The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 283: The Day of Rest
Episode Date: October 10, 2023We all tend to make an idol of work. The Catechism teaches us that Sunday is a day of grace and rest from work. Fr. Mike explains what holy leisure looks like, emphasizing the importance of spending t...ime with family, serving the poor, and taking time to meditate and pray. Resting on the Sabbath reminds us that our freedom and identity are found in the Lord. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2184-2195. 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
Discussion (0)
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to The Catechism in a Year Podcast,
where we encounter God's plan if you're 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 a heavenly home, this is day 283.
We are reading paragraphs 2184 to 2195.
As always, I'm using the Ascension Edition of the Catechism,
which includes the foundations of Faith of Brooch,
but you can follow along with any recent version
of the Catechism or the Catholic Church.
You can also download your own Catechism in a year reading
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As we said, day 283 paragraphs 2184 to 2195. We have some nuggets because we are coming to the conclusion of the third
gamamit as well as the conclusion of those commandments that are directly related to the Lord. I mean, obviously all the commandments are related to the Lord.
But remember, out of the 10 commandments here, the first three are specifically to the Lord
and the last seven are how we interact with each other.
Now, yesterday, we talked about the Sunday obligation, we talked about the parish,
what a parish is, we talked about how the Sunday Eucharist is the heart, right?
It's the foundation and it's everything.
It is everything for us.
At the same time, we recognize that the commandment
not only entails the obligation to worship,
it also instructs us that we also have to take time
aside to rest, to rest from work.
It's a day of grace and rest from work.
And that's what the header of paragraph 2084 highlights
and reminds us of, now this is one of those things.
I said this yesterday and maybe even the day before,
there are some aspects of this commandment
that are going to be convicting.
There are some aspects that are, you're gonna say,
wait, what does that mean for me?
Yes, that's good.
That's really, really good.
The explanations here in paragraph 2184 to 2188,
this is gonna be really, really
important and valuable when you say, wait a second, if this obligation, this command to rest
from work doesn't just land on me, it actually lands on how I live my life because am I choosing
to spend my Sunday in such a way that I'm forcing other people to work, then I may need to
take another evaluation of how I'm spending
that day of rest, how I'm spending that Sunday, the Lord's day. And so again, this is going to be
a great day of conviction, first probably so many of us, because we resist the commandment to
enter into rest, we resist the commandment to allow Sunday to be a day of grace. And so
to allow Sunday to be a day of grace. And so our rebellious hearts need to be surrendered to the Lord.
I know my rebellious heart needs to be surrendered to the Lord.
And so we pray, Father in heaven, in the name of your Son Jesus Christ,
I ask you to please send your Holy Spirit into this moment, send your Holy Spirit
into this next time of listening to your church,
explain to us how you're calling us to live out the commandments.
It's particularly the command to rest, to not be a slave, to rest from survival work, and to rest from allowing these idols in our lives to become powerful.
Lord God, we ask you to help us. Kill our idols so that you can be the true God in our lives.
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 283, we're reading paragraphs 2184-2195.
A day of grace and rest from work.
Just as God rested on the seventh day from all his work, which he had done, human life has a rhythm of work and rest from work. Just as God rested on the seventh day from all his work which he
had done, human life has a rhythm of work and rest. The institution of the Lord's Day
helps everyone enjoy adequate rest and leisure to cultivate their familial, cultural, social,
and religious lives. On Sundays, in other Holy Days of Obligation, the faithful are
to refrain from engaging in work or activities that hinder the worship
owed to God.
The joy proper to the Lord's day, the performance of the works of mercy, and the appropriate relaxation
of mind and body.
Family needs or important social service can legitimately excuse from the obligation
of Sunday rest.
The faithful should see to it that legitimate excuses do not lead to habits prejudicial
to religion,
family life, and health.
Sinekustin stated,
The charity of truth seeks holy leisure.
The necessity of charity accepts just work.
Those Christians who have leisure should be mindful of their brethren who have the same
needs and same rights, yet cannot rest from work because of poverty and misery.
