The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 299: Respect for Health
Episode Date: October 26, 2023Our health is a gift from God, and so we have a responsibility to care for it. Fr. Mike emphasizes the importance of caring for our health while also explaining that we cannot idolize our health and ...bodies as an absolute good. If we do idolize health, it can greatly distort the way we view the dignity of those around us. He also unpacks the virtue of temperance, defining it as, “doing the right thing, in the right way, at the right time.” Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2288-2291. 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)
I'm a name's Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in the 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 the 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 299.
That's amazing.
That's amazing.
We're reading paragraphs 2288-2291 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 cyy
And you can click follow or subscribe to your podcast after daily updates and daily notifications because today is day
299 that means we literally have 66 more days. That's awesome. That's incredible. I did the math in my head
You guys I don't know if you're impressed by that but day 299 reading paragraph 2288 to 2291
Yesterday we looked at respect for the souls of right? Respect for the dignity of the person,
scandal. We also have respect for health. So today, paragraphs, these brief paragraphs,
four, these looks like we've been signaling the four paragraphs motif for a few days now.
But these four paragraphs talk about respect for health. And so we recognize that health is a good
that that if we'd looked at the soul yesterday, obviously, respect for the souls of others. And so we recognize that health is a good, that if we'd looked at the soul yesterday,
obviously, respect for the souls of others.
And so the sin against that would be scandal.
And also we are also called to have respect
not only for life in general,
not only for spiritual life, but also for health.
So not only our own health, but also the health of others.
We are also gonna talk about the virtue of temperance,
and that is incredibly important when we're looking at
this, the goodness of the body and the good that is health.
So as we launch into today, these four short paragraphs
let us, as always, launch into the Father's heart as we pray.
Father in heaven, in the name of your Son Jesus Christ,
I ask that you please help all of us in the name of your Son Jesus Christ, I ask that you please help all of
us in the midst of life.
Help all of us in the midst of this day right now when we're listening to these words.
Help us all.
Whether we are healthy or sick, whether we are strong or weak, whether we are whole or
we find ourselves broken in this moment, we ask that you please come and meet us.
Meet us with your grace, not only to heal our souls, but meet us with your grace to give
us strength and body, give us clarity of mind and thought, give us the ability to focus
on the task at hand and the strength to carry out, the courage to carry out, the task at hand.
Whatever your will is for us Lord, in this moment, we ask you to give us the grace to
be able to accept it, to enter into it, and to find joy in the midst of whatever it is,
health or sickness, wholeness or brokenness, strength or weakness.
Lord God, may all of us find your will in this moment.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
And the name of the Father, who know the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
amen, we're reading paragraphs 2288-2291.
Respect for health.
Life and physical health are precious gifts entrusted to us by God.
We must take reasonable care of them,
taking into account the needs of others, and the common good.
Concern for the health of its citizens requires that society help in the attainment of living
conditions that allow them to grow and reach maturity, food and clothing, housing, health
care, basic education, employment, and social assistance.
If morality requires respect for the life of the body, it does not make it an absolute
value.
It rejects a neo-peggin notion that tends to promote the cult of the body,
to sacrifice everything for its sake, to idolize physical perfection and success at sports.
By its selective preference of the strong over the weak, such a conception can lead to the
perversion of human relationships. The virtue of temperance disposes us to avoid every kind of excess, the abuse of food, alcohol, tobacco,
or medicine.
Those incur grave guilt, who, by drunkenness or a love of speed, endanger their own and
others' safety on the road at sea or in the air.
The use of drugs inflicts very grave damage on human health and life.
Their use, except on strictly therapeutic grounds, is a grave offense. Klandestin production of and trafficking in drugs are scandalous practices.
They constitute direct cooperation in evil since they encourage people to practice gravely
contrary to the moral law.
Alright, so there we have it, paragraphs 2288-2291 for brief paragraphs.
