The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 305: The Call to Chastity
Episode Date: November 1, 2023We are all called to the virtue of chastity, which integrates our sexuality within the fullness of our person. Chastity trains us in freedom, teaching us how to direct and guide our desires. Fr. Mike ...explains that this virtue requires sustained effort and leads to self-mastery and peace. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2337-2345. 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 to 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
and God's family as we journey together to our heavenly home.
This is day 305.
We're reading paragraphs 2337 to 2345 as always.
I am using the Ascension Edition of the Catechism, which includes the foundations of faith approach,
but you can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism, the Catholic Church.
You can also download your own Catechism and your reading plan by visiting AscensionPress.com
slash C-I-Y.
And you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates and daily
notifications.
As we start today, day 305, I just want to thank you so much.
Thank you all of you who have been praying.
Again, day 305 means there's 60 days left.
And I'm not trying to count down the days.
I'm not like one of those people who thinks like, oh my goodness, we're almost done.
But I'm kind of like, this is amazing.
You are so proud of you guys.
This is amazing.
And thank you so much for your prayers,
for praying for each other.
Again, as we go through all of these teachings
as we hit these commandments, oftentimes,
what, right, if the invitation and it's the challenge,
it is this, the reality that we're not, none of us
are called here to simply have the information transfer, right?
We're not just called to learn more,
or called to be transformed by the Lord by His grace,
by His teaching.
And so proud of you.
And so grateful for you.
Thank you for your prayers.
Thank you for your financial support because we couldn't do this without you.
Today we're going to continue talking about the vocation to Chastity.
So yesterday we had the introduction of the sixth commandment.
It's going to funny.
Sex the commandment because that's one way to think of it.
One way to think of this.
I'm not sure if this is a throwaway thing.
I always think of it.
Did I mention this before? The Fifth Commandment, someone once told me, and I was
probably in my teenage years, and so it just stuck with me, and I thought it was kind of funny.
They said, you can remember the Fifth Commandment, thou shalt not kill, because it takes five
fingers to strangle someone. Okay, I'm so sorry about that, but that's what I remembered. And if you
want to remember the Fifth Commandment, there it is. That image, if you want, and the Sixth Commandment about sexuality is kind of like the Seventh
Commandment.
I don't know if that helps anybody, but if it helps you, that is wonderful.
And if it doesn't, please forget that I said anything about this.
That would be awesome.
Anyways, moving on yesterday, we started talking about the Sixth Commandment, right?
You shall not commit adultery.
And there is this massive
I think a pretty big statement it says the tradition of the churches is paragraph 2336 the last paragraph
We had yesterday the tradition of the church has understood the sixth commandment as encompassing the whole of human sexuality
And so it's not just about thou shalt not commit adultery
But it informs the way in which what what is the purpose of sex?
What is the meaning of being
made male and female? There is a meaning there. And if there's a purpose there, in fact, the
purpose is oriented towards a vocation. And so we're going to talk about, we're going to begin
talking about that today. And the primary vocation, it says here, the vocation to chastity. Now,
sometimes people think, oh, wait, chastity like what priests and nuns have, like, they don't
have, you know, they don't enter the sexual embrace.
No, that's celibacy.
Chastity is different.
In fact, Chastity's given the definition right away in paragraph 2337.
It says this, Chastity means the successful integration of sexuality within the person,
and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being.
So that's just, that makes sense.
Okay.
So, it's, chastity is the successful integration of sexuality within the person.
And thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being.
So basically, it's that, that harmony, right?
Order.
We talked about this before, that when things are properly ordered, when we have our intellect
that guides and governs our passions, we have a will that are intellect that informs our will right that guides and governs our passions to have that all balanced and then the proper way when we see other people in
The way that we're called to see them right people are not objects. They're not things to be used
They're persons to be loved and yet how often we have a distorted vision of other people where we treat people as things to be used and
objects as things that we love and
Chastity is the successful integration of sexuality within the person and thus the inner unity of man in this bodily and spiritual being so we're
We're gonna talk about that today. So we're gonna talk about integrity the integrity of the person
And so chastity is gonna involve a things. One is an apprentice apprenticeship in self mastery. It means I'm going to learn over the course of my life,
more and more. Okay, how do I govern my passions? How do I govern myself? How do I not be a slave?
And so when it comes to not being a slave, we're going to be in this apprenticeship,
meaning we're going to, we're going to start wherever we are. we're going to start wherever we are.