Sunday is traditionally consecrated by Christian piety to good works, and Hubble's service
of the sick, the infirm, and the elderly.
Christians will also sanctify Sunday by devoting time and care to their families and relatives,
often difficult to do on other days of the week.
Sunday is a time for reflection, silence, cultivation of the mind, and meditation which
furthers the growth of the Christian interior life.
Sanctifying Sundays and Holy Days requires a common effort.
Every Christian should avoid making unnecessary demands on others that would hinder them
from observing the Lord's Day.
Traditional activities, sport, restaurants, etc. and social necessities, public services,
etc. Require some people to work on Sundays, but everyone should still take care to set
aside sufficient time for leisure. With temperance and charity, the faithful will see to it
that they avoid the excesses and violence sometimes associated with popular leisure activities.
In spite of economic constraints, public authorities should ensure citizens a time intended
for rest and divine worship. Employers have a similar obligation toward their employees.
In respecting religious liberty and the common good of all, Christians should seek recognition
of Sundays and the Church's Holidays as legal holidays. They have to give everyone a public
example of prayer, respect, and joy, and defend their traditions as a precious contribution
to the spiritual
life of society. If a country's legislation or other reasons require work on Sunday, the day
should nevertheless be lived as the day of our deliverance, which lets us share in this festival
gathering this assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven. In brief, observe the Sabbath day to keep it holy.
The seventh day is a Sabbath of solemn rest, holy to the Lord.
The Sabbath, which represented the completion of the first creation, has been replaced
by Sunday, which recalls the new creation inaugurated by the resurrection of Christ.
The church celebrates the day of Christ's resurrection on the eighth day, Sunday, which is rightly
called the Lord's Day.
Sunday is to be observed as the foremost Holy Day of Obligation in the Universal Church.
On Sundays, in other Holy Days of Obligation, the faithful are bound to participate in the Mass.
On Sundays, in other Holy Days of Obligation, the faithful are bound to abstain from those labor and business concerns,
which impede the worship to be rendered to God, the joy which is proper to the Lord's day, or
the proper relaxation of mind and body.
The institution of Sunday helps all to be allowed sufficient rest and leisure to cultivate
their familial, cultural, social, and religious lives.
Every Christian should avoid making unnecessary demands on others that would
hinder them from observing the Lord's day. All right, there we have it. Paragraphs 21,
84 to 295. As I said, there is every one of these commandments has something convicting
us. You know, this last piece of this third commandment, I think if there's anything
countercultural yesterday, we talked about the obligation to enter into worship,
the obligation of going to mass.
That can be counter-cultural,
that can be personally counter-cultural
in my own personal culture.
But if there's any commandment that is counter-cultural,
I mean, yes, in some ways they all are, right?
But this one, this part of this third commandment
goes so directly against how we live our lives in the West, right?
Where we just have this non-stop work.
We have this non-stop activity.
In fact, you might even say that we've made activity
an idle.
You might even say we've made work an idle,
which goes back all the way to the beginning
of this commandment.
With the context for this enter into rest is,
you're not a slave anymore.
The context is you've been set free.
And so we have to live like that.
We have to live as free beings.
And so here we are, paragraph 2184.
It says, the institution of the Lord's Day
helps everyone enjoy adequate rest and leisure
to cultivate their familial, cultural, social,
and religious lives.
So think about those, those four areas there, right?
Cultivate their familial,
because how many times, how much time is there for family?
I mean, it's so rare.
Again, in our day and age, in our postmodern world,
how much time is there for family?
There are so little time.
I can remember even, well, not, I mean,
I'm relatively old, but at the same time,
when I was growing up, you had no sporting events
on Sunday, that at least high school sporting events
or you know, kids sporting events.
And now, Sunday is no longer off limits, right?
Now in so many states, in the United States at least, Sunday is just another day you get
to take advantage on all day tournament schedule.
That's what it is now.
And yet, what is Sunday meant to cultivate leisure, cultivate family, cultural, social, religious
lives, so important for us.