But something you probably caught in these four brief paragraphs
is a theme that we've talked about many times when it comes to the dig-d-d-demon person,
when it comes to these commandments, that we're talking about goods. And we're also talking
about goods that are not absolute goods. So remember, in the fourth commandment, it says
family is a good, but not an absolute good. Even the other couple of days ago, in paragraph 2278,
when we talked about life and the good of life,
and that we're not gonna work against life,
but at the same time, discontinuing medical procedures
that are, remember those four things,
burden some dangerous, extraordinary,
or disproportionate, they expect it outcome.
To discontinue those can be legitimate.
And in that case, remember we talked about this.
In those cases, one doesn't will to cause death.
One's inability to impede it is merely accepted.
And so we recognize that, again, life is a good,
but it's not an absolute good.
So we have family, good, not an absolute good,
life a good, not an absolute good.
And then here today, paragraph 22-88,
we have physical health, precious gift, a good, but not an absolute
good. It says, we must take reasonable care of them. In that phrase, the reasonable care
of our health is saying, essentially, all right, physical health is a good, but it's not
absolute good. In fact, there is a very big warning in paragraph 2289. Goes on to say,
and looks at, if we do treat the body, if we do treat health as an absolute fact, there is a very big warning in paragraph 2289. Goes on to say, looks at, if we do treat the body,
if we do treat health as an absolute good,
there is an incredibly grave danger we can fall into.
It says it like this, if morality requires respect
for the life of the body, it does not make it an absolute value.
See what I said?
I'm not making stuff up.
It rejects a neopagin notion that tends to promote
the cult of the body to sacrifice everything for its sake to idolize physical perfection and success at sports.
And this is so important. I mean, jump all the second way back in the day, right?
I got not too far back in the day, but a little bit back in the day.
He was known as a sportsman's Pope, right? He was a skier. He was a hiker. He was a mountain climber.
He was an outdoorsman in so many ways. And he talked about the goodness of sport,
the goodness of physical activity,
the goodness of physical fitness,
that that is a good, it's not an absolute good.
In fact, the same Pope who talked about the theology of the body
also at the same time warned against this exact thing in paragraph 2289,
the cult of the body.
And if we look at our culture,
we have such a bifurcated culture right
now where it falls into both extremes at the same time, one extreme of dismissing the
body. That no, you're not your body. Your body doesn't reveal anything about who or what
you are. And at the same time, exulting and glorifying the body. And as we just, you know,
we're presented with celebrities. And how are they looking? Are are their bodies young?
Are their bodies healthy? Are their bodies fit? And if they're getting older, it's like, oh my gosh, what are they doing?
What do they need to preserve? You need to preserve or the appearance of youth at least. We need
to preserve fitness. And we preserve a certain kind of size or shape of a person's body. There's
this remarkable simultaneous, again, bifurcation in our culture that exults the two extremes and says,
this is the answer. And it's so strange
because here's the church saying the middle. Remember, virtualize in the middle. And so we recognize,
oh no, the body is a good. Health is a good. Life is a good. It's not an absolute good. So your body
is you. And so we have to take reasonable care of our bodies. Your health is given to you as a gift.
So we have to take reasonable care of our health at the same time it is not an absolute value. In fact, we can fall into
so many dangers. So many dangers we can fall into, not only, as it says here, to sacrifice
everything for the sake of the body, to idolize physical perfection, success at sports,
goes on to say, by its selective preference of the strong over the week, such a vision,
right, such a conception,
can lead to the perversion of human relationships.
So if we have this cult of the body,
even promote this, we, or even just accept it
as a part of our culture,
one of the things that it costs us,
one of the things that it does is distort our view
of human persons, right?
It distorts our view of other people that are in our lives
because if we allow ourselves to be affected so strongly
by our culture that exalts the strong over the week,
that prefers the healthy to the sick,
that prefers the young to the old,
that brings about a distortion of how we approach
other human beings, right?
How we see others, and how we value others.
And so we have to keep that in mind.
Now, I think those these first two paragraphs are all about this, that yes,
we need to be have concern for health, our own health, as well as paragraph 2288,
highlights concern for the health of the citizens of a society that is also incredibly
important. At the same time, we would do not want to fall into the trap
of the cult of the body.
No paragraph 2290 goes on to talk about the virtue of temperance.
