the Lord's Day
and his Eucharist is at the heart of the church's life.
Again, here is the Lord of Canon Law that says,
Sunday is the day on which the Paschal mystery
is celebrated in light of the apostolic tradition
and is to be observed as the foremost holy day
of obligation in the universal church.
It goes on, paragraph 2177 goes on to specify the other holy days of obligation. And this dates from the very beginning. I
don't know if you caught this, but in paragraph 2178 it quotes the letter to the Hebrews chapter
10 verse 25, where it reminds the faithful not to neglect to meet together as is the
habit of some, but to encourage one another to come together for the celebration of the
Eucharist. This is so important for every single one of us.
It's absolutely essential.
Again, remember what Jesus said, if you love me, you'll keep my commandments.
And yes, His great commandments, love one another as I've loved you, as the Father
has loved me so I love you, you don't remain in my love.
Yes, but Christ's commandment also
On the night of his betrayal on the night before he died
Jesus's great commandment in so many ways I say great commandment not in terms of love the lord
You got with all your heart mind soul and strength and the sadder one as yourself
You know, we already talked about this but the great commandment that Jesus gives to his disciples
The night he was betrayed the night before his death, take this all of you and eat of it. Do this in memory of me. That's so important
for us. We need to understand that to love Jesus is to do what he says and what
he says to do, among other things. But I say that at the center of what he says
to do is when he says, do this.
And that is so, so important. Now paragraph 2179 gives us the definition of a parish.
A parish is a definite community of the Christian faithful
established on a stable basis within a particular church,
basically in a diocese.
The pastoral care of the parish is entrusted to a pastor
as its own shepherd under the authority
of the diocese and bishop.
Okay, there we go.
But that's the place where we all the people people get together. And so I don't know if
you know this, but it is pretty important if you're a Catholic to be registered at a parish,
to say, okay, this is my parish. This is the place that I abide in in so many ways, right?
This is the place where I come together and I belong. I come together and I worship. Now,
as a Catholic, you belong to every Catholic church around the world, right?
As a Catholic, you're part of the body of Christ.
And so every Catholic church is, in a certain sense,
your Catholic church, right?
And yet there is something that we're called to do.
We're called to belong to a parish.
And that's not just be registered, so now, yeah,
now I pay, or all those kinds of things.
But we're called to be committed to a parish
because we recognize that we're meant to
come together.
That quote from St. John Chrysostom is so important where he highlights, you cannot
pray at home as at church.
That is so true.
I mean, yes, you can pray at home and please pray at home.
He also could say you can't pray in the woods as at church, although of course you can pray
in the woods or pray in the mountains or pray at the great lakes, all these places.
Those are places of prayer, but you can't pray at home the way you pray in the church,
where there's a great multitude,
where exclamations are cried out to God as from one heart,
and where there is something more.
The union of minds, the accord of souls,
the bond of charity, the prayers of the priests.
And that is so important.
I mean, all of those things are good,
union of minds, accord of the souls, bond of charity are good Union of Minds, a court of the souls, a bond of charity
But what's also essential?
The prayers of the priests
We need the ministerial priesthood in order to have the Eucharist in order to do this in memory of Jesus
We need that we need them and so we have an obligation to go to the parish. We have an obligation to go to Mass
That's what paragraph 2180 through 2183 talk about right?
That we have an obligation to present ourselves
to the Lord to worship God in the Mass every single Sunday.
Now, the end of paragraph 2180 specifies, it says,
the precept of participating in the Mass
is satisfied by assistance at a Mass,
which is celebrated anywhere in a Catholic rite,
either on the Holy Day or on the evening
of the preceding day.
Now, I don't know if we've talked about this yet,
but why would it be on the evening of the preceding day. Now, I don't know if we've talked about this yet, but why would it be on the evening of the preceding day?
What would that be?
Well, according to the Jewish rite of marking time,
as sun falls, that's the beginning of the next day.
So if you look at Genesis chapter one,
when that day ends with sunfall, the next day has begun.
So the next day begins at sunfall,
therefore we kind of quote unquote count it
if you do the vigil mass the night before the next day begins at Sunfall therefore we kind of quote-unquote count it if you do the vigil mass the night
Before the actual day now paragraph 2181 the Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and
confirmation of all Christian practice
Just like pause on that for a second
Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and confirmation of all Christian practice
That without the mass, you know, back in the day,
there was a time where there were these martyrs.
So under Roman occupation, under Roman rule essentially,
there were Christians.
And at one point it was illegal to go to Mass.
This is a story I came across in a book
written by Dr. Scott Hahn.
At one point he was recounting that
there's this whole group of, you know, community,
basically what would have amounted to a parish back in the early
church. And the dictate was not to go to mass.
Now Catholics said I have to go to mass.
So they went and the Romans knew that they'd be there.
And so every one of them, when they went to mass,
they arrested them as they were leaving the mass.
And as they were being led into the arena
or wherever it was they were gonna be martyred,
they said, why would you do that?
Why in the world would you go to mass
even though you knew that you'd be killed for it?
And their response was so powerful and so profound.
It was, we cannot live without the mass.