We're going to start wherever we are.
And we're going to grow and grow from there.
That's what we're talking about today.
So again, let this be a message of hope today.
This you might say, man, I have experienced only brokenness in my sexuality.
I've experienced only brokenness in my sexual desires.
And so either I've given into those repeatedly or I've run away from them.
And so that's not chest. Neither of those is chest. It gives simply giving into the desires or
even running away from the desires. Neither of those is the successful integration of sexuality.
One is the unsuccessful giving into it. Whatever whims I might have. And the other is running away
from whatever whims or desires I have. Successful integration is chastity. Does that make sense? Okay, we're going to, well,
if it doesn't, we're going to talk about it today. So in order to talk about this more fully,
and with great purity of heart, just allowing the Lord to guide our conversation,
we call upon His name. We pray, Father, in heaven, in the name of your Son, Jesus Christ.
We ask you to send your Holy Spirit into our
hearts, into our minds. Give us clarity of thought and give us purity of love. Help us to see
others, the way you see them, help us to love others, the way you love us, and the way you love
them. Remind us that other people are not objects to be used, they are persons to be loved.
objects to be used, they're persons to be loved. Help us to see in every person, in every person.
Someone made in your image, someone you died for, someone you rose from the dead for. Help us to see in every person around us, your gift of life and your gift of love. Help us to see you
in them. And help us also to see you in ourselves, in ourselves to see someone that
you died for. When we look at ourselves to see someone that you conquered death for,
in ourselves to see someone that you love, help us to see like you, help us to be chased.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit, amen. It is day 305, we were reading paragraphs 2337-2345.
The vocation to chastity. Chastity means the successful integration of sexuality within the person,
and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being. Sexuality, in which man's
belonging to the bodily and biological world
is expressed, becomes personal and truly human when it is integrated into the relationship
of one person to another, in the complete and lifelong mutual gift of a man and a woman.
The virtue of chastity, therefore, involves the integrity of the person and the integrality
of the gift. The integrity of the person. The Chase person maintains the integrity of the powers of life and love placed in him.
This integrity ensures the unity of the person.
It is opposed to any behavior that would impair it.
It tolerates neither a double life nor duplicity in speech.
Jastity includes an apprenticeship in self-mastery, which is a training in human freedom.
The alternative is clear.
Either man governs his passions and finds peace, or he lets himself be dominated by them,
and becomes unhappy.
Man's dignity therefore requires him to act out of conscious and free choice as moved
and drawn in a personal way from within, and not by blind impulses in himself or by mere
external constraint. Man gains such dignity when reading himself of all slavery to the passions,
he presses forward to his goal by freely choosing what is good and by his diligence and skill,
effectively secures for himself the means suited to this end. Whoever wants to remain faithful to
his baptismal promises and
resist temptations will want to adopt the means for doing so. Self-knowledge, practice of
an asesis adapted to the situations that confront him, obedience to God's commandments, exercise
of the moral virtues, and fidelity to prayer. Indeed, it is through chastity that we are
gathered together and led back to the unity from
which we were fragmented into multiplicity.
The virtue of chastity comes under the cardinal virtue of temperance, which seeks to permeate
the passions and appetites of the senses with reason.
Self-mastery is a long and exacting work.
One can never consider it acquired once and for all.
It presupposes renewed efforts at all stages of life.
The effort required can be more intense in certain periods, such as when the personality
is being formed during childhood and adolescence.
Jastity has laws of growth, which progress through stages marked by imperfection and too
often by sin.
Man, day by day, builds himself up through his many free decisions, and so he knows,
loves, and accomplishes moral good by stages of growth.
Chastity represents an eminently personal task. It also involves a cultural effort for
there is an interdependence between personal betterment and the improvement of society. Chastity
presupposes respect for the rights of the person, in particular, the right to receive
information and in education that respect the moral and spiritual dimensions of human life.
Chastity is a moral virtue. It is also a gift from God, a grace, a fruit of spiritual effort.
The Holy Spirit enables one whom the water of baptism has regenerated to imitate the purity
of Christ.
All right, there we have it. Paragraphs 2337 to 2345 so much in here and so much, we again, the definition of chastity. So once again, it is, celibacy is one thing.
Celibacy is when someone makes a promise or vow of some sort that they are going to
abstain from sexual action, sexual activity.
