The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 3: What We Believe (Part 1 Introduction with Jeff Cavins) (2024)
Episode Date: January 3, 2024Part 1 of the Catechism—the first pillar—is the longest part of the four parts of the Catechism, and arguably the most foundational. Fr. Mike sits down with Jeff Cavins to discuss the big picture ...behind this important pillar and prepare us for the journey ahead. Unlock the full experience of The Catechism in a Year (with Father Mike Schmitz) with the Ascension App! (https://ascensionpress.com/pages/ascension-app?_branch_match_id=1248288113491054729&utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=marketing&_branch_referrer=H4sIAAAAAAAAA8soKSkottLXz8nMy9ZLLE5OzSvOzM%2FTTSwo0EvOz9X3CKtwCktMDfB1SQIAklUiuCoAAAA%3D) Get access to an interactive reading plan, the complete text of the Catechism, episode transcripts, summaries, and more. 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 there, I just wanted to hop in real quick to tell you about a great way to listen to both
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catacism in a Year podcast.
When we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us,
reveal the scripture and pass down through the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catacism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension. In 365 days, we'll read through the Catac tradition of the Catholic faith. The Catechism in the years brought to you by Ascension
in 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism
of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
and God's family as we journey together
toward a heavenly home.
This is day three.
Congratulations, you made it today, three.
And today, we are introducing
the very first pillar of the Catechism.
And to that, I wanna welcome back
for those who are a Bible and a year listeners,
Jeff Kavins.
Go to be with you.
I'm so glad you were.
It's exciting.
We had our first two days already.
I'm so grateful that you're here
to introduce the first pillar.
How's the voice doing?
Oh, you know, I got a cup of coffee here.
I'm ready to keep on trekking away.
So with this introduction,
we have the Catechism S4 pillars, right?
And so for each one of those pillars, we're going to explain those in a second, but we're
going to people introduce those.
And so you're the one to introduce the very first pillar on the creed, what we believe.
As we begin, is it okay if I just open us up with a prayer?
Absolutely.
Awesome.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and glory.
Thank you for bringing us today.
Thank you for bringing us to this place where we can learn more about you. Nor we can know your identity and know our deepest identity as
your beloved creation, as those who have been adopted by you and baptism and made into your sons
and your daughters. Help us to know you as our Father. Help us to know you God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and be drawn into your love.
This day we ask you to please bless this conversation.
Bless Jeff, bless me, and please bless everyone
who's listening to us today in Jesus' name we pray.
Amen, and the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen, as I said, it's day three.
And I'm using for when it comes to the Catechism,
I'm using the ascension edition of the Cateism of the catacism of the church, which includes
the foundations of faith approach, which you're going to talk about in a second.
Those who were heard listening, if you like, you can download your own catacism in your
reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y, the C's for catacism in here.
Also, if you want to, you can like, you can follow, you can subscribe, whatever you're
listening to this podcast. it's only day three.
And so why not?
Why not subscribe today?
Why not follow today?
I think it's worth it.
Okay.
So Jeff, pillar one.
Sure.
What, what have we gotten into here on day three as we're starting this catacasemium?
Sure.
Well, first thing we need to do really is to kind of go zoom back and look at the big picture.
Yeah.
And the beautiful thing about the catacasem is that it presents our faith in four pillars.
And you might remember that great quote of Frank Sheed, he talked about one of the problems with Catholicism is that
kids go through from kindergarten all the way to high school and they graduate and they've got what?
They've got a pile.
Big pile.
A big pile of Catholicism.
They're not quite sure what to do with it.
Remember when you said this, you're like, you someone asked you like, hey, do Catholics
believe in such and such?
And you're like, well, looking at the pile, like, I think it's in there.
I don't, I don't, I gotta be in.
I heard of that.
I got an A in that class.
Right.
You're right.
It's got this pile of Catholicism.
And what the catacism does is brilliantly, brilliantly, separate all of this out so that
we can understand our faith and even the separation into four pillars is a teaching tool in itself.
And so in this new Catechism, the Sentsions Catechism, they brilliantly laid it out and they color
coated it into four areas and that is
blue is what we believe that's the first one the creed that's what we're going to talk about. The second is how we worship
and the third is how we live and then how we pray that's prayer and so
it's laid out in a in a beautiful
way and you could say it this way in in some ways. You could say, well, what we believe
is the creed. And the creed is from Genesis, all the way to Jesus and the Holy Spirit, the church.
And so the creed is the plan of God, the plan of sheer goodness, the first paragraph of the Catechism says, in miniature. And so the creed is this whole great big plan of sure goodness, in miniature, you know.
And so that's what we believe.
And then you're going to be looking at how we worship.
And that's how you get into God's amazing plan.
And then what do we live in the plan?
How do we live?
We live the life of Christ, the third pillar, and the fourth is prayer. So in the words of Frank Sheed, who was from Great Britain, brilliant.
Absolutely, brilliant. So we're going to be taking a look at the creed here, what we believe,
and this is really, really exciting because it begins with this plan of sheer goodness that God is going to come looking for us and he is going to bring us into his blessed life.
And that's the very first paragraph.