Said that mass is what makes us Christians.
We wouldn't be Christians without the mass.
That Christians make the mass and the mass makes us Christians. Something like that.
It's so powerful and that's so true. The Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and confirmation
of all Christian practice. For that reason, we're obliged to participate in the Eucharist
on days of obligation. Unless, now this is important for us, unless excused for a serious
reason. For example, if you're ill, if you're taking is important for us, unless excused for a serious reason.
For example, if you're ill, if you're taking care of an
infant, we're gonna talk about this later on,
if you have a job where your job is to care for others,
there might be some valid reasons why you may not be able
to make it to mass.
There are some serious reasons.
Now, the next piece is something that I think,
I wanna highlight this.
If I could highlight my voice right now,
this would be the thing.
If I could put an asterisk by the thing
I'm gonna say next, it's so important.
It says this.
It says, yes, we're obliged to participate
unless excused for a serious reason
or dispensed by their own pastor.
This is important.
Your pastor can dispense you from the Sunday obligation.
So here's an example.
I live in northern Minnesota.
And so a lot of people up in northern Minnesota
will vacation in the boundary waters, right?
So in the boundary waters, you are miles and miles and miles,
miles, days sometimes, from civilization.
And so you go into the wilderness
and you go there over a weekend.
And there's no way, there's no way imaginable
that you could ever possibly make it to Sunday Mass.
Now rather than just getting up to the woods and saying, ah, you know,
I can't do it. What you can do is you can ask your pastor, you can say, you know,
call up father and say, father,
my family and I are going on vacation up to the boundary waters and we're not
able to make the mass. Could you give us a dispensation?
He has the authority to give you dispensation. Now,
it's not the same thing as you were to say,
hey, Father, we're going on vacation to, I don't know,
Cancun, and can we have dispensation for Mass?
Because here's the thing, in Cancun,
you have the ability to go to Mass.
They have, I know this about Cancun,
they have Catholic churches there.
And actually, I'm going on vacation,
we're going to South Dakota.
You know what, they even have Catholic churches
in South Dakota.
Guys, this will blow your mind.
If you go on vacation to Wisconsin, they even have Catholic churches in South Dakota. Guys, this will blow your mind. If you go on vacation to Wisconsin,
they even have Catholic churches in Wisconsin, I know,
believe it or not.
But it's different if I can't make it,
to be able to say, I'm not just gonna excuse myself,
I'm going to ask for permission
to be dispensed from this obligation.
Now, what's happening in that?
Is it just the church trying to exercise control
and authority?
I would argue no.
What I would argue is this,
remember the church is a family.
We're the family of God.
Now imagine a family, maybe not your family,
but imagine a family that gets together
every single Sunday for brunch
or for some kind of family meal.
And this is really important.
In fact, this is what grandma and grandpa established
and it's been going on for the last couple generations.
It's a really, really big deal.
And it's so big that, you know, to miss it,
to not just miss, to skip it,
would be to be saying something to your family.
Now, I can take it on myself,
I'm just gonna excuse myself.
That's one thing I could do, or I could ask permission.
And when I'm asking permission,
what I'm doing is I'm placing myself
under the authority of the patriarch or matriarch, right?
I'm placing myself under the authority of the patriarch or matriarch, right?
I'm placing myself under the authority of grandma or grandpa.
Placing myself under the authority of my parents and saying, may I be excused?
And you realize the difference, the difference is happening there when it's like, I'm going
to excuse myself versus may I be excused.
Something similar is happening when it comes to asking for a dispensation by your pastor.
I don't know of any pastor who, when the parishioners had given him a good reason,
that he didn't say, of course, I'm so glad.
As priests, we're so glad when someone asks
because we realize, well, this person
takes their Sunday obligation seriously.
So here's probably what will happen.
Now, what you're gonna do from now on
is if you absolutely cannot make it to Mass, right?
You're in the boundary waters,
you're somewhere else but just getting to Mass
is precluded, right, it's just not gonna work.
Rather than excuse yourself, you just contact your pastor.
He will happily, my guess is he will happily say,
thank you for asking, you're dispensed.
He might then go on to say, would you be able to
read the readings for that day,
especially if you're on vacation with your family, okay,
take some time and as a family, read those readings and maybe pray a decade of the're on vacation with your family. Okay, take some time and as a family,
read those readings and maybe pray a decade
of the Rosary, something like this, right?
Take some time and still let it be the Lord's day.
It's not like, oh, you've got a freebie today,
just go ahead and do whatever you want.
It'll probably give you some direction about,
okay, here's a way you can sanctify that day
since you are unable to make it to Mass.
So keep that in mind, but know this,
know that you get to ask for dispensation by your
pastor.
2181 ends that paragraph by saying, those who deliberately fail in this obligation commit
a grave sin.
If I intentionally miss mass, if I intentionally essentially what it is is skip mass, I'm committing
a grave sin.
Keep that in mind.
It's just so, so important.
