The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 324: The Ninth Commandment (2024)
Episode Date: November 19, 2024What does covetousness mean? Today, we launch into the ninth commandment, which deals with carnal concupiscence. This commandment addresses the tension between the “flesh” and the “spirit.” Fr.... Mike emphasizes that purity of heart and temperance are crucial to overcoming lust of the flesh. The more we obey God, the more our hearts see others as God sees them. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2514-2519. 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, 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
and God's families, we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is day 324. We're reading paragraphs 25-14 to 25-19. As always, I'm using
the Ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes the Foundations of Faith approach,
but you can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. You can
also download your own Catechism in a year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And you can click follow or subscribe to your podcast after daily updates and the other notifications because
Today is day 324. We left the eighth commandment yesterday
Not leaving it as we say before we have to live all of these commandments
These commandments of the Lord are so important, but we're launching today into the ninth commandment now
Here's an interesting thing in the sixth commandment. We talked about what is God's commands? What's God's purpose?
What's God's plan for human sexuality? So we talked about that in the sixth commandment. We we talked about what is God's commands what's God's purpose what's God's plan for human sexuality so we talked about that in the sixth
commandment we also talked about possessions right in the seventh
commandment and commandments 9 and 10 come from the same place here in Exodus
chapter 20 for 17 it says you shall not covet your neighbor's house you shall
not covet your neighbor's wife or his manservant or his maidservant or his
ox or his ass or anything that is your neighbors and so it gets to
The heart of things, you know
Jesus later on in Matthew chapter 5 said everyone who looks at a woman lustfully is already committed to adultery with her in his
heart and so even though the sixth commandment dealt with
Actions related to human sexuality and the seventh commandment deals with actions related to the possession of goods and stuff
the ninth and 10th Commandment remind us
that where does sin come from?
Where does all the tensions in our lives come from?
Where do all the battles in our lives come from?
They come from a broken heart.
They come from the fact that we have this concupiscence,
right, we have this desire for what is not good for us
or what is not meant for us.
And so here in Commandments nine and later on
in the 10th commandment,
we're gonna be looking at this.
We're looking at, yes, we talked about the parameters
and the directions that God has given to us
when it comes to human sexuality,
when it comes to human possessions.
But also taking another look at the human heart.
And so that's what we're looking at
for the next couple of days,
as we look at the ninth commandment
and later on at the 10th commandment.
So as we do that, let's take a moment
and call upon our Father in heaven as we pray.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and glory. Thank you.
We thank you for giving us guidance, for giving us your commandments, because your commandments are a reminder
that you've brought us into covenant with you. Your commandments are a reminder that you want a relationship with us. Your commandments are a reminder
that we matter to you and that our choices matter to you
Not only our choices, but even our heart
The state of our heart matters to you
and we thank you we thank you for
caring about us when
Sometimes we don't even care about ourselves
But you care and you love
and so we thank you and we just praise you.
And today we give you permission to care about us.
Today we give you permission to let us matter to you.
Today we give you permission to love us.
Help us to love you back.
In Jesus name we pray.
Amen.
In the name of the Father, in the name of the Son, in the name of the Holy Spirit, Amen.
It is day 324.
We are reading paragraphs 25-14 to 25-19.
Article 9. The Ninth Commandment. You shall not covet your neighbor's house.
You shall not covet your neighbor's wife, or his manservant, or his maidservant,
or his ox, or his ass, or anything that is your neighbor's.
Everyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart.
St. John distinguishes three kinds of covetousness or concupiscence.
Lust of the flesh, lust of the eyes, and pride of life.
In the Catholic catechetical tradition, the Ninth Commandment forbids carnal concupiscence.
The Tenth forbids covening another's goods.
Etymologically, concupiscence can refer to any intense form of human desire.
Christian theology has given it a particular meaning – the movement of the sensitive
appetite contrary to the operation of the human reason.
The Apostle St. Paul identifies it with the rebellion of the flesh against the spirit.
Concupiscence stems from the disobedience of the first sin, it unsettles man's moral
faculties and, without being in itself an offense, inclines man to commit sins.