The very first paragraph just says it all and that is that we are destined for a plan and that's God's plan and he wants us in it.
That's so interesting.
I mean, just brilliant.
As you're noting, here is what we believe about God,
but it's not just, here is a list of things
we believe about God, or that we believe about revelation,
or we believe about faith, but it's that,
God wants to bring us into that relationship.
He wants to bring us into a covenant community with him.
And that's just, I mean,
and almost every section of the Catechism,
when it does introduce a new article of faith, right?
Another thing we believe, it always goes back to that,
and God shares this with us,
so that He can share Himself with us,
that He doesn't just reveal it, so we know,
He can check that box, this is what I know.
But it's because He wants to share His own divine life,
and He wants us to participate in that life, which is, again,. But it's because he wants to share his own divine life. And he wants us to participate
in that life, which is, again, it makes it, it makes it what might be, you've said it before,
like an encyclopedia into something very, very different than encyclopedia.
Yeah, it's not an encyclopedia, even though you could use it for that. You could be a third
in the reference book. I want to know more about confession. Okay, I'm going to look it up in the,
you know, in the, in the catechism. But the way that it's put together is that it's a teaching tool in itself. And Pope
Benedict really brought this, he brought this out. It's more than knowledge, it's a relationship.
The catacism is more than knowledge. It's a relationship and God is calling us to intimacy.
calling us to intimacy. And so the very first pillar, the creed,
talks about this quest for God,
our search for God who's wooing us and calling us.
And it really begins and talks about man's capacity for God
and how we can come to know something of God.
And so it kind of brings everybody in
on an equal playing field.
And it gives us three ways that we can know something of God. And so it kind of brings everybody in on an equal playing field. And it gives us three ways
that we can know something of God. You know, we can know something of God through creation.
Certainly you can look at creation, the laws of the universe, even gravity. You can look at the
stars. And you can know that there is a creator. And then the second one is the human being,
right? Our own longing for God, what we call God.
And then the third way that we can come to know something of God is reason.
But then we hit a wall.
It's like we can know something, but at some point God has to act.
Exactly. And that's the fourth thing.
That's the thing that the Catechism is really all about.
The Catechism is saying to every reader, look, you can know something of God through creation
and we know through the human person, yes, you're smart, you can reason, but you hit the
end of the road.
You know what it reminds me of.
It reminds me of, remember the movie Truman?
Absolutely.
The Truman Show.
Yeah.
And Jim Carrey.
Yes.
And he doesn't know it, but the Hollywood set is his whole life.
Right.
Everyone else is watching him.
Everybody else has popcorn and drinks and they're watching him every week and their
sponsors for the show and everything else.
And he begins to search.
He begins to ask questions.
There's got to be more.
There's got to be more.
And he looks at the ocean, which is only about 100 yards long.
He doesn't know it.
And the director's like, oh, we got a problem, we got a problem here.
And he gets into the boat.
Oh, no, send a storm, send a storm, and they can't stop him.
And finally, he runs into the end of his world.
And what does the director say?
He comes over the loudspeaker.
Yeah.
And he says, he says, he says, Truman, and Truman says, who are you?
And the director says, I'm the creator.
Yeah, yeah, that's divine revelation.
It is.
Because at some point, God speaks through His creation, but at some point He speaks to
man.
How does it say in the galaxy?
And it says that God's divine condescension, he speaks to us as a father to his children.
Exactly. He comes down to our level and he adjusts his language to our weakness.
And he speaks to us. And that's the beautiful thing about the creed here. We in the
in the sentient catechism, they divided it up into divine revelation and the creed. And then
under divine revelation, it's the search.'s the search. That's the Truman thing.
You know that's where we're searching for God. But then in divine revelation, what God does is he
pulls back the curtain and he begins to reveal himself. And so the Catechism talks about how he begins to reveal himself in Scripture, in words and deeds.
And as he reveals himself, we come to know more of the Father and what's he like, what can we depend on.
And it becomes very, very exciting to know that he's actually revealing himself to me.
He's not hiding. He's saying, here I am. Right. It's the opposite of hiding. Yeah. He's revealing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah himself to me. He's not hiding. He's saying,
here I am. Right. It's the opposite of hiding. Yeah. He's revealing. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So interesting as you're mentioning this,
I think some of the, here is the man's capacity for God, as you said. Here's our hunger,
our search, our longing for God, and here he is responding to us. In those first paragraphs,
we had the beginning yesterday,
we had the prologue that whole, the words before,
and then tomorrow we're gonna start with the next piece,
again, this beginning of the search.
In your experience of getting into the catacism,
just even those beginning paragraphs,
are there any challenges or difficulties that you've found
in those, because I know that it pretty soon starts ramping up and starts getting into,
as you mentioned, here's got a revealing himself, revealing his heart, and sometimes as he does that,
our hearts get on fire, you know. But sometimes before that, there can be,
I don't know, maybe how would I say this? There can be a little bit of wind up
where it's not sweeping my feet immediately.
And I want to just ask if you have any,
because you've been teaching the catacasem
in the catacasadal institute for 15 years.
Yeah, all the time.
And so leading people through the catacasem,
before we go into the rest of the map here of the shade,
what are some obstacles right away
that people might find right at the beginning?