So priests, religious sisters, religious brothers, consecrated virgins, the people who forsake
sexual activity for the sake of the kingdom, or forsake marriage for the sake of the kingdom.
We are all called a chastity.
Whether someone is single or they're married or they're religious, consecrated, it doesn't
matter.
Every one of us is called the Chastity Why, because Chastity means the successful integration
of sexuality within the person and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being.
And so this recognition that we need this integrity, that's why I love this last sentence of paragraph 2337,
the virtue of Chastity, therefore, involves the integrity of the person and the
intergrality of the gift.
Now, we're going to talk about the intergrality of the gift itself tomorrow.
Like, what is the meaning of that gift?
And what is that?
What is it to have make a gift of oneself?
But the integrity of the person is so important because everyone desires to be, had to have integrity.
I don't know too many people who desire to be disintegrated.
And so let's start here.
Paragraph 2338.
Continuous and says, the Chase person maintains the integrity of the powers of life and
love placed in him.
Goes on, integrity ensures the unity of the person.
Again, this is that sense of, I love how it says, it tolerates neither a double life,
nor duplicity and speech.
I sometimes am captivated by this notion. The notion of,
you know, being made on purpose is being is to be given a mission, right? The vocation is a call,
right? So I have a vocation means I have a purpose. The Lord is calling me to a mission. And so to
live that mission is amazing. To live that mission with your whole life is had to have integrity.
At times though, every one of us, I would say every one of us,
is tempted towards what you might call a shadow mission. Remember hearing that term years and years
ago, and I thought it just resonated because it says, oh my gosh, this is the human condition.
This is all of us, especially you and me who find ourselves, those of us here who find ourselves,
know this is my vocation, whether your vocation is consecrated single person
Religious sister or brother a priest a bishop a Deacon a married man or married woman
Your vocation is there your mission is there in the temptation sometimes is to live a shadow mission
And that's what this is saying
Integrity to truly have integrity
Tolerates neither a double life nor duplicity in speech
So and I love how it says that, so double life is,
okay, here's actions that are not in conformity
with that integrity.
Like, here's actions that are not in conformity
with the person that you are.
And not only actions, but also duplicity in speech
that is so important for us.
Because sometimes it's like, well, I didn't do anything.
Okay, but did I say something?
You know, maybe I didn't say anything,
but did I, in my mind, did I entertain something?
I remember hearing it was a sermon
and it was about faithfulness and marriage.
And they were trying to sum up like,
what is it that every person in this is,
whether someone is married or conspicuous single,
so a little bit for the sake of the kingdom.
What is it that is a violation of one's marriage vows,
a violation of one's vows?
What is it that could be defined as a shadow mission?
And they used this criteria, they said this,
they said, your spouse is the only legitimate source
of romance in your life.
So I guess this would actually only be applied
to married people.
The concentrated singles, priests, bishops, they'll think there would be no, they would
have to say this, they would have to say that the mission is no, I've forsaken romantic
relationships.
So there is no legitimate source of romance in ones in someone who's made a vow of
celibacy.
There is no legitimate source of romance in their life for someone who's made a vow of celibacy, there is no legitimate source of romance in their life.
For someone who's married,
your spouse is the only legitimate source of romance.
And so I like that criterion because why?
Because this last sentence,
remember in paragraph 2338, it says,
it tolerates neither a double life nor duplicity in speech,
and so it encompasses everything.
So what can I just watch, rom comes,
and just kind of get my romantic fix there?
No, your spouse is the only legitimate source
of romance in your life.
What about reading some of those books
that have a lot of romance novels?
No, your spouse is the only legitimate source
of romance in your life.
What about texting?
You're just kind of getting that charge
by sharing those words back and forth
between that person that's,
I'm not acting out.
No, your spouse is the only legitimate source
of romance in your life. So it encompasses everything, and it just is so good. Because again, for'm not acting out, no, your spouse is the only legitimate source of romance in your life.
So it encompasses everything and it just is so good because again, for those who are
celibate, those who have made a promise to be chased for the sake of the kingdom, right,
for seeking romance for the sake of the kingdom, then we get to, and that's met me, I get to
say, no, there is no legitimate source.
There's no way I can legitimate any source of romance in my life.
If you're a husband or a wife, your spouse is the only legitimate source of romance in
your life.
To live other than that, in this area is to live a double mission or a shadow mission,
a double life.
Does that make sense?