I'm very happy for 2085 highlights this.
Not only are we obligated to enter into rest ourselves, it goes on to say, on Sundays,
in other holy days of obligation, the faithful are to refrain from engaging in work or activities
that hinder the worship owed to God.
So that's the first part.
So if I'm going to work, it's such a way that it takes
away from my ability and availability to get to mass. I need to avoid that. Next, the joy proper
to the Lord's day. Now sometimes people will say, so I really like working in my garden,
or I was planning on building a shed. I was going to work on my house, do some house projects.
Can I do those on a Sunday? And the commandment here is Christians understand it.
Is not you can't work. It's
not that you can't do strenuous things. It's not that you can't engage in labor. It's
to avoid survival labor, right? If you're working in your garden, it's probably because you
enjoy gardening. If you're going to work on a house project, it's probably because you enjoy
working on your house projects. And so it says here, there were to avoid the activities that
hinder the joy proper to the Lord's day, which would be servitude, right? Slavery shlabor, that the labor that we can't escape from.
So again, working on your project, building a shed, mowing your lawn, those are not the
same kinds of things.
It's not work per se.
It is entering to rest.
That's the goal.
The goal is not avoiding work.
The goal is entering to rest.
It goes on to say, the performance of the works of mercy.
You know, I don't know how many of us have actually cultivated the Lord's day
as a day where we perform the works of mercy.
You know what, those works of mercy? Well, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked,
visiting the sick, visiting the elderly, right?
The idea of being able to even spend time with those who have no one to visit them
or doing good.
spend time with those who have no one to visit them or doing good.
Again, in our world, it is so rare
that you find a family or even individuals who say,
yes, Sunday is a day that not only are we worshiping God,
not only are we refraining from slavish labor,
but Sunday is a day that we enter into the works
of God Himself, those works of mercy. You
was on to say the appropriate relaxation of mind and body. Those are all so
important, right? Those four aspects. So worship, O to God, joy proper to the
Lord's day, the performance of works of mercy, and appropriate relaxation of
mind and body. Chances are you can't do that every Sunday. Let's just get
up there right now. Chances, Sunday is still only 24 hours.
And so you can't probably do all four of those things
every single Sunday, but how do we,
in our individual lives, how do we in our family lives?
How do we incorporate those things into our lives?
Goes on to say, family needs or important social service
can legitimately excuse from the obligation of Sunday rest.
So obviously, if you need to take care of your family,
that can be a legitimate excuse.
If you are a nurse or a doctor, if you are someone,
if you're someone who works in plumbing, right?
You work in the sewer system.
You work with septic.
I mean, that would be an act of grace for you.
If there is a backed up sewer,
if there is a failed the septic tank for you
to arrive on the scene, that would be an act of mercy,
essentially for you. So it says family needs are important social
service. I'm being the military being a firefighter, being a police officer, can
legitimately excuse from the obligation of Sunday rest, because I'm to say the
faithful should see to it that legitimate excuses do not lead to habits,
prejudicial to family, religion, or health. So keep that in mind is is that yes, you might find yourself in a place where how about this,
how about you are the primary breadwinner of your family, your household.
And in order to make ends meet, your boss says, you have to come in on a Sunday.
Like, okay, that might be something you have to do on occasion.
Okay, so that is a family need, family obligation you might have. And so that might
legitimately excuse you from this particular Sunday they arrest, right? At the same time,
it is upon us to be able to say to the boss, I would like to have Sundays off. This is important to
me as a religious exercise. I'm called to enter into worship, I'm called to enter into arrest,
I'm called to enter into family life. So to make that known to your boss is gonna be very important.
So keep that in mind and this is for everybody from
the parent who's responsible for their family as well as to the high schooler who has a summer job or whatever kind of job
to be able to say it is important for me to exercise this
Commandment of the Lord to not only worship him on this day, but also to enter into a day of rest.
And so I'm asking my boss,
could you please not schedule me on Sundays?
Now, if your boss does that,
okay, that could be a legitimate excuse.