That's a good question.
That's a really good question,
because as you begin that reading of the first paragraph
that God has a plan of sheer goodness,
you're going to start reading.
And people are going to be reading with you
and listening to you and they're going to come across words
that they've never heard before.
And they're going to be like,
oh, this is too much for me.
This is, yeah, this is Bible, yeah, Jesus with a lamb around
is the thing, I get that.
But, you know, this word divinization Yeah, Jesus with a Lama Rosalina. I get that, but you know
This were divinization. What's that about right and so I think people need to relax and and go along for the ride and take as much as you can In I mean you got to think about this
We're not talking about how to put some kind of little plastic card together or something
We're talking about the God of the
universe disclosing himself, but in a way that we can understand, and you have to be, I think,
a little bit, a little patient with it and realize, you're not going to get everything, you know,
the first time, but you listen with the heart of a son, the heart of a daughter who wants to know more about dad,
wants to know more about their father. And so that eager heart is important. You know, you're not
just kind of casually reading about this, but you are giving yourself to it with the hopes that
you can learn more about them and discover more about yourself. Yeah, that means that's
since eagerness. And you also kind of mentioned some patience. Yeah, right? That sense of thing I able to say okay, if I don't get it
I that's one of the reasons I love podcasts and audiobooks is because if I'm reading something with my own eyeballs
And I might get hung up on a sentence that I'm like, I don't know what this is. I don't know. I don't know what that just said
I stop
But if it's being read to me, it's we keep moving and then what usually happens is as I keep hearing I get more more context clues
And like oh, okay now I know I more or less get the gist.
And so that's why I think that eagerness,
God, He wants to reveal Himself to me, patience.
And I would say maybe even patience,
not only with myself and my own limitations,
but also maybe some patience with the fact that
today's reading or whatever the data is,
might not answer all the questions that I have, but we're gonna get to those
I think there's something about that too. They're just like okay, we're on like you said we're on this journey
Just yeah continue to let yourself be led
Yeah, and constantly hear the words in the back of your of your mind and God saying I want to know you
Yeah, and I want you to know me. I want you to know this is part this is part of that even I can't go back to that
You know sometimes in our prayer, my prayer,
maybe not yours.
I want to, maybe this was even the Bible.
I go to, I approach God wanting a certain thing.
So whether that's reading the Bible,
I want to be inspired or I'm in prayer
and I want to be consoled.
And that might not be what God wants for me at that moment.
Maybe he just wants, but he might say,
but I have this word for you.
And I think part of that is also trusting each day, even if I wasn't blown away by this article of faith
or by this teaching we just got today. But that's what he had for me today. And so I think
that, I think it goes hand in hand right here with the search, revelation of God revealing
himself to us, that trusting that we're going to get it.
And you're going to be stretched in this study. Yeah.
You're going to be stretched because you come into the study, you come into the catechism
and the Bible, and many people went through the Bible in a year, and you come into it
with this sort of, okay, I think I kind of figured, I know what's going on here, and you know
in a God, you know, Father, Son, Holy Spirit, all right, I'm uncomfortable with that.
And then prepare for your world to expand.
Expand, and your understanding of God will understand.
You're like, oh my gosh, this is so much bigger than I thought.
Yeah, you are so much bigger.
It's so great.
What a family.
You're the Mary, the saints, the sacraments,
is wow.
Yeah.
And it reminds me of there was a book written.
I think it was in the 60s.
I think it was in the late 60s by J.B. Phillips
and it's called, your God is too small.
But you see small.
Yeah.
And that's what I would encourage people in at the beginning of this is, I think by the
time you're done, you're going to find out your God was too small.
Yeah.
And that he's born much bigger.
Yeah.
And be open to that.
Yeah.
That makes no sense.
And I think again, addresses some of those initial obstacles
that people are gonna experience.
I think, you know, we get to, like, the moral life.
This, I think it might be a challenge every day
when it gets to the sacramental life,
some of the illumination every day.
The part of this, God revealing himself is both,
yeah, both challenging,
both revealing, illuminating.
So going back to, as you're highlighting,
the foundations of faith on this,
the Catechism in the ear chart,
you talked about how God reveals himself in a unique way.
And then the next section is pretty remarkable too.
Well, actually, no, in that section is transmission of the doctrine.
Yeah, he reveals himself,
and it's very specific in the Catechism,
that God reveals himself inward, indeed, in sacred scripture, but he also reveals
himself in sacred tradition, which may be known to some people. You know, and you have to realize that
we, as Christians, we are not people of the book, although we love the book, we're not people of the book, we're people of the word,
and specifically the living word Jesus. And this revelation, what we call the
deposit of faith that Jesus gave to the apostles, that is, was given in written
scripture and in the sacred tradition, sacred scripture, sacred tradition. And a lot
of people say, well, man, I wish I could have been back there. Oh, that scripture, sacred tradition. And a lot of people say, well, man,
I wish I could have been back there.
Oh, that'd be so cool.
To know it, to hear all of this, you know?
Like you hear people read Luke 24 with the Amazis Road
and Jesus gives this talk and they think,
oh, I wish I had a seat.
You know, and we want to be back there.