I don't want to over-emphasize this, but if chastity is about integrity, then this is
part of what integrity is. It means I don't like press pause, and this is the key thing.
To be a person of integrity means I don't press pause in any area of my life.
And in this area, commandment number six, when it comes to the area of sexuality, I don't press pause here.
It when it comes to the area of chastity, I don't press pause.
It encompasses my whole life.
Now, this is going to be a challenge, right?
That's why paragraph 2339 says,
this includes an apprenticeship in self mastery,
which is a training and human freedom.
This is beautiful, it's so powerful,
because the church doesn't see chastity as,
okay, here's what you can't do.
Here's what you can't do.
You can't do this, that's the other thing.
The church says, no, chastity, this gift of integrity
is an apprenticeship in self mastery,
which means it is a learning process.
It also is a training in human freedom
that the goal is not straight jacket.
We talked about this one of the virtues, right?
The virtues are not straight jacket,
the virtues are strengths, chastity,
as one of those gifts, those one of those virtues, is
a training in human freedom. And there's the thing, it's not arbitrary. It's not as if,
okay, you can, if you really want to go for the gold, you know, go for the, go for the
brass rain, like shoot for the stars, then try to be chased. If not, you just be like
normal, like the rest of us. No, it's actually this. It's either. I love this. It paragraph
2339 says, the alternative is clear.
Either man governs his passions and finds peace, freedom, joy, or he lets himself be
dominated by them and becomes unhappy. This is, oh, man, look at the story of the world. Let's
look at the story of maybe your life, you can look and say, okay, when I just gave in, when I just
gave into my passions, was I freer, was I more joyful,
horror, did I find myself becoming dominated by those passions and becoming unhappy? In fact,
St. Augustine has this quote, it's not in the catechism today, but it says this, it says St. Augustine,
who knew something about giving into his passions and also knew something about freedom, about integrity,
right, about chastity, he said, because part of his story is lust. Part of his story is a brokenness of his own chastity. We didn't
have it. He said, lust and doledged became a habit. And habit unresisted became necessity.
He found himself a slave to his passions. So once again, here's the quote, lust and doledged
became a habit. And habit unresisted became a necessity.
And this is what the church is saying.
The church is saying, God doesn't want that for you.
God doesn't want you to be a slave.
He doesn't want you to be dominated by your passions.
He doesn't want you to be unhappy.
He wants you to govern your passions and find peace
and be free, be powerful.
And so what happens?
It says, goes on to say, man gains such dignity.
When reading himself of all slavery to the passions, he presses forward to his goal by doing what?
By freely choosing what is good, and by his diligence and skill effectively secures for himself,
the means to this suited end. And so this comes from within. This is so important. And that's right in
the middle of paragraph 2339. It says, man's dignity requires him to act out of conscious and free choice
as moved by or drawn in a personal way from within and not by the blind impulses and not by
external constraint. Okay, so what does that mean? This is one of the coolest things.
John Paul the second. Okay, let me, here's the sentence again, right? It's middle of 2339.
Man's dignity, your dignity requires you and me to act out of conscious and free choice as moved and drawn
in a personal way from within.
So John Paul II, when he gave us the theology of the body, he talked about a thing called
the ethos, E-T-H-O-S. So ethos, ethos, I like to say ethos, it sounds more pretentious
in many ways.
The ethos is that in a world of a person that draws us to certain things and repels us from other things.
Right? So that it's that that that sometimes you don't need someone to tell you, oh, turn away
from this or turn towards this, you just want to. Right? So there's some things in your life that
you automatically are repelled by. There's some things in your life you're automatically drawn towards.
And so say, take a shot of all the second, he talked about this ethos that inner world that draws
over it draws us to certain things
and repels us from other things.
And when we find ourselves being drawn to things
that are sinful, we don't just need an external constraint.
What we need is a change of our ethos, a change of heart.
When I find myself repelled by the good,
again, it's not like I need someone
to force me to choose the good.
What I need is I need a transformation of my heart,
I need a transformation of my heart. I need a transformation
of my ethos. And that can be done. That's what this apprenticeship and self-mastery is all about.
So now going on, paragraph 2340 highlights this and says, whoever wants to remain faithful to his
baptismal promises and resist temptations will want to adopt the means for doing so. So again,
this is not just, you know, white knuckle this. And if you really
grip the steering wheel really hard, you can, you can make it through. This is, no, there's,
there's a process. There's a apprenticeship in self mastery. This changing the ethos,
the means for doing that are this. Here are a few, self knowledge. So knowing yourself,
how many of us run from knowledge of ourselves? Man, we're just so afraid of what we might find
if we dig deep into our hearts. So self-knowledge is one. Number two, the practice of an
accesus adapted the situations that confront him. So accesus, asceticism, right? So there are certain
things. If I find myself being broken in a particular area, let's, I don't know, let's think of a certain
thing. Like, okay, well, we're going gonna talk about pornography at some point. So maybe it's pornography.
And maybe the pornography is related to one's telephone,
right?
One has a smartphone.
So I have a lot of students here.
One of the practices of a ceasus when it comes to their phone.
And that doesn't even have to be related to pornography.
It could be related to just over use of their phone.
They will put it to grayscale.
Grayscale is when you can actually take away the color.
And it's just basically black and white,
black and white, fancy phone.
And there's something about it that is less attractive.
Like something about it that's the less grabby of your eyes.
And so a lot of our students will do this.
They'll have this practice of a ceasus, a set of sysm
that's adapted to their situations.
They might find themselves,
ah, man, I'm just addicted to my phone.
Well, you know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna make it less pleasurable
by taking away the color or someone who says,
I'm addicted to looking at impure images on my phone.
Okay, I'm gonna take away that color
and to make it less attractive to myself.
It's that asceticism that's adapted to their situations
that confront them.
So number one, self-knowledge, number two, asceticism,
number three, obedience to God's commandments.
And sometimes it's just so simple as that.
It's just okay.
I'm gonna begin striving to follow God's commandments.
Number four, the exercise of the moral virtues.
I'm gonna become more just.
I'm gonna become more prudent.
And temperate, we'll talk about that in a second.
Fidelity to prayer is so important.
And I'll say this again, but I remember hearing a very holy person once say,
when you find yourself battling serious sin, choose serious prayer, especially when that
serious sin seems so daunting and seems like it's winning. Like, I can't, there's no way I can
break away from this serious sin. He said this. He said, serious sin and serious prayer cannot coexist.
One will kill the other.
And that's so true, I believe.
Serious sin and serious prayer cannot coexist.
You might find yourself like, I can't break away from the sin.
It's like what St. Augustine said, right?
That lust and dulls became a habit and the habit unresisted became a necessity.
I don't know if I can break free of this.
Serious sin and serious prayer cannot coexist.
One will kill the other.
And it's through chastity. Here's another St. Augustine quote at the end of paragraph 2340.
It is through chastity that we're gathered together and led back to the unity from which we were
fragmented into a multiplicity. So again, we don't want to be divided. You're not called to be divided.
I'm not called to be divided. We're not called to live a shadow mission. We're called to have an
ethos that is drawn to the good and repelled by the bad.
No, keep in mind that self mastery is a long and exacting work. 2342, one's never done from this.
This, and so if you're discouraged by that, it's like, I've taken so long, it's okay. It's
going to take a long time. It also has laws of growth, which is important. It says this, jacity has laws of growth,
which progress through stages marked by imperfection
and too often by sin.
If you find yourself saying,
man, I put in this whole process,
I keep falling and this process, I keep failing.
Well, yeah, here's the church saying,
okay, well, here's the deal.
Jacity, growing in this integrity,
has laws of growth, which progress,
how, through stages
marked by imperfection into often by sin.
If that's your story, if that's part of your story, and you are discouraged by that, the
church is saying, this is how it goes.
This is just how it goes.
In order to get stronger, you're going to sometimes work to failure, but then you'll
get stronger.
It's laws of growth, which progress through stages,
marked by imperfection and too often by sin. So don't give up. This is not to be discouraging.
This is growth. Last thing is, chastity is a moral virtue. It's also a gift from God. It is a
grace. It is a grace, a fruit of the spiritual effort. You're not on your own. You're not on your own in this.
The Holy Spirit enables you,
you who the water of baptism has regenerated to imitate the purity of Christ.
So as we continue talking about this, they call the invitation. The challenge is not to be discouraged,
but to recognize, okay, this is my call, but this is, I know it's gonna be an apprenticeship in self-mastery.
It's going to involve discipline. It's going to self-mastery. It's going to involve discipline.
It's going to involve stages of growth.
It's going to involve failure.
But it also will involve God's grace and God's help.
So we pray.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
God bless.