The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 310: The Gift of a Child
Episode Date: November 6, 2023Children are a gift from God. Children have integrity and rights. With these key principles in mind, Fr. Mike reviews the Catechism’s teachings about marriage, family, child bearing, sterility, and ...adoption. Because “a child is not something owed to one but is a gift”, we must protect the dignity of the child at the forefront of all decisions. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2373-2379. 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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The Catholic Church
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in a Year podcast,
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in Scripture, and passed down
through the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church discovering our identity
in God's family, as we journey together toward our heavenly home,
this is day 310, we're reading paragraph 2373 to 2379.
As always, I am using the Ascension Edition of the Catacism,
which includes the foundations of faith approach.
But you can follow along with any recent version
of the catacism of the Catholic Church.
You can also download your own catacism
in a year reading plan for the last 55 days.
If you want to, you can go to ascensionpress. essentialpress.com slash CY and you can click follow or subscribe to your podcast app for daily updates and daily
notifications. Just a last quick thank you for all those who have supported the production
of this podcast with your prayers. Thank you so much. Financial gifts, we could not literally
could not do this podcast without you. Thank you so much to get us here today 310. As I said,
we're reading paragraph 2373 to 2379 yesterday. We talked about the validity of marriage and congeal fidelity.
So faithfulness.
Remember we had those four marks of God's love.
The four marks of God's love are God's love is always free, total, faithful and fruitful.
And so we recognize that here in paragraph 23, 64 and 65, the faithfulness of marriage.
That's a essential part of this love.
Also for quantity and that fruitfulness is an end of marriage.
And so it naturally tends to be fruitful.
Now, what do you mean by fruitful?
Well, today, I'm looking at 23, 73 and 23, 79, is the gift of a child.
And so today, we're going to actually take a couple paragraphs and talk about what is
that gift and not only what is the gift of a child but
Because children not just children in general but every child each and every child because each and every child is a gift and has a dignity
And that the creation of this child is intrinsically connected to the sexual act because of that there is a massive boundary, I say,
or even protection around children, since children are a gift and since the creation of a child
is intrinsically connected to the reality of the sexual act, there is, again, there's a thick
and powerful boundary protecting that dignity of each and every child and connecting them to
the sexual act as well as
Preserving the integrity of the sexual act for the sake of what not just for the sake of the sexual act for the sake of
Persons right for the sake of the dignity of each and every person if that doesn't make any sense to you
It's going to make sense. Hopefully as we read these paragraphs
Let's launch into today. I know the last couple days have been long days.
So let's see what we can do today.
Let's pray, Father in heaven.
We give you praise and glory and thank you.
Thank you for bringing us to this moment, bringing us to this day.
Today, 310.
Lord God, thank you so much for revealing to us truly what are gifts.
The gift of life and the gift of family,
the gift of friendship, the gift of love.
Thank you for the gift of conjugal love
in the context of marriage.
Thank you so much for all those people
who have been called to marriage.
Amidst trials, amidst thorns, amidst thisils, amidst,
amidst the burdens of life,
we thank you for the blessings of life.
And amidst the struggles of life,
we also thank you for the blessings of life. And amidst the struggles of life, we also thank you for the gift of life.
And in the midst of the dangers of life,
we thank you for the gift of children.
Thank you for the gift of children.
We pray this day for all those who have children,
for all those who do not have children.
We thank you and praise you.
And we ask you to please,
Lord God bless all of those who long
for children and all those who fear the presence of children in their lives.
Help us all to take on your lens, to see as you see and to see that every child, every
human life, is a gift from you.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen, the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
amen.
It is day 310, we are reading paragraphs 2373-2379.
The Gift of a Child
Sacred Scripture and the Church's traditional practice see in large families a sign of God's
blessing and the parents' generosity. Couples who discover that they are sterile suffer greatly.
What will you give me, asks Abraham of God, for I continue childless.
And Rachel, Christ who her husband Jacob, give me children, or I shall die.
Research aimed at reducing human sterility is to be encouraged, on condition that it
is placed at the service of the human person, of his inalienable rights, and his true and
integral good according to the design and will of God.
Techniques that entail the disassociation of husband and wife by the intrusion of a person
other than the couple, donation of sperm or ovum, surrogate uterus, are gravely immoral.
These techniques, heterologous, artificial insemination and fertilization, infringe
the child's right to be born of a father and mother known to him,
and bound to each other by marriage. They betray the spouse's right to become a father and a mother
only through each other. Techniques involving only the married couple homologous artificial
insemination and fertilization are perhaps less reprehensible, yet remain morally unacceptable.
They dissociate the sexual act from the procreative act.
The act which brings the child into existence is no longer an act by which two persons
give themselves to one another, but one that entrusts the life and identity of the embryo
into the power of doctors and biologists, and establishes the domination of technology
over the origin and destiny of the human person. Such a relationship of domination is in itself
contrary to the dignity and equality that must be common to parents and children. Under the moral
aspect, procreation is deprived of its proper perfection when it is not willed as the fruit of the
Conjugal Act, that is to say, of the specific act of the spouse's union. Only respect for the
link between the meanings of the Conjugal Act and respect for the unity of the spouse's union. Only respect for the link between the meanings of the conjugal act and respect for the unity
of the human being make possible procreation and conformity with the dignity of the person.
A child is not something owed to one, but is a gift.
The supreme gift of marriage is a human person.
A child may not be considered a piece of property, an idea to which an alleged right to a child
would lead. In this area, only the child possesses genuine rights, the right to be the fruit
of the specific act of the conjugal love of his parents, and the right to be respected
as a person from the moment of his conception. The gospel shows that physical sterility
is not an absolute evil. Spouses who still suffer from infertility after exhausting legitimate
medical procedures
should unite themselves with the Lord's cross, the source of all spiritual fecundity.
They can give expression to their generosity by adopting abandoned children or performing demanding
services for others. Okay, there we have it, paragraphs 2373-2379. As we've been saying, as I've been saying
for the last number of days, the sixth commandment
touches on a lot of topics that are very close
close to our hearts, right?
Close, basically, we can feel the pinch, right?
We can feel this squeeze of God's commandments in our lives.
And sometimes that squeeze, sometimes that pinch
is not very comfortable.
In fact, the sixth commandment touches on so many things that are so...
Yeah, I just lack a better phrase, close to the human heart.
Yesterday, we talked about contraception, the day before talking about same-sex attraction,
the day before that, or before that, talking about sexual assault.
All of these issues are so deep and so profound, and again, they touch on the human heart in such a way
that we have to be careful when we talk about them.
And at the same time, I think it's worth just noting
that we have to talk about these things.
It's noting, it's worth noting that,
okay, what is the church's teaching?
So let's start at the very beginning, paragraph 2373.
It says very clearly, sacred scripture
and the church's traditional practice.
See in large families a sign of God's blessing and the parents generosity.
And let's just pause for a moment on that because I know I sometimes talk to parents
of families that are not necessarily large and they say, oh, you know, we've only got
X number of kids. I'm not even going to say a number. We've only got X number of kids.
And I know people are thinking that we're not Catholic enough because we don't only have
X number. Like maybe that's the case. Maybe that's what someone has said.
Maybe that's what you think. But I think sometimes we get really sensitive about areas where we're not
quite sure. I mean, sometimes we're sensitive about things we're just sensitive about, right?
Like that. You know, those things, maybe you have this, maybe I don't think I'm the only one,
but you have those things about your appearance that you notice every things, maybe you have this, maybe I don't think I'm the only one, but you have those things about like your appearance
that you notice every time you walk by a mirror,
or you have those things about your appearance,
you notice every time like, you know,
just go out for the day.
And if someone were to look at you,
they would never even notice that thing,
right, but you're extra sensitive about it,
like that, you know what I'm saying?
I think sometimes a lot of life
and a lot of the spiritual life, a lot of the sense of,
remember the church doesn't say you have to have a certain number of children in order
to be Catholic.
It doesn't say that at all.
In fact, we talked about this, how the church encourages responsible parenthood, the
responsible parenting.
And so that means that the parents themselves, you get to decide that, okay, is this a time
that we need to space out the births of our children?
Now, again, call the bond to be as generous as possible,
but at the same time, that is between the couple
and the Lord, right?
So just that's essentially the church is teaching here.
At the same time, the church does see,
in large families, a sign of God's blessing. I mean, this was back to the Bible where it in large families, a sign of God's blessing.
I mean, this was back to the Bible,
where it just, that's a sign of God's blessing.