You made it known to them
that you don't wanna be scheduled on Sundays
and they do this, that could be a legitimate excuse.
It goes on to say though,
the faithful should see to it
that legitimate excuses do not lead to habits,
prejudicial to religion, family life, and health, right?
So they scheduled me on Sunday,
and so now that's just what I do.
Or I get, you know, over time on Sundays,
and so that's kind of what I do now.
So I'm not gonna be careful,
that legitimate excuse doesn't lead to a habit.
Now, this is where it comes to not just our own lives,
which is hard enough to look at,
but the lives and how we're impacting those around us.
And this is what's so convicting per GF 2086.
Those Christians who have leisure
should be mindful of their brethren,
who have the same needs and same rights,
yet cannot rest from work because of poverty and misery.
So that is very important.
So we have to be mindful of our brethren.
Again, I know sometimes that temptation is,
I need to get myself in order, I need to get my house in order.
I'm just gonna do me, right?
And just you do you, I'll do me,
and we'll take care of ourselves.
Yet, and this is so important, goes on to say,
Sunday is traditionally consecrated by Christian piety
to good works and humble service of the sick,
the infirm, and the elderly.
Do we realize that in their patrimony,
we've inherited, right?
In the 2000 year history of Christianity
of the Catholic Church, that there is a strong strain
where it was, oh, Sunday is the day that we serve others.
Sunday is the day that we perform those acts of mercy, those acts of love for those who
need them.
What if we look that Sunday as that kind of day, not only a day of entering into worship,
entering into rest, but also a day where we have good works and humble service of the
sick, the infirm, the elderly, because on to say, Christians will also sanctify Sunday
by devoting time and care to their families and relatives, often difficult to do on other days of the week.
So and this might be something where I know families are so scattered right now.
Maybe Sunday's a day where you get phone call, phone call to grandma grandpa phone call
to your mom or dad phone call to your kids or to your your siblings.
I mean, how many brothers and sisters are just scattered across the country.
This could be an incredible day that we just say,
let's spend that time together.
I know that during COVID, this was a,
it was a gift for us in so many ways.
I mean, obviously, it was difficult.
That's no doubt.
But one of the gifts that we did was we set up a Zoom call
every Sunday afternoon.
And we just kind of got to gather and see each other
and it was one of those things that I thought,
this could be the kind of thing that we're all living
in different towns or many of us are living in different towns. this could be the kind of thing that we're all living in different towns or many of us are living in different towns.
It could be the kind of thing that we could do indefinitely.
And of course, what happened was it was pretty definite.
It stopped at some point.
But what an opportunity to exercise this invitation, this command to not only worship, to not
only rest, but also to reach out to family members to relatives, which is difficult to do. They have the days of the week. Last line in 2086, Sunays a Time for Reflection, Silence,
Cultivation of the Mind, and Meditation, which furthers the growth of the Christian interior life.
Now, I've had a couple chances to get to Israel. And in many of these opportunities,
we go to this place called Kafar-Q Kadam, which is basically a, it's a community
that where they dedicate themselves to live here.
We're living in this community,
and we're dedicating our lives to follow
the laws of the old covenant.
And so they observe the Sabbath rest very, very seriously.
And so one of the things that they get to testify to
is they say, you know, starting on Friday afternoon,
Friday evening, we just get to be with
our families all day on Saturday.
We just get to be with our families.
We get to pray, we get to rest, we get to rejoice in each other, we just get to go for a walk,
and it's one of those things where when they describe it, there's something in the human
heart that just longs for that.
And if you could do that, why not do that?
Especially since the commandment of God is centering to that.
Now, last couple things.
Perigraph 2187, it says that sanctifying Sundays and holy days requires a common effort.
Okay, that means we have to work as a culture.
Every Christian should avoid making unnecessary demands on others
that would hinder them from observing the Lord's day.
Okay, this is where it gets serious.
Traditional activities like sports, restaurants, et cetera,
and social necessities, public services, et cetera,
require some people to work on Sundays,
but everyone should still take care
to set aside sufficient time for leisure.