Because man is a composite being, spirit and body, there already exists a certain tension
in him, a certain struggle of tendencies between spirits and flesh develops.
But in fact, this struggle belongs to the heritage of sin. It is a consequence of sin
and at the same time a confirmation of it. It is part of the daily experience of the
spiritual battle. As St. John Paul II stated, for the apostle, it is not a matter of despising
and condemning the body, which with the spiritual
soul constitutes man's nature and personal subjectivity.
Rather, he is concerned with the morally good or bad works, or better, the permanent dispositions,
virtues and vices, which are the fruit of submission, in the first case, or of resistance,
in the second case, to the saving action of the Holy Spirit.
For this reason, the apostle writes, If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the
Spirit.
Purification of the Heart The heart is the seat of moral personality.
Out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, fornication.
The struggle against carnal covetousness entails purifying the
heart and practicing temperance. As an ancient Christian source states, remain simple and
innocent and you will be like little children who do not know the evil that destroys man's
life. The sixth Beatitude proclaims, blessed are
the pure in heart, for they shall see God." Pure in heart refers to those who have attuned their intellects and wills to the demands
of God's holiness chiefly in three areas – charity, chastity or sexual rectitude,
love of truth and orthodoxy of faith.
There is a connection between purity of heart, of body, and of faith.
As St. Augustine wrote, the faithful must believe the articles of the creed so that
by believing they may obey God, by obeying may live well, by living well may purify their
hearts and with pure hearts may understand what they believe.
The pure in heart are promised that they will see God face to face and be like Him.
Purity of heart is the precondition of the vision of God.
Even now, it enables us to see according to God, to accept others as neighbors. It lets us perceive the human body, ours and our neighbors, as a temple of the Holy Spirit, a manifestation of divine beauty.
All right, there we have it, paragraphs 25-14 to 25-19.
As I said, commandment number 9 and commandment number 10 are kind of recapitulations of the
6th and the 7th commandments and also they're very connected in this reality that obviously
in Exodus chapter 20 they're kind of bunched together here.
But also we recognize that there's this concupiscence that we have, this attraction to what is not
good for us. Now,
paragraph 2514 highlights this. It says St. John distinguishes three kinds of concupiscence,
lust of the flesh, lust of the eyes, and the pride of life. So in this commandment, the ninth commandment, we highlight lust of the flesh, right? Lust of the eyes is that other thing of that,
that greed, right? That thing I want to possess another thing. Now, lust of the flesh is I want
to possess another person. I want to use another person. Lust of the That thing I want to possess another thing. Now lust of the flesh is I want to possess another person
or I want to use another person.
Lust of the eyes is I want to possess those things.
I want to be able to use those things
and it's that form of greed.
Yet in a similar way, they come from the same place
and it's so remarkable that even though lust of the flesh
and lust of the eyes are different,
they kind of manifest differently,
they come from the same place.
They come from the place of,
I'm willing to take what is not mine.
As kind of an example of how lust of the flesh
and lust of the eyes come from the same broken place
in our heart, there was a man who years ago
told me a story from his own life.
And he said that he was out of town
at kind of a resort place where a number of conferences
were happening, like, you know,
different companies were at this place
and they were hosting their seminars or whatever. And so he said he walked into one of these
conference rooms. If you've ever been to those conference rooms, you know what they kind of look
like. They're all kind of the same, a big room with a lot of fluorescent lights and they have long rows
of tables and chairs. And on these tables are, you know, bowls of candy a lot of times, right,
or other kind of treats they have. And so he said he walked into this room and it wasn't his own
company. So he walked in, he wanted to have some of treats they have. And so he said he walked into this room and it wasn't his own company.
So he walked and he wanted to have some of the treats
they had out there, but he's like,
oh no, no, that's not mine.
That's not mine.
So I can't take any.
And he walked to the window
and the window was facing a body of water.
And he said right outside the window
was not only the body of water,
but there were a number of young women
who are also at the resort
and they were by the water wearing swimsuits and whatnot.
And so he found himself looking through the window
and just gazing basically staring at these young women
and allowing himself to lust after them.