We want to hear what the disciples,
and the disciples of the disciples
heard and taught. Well, guess what? You get to. You get to. You get to. And more. Yes. And more. And so
we understand that God is revealing Himself in sacred scripture and sacred tradition. But then
comes the part of, well, yeah, that was them. But what about me? How does it get to me? And that's
where we have apostolic succession, which is so important that these early disciples,
they, they ordained bishops who were entrusted with the same deposit of faith, not to change
it, not to add subtract, but to keep this deposit of faith and to systematically and organically keep passing this on to the next generation.
And so we are very confident now that we are hearing the teachings of Jesus that he gave to the disciples
and we are getting the collective input from giants who also got it and said, let me tell you
a little bit more about this.
Right.
You want to live this whole thing at an entire lifetime.
Lifetime's of people praying with this, thinking wrestling with it.
And it also being God-bedded by the Holy Spirit in that.
In passing it on to us, we just get to receive it.
I mean, even the reality here is Jesus Christ, fully God and fully man.
Right.
Of course. Like, no, fully God, and fully man. Right. Of course.
No, not duh, of course.
Yeah.
Like this was something that was wrestled with in the early church that every Christian
just takes your granted at times.
Yeah, but that was giants.
So as you're reading over the next year, we're going to be sitting at the feet of giants
and listening to all kinds of this teaching.
You know what it's similar to?
It's like you've been to an orchestra before.
Well, you go to the orchestra,
hardly anybody knows the names of the people in the orchestra,
but they know who the director is.
Yeah.
And they know who the director is,
and the director's name is on the front of the program
and everything.
Well, there's all kinds of people in this orchestra,
the director is the Holy Spirit.
And that's why we're confident. Yeah, you know.
That's so good.
So we got apostolic succession,
but then we get into what is our response to this revelation
that's been given to us.
Which is right away.
I mean, here in this very first section, section one,
is here's got revealing himself to us in all these ways.
And as he said in creation and in the human person in reason and then revelation.
And then what say you?
Well, you exactly.
What's our response?
Right.
And the response is a beautiful thing.
And this is an important point.
God revealed himself in words and deeds.
Everybody can agree on that.
I don't care what background.
You can agree that God revealed himself in words and deeds. Everybody can agree on that. I don't care what background. You can agree that God revealed himself in words and deeds.
And so the response to that revelation is in kind,
in words and deeds.
Words alone are not enough.
Right.
It has to be words and deeds.
Not everyone who says to me, Lord, Lord,
luster the kingdom of heaven,
but only those who do the will of my father in heaven.
Exactly.
So it's kind of fun.
You mentioned it.
It's interesting, I think,
is that God kind of laid it on the table at the beginning.
Yeah.
He's like, I'm going to share a lot with you,
but I want you to know I want something back here.
You're critical.
I want your heart.
I want you to know.
Yes.
Yeah.
So that's what we're learning in this first pillar,
what we believe is we are learning about this revelation prepared to respond to God.
The name for that that the church gives us is the obedience of faith.
Right, which comes from a first chapter of Romans.
The obedience of faith.
Yeah. And just to unpack that a little bit, because this will be important for pillars
two, three, and four as well. When we talk about the obedience of faith, we're not talking
about the obedience of believism. Yes, more about that. Yeah. Belief is, I believe.
I believe. Okay, kind of like your your teeth. Sure. I'm really believe.
Yeah, yeah.
Can't you see how much you're falling?
I believe.
I believe in your face.
They should.
Yeah.
Hopefully they just see the video has faith.
No, we're not talking about the power of beliefism.
We're talking about faith.
And when you look at faith from a hebraic perspective, that is the Hebrew perspective and the
Greek, you've got Muna in Hebrew, Piste, and Greek. This concept of faith is not mere
beliefism, but as Pope Benedict brings out so well, it is divided into two movements.
The first is intellectual ascent. I believe it. It's true. I believe so. As you're reading
for the next 360 two days, people are going to listen to it and they're going to have to make a decision.
Do I believe it?
Right. Do I believe that?
Okay. Okay. Check.
I'm going to send father an email.
I believe it.
That's not that that's part of it.
You make intellectual a cent check.
The second part is a personal,
interesting of yourself to that truth.
And so for example, if you believe that the Blessed Virgin Mary
is the mother of God as an intercessor and an advocate given to you, you believe that? Yeah.
And trust yourself. Right. Start, start, start praying, start asking her to intercede for you and
pray for you. If you truly believe it.
You know? And so I love this because faith without works is dead and we have to
respond by saying yes, I believe it Lord, but now I'm going to entrust myself to
you. That's what biblical faith is. Right. It will always be that. And so then when you move into the actual creed
in the first pillar, you're going to have material that is, if you go to church, it's very
familiar. Right. Because it's an enthomild year. You know, because that whole section is
based off of the apostles creed. Exactly. Yeah, hopefully we all know. Right. But you
know what's really interesting is you go to mass. And when you hear the apostles' creed. Exactly. Yeah, hopefully we all know. Right. But you know what's really interesting is you go to mass and when you hear the apostles' creed in mass, everybody, they read it
together collectively because that's easy. But if you had to do it on your own, that's more
difficult. Yeah, I have to read it. Yeah. And it's, we, you know, I believe, we believe, I remember,
it was a funny thing that happened a few years ago. And this tells you how much we are together in the body of Christ.