So, what do we do?
Let's go to a movie on Sunday.
That means someone's working at that movie.
That's about to eat on Sunday.
Okay, that means that someone's going to have to work at that restaurant.
And so there's no cut and dried answer.
Keep this in mind.
There's no black and white answer to this.
Even the church leaves this kind of open-ended, where it says traditional activities, sports,
restaurants, etc.
Requires some people to work on Sundays, but everyone should still take care to set aside
sufficient time for leisure. So we recognize that the Church is not prohibiting sports, Church is not prohibiting restaurants,
Church is not prohibiting going to a movie. It's not saying we can't do that. It is saying,
though, at some point, isn't there some point where we just say, okay, that's enough.
You know, if there's anything that afflicts the human heart in the Western world in the
21st century, is this inability to say enough, the inability to say, okay, I'm going to
stop the inability to say, okay, let's pause.
I'm full, right?
We always want to pack in our days.
We always want to pack in the stuff.
We always want to do more and more and more.
What if we worked together and said,
you know, there's an opportunity for us to do less.
So here's an example.
I think this example can be pretty helpful for us.
It's been the last thing.
Keep in mind, right, that we,
it's not just our own lives, our family's lives,
but also the obligation that people around us,
that there are people who have to work.
There are people who are in
misery, people in poverty. And it could be again, the argument can be made that by going out to
a restaurant on a Sunday, you're helping someone get paid. Again, there's an argument there. And so let's
be wise, let's be prudent, let's be temperate in all this. There was a priest, his name was Father
Bill Bear. And Father Bill Bear was the director of the seminary called St. John V. Any seminary
at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota.
And at one point, he's just a wise, wise priest and so faithful.
And at one point, you know, he worked with all these young men who were in college seminary.
And so, you know, anything about college is that a lot of things are due on Mondays.
And you have tests on Mondays, you have projects that are due on Mondays, you have group
work that's due on Mondays.
And so, obviously, as you probably know, or you can imagine, Sundays the day of cramming.
And so here are all these seminarians who come to Father Bear and say, Father, what do we
do? Do I actually take all of Sunday off and enter into rest? Well, but my small group's
meeting on Sunday night because we were planning for our presentation on Monday morning.
What do we do? And he just said, how about this?
How about?
How about from four o'clock on Saturday night, right?
The sundown, kind of idea, the vigil time from four o'clock on Saturday afternoon,
evening, put your work aside, enter into that rest, that evening.
The next morning, when you get up on Sunday, you went, you continue to live in rest.
You're a mass, enter into
worship, and then you live out that rest, maybe go over to the dining center, maybe go out
for a walk, whatever the thing is, but you enter into that rest and keep living in that
rest until like one o'clock.
And then at one o'clock, you can pick your work back up.
But the idea behind this is that you're cultivating, you're training yourself to enter into
rest, you're training yourself to limit, you're training yourself to say, okay,
at some point I can say enough, why?
Because you're not a slave, you're free.
And so even if you did this as a family,
or even if you did this as an individual,
to say, okay, at some point on Saturday,
putting the work aside, entering into the Lord's day,
I'm entering into worship, I'm entering into rest.
And then again, all that morning, worship on Sunday,
worship and rest, maybe that's when you call your family,
maybe that's when you make time for family.
And then at some point, saying, okay,
at one o'clock, two o'clock, whatever the time is,
there's things that need to get done.
So I'm gonna pick that work back up.
But at least you've carved out a time, a space
that belongs to the Lord.
And you began exercising this no muscle, right?
The ability, the capacity to say no, the capacity to say enough,
and above all, everything else.
The capacity to say yes to the God who commands this,
instead of just simply saying, I just can't do it.
Because that's what we want to say, right?
I just can't do it.
I couldn't possibly.
I couldn't possibly take the entire Sunday
and let it belong to the Lord.
Well, start where you can.
That's the invitation.
That's from Father Bill Bear,
who passed away a few years ago,
so may he rest in peace
and may all of us rest in this life.
Let's pray for each other.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I can't wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.