Saying like, well, it's not hurting anybody
because here I am on this other side of this window,
no one's seeing me do this thing.
And he was, again, this is the lust of the flesh.
And at one moment, he was reminded of the treats here
that were in this room.
And how when he walked by those treats,
he was like, oh, I want one of those.
But then he was like, oh, it's not mine.
And he realized that as he was looking out this window
and looking at these women,
wait, they're not mine either.
And he had this conviction of, oh my gosh,
this is the same thing.
I wouldn't take these treats
I want to take these you know, whatever they are candies because they don't belong to me
But here I am willing to quote unquote, you know take or use
These women in my mind and they don't belong to me either not that any person belongs to another person
You know I'm saying but he realized that all this is the same brokenness
But also it's the same beginning of a solution,
right? It's the same beginning of a remedy. Because when he saw the candy there, when he saw the
treats there, he was like, oh, that's not mine. I'm not going to take it. I'm not even going to
entertain the thought of taking it because it's not mine. And then he realizes looking out the
window at these women like, okay, I'm not even going to entertain the thought that I could have
a second glance at these people
because they're not mine.
They belong to themselves.
They belong to the Lord, hopefully, who knows?
But they're not mine.
And that same, again, same brokenness
that led him to lust of the flesh and lust of the eyes
could be in some ways tempered, we'll say it like that,
some ways calibrated by that same statement of truth.
Okay. This is not mine.
As is not mine to take and they're not mine to use.
And I think there's something really powerful about this because we
recognize that the brokenness is the same in all of us.
Now we experienced this concubusence in different ways, but the
brokenness is the same for some people.
The idea of lust of the flesh. That's not even maybe not even on your radar. Maybe it's like, yeah, it's there, but like,ness is the same. For some people, the idea of lust of the flesh,
that's not even maybe not even on your radar. Maybe it's like, yeah, it's there,
but like that's really under control. It's not a big deal,
but maybe most of the eyes or lust for, for food or lust for, you know,
cigarettes or lust for whatever the thing is that has a hold on you.
And it might feel like, okay, how do I, how do I get free from this?
How could I ever have this purity of heart?
No paragraph 25 17 highlights this it says the heart of course is the seat of moral personality
That out of the heart come evil thoughts murder adultery fornication, right? Of course, that's the scripture from Matthew chapter 15
and so the struggle against you know carnal covetousness that guy looking out the window or any way that's just manifesting itself, entails purifying the heart and practicing temperance.
It's one of the reasons why, again, I'm bringing up that situation of the guy in the
conference room, because temperance would be able to say, okay, yeah, these traits are
good but they're not mine.
So they're not meant for me to be used.
And I can say no to this.
That's one of the reasons.
I think I mentioned this before. There was a young woman named Anastasia
And I remember her telling the story that Anastasia at one point went to her father and said dad
What kind of man should I marry? What should I be looking for in a man to marry?
And her father could have said a number of things, you know
Find a man who's honest find a man who's noble man who's whatever the thing is
He said find a man who can fast That was it. he said find a man who can fast that was
it he said find a man who can fast because that person who can be temperate
right that person who can say no to their concupiscence that their desire
for food will also be able to say no to himself in many other desires because
it's all connected again struggle against carnal covetousness entails
purifying the heart and practicing
Temperance and doesn't happen all at once
In fact, actually I did talk to a man who that he had struggled with lust of the flesh for his entire life
In fact, he said it was overwhelming and he could never imagine his life not
Delving into pornography and masturbation on a multiple times a day
One day he said I'm gonna bring this to confession.
And he brought it to confession and he said,
as of that confession, after a whole lifetime
of being enslaved by this, I've been free now
for I think he said something 18 years.
This is remarkable, it's just incredible.
Because that can happen all at once.
For most of us, it happens gradually by a process.
And again, there's a connection here that
catechism says in 25 18 between purity of heart purity of body and our faith
this is this great quote from st. Augustine yes some people have this
experience where yeah I've come to the Lord and he heals automatically most of
us experience gradual progress in freedom and so that's why St. Augustine
says here says the faithful must believe the articles of the And so that's why St. Augustine says here, says, the faithful must believe the articles of the creed so that
by believing they may obey God, by obeying may live well,
by living well may purify their hearts and with pure hearts may understand what they believe.