Also, it is a sign of parents generosity.
I was with a family the other day, a couple months ago,
that I believe they have 16 children, 16 children.
And now eight of those children are biological children,
eight of those children are adopted children.
They are all, all 16 are their children.
And that is an incredible sign of God's generosity
because that family can handle it.
And being with that family,
it's like, wow, you do handle this really, really well.
There's a lot of joy in that family.
There's a lot of love in that family.
And yet, you could find another family that says,
wow, we are having a really, really hard time handling too,
or really, really hard time handling three.
Like, I understand, believe too, or really, really hard time handling three. Like, I understand.
Believe me, I understand this.
The recognition is, what can you do?
There is no.
Again, the church doesn't give you a number and says, this is the number to shoot for.
Obviously, 16 is quite a large number.
That's kind of obvious, right?
That's on the level of like, whoa, not everyone can do that.
And I don't think
everyone's called to do that. At the same time, that's a blessing. It's a sign of God's blessing
and a sign of parents generosity. That doesn't mean that if you have three, that's a sign that
you're selfish. You know what I'm saying? Okay, yet we're just affirming this. We're affirming
that large families are a good. But also we're affirming this, family is a good.
So much so, family is such a good.
Children are such a good that paragraph 2374 notes this, and this is something that no
one needs to be reminded of, because we know that this is true, because this is the reality
of so many people's lives.
Couples who discover that they're sterile suffer greatly.
I mean, this is the story of Scripture, right?
Here's Abraham and Sarah.
Here's Rachel and Jacob and they find themselves
in so many people in the New Testament,
in the Old Testament.
I mean, so many people who find themselves
unable to have children in a breaks their heart
in so many people in our lives, in our lives,
they find they're unable to have children
and it breaks their heart.
I mean, you can, Rachel, cries out to her husband, Jacob,
give me children or I shall die.
There is something so profound about that desire for children that would, in some ways,
can drive a couple to do almost anything. Almost anything to just let us have a child.
And so paragraph 2375 says, the research aimed at reducing human sterility is to be encouraged.
And that's a good thing, but there's a condition there.
Remember, because the child is a gift, because the child,
the dignity of the child needs to be protected as much as possible,
that research needs to be conditioned placed on it,
that it's at the service of the human person.
Now, not necessarily strictly speaking the service of the mom and dad,
but at the service of the human person, the child,
the child's inalienable rights, and his true and integral good, according to the service of the human person, the child, the child's inalienable rights,
and his true and integral good according to the design in will of God.
So therefore, there are certain things like, for example, surrogate parenthood that is
prohibited, gravely immoral, such things as artificial insemination, gravely immoral.
Those are sins.
Why?
Well, on a technical sense,
they're sins because they separate
the procurative act from the unitive act.
And because of that, they're gravely immoral.
The last sentence here in paragraph 2377 says,
under the moral aspect,
procuration is deprived of its proper perfection
when it is not willed as the fruit of the conjugal act.
So again, procreation and unity have to be together,
that is to say, of this specific act of the spouse's union.
This is key line.
Only respect for the link between the meanings
of the conjugal act and respect for the unity
of the human being make possible procreation
and conformity with the dignity of the person.
And again, this is one of those remarkable things
where so many of us, in least in our culture, I think,
so many of us were concerned with,
and not unrightly so.
Not wrongly so, we're concerned with the parents,
we're concerned with, or the potential parents.
And we want their good, and we want their happiness.
We want them to have this good thing, this gift of a child.
And yet, the church is saying, yes, yes, pay attention to that.
And if we can have some research that helps couples achieve pregnancy to have this good thing, this gift of a child. And yet the church is saying, yes, pay attention to that.
And if we can have some research
that helps couples achieve pregnancy
in the context of the conjugal act,
then wonderful, so good.
At the same time, there is another person involved in here.
And the other person involved is the child.
And perg up 2378 highlights this.
It highlights the fact that a child is not something
owed to a person,
but is a gift that that no one has a right to a child and that there's something
painful about that, right? But to stop and say, wait a second, here are couples that long for a child.
And again, I'm not talking in an abstract way. I know couples, I'm related
to couples. I love couples who are in the midst of this. Here we're trying. And we're trying.
And we're trying. And couples who have said, what is it that here we are, we're doing
everything right and hearing stories of people who, you know, here's an unintended pregnancy
outside of WebLock. And like, what the heck is going on here?
Where here, we're trying to do everything right
in the context of marriage, we're trying to do everything
right in the context of the lords and the churches teaching.
And yet here we are, we find ourselves childless.
That is a real pain and a just, man, I'm just pleased
to hear this.
This is not simply a teaching that is just black
and white, it's not simply objective, it's not simply,
it's not heartless. And yet at the same time, can we, can we all hear this, can we all hear
that a child may not be considered a piece of property, an idea to which an alleged right to a
child would lead? Again, if I have a right to a child, then that, that temptation, of course,
or the place it would lead potentially, and
maybe even certainly, is to see that this is my child, as opposed to, this is a child
who I did not have a right to, but is simply a gift.
I think that there is something powerful about this.
I think there's something like if we could step back for one moment
and say, wait, there is a dangerous place that this could lead the idea that husband and wife have a right to a child.
It could be really dangerous because then they're they're mine, but they're not.
It goes on to say the child, only the child possesses genuine rights.
Have you ever thought about that? I've never thought about that before. Only the child possesses genuine rights. Have you ever thought about that?
I've never thought about that before.
Only the child possesses genuine rights,
and those genuine rights are the right
to be the fruit of the specific act
of the conjugal love of his parents,
the right to be respected as a person
from the moment of his conception.
That's the only person has a right in this situation
is the child, and they have a right to be born of simply to be a gift.
They have the right to be a gift.
They have the right to be respected as a person, as a gift, not as a right.
From the moment of the conception, now, paragraph 2379 highlights that the gospel shows
that physical stability is not an absolute evil.
That yes, it is a result of the fall. It is a result of living in a broken
world. But spouses who suffer from infertility. After exhausting legitimate medical procedures,
what do we call to do? It's what we're all called to do. We're called to unite ourselves with the
Lord's cross, the source of all spiritual fruitfulness. Every one of us is again, remember, remember, this is not us and them, this is every one
of us.
Every one of us is called to be a saint, and that means every one of us in this broken
world is called to unite our sufferings, those those broke that broken part of our
lives, the parts of our lives that are so painful and so achy and so wounded that it seems
like there is no way for this to be healed, sometimes it isn't healed and when it isn't healed
What is the church telling us to do what Jesus told us to do to pick up our cross follow after him
We can all of us unite ourselves in the greatest pain of our lives
What is the greatest pain of your life
You and I are called are called to take that and say okay, God use this
Unite this with you on the cross. This is me in pain You and I are called or called to take that and say, okay, God, use this.
Unite this with you on the cross.
This is me in pain.
Let me be united with you on the cross.
And finally, it says paragraph 2379 that these couples, any couple, but these couples can
give, can give expression to the generosity by adopting abandoned children or performing
demanding services for others.
And again, couples who have done this, couples who have said,
this is the cross, the Lord has called us to, and so how do we open our hearts?
How do we open our homes?
Here we are, individuals who long to be parents without children.
Well, there are children who long to have parents, but don't.
Maybe we can find each other. Maybe we can find each other.
Maybe we can find each other. Maybe we can let God bring us together.
And maybe we can love the way we know we're called to love.
Because that's where all of us are called to do.
We're all called to love.
We're called to love in the context.
I don't want to say I'm saying it meets the cards we've been dealt
because that sounds so random and chancy.
But let's say like that, we've been called to love with the cards we've been dealt. We've been called to love in the circumstances in which
we find ourselves, we're called to love in the midst of whatever cross it is we find ourselves
carrying. That's all of us. So please know on this day, gosh, I don't know. I don't
know if this seems so insensitive. I don't think it is. I think it's just life.
I think it's just reality and I think it's just that holding on to this, let's protect the dignity of children by
realizing that no one has a right to a child. The only one who has a right in this is the child and they have a right to a mom and a dad.
They have a right to not be property, but to be a gift.
Before all those who experience this pain, you're part of this community, you're part of
the church.
God loves you, He has not forgotten you, He has not abandoned you, He is there in the midst
of your suffering, in the midst of your heartbreak, in the midst of your grief He is there, and He's
calling you, okay, look up, Look up and what's the next step?
What is the next step he's calling you to?
And simply say yes, knowing that he's there.
Let's pray for each other because that's what we find ourselves.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
God bless.