Because why? 2182. Participation
in the communal celebration of the Sunday Eucharist is a testimony of belonging and
of being faithful to Christ and His Church. So important. It is a testimony of belonging
to and being faithful to Christ and to His Church. It is so essential and so important
for all of us. As I said, you know, these commandments are gonna be
convicting for many of us, consoling for many of us.
Today, if it's consoling,
because that's what you've been living, awesome, so good.
If it's convicting because it's now challenging you
to do something different, amazing.
Last story, last little thing, I'm so sorry,
this is a little bit longer, I get ramped up.
I don't know if I shared this story before,
but years ago, we had a young woman in our RCIA class, so the Right of Christian and Nation of creation for adults.
So she was becoming Catholic, the process of becoming Catholic.
And at one point we came across, I mean, we covered the commandments at the end of the
year.
So she'd been going to RCIA faithfully, been going to Mass pretty faithfully, and we get
to this commandment.
We highlight paragraph 2181.
That is absolutely clear that those who deliberately fail
in this obligation committed grave sin.
And she was getting married to a young man who was Catholic
and she talked to him about it and he's like,
ah, don't worry about it.
She was concerned.
She was like, I don't know if I can promise
that I'll go to Mass every Sunday.
I don't know if I can do that.
And he was like, ah, don't worry about it.
Like we miss all the time.
His family was also the same way.
They're like, ah, don't worry about this.
We skip Mass all the time too. it's not that big of a deal.
But she was so, not just intellectually honest,
she was so spiritually honest with the Lord
that she got to the end of our CIA
and before the Easter vigil,
when she would have come into the Catholic Church,
that was the schedule we were on, she bailed.
She said, I can't do this.
Because of this, because she was aware of herself and her own hesitation
about I don't think that I can commit to coming to mass
every single Sunday and Holy Day of Obligation.
Therefore she absented herself from becoming Catholic.
And I mean, we met, we tried to talk about it
and I was clear about this, of course,
at the same time talking about how,
yes, take it seriously, but don't let it be an obstacle.
Don't let your fear be the thing that gets in your way.
Don't let your fear of your own failure or potential failure get in your way.
But she was like, I just, I can't do it.
So, you know, time went on and that year she graduated and moved on.
I think she was in graduate school at the time, moved on, moved away.
And I just always prayed for it.
They got married and everything.
I had a big start of their life together and had some children. I always, whenever she came to mind, whenever we talked about this, I've always prayed for it. They got married and everything. I had a big start of their life together and had some children.
Whenever she came to mind, whenever we talked about this,
I'd always just pray for her
because she was so honest about the whole thing.
She was so fearful about not being able to live up to it,
but also had such integrity.
I'm not gonna stand up and say something
that I don't believe I'll actually be able to do.
Like remember we talked about,
oh, it was a couple of days ago. That's what she was essentially saying.
I'm not gonna stand up and make a false oath.
I'm not gonna stand up and say that I'm gonna do this
when I don't think I'm actually gonna do this.
Prayed for her again and again.
I don't mean the story to drag on.
I prayed for her so much.
Couple years after that, maybe, I don't know,
between five and 10 years later, I got a letter from her.
And the letter was, hey, you'd be happy to know
that I wrestled through this and struggled through this
and realized that I was letting my fear
get in the way of my yes to the Lord.
I knew this was all true.
I knew that the Eucharist really is Jesus
and I knew he's calling me, commanding me
to worship him every Sunday, in season, out of season,
convenient or inconvenient,
but I let my fear of not being able to do it,
let my fear of failure stop me.
But this last year, she said, I went through RCIA again,
and you'd be happy to know, at the Easter Vigil,
I was received into full communion with the Catholic Church,
and now here I am, you know, launching this,
rest of her life as a Catholic.
And I just, you know, at the time she backed out,
I was so impressed by her integrity.
At the same time, she let fear get in the way of her faith.
I mean, she truly let fear get in the way of that next step.
Yet, it was such a great testimony to the fact that,
even though her fiance and her fiance's family was like,
ah, don't worry about it, she was like, no, no, no.
This is serious.
This is what the Lord has asked of all of us,
including of me, if I become Catholic.
I'm not gonna just dismiss
that out of hand because you happen to dismiss it
out of hand or because others happen to dismiss it
out of hand.
If I'm gonna stand up and say I'm Catholic,
I'm gonna be Catholic all the way.
Took her a little longer, but eventually that grace,
that faith overcame her fear and here she is now
in full communion with the church, raising children
in full communion with the church and also helping
her husband be the kind of man
who also says, yeah, that's true.
I'm not just gonna, I'm not gonna make excuses for myself.
We as a family, we are going to mass every Sunday,
every Holy day.
We're doing our absolute best.
And that sense of like echoing Joshua's words,
as for me and my family, we will serve the Lord.
You guys, it's just incredible.
So I'm inspired by them, I'm inspired the Lord. You guys, it's just incredible. So I'm so inspired by them.
I'm inspired by you.
Here we are on day 282.
Thank you so much for being part of this journey.
Please pray for each other.
Because again, as we hit these commandments,
we know that every one of us is going
to be convicted in different ways, consoled in other ways.
We need each other.
We need each other's prayers.
We need God's grace.
So pray for each other.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name's Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.