But it has to be brought down to the personal level, I believe.
I do believe.
I was with Father Mitch Pachow once.
And he invited me over.
I said, I said, are you going to say, Master's morning?
He said, yeah.
So I said, can I come?
And he said, yeah.
And I thought it was going to be like 30 other people.
And of course, with 30 other people, we can all do the heavy lifting together.
Right.
You have a response.
I know the lines every time.
Exactly.
And I got over there.
It was the only one.
Yeah.
And I realized, I didn't know Mass the way I thought I knew Mass.
The first time I ever went to Mass, but I was the only person in the congregation, quote,
unquote, I was, oh my gosh.
What do I say?
The Lord be with you.
I'm not sure. Yeah, right. Yeah, I've been doing this a long time. But that's the way it is here,
is that the creed is something that we all recite in the mass. We believe and you can, you know,
you can look at this in the beginning of the catechism, the very beginning, you can see the creed is broken
down so well in the catechism on page Nr. 10, is I believe in God the Father, and then
I believe in Jesus Christ is only Son, and then third, I believe in the Holy Spirit.
And so you've got the creed broken down into these three areas.
And then all of the sub-points of what we believe and what's funny is we go to mass. And we just sort
of recite it, you know, and I believe in God the Father Almighty, Creator of mind's wander in.
Yeah, you're looking at all the words. Yeah. And someone says, would you believe it? Yeah, I said it,
didn't I? I mean, yeah, of course, Jack. Right. And it's like the first year to get all excited about God. You listen to the creed.
I believe that five years later. I believe that 10 years later. Yeah, I believe that 20 years later,
I'm still here. Yeah. And that's not what it's for. It's not a checklist to see if you're still on the camp. The reason that we recite the Creed is because it's what we not only believe intellectually,
but it's what we're entrusting our life to.
And if you entrust your life to that, every part of that Creed, you're going to live differently.
Yeah, that makes so much.
Because like you said, we're here in words and in deeds that God reveals Himself.
And we respond in words and in deeds.
I'm a head of friend who wants to who said when it came to the creed, sometimes that's
what we believe is subscribing what we believe.
And he said, sometimes I just I say the creed.
And what I think is, no, this is in whom I believe or this is in whom I trust.
This is the one I'm describing the one who I trust, as I'm describing the one that I believe in,
that I have surrendered my life to.
And that would be, because it makes it,
it's not just, again, this is the data that I say is true.
But it's, here is the one in whom I have this relationship,
that I, again, used it, in trusting.
I think that's all.
So, I heard a great analogy from one of our friends
I'll make it quick he was a great analogy he talked about though
I think it was the well-end of brothers, you know, we're gonna walk across the great Blondini. Yes
I would have was yeah, it leaves us a Blondine, but I the first time I've read it was the Blondini I'll go with you about
Niagara Falls. Yes. Yeah, and you know that story. Yeah. I love it because it's he goes across. You know,
it's very dramatic. Yeah. I'm going tight rope across the tight rope and gets on the other side.
Someone yells out, do it again. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Do it again. Go back the other way. You know,
and I think from what I understand of the story, you might correct me is that he says, do you think
I can do it again to the crowd? And I go, yes, we believe. You think I can do it again?
Pushing a wheelbarrow.
Yes, we believe.
You think I can do it pushing a wheelbarrow?
Blindfolded.
You think I can put a human being in the wheelbarrow and they're going, yes, yes.
And he says, I need a volunteer.
Nobody believes.
Crickets.
Nobody believed. Nobody believed. Crickets. Nobody believed.
Nobody believed.
Yeah.
And that's the way it is with our faith.
You know, we can stand up and say, I believe all these things,
but do you entrust yourself?
Yeah.
And it's the entrusting of yourself
that is going to make the biggest difference in your life.
You can go through the whole Catechism in a year
and agree to everything you're going to be reading, everything.
Yeah. But unless you entrust yourself to God, through the whole Catechism in a year and agree to everything you're going to be reading everything.
But unless you entrust yourself to God, your life will not look different.
Yeah, this is not about just more information, or information transfer, about transformation.
Exactly.
That's exactly what it is.
Good way to put it.
Whenever we start RCA, people becoming Catholic or learning more about the Catholic church,
it's like, we don't just want to pass on data. It's about conversion of heart. It's actually not just getting
to know the one who is created and redeemed us, but also having been gone more deeply into
relationship with them.
Yeah, so information, transform it. And that's what people need to keep focused on as they
go through it. And there's going to be some keep focused on as they go through it.
And there's going to be some things that they hear about where they're going to say,
man, I just don't understand quite.
You know, all right, it's okay.
Yeah.
Make a note of it.
You can get back to it, but take as much as you possibly can in and everything that
you learn, ask yourself how you can entrust yourself.
You know, going back just a little bit about this revelation in scripture,
there's a whole section in this first pillar about the nature of scripture, how we go about
studying scripture, interpreting scripture, and this should give people a real sense of joy
and certitude to know that, you know, a lot of people are afraid of that. I don't know if I'm
going to mess it up. I know I'll mess up the Bible and what God is saying is, no, come on in.
