The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 285: The Nature of the Family (2024)
Episode Date: October 11, 2024In learning the core and fundamental definition of the family, we read today that a family is formed by a “man and a woman united in marriage, together with their children.” The Christian family i...s a communion of faith, hope, and love and an image of the Trinity. Fr. Mike shares how important he believes friendship and family are in spreading the Good News of the Gospel. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2201-2206. 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 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 285.
We're reading paragraphs 2201 to 2206.
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, your very own Catechism in your reading plan by visiting
ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And you can click follow or subscribe in your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C I Y and you can
click follow or subscribe in your podcast app.
That was you can click follow or subscribe and your podcast app to receive daily updates
and daily notifications.
Also a quick thank you for all those.
Thank you for your prayers yesterday.
I remember just, you know, we keep getting challenged, keeping challenged day after day
by these commandments, keep getting challenged by God's word and by his commands to us. And so we need prayers for each other. And I'm so grateful.
I cannot move ahead without thanking you for your prayers and thanking you for your financial
support of this podcast. We couldn't do this without you. Thank you so much.
We've made it all the way to today in day 285 and we're going to continue talking about the fourth
commandment. In fact, we're looking at paragraphs 2201 to 2206, only what that sounds like six paragraphs
to me.
When we talk about this, we're talking about the family in God's plan.
Now, this is going to be fascinating because I think in so many ways you might listen to
this.
If you're listening to this or reading this for the first time, you might think, oh, this
is recent.
This is a recent definition of the family.
This is a recent definition of marriage. And it's not. This is a recent definition of the family. This is a recent definition
of marriage, and it's not. This is an ancient definition of marriage. In fact, the church
wrote this catechism, this section of the catechism in the 80s, right? They started
compiling this in the 80s. It wasn't promulgated until the 1990s, long before we experienced
some of the cultural issues that we experience in the West about family and about marriage.
And so, it's fascinating to recognize that the church is saying what the church is teaching
is not a response, it's not a reaction to the world around it.
It is a clear teaching and it is direction to the world around us.
And that's a huge distinction.
Again, you might listen to this and say, oh, that sounds very political.
Well, it's only political because, you know, our culture has brought questions
of what is marriage, what is family into the political realm.
And yet here's the church again, not reacting, not even simply, simply speaking,
responding to the culture, but directing the culture, teaching the culture.
As we talk about what is the nature of the family and also what's the
nature of the Christian family.
Those are the two big questions we're gonna look at today.
So buckle in, strap in, and let's get ready
for these six paragraphs that are very beautiful,
but also for many of us, maybe certainly challenging.
So let's pray.
Father in heaven, in the name of your son Jesus Christ,
we ask you to please be with us.
Please hear our prayers and be with us in our need.
Be with us in our confusion.
Be with us in our understanding.
Even Lord, if we have hesitant hearts,
if we have a reluctance to say yes to you
with freedom and with joy,
we ask you to please meet us in that hesitation.
Meet us in that reluctance.
And if we are excited, if we are grateful and joyful over your teaching, we ask you
to please help us be humble in our joy.
Help us be humble in the conviction of the truth of knowing what is the nature of the
family.
You invented the family.
God, you invented the concept of family.
And you also have called us to live in a certain way as we are called to be part of a Christian
family.
So we ask you to please send us your Holy Spirit so that we can not only know this but to live this. In
Jesus name we pray. Amen. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit it is day 285. We're reading paragraphs 2201 to 2206.
The family in God's Plan The Nature of the Family
The conjugal community is established upon the consent of the spouses.
Marriage and the family are ordered to the good of the spouses and to the procreation
and education of children.
The love of the spouses and the beginning of children create among members of the same
family, personal relationships, and primordial responsibilities.
A man and a woman united in marriage, together with their children, form a family.
This institution is prior to any recognition by public authority, which has an obligation
to recognize it.
It should be considered the normal reference point by which the different forms of family
relationship are to be evaluated.
In creating man and woman, God instituted the human family and endowed it with its fundamental
constitution.
Its members are persons equal in dignity.
For the common good of its members and of society, the family necessarily has manifold
responsibilities, rights, and duties.
The Christian Family The Christian family constitutes a specific
revelation and realization of ecclesial communion,
and for this reason it can and should be called a domestic church.
It is a community of faith, hope, and charity.
It assumes singular importance in the Church as is evident in the New Testament.
The Christian family is a communion of persons, a sign and image of the communion of the Father
and the Son in the Holy Spirit.
In the procreation and education of children, it reflects the Father's work of creation.
It is called to partake of the prayer and sacrifice of Christ.
Daily prayer and the reading of the Word of God strengthen it in charity.
The Christian family has an evangelizing and missionary task.
The relationships within the family bring an affinity of feelings, affections,
and interests arising above all from the member's respect for one another. The family is a privileged
community called to achieve a sharing of thought and common deliberation by the spouses as
well as their eager cooperation as parents in the children's upbringing.
There we have it, six quick paragraphs, 2201 to 2206.
And yet, as we said before, these paragraphs are packed.
They are packed with just, again, here's the teaching of the church.
Here's the teaching through the lens of scripture in light of tradition.
So let's start with 2201.
The conjugal family, how is it established?
It's established upon the consent of the spouses.
What's conjugal community?
Conjugal community is like marriage, right? So, conjugal, implying the conjugal relationship
between husband and wife.
That's established upon what?
The consent of the spouses, and that is important, right?
So it's not established upon anyone else's will.
It's not established upon love for one another.
It's established upon consent.
That the spouses, the husband and wife,
are saying yes, the mutual consent to each other,
mutual consent to this relationship,
the conjugal community relationship.
It goes on to say, marriage and the family
are ordered to the good of the spouses
and to the procreation and education of children.
These are the two ends of marriage, right?
This is what they're oriented towards.
Even if, even if, right?
Even if a couple is unable to have children of
Biologically the family is ordered toward that end. So keep that in mind goes on to say the love of the spouses
So well so far we've only talked about like the will so we talked about like that
Yeah, they're consent to marriage their consent to one another
But the love of the spouses and the beginning of children create among the members of the same family
Personal relationships and primordial responsibilities that there's something so good about the care the love that parents have for each other
Of course, but also for their children that then create
personal relationships and
Primordial responsibilities and so moving on what's the definition of a family in paragraph 2202 it offers the definition years ago
I remember reading it was a kind of a study on our culture right now and it talked about how young people it was
adolescents and young adults how they saw
Anyone to whom they are they feel an affinity anyone to whom they feel close
They would say that's my family and that makes sense. I mean, we're social beings. And in fact, you probably know this.
I think social scientists or psychologists
have observed this is that yes,
while family like biological family
or your natural family or the family which you're raised
is very, very important.
When it comes to our further development in adolescence
and the maturity, there is a great reliance
upon those members outside
the family at the same time.
The definition of family is not those people to whom I feel an affinity or to those people
to whom I feel a closeness.
Paragraph 22.2 makes it very clear.
A man and a woman united in marriage together with their children form a family.
That's what it is.
They form a family. That's what it is. They form a family. Now going on, this institution,
so the family, marriage and the family, this institution is prior to any recognition by
public authority. So we don't get the definition of marriage from the state. We don't get the
definition of marriage from history. We don't get the definition of marriage from anyone
who's in charge, right? It's beyond any public authority.
So it existed before any government,
it existed before any community, it's exist,
it is the fundamental building block of society,
marriage and the family.
That's, it predates, it precedes society.
It predates and precedes civilization.
So we don't get the definition of marriage
from our society or from our civilization.
And that's the consequence of that is this.
We may not redefine it.
If the definition of marriage and family predates and precedes civilization and culture,
then our culture and our civilization may not redefine it.
We have to simply observe it and accept it.
It goes on to say, may not redefine it. We have to simply observe it and accept it.
It goes on to say, it, meaning the family,
should be considered the normal reference point
at which the different forms of family relationship
are to be evaluated.
Yes, there are times when,
I mean, obviously, I said biological family earlier,
and I don't mean to limit family to biology,
because there's adoptive families
and there's other forms of family, foster families.
There's other forms of family, yet families. There's other forms of family,
yet that a man and woman united in a marriage
with their children.
And again, I'm not saying that adopted children
are not truly their children.
Please don't misunderstand me.
Not at all in that.
But I'm saying that's the most basic form
and that's the fundamental form,
the normal reference point,
by which different forms of family are to be evaluated. So this is
the norm and everything outside of this is evaluated by this particular reference point.
Does that make sense? I'm not trying to be too heavy-handed on this one. It's just trying to
make it clear that husband, wife, united with their children are the normal reference point.
Now going on, here's what God did. God created male and female and he therefore instituted
the human family and endowed it with his fundamental constitution. That is at the heart of this whole
thing is where does the family come from? Again, not from the state. It comes from the Lord himself
who made human beings male and female. That's the very basis of this. Goes on to say, then the church affirms this.
Now, cause this is very important
in terms of the fourth commandment.
It says, its members are persons equal in dignity.
Remember we talked about this yesterday,
that every person you're gonna meet,
we treat them with respect and honor
because of the fact that every person
you're ever gonna meet is made in God's image and likeness.
So keep that in mind.
Parents and children and extended family,
all of them are equal in dignity,
even if parents owe their children
a certain kind of respect and honor,
and children owe their parents
a certain kind of respect and honor,
everyone is equal when it comes to dignity,
and that is so important.
Now there's a phrase that's been used
ever since I think the Second Vatican Council,
and it's that the family is the domestic church.
And that sense of, okay, here are parents united with their children and that forms
a domestic church.
Now let me just pause for a second because you might say, like we'd said yesterday and
the day before, like when it comes to dysfunctional families and we're all dysfunctional, you
might say, okay, well, you just keep saying that, you know, Father,
you keep saying that the catechism keeps saying
that it's husband and wife united with their children.
That forms a family.
What about, there's only one parent.
What happens when there are husband and wife,
but they can't have children?
Is that still a domestic church?
The answer is yes.
And we don't have to look too far.
We can look, let's look at John Paul II.
So John Paul II, he had a mom and look at John Paul II. So John Paul II
He had a mom and a dad and a brother
when John Paul II was very young his mother died and
His father raised him and his brother
Now when his father was raising he and his brother that was a domestic church, too
Even though he was for all intents and purposes a single dad
Then his older brother died and John Paul II was left just with his dad.
Still a domestic church. Even though it was just father and son, that's still a domestic church.
And if you have husband and wife with no children, that's still a domestic church.
Like this is the goodness. Again, the fullness of it, husband, wife, united with their children,
of course, obviously. And yet to be missing a part because of just life, right? Because of the fact that we're in a world that's good but broken doesn't mean it's
not the domestic church.
Goes on to say, it is a community of faith, hope and love, right?
Charity.
It assumes singular importance in the church as is evident in the New Testament.
And we would not argue that John Paul with his father was not a domestic church that
grew in faith, hope, and love.
Right?
Does that make sense?
So you might find yourself in an irregular situation.
You might find yourself in a place where like, okay, the spouse I committed to, they're not
here anymore.
Or we committed to each other, my spouse and I, but we don't have any children.
Or whatever the situation is, you're not excluded from this.
You're invited into this.
And because that's the heart of what it is to belong to the Lord, we're called to be part of the Christian family.
And the Christian family is a communion of persons meant to be a sign and image of the
Trinity.
And that is so important.
So what we're called to do is partake of the prayer and sacrifice of Christ.
And if you find yourself in a situation, I mean, think about this, if you're husband
and wife, you can't have children. Your life is a sacrifice. Your life is marked by this
pain of longing, this pain of loss. If here you are, you're a single mom, a single dad,
and you long for that spouse that for whatever reason is not there, your life is marked by
pain, it's marked by sacrifice. And so what are we called to do?
Or if you're husband and wife united with your children,
you don't need me to tell you.
Your life is likely marked, your family's likely marked
by pain and loss and sacrifice.
So what are we called to do?
The domestic church is called to do
what every individual Christian is called to do,
to partake of the prayer and sacrifice of Christ.
Daily prayer, reading of Scripture,
strengthen us in love. The Christian family has an evangelizing and missionary task. And I want to
end here with this. We recognize that around the world, there are certain parts of the world where
the church is growing in leaps and bounds. Like the Catholic Church is just exploding in so many
great ways. There's some places around the world where the church, Catholic Church is shrinking.
And it seems to be like a kind of a losing game, losing proposition.
And so sometimes people say, here's what we need more of.
What we need more of is we need more conferences, we need more retreats, we need more big events.
And those aren't bad things, those are great things.
But I've come to the conclusion that the Gospel will not spread to the whole world.
The Church will not grow through a person
on a stage with a microphone.
That the church will grow and the gospel will be advanced
by two means, the means of friendship and family.
I'm convinced of this.
I'm convinced that God does want to grow his church,
but he's going to grow it primarily.
Yes, conferences are good and retreats are good. All these things are great, but he's going to grow it primarily. Yes, conferences are good and retreats are good.
All these things are great.
But he's going to primarily be growing his church
and spreading the gospel through the things
that we long for the most
and experience the greatest brokenness in,
which is family and friendships.
Think about our world right now.
Is there anything, I keep talking about broken families,
because it's our common experience.
So family is gonna be where the gospel continues
to move throughout the world.
Think about how lonely people are
when it comes to friendship.
So friendship, true friendship,
self-sacrificial friendship and self-sacrificial families
will be the way, I believe,
the means by which the Lord God will grow his church
and spread his gospel throughout the world.
And so that means again that the domestic church is going to be imperfect.
Your domestic church and my domestic church are going to be imperfect and yet they are
the privileged community, the privileged community in the church that I believe, I believe has
an evangelizing and missionary task and I believe is positioned in such a way as to spread the good news of Jesus, maybe like no other.
Maybe, I could be wrong, but I do think
it's not gonna be through a person on a stage
with a microphone, it is gonna be through friendship
and family.
Anyways, that's what I got for you today.
You guys, what a great thing.
Tomorrow we're gonna talk about the family and society.
Again, more big ideas. And so we'll continue to pray for each other. I am praying for you.
Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.