And that temperance disposes us to avoid every kind of excess,
the abuse of food, the abuse of alcohol,
the abuse of tobacco, the abuse of medicine.
I think we might have talked about this.
I prefer my definition of temperance.
And I like defining temperance as doing the right thing at the right time in
the right way, or using the right thing at the right time in the right way. And so we have
food. It's a good, right? So the right thing, what's the right kind of food at the right time?
It's time to eat in the right way, meaning in proportion to the amount of food that I need
to nourish my body. That alcohol is a good,
at least it's morally neutral. The Bible praises wine gives joy to men's hearts. So there's a good
ness there at the same time. We must avoid every kind of excess when it comes to alcohol or tobacco
or medicine. The paragraph 2290 goes on to describing how those incur grave guilt to by drunkenness
or love of speed endanger their own and other safety on the road at sea or an air. So that would be
anything from again, a love of speed. A drunkenness says it says clearly, but let's take this even
even further because you might be someone who I'm like, no, I would never drink and drive. I've
never done that. You might be someone who would like, no, I don't, I don't excessively speed in that case.
But we live in a kind of world right now
where everyone has this magic rectangle
in their hand or in their pocket or near them.
And the temptation of so many people to glance at their phone,
the temptation of so many people to do something on their phone
as they're driving, that could be those incur grave guilt.
Who, who it says here, drunkenness still of a speed. But how about this? By intentionally distracted driving,
endanger their own and other safety on the road at sea or in the air. Because why? Because we, if we're gonna be in this
hunk of metal and plastic
hurtling down the road, we need to be very attentive to this and if I'm not attentive to this That I'm endangering the people around me and endangering my own safety
So this is the church basically
Highlighting that spotlighting that and letting us know this is very very important paragraph 2291
We'll emphasize the use of drugs and that that the fact that it inflicts very grave damage on human health and life
It goes on to say they're use, except on strictly therapeutic grounds,
is a grave offense.
And so keep that in mind.
The catacasin makes it very, very clear
that yes, there is such a thing as therapeutic medication.
When it comes to drugs,
there is a therapeutic use for drugs.
But their use outside of,
strictly therapeutic drugs, is a grave offense.
And obviously producing drugs and trafficking in drugs is a scandalous practice that says here they constitute direct cooperation
and evil since they encourage people to practice his gravely contrary to the moral law.
Now when I was looking ahead at this paragraph, paragraph 2291, I when it says clandestine
production of and trafficking in drugs, I was going to say, well, that's clearly illegal
drugs. And I mean, I mean, clandestine production, right? Secret production of drugs would imply
that these drugs are illegal, that they're talking about. And I was going to say, well, clearly,
that you kind of like a joke, they mean illegal drugs, not your prescription medication.
At the same time, if we look at our culture right now, and we look at our culture for the last,
I think a couple of decades, the opioid epidemic is gravely contrary to the moral law. The opioid epidemic is a massive, massive misuse, right, of
prescription drugs that I've heard, and I've read about this, that there are times when doctors,
physicians discover the uses of opioids and then it's okay to prescribe it and it's helping some
people. And then it grows and grows and grows because it's so easily abused that then no one starts then everyone stops prescribing them and then it goes away and then
doctors physicians are saying wait, but this actually can help and so they prescribe an over prescribed I don't know I get I'm no physician neither am I a politician.
I'm just relating to the fact that it may not be only illegal drugs that the
church is highlighting and spotlighting in terms of something that's gravely contrary to
the virtue of health and the virtue of life.
It also could be the misuse and abuse of prescription medication, because we know that we live in
a world where any excessive use of any good,
would that be, as I said, in paragraph 20 to 90, food, alcohol, tobacco, or medicine,
any excessive use of this thing is a direct assault on the goodness of the body,
the goodness of health, and the goodness of life. So in these four paragraphs,
we have a lot, apparently I had a lot to say about these four paragraphs,
but man, here we launch, tomorrow, I had a lot to say about these four paragraphs, but
Man, here we launch tomorrow. I don't know if you know this, but tomorrow is day 300, which is pretty remarkable
And I'm pretty excited for it. I am praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless
you