Right. Come on in. I'll give you some hints on how to do this. And so very early on in the
catechism in paragraphs, I think it's 112. In paragraph 112, 113, and 114. The church teaches us three things that will ensure that you're not going to miss the mark in your study.
For example, to be especially attentive to the content and unity of the whole scripture. In other words, when you're studying second Timothy,
make sure that you're taking into consideration the gospel of Mark. Right. You're in Exodus, even Leviticus.
Yeah. You know. And so the content and unity of this divine revelation is very important.
You don't want to take a text out of context.
That's right. In the context for anything or a problem. Yeah.
Exactly. Paragraph 113 read the scripture within the living tradition of the whole church.
Well, why should I do that?
Do you know how this Bible, the Bible, or not?
But the truth is, the Bible comes from, it's a tradition that comes from the church.
And the church, as you and I have talked about before, the church is the pillar and support
of truth.
And it's the church that said, that's the inspired word of God.
In St. Augustine said, I wouldn't even, I wouldn't even know that this was the word of God. And St. Augustine said, I wouldn't even,
I wouldn't even know that this was the word of God
unless the church had told me.
And told me so.
It's important to stay within the tradition,
the full tradition, that is,
sacred scripture and sacred tradition.
And then the third is to be attentive
to the analogy of faith,
or that is the coherence of the truths of faith among themselves and within the whole plan
of revelation. So it gives us some simple guidelines there on, you know, what to, what to,
you know, I think you said it before, you know, it's like a big sandbox or something and it gives
you the corners to stay, to stay there.
You've been fine.
But inside, you can play around, you can dive deep,
you can even use your imagination in many ways.
Yeah.
That sense of being able to say, maybe what about this?
But you round it against the wall, like, okay,
I guess that's as far as we go.
Yeah.
And the church just said, that's off base.
And yeah, it's so good to be able to have all those three
when we read Scripture.
And even as we move forward this year with Catechism.
And it even gives you the recipe here, like in paragraphs, it's 116, 117, 118.
It gives you the recipe here on how to, in a sense, squeeze all the juice out of the orange.
Right.
And get as much out of the word of God as you possibly can by instructing us to, first of all, look at the literal sense. That's not a big complicated thing. That
just means what was the intention of the author. And then, then we get to look at what people really
like to do. And that's the spiritual sense. And that's in three, in three different ways. That's
the allegorical sense. And this is big words ways. That's the allegorical sense.
And this is big words, but right now.
The allegorical sense means,
how does this relate to Christ?
Moral sense, how does it relate to me and my life
and conduct, anagogical sense,
how does it relate to the future?
So you can see here that the church
is giving us some very simple instruction
on going after this revelation and trying to understand it for ourselves.
And then it talks about the relationship between the old and the new and typology,
and it just really equips you to dig in.
Which is fascinating that recognition of typology, right?
So that in the Old Testament, there are four shadows of what Jesus fulfills in the New Testament
or in the New Covenant.
And not all Christians know about that.
Not all Christians know that in the scriptures they unified whole and that it's a story.
How's the line that the Old Testament is revealed in the New and the New Testament is hidden in the Old?
And that sense of like, yeah, there's this connection that is so powerful when we know that that connection exists, which is amazing.
Yeah. Yeah. I love it. Also, I think that there'd be something worthwhile noting that in looking
at this, especially the creed, that some of the ways, and on the back of the, the catechism
at a glance, you know, the catechism timeline, there actually is a timeline on the back of this.
I know, I love it.
And some of the...
I'm wired that way.
You like the timeline.
I wonder where we got that idea.
But there's this piece,
and not only of how here is scripture coming to us,
but also these professions of faith
and these church councils.
It's not every church council,
but kind of some of the significant ones.
And how a lot of what we say is true comes out of, you know, maybe wrestling with error.
Yeah.
Like that there were heresies that came up that were like, maybe that's true.
I mean, even like the council of NICA right in 325, I mentioned that we all know, of course,
we know Jesus is fully God and fully man.
But that was formulated because some people were saying, no, that's not the case.
And so a lot of what we believe as true in the creed in all of these church councils
comes out of, I don't know what is the error or heresy, I guess, for lack of a better
term.
That'd be accurate.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Most of the councils, Vatican II is a little different, but most of the councils were actually
trying to settle a problem.
Like, for example, in the Council of Ephesus, when they declared that Mary is the Theatokos,
she is the mother of God.
And that argument was actually over the divinity of Jesus.
Right.
It's all about Jesus.
It's all about Jesus. Yeah. And they said, no, Mary is divinity of Jesus. Right. It's all about Jesus. It's all about Jesus.
And they said, no, Mary is the mother of God.
Jesus is God from the moment of his conception.
Yes.
Yeah, Jesus.
Holy God, a fully man.
Holy God, fully man.
We call that the big word now, hypostatic union, which means, and this is important.
These things are important and they do have ramifications.
Yes.
Results.
Jesus isn't two people.
He's one person.
One person.
Two natures, human and divine.