And so that's the thing, that's one of the keys for
anyone who finds himself in a place where, man, I find it really difficult to look at myself or look at others with purity of heart.
Augustine is making this connection saying, okay, so let's believe the articles of the Creed.
So that by believing they may obey God. One of the articles of the Creed, of course, is that Jesus Christ suffered and died for you.
So you could be set free. I'm paraphrasing, obviously, right?
But one of the things that we believe as Catholic Christians is that Jesus Christ
By his life death and resurrection. He has conquered death. He's conquered sin. He's he's given us a new freedom
Do we believe that or not?
Do I really believe that in my life, you know with all my sins with all my attractions to sin my concupiscence
Do I really believe that Jesus Christ and his power of his cross can actually set me free?
So years ago my best, my best friend, Nick, uh, with his wife, Jason,
and they weren't Catholic yet.
And they had come to a teaching on the theology of the body that I had done.
So they were so fired up by this that the next night they were back at their,
their non-Catholic church, uh, like young adult Bible study.
And at one point they had the outline from the night before that I had given them.
And so Nick and Jason and we're teaching this theology of the body and how God
can give us a new heart, right?
He he it's not just about you know modifying behavior. He can actually give us a new heart
He can give us a pure heart and one of the Bible study leaders said yeah, Nick, that's fine
But you know just that's for some people. I'm really glad that you are excited about this, but that's not for everybody
They know some of us just have a higher libido kind of a situation
but that's not for everybody. They know some of us just have a higher libido
kind of a situation.
And Nick said, he looked at his friend and was like,
are you crazy?
Are you doing exactly what St. Paul warned against doing?
Are you emptying the cross of Jesus Christ of his power?
Are you saying that there are some people here
that Christ did not die to set them free?
Are you saying that Christ,
what he did on the cross is not sufficient for you?
It's not enough for you.
That it's not for everyone else,
but it's not enough to heal you in this area.
And the guy was kind of like, he was kind of sheepish,
and he was like, okay, okay, I get it.
It's true.
Because here is what St. Augustine's saying,
that by believing these articles of the Greek,
by believing what Jesus has done for us, we may obey God.
If I don't believe that Jesus Christ
truly has conquered sin and death, then why obey him?
If I don't really believe that that he can actually set me free, then why even try?
But those who believe, those of us, here we are on day 324. We believe these articles of the creed.
We know what Jesus has done for us. We know the power of the Holy Spirit in us. By believing,
we can obey God. And when we obey God, we live well. You know, so often people
on the outside, and maybe sometimes people on the inside, we can see obedience as slavery.
We can see obedience as, I'm in a straight jacket now, as opposed to, oh my goodness,
by obeying the Lord, by being obedient to God, this is a good life. This is what it
is to live well. And that also by living well,
they purify their hearts. You know, it has a compounding effect, right? That by living well,
your heart becomes more and more aligned to the truth. We can see God more and more clearly. And
then with pure hearts, we can understand what we believe. That's why paragraph 25 19 is the last
thing. Highlights the pure of heart our promise
They will see God face to face and be like him. It's a precondition for the vision of God and even now
To grow in that purity of heart
It enables us to see according to God to accept others as neighbors
Let us perceive the human body both ours and our neighbors as a temple of the Holy Spirit and manifestation of divine beauty
We can actually not just see the person as parts that are either more attractive or less attractive,
but we can see the human person, right? We can see the human body and see the person.
The body and it alone says St. John Paul II, says the body and it alone is capable of making visible
what is invisible, the spiritual and the divine.
And so the more and more we are living in obedience to God,
the clearer and clearer we see.
So when we see people's bodies,
we are not tempted to reduce them to parts
or to use them for our own lusts.
But when we see the body, then we see the person
because the body and it alone is capable
of making visible the invisible, the spiritual
and the divine. And so we pray for that. We pray for that gift of sight, gift of purity of heart
so that we can see people and love people as they are and be loved by people as we are.
I'm praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.