And in the console of Constantinople, he even said he had two wills, a human and a divine
will, which never were parted from one another.
And to realize that that's not explicated in scripture, right?
That's not necessarily like given to us
as the data of scripture,
but we have the data of, wait a second,
here is Jesus who is conforming his will to the father's will.
Here is Jesus who at the same time experiences this,
I don't wanna say temptation,
as everybody who was tempted in the world,
or an issue is tempted in,
everywhere that we are without sin.
And so the church has been able to say temptation as to everybody who was tempted in the world or an issue is tempted in. Everywhere that we are without sin.
And so the church has been able to say, wait a second, if that is the case, and it is the case,
then he would have not only human nature and a divine nature, but a human will and a divine will.
Yes.
And just like, wow, I never thought of that.
I would never even thought to ask the question.
But I'm glad someone did.
Well, somebody did before.
Do you know one
page in here? No, and I would just encourage your listeners to look at this. It's page
735. I love that page. And because it gives, it says, it's a timeline of ecclesiastical
writers. The following writers and authors arranged here by date are cited in the catechism, and it goes from the second century
and it goes through a list of every century the main ecclesiastical writers and where in the catechism they're cited.
And so it's basically like going to the beginning of the history of baseball and saying in 1864, you know, and then it comes all the way up to the present, with the stars.
And that's what's happening here. So it's a visual of the continuity of the faith from
the beginning all the way till now. That blows my mind to just, I can just meditate on
that page. You know, and say, wow, this is part of the living character of tradition. Yeah yeah.
And you know I'll tell you another we could go on about so many different things but I can tell you
another part that I really really like in the first pillar the Creed is paragraph 787.
paragraph 787. In 787, it says that from the beginning, and this is under the title, the church, the body of Christ. And I love this because in the creed, we make certain statements about the church.
You know, we believe in this holy Catholic church.
The church is a communion with Jesus.
And I love this paragraph.
It says, from the beginning, Jesus associated
his disciples with his own life,
revealed the mystery of the kingdom to them
and gave them a share in his mission, joy, and sufferings.
That line, Father, right there, in 787. That line should open up in people's minds
and hearts an incredible world of opportunity to know that Jesus is sharing everything with us.
And so you can look at His work and His mission one of two ways. You can say, well, he's the son of God, he's the King of kings, he is the physician, he's the counselor, he's the healer, he's the one that suffered for the sins of the world, he's the one that died for the sins of the world, he's the one that rose from the dead.
So what's my job? Well, I can either say, well, I'm just a beneficiary of all that. Receive it all. Receive it. Or, wait a minute, he shared everything with me.
His mission, his joy, and his suffering.
And so I love this because for Jesus to share himself with the church with us in this
first pillar means Satan was wrong in the Garden of Eden when he lied to Adam and Eve about God with
holding.
God is not withholding anything from us.
In fact, he's not withholding anything.
He is in fact sharing everything with us.
And not only do we get the divine revelation, we get the divine invitation to share in the divine life and the blessing of God.
So this is big stake stuff. It is. And it's one of those things where I think that's one of the
reasons why, as you're highlighting this in paragraph 787, I can't recommend enough having a
catechism to follow along. There is, sometimes you can, one of the things that I found is
There is sometimes you can, one of the things that I found is when doing the Bible in a year, because you based it on that great adventure Bible timeline, which has that we're following
the story. We're never going to lose the story or leave the story. So, you know, you press play
the next day. And so, yeah, we're still with, you know, even if we're with the prophets, we're still
with the brook. Great. No problem. I've got to introduce to him yesterday and just carrying on where we left off. But sometimes with
the catechism, it's here we are on a new article. And for me, if I'm not prepared,
if I don't see it in front of me, like, what are we going to talk about today? I
don't know yet. And so it's it's going to be I think people are going to find
that it's going to be a little bit of a challenge that way that we don't
necessarily. Yes, this is our invitation into the story, into God's
life. But I think what can really, really help people is if they get any catacas and
but this, you know, obviously I love the ascension edition because then you get to look at it
and say, okay, I see here we're on, we are on day, whatever. And the section is, oh, God
is truth and God is love. Okay, non-'m prepared. Go ahead and read it to me.
You know, if there's something about that,
I think it roots it more deeply in my mind,
in in my heart when I have some kind of frame of reference
that I can also kind of see, I guess.
Yeah, and I think adding to that, which is great,
is that first paragraph.
Yeah, is if you open with that almost,
every once a week at least, as if you open with that almost, you know, once a week at least go back and open with it
and keep in mind that everything I'm reading back here
in paragraph 1384 in paragraph 1815 in paragraph 2285
in paragraph 2705, all of it is for the aim
of sharing in the life of the Trinity. Now and for ever, it's what we're
destined for. We're destined to live in the life of the Trinity. And this is the playbook.
This is a map that will guide you in a more sure way than I promise you. Any book you can buy on Amazon or anywhere.
This is the book that will give you really the trail guide of,
how do I do this?
I want to share in the life of God.
I want to be with God forever and ever and ever.
Okay, well, if you really do, guess what?
We got two books for you.
We got the divine revelation and we've got the continuation
and the synopsis of the great riches and the inheritance that we have. And so when you hold
the Catechism in your hand, you might as well, someone says, what are you reading there? You might
as well say, it's my inheritance, right? It's my inheritance, you know? You know, yesterday people,
so the very first day, we heard that paragraph one, you know, you, you, yesterday, people, so the very first day,
we heard that paragraph one, you mentioned in that the plan is your goodness. Yesterday,
we concluded the day by reading paragraph 25. And in the conclusion of the, the,
the prologue is this from the Roman Catechism, which is so incredible. I love this. The whole concern
of doctrine and its teaching must be directed to the love that never ends.
So this whole thing we're going to do, doctrine teaching,
whether something is proposed for belief,
for hope, or for action,
the love of our Lord must always be made accessible
so that anyone can see that all the works
of perfect Christian virtue spring from love
and have no other objective than to arrive at love.
Which is just like, okay.
So this is the context that we're given.
Yeah.
The very first paragraph, I'll be in a plan
if you're goodness, hear God in this love,
and then this, it's all meant to lead us to love.
And listen to the way the first pillar ends.
If you wanna take the first verse, our first paragraph,
I used to always come versus,
because it's so, it's a good Bible. The first paragraph, but listen to the last paragraph in the in-breath section.
And that's something, you know, I want to bring out to our listeners is that every section
has a little area that is highlighted called in-breath, it's like Clif Notes.
Right. Now don't just go to those.
Here's the bullet points. But that's really what, you know, kind of the heart of it. Listen to what paragraph 1060 says. And this is at the end of pillar one. At the end of time, the kingdom of God will come in its fullness.
Then the just will reign with Christ forever, glorified in body and soul, and the material universe itself will be transformed.
God will then be all in all in eternal life. Oh, that sounds good.
Yeah, I'm all for that. You know. So good news at the beginning. Good news at the end. Yeah, it's
so good and we get and we the thing is if we're willing to kind of stick with this again, it's day three
and we're just getting started. But if we're willing to say, okay, I know God, you're going to give me
these crumbs. I think when I say crumbs, know God, you're gonna give me these crumbs.
And I think, when I say crumbs,
I mean, you're gonna keep leading me.
You're gonna, and again, not every day
is gonna blow my socks off.
Some days I'm like, okay, well, there we go.
Day 12, we're checking off the box.
But I'm convinced that it's one of those things
like the Bible, where if we keep pressing play,
we miss a day, we miss a week,
we keep pressing play,
that God has something to say to us
every single time we show up.
And so kind of it's in conclusion, one last thing,
just another question for someone,
you've been teaching scripture, you've been teaching
the catacasem for so long.
What's one last thing you'd want to just offer
the people as they're gonna go on this,
you know, the journey of the creed,
this first pillar is the longest.
It's the longest journey we have.
What's one last word for them is they get started on that.
Sure.
I think what I would share with your father is what Cardinal Rout singer then became
Pope Benedict, you know, had to share.
And that was that there's a reason that the creed is first.
And the reason, you know, you could have put it second or third or whatever, but it was first because pillar
two, three and four all springs, spring, spring from this amazing, this amazing story of salvation, history, and what we believe. So the second pillar springs from what we believe. The third pillar,
the second is sacraments and liturgy. The third pillar is the moral law, life, and Christ, that springs from what we believe and prayer springs from what we believe. So consider this
first pillar as an anchor. And the last thing I would say is that when you go to mass,
when you go to mass and you recite the creed, make sure it's not just column one that you agree.
Yeah, yeah.
But say to the Lord, help me, help me to entrust myself.
Trust myself, yeah, that's so good.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, that's so fun.
So grateful.
And I know that for everyone who's going to be joining us,
everyone's going to be walking with us.
Again, there can be the tendency to be discouraged
and the tendency to say, what's happening? What's happening is I just think sometimes, you know, there's a there was a
early church
Father who described the action of the Holy Spirit and
Sometimes the Holy Spirit comes upon us and power like Pentecostus BAM. There it is, you know, tongues of fire and
Sometimes he said the Holy Spirit comes upon us like a gentle dew and it just just like sinks, seeps into the ground. And
just like the earth gets watered one way or the other. If it's, you know, huge storm
with all this rain pelting the earth, or if it's just a gentle dew, it gets absorbed into
the earth. And so I would decide to say that some days, some days are going to be like,
oh my gosh, that was amazing penetrated. And some days it's just like, okay, that was good.
And it's just that dew. And I think that if we just show up, keep listening, keep pressing play, keep
just being faithful. We know that the Lord himself is faith. He's gonna do
something through this. And I would encourage, I will also encourage our listeners
to pray for you because and thank you for what you are doing. You know, we
don't know why God chose us to do what we're doing, but kind of like Esther
for such a time as this, you know, you're the one that you're doing it.
And we need to pray for you.
Pray for you and your voice.
He eat right?
Is it?
But pray for protection with you because God's using you in a very unusual way,
but a beautiful way.
And we stand with you.
We're not just listening to you.
We stand with you together.
Yeah, it's awesome.
Thanks, Jeff. Thanks a lot. That means a lot. So yeah, please let's pray for each other
Shift said please pray for me. I am praying for you our names for the mic and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless