The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 33: God as Father
Episode Date: February 2, 2023The Catechism describes the various ways that God has revealed himself to us as Father over the ages, and gives us insight into God the Father “in relation to his only Son,” Jesus. Fr. Mike entrea...ts us to examine our relationships with our earthly fathers and how they might be impacting our vision of God as Father. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 238-242. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm a name to 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 entire Catechism of the Catholic Church discovering
our identity in God's family, as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
It is day 33. You guys, this towards our heavenly home, it is day 33.
You guys, this is our Jesus day, you know, Jesus lived 33 years.
And we're reading paragraphs, 238 to 242,
a couple things before we get started.
I'm using the ascension edition of the Catechism,
which includes the foundations of faith approach,
but you can follow along, obviously,
in any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Also, you can download your own Catechism
and the reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, you can, you can click follow or subscribe
in your podcast app for daily notifications
and daily updates.
As I said, stay 33 reading paragraphs,
238 to 242, a couple of things.
We're gonna continue to talk about how God has revealed
Himself to us as Trinity.
And this is the key thing,
that the Father is revealed by the Son. And later on, we're gonna talk about how, that the Father is revealed by the Son.
And later on, we're going to talk about how the Father and Son is revealed by the Spirit.
That's tomorrow.
But today, we're talking about how the fact that the Father is revealed by the Son, God
throughout the course of Israel's history, he does reveal himself like a Father.
And we realize that many religions might invoke God as Father.
And yet, and yet, the beginning of Israel, there's this hint that, oh God loves you like as Father. And yet, and yet, the beginning of Israel,
there's this hint that, oh God loves you like a Father.
He loves, even that says, he loves like a mother.
But we're gonna find out that Jesus revealed
that God is Father in an unheard of sense.
This is gonna be so important.
You guys tell his Father's day,
and that's where we're calling it today,
because he's a Father not only in being a Creator,
he's eternally Father in relation to his only son, who's eternally son only in relation to his father.
And this is so important for us.
So we're going to talk about God not only analogously as father, but realize this.
Well, our fatherhood, all fatherhood comes from God's fatherhood.
So in more ways, God's fatherhood is not analogous.
Our notions of fatherhood are analogous to God's fatherhood.
Does that make sense?
But it's just remarkable.
Again, as I said, the Catechism 240 says,
Jesus revealed that God is father in an unheard of sense.
And that's what we want to focus on today.
Jesus reveals that God is father in an unheard of sense.
That He's eternally Father.
That's His deepest identity of the Father and of the Son is the Son and the Holy Spirit is at love between the two of them.
That's deepest identity is love. We're going to say that a bunch of times because it is so important.
It is no small thing to be able to assert this, to be able to profess this,
and to be able to enter into relationship with this God.
Oh, man, so good.
Let's right now in our common sunship, right? Because of what Jesus has done for us.
Because we have the Holy Spirit within us. We share in the divine nature and we're
able to call God our Father. So in this moment, let's pray, Father in heaven.
You have revealed your deepest identity. You revealed yourself to us, to your son and your Holy Spirit. You've called
us, you've made us into your adopted children, and you are our adoptive father. You've shared
your nature with us, you've shared your divine life with us, and so we just rejoicing
you, we give you thanks, we praise you, may be glorified, may be loved, not just by
others, not just by people throughout the world, but you be glorified, may you be loved, not just by others, not
just by people throughout the world, but may you be glorified, and may you be loved by
us this day.
He praise you, Father.
We love you.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
As I said, we're reading paragraphs 238 to 242.
Here we go.
The Revelation of God as Trinity.
The Father revealed by the Son.
Many religions invoke God as Father.
The deity is often considered the Father of God's and of men.
In Israel, God is called Father in as much as He is creator of the world.
Even more, God is Father because of the covenant and the gift of the law to Israel, his first
born Son. God is also called the gift of the law to Israel, his first born son.
God is also called the Father of the King of Israel.
Most especially, he is the Father of the poor, of the orphaned, and the widowed, who are
under his loving protection.
By calling God, Father, the language of faith indicates two main things.
The God is the first origin of everything and transcendent authority, and
that He is at the same time goodness and loving care for all His children. God's parental
tenderness can also be expressed by the image of motherhood, which emphasizes God's
imminence, the intimacy between creator and creature. The language of faith thus draws
on the human experience of parents who are in a way the first representatives of God for man.
But this experience also tells us that human parents are fallible and can disfigure the face of fatherhood and motherhood. We ought therefore to recall that God transcends the human distinction
between the sexes. He is neither man nor woman. He is God. He also transcends human fatherhood and motherhood, although he is their origin and standard.
No one is Father, as God is Father.
Jesus revealed that God is Father in an unheard of sense.
He is Father not only in being Creator, He is eternally Father in relation to His only
Son, who is eternally Son only in relation to His Father.
As Jesus states in Matthew's Gospel, no one knows the son except the father, and no one
knows the father except the son and anyone to whom the son chooses to reveal him.
For this reason, the apostles confess Jesus to be the Word.
In John's gospel it states, in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God.
As the image of the invisible God, as the radiance of the glory of God, and the word was with God, and the word was God. As the image of the invisible God, as the radiance of the glory of God, and the very stamp of his
nature.
Following this apostolic tradition, the church confessed at the first ecumenical council
at Nicaea in the year 325 that the sun is consubstantial with the Father, that is one
only God with him.
The second ecumenical council held a
Constantinople in 381 kept this expression in its formulation of the Nicene Creed and confessed,
the only begotten Son of God, born of the Father before all ages. God from God,
light from light, true God from true God, begotten, not made,
God from true God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father.
Okay, we are paragraph 238 to 242.
This is remarkable.
Again, it's the beginning at the beginning,
which says that many religions would say
that God is like a father.
Yep, he's a father of God, father of men,
he's a father of everything, right?
That's kind of what others would say.
And also in Israel, right?
To the people of Israel,
God's a father in as much, he's greater of the world.
And even more that, Israel is his firstborn.
So he reveals himself in fatherly terms, right,
in parental terms.
And even, you know, the Old Testament in Second Samuel,
God refers to himself, he's referred to as the father
of the poor, right, the father of the orphan, the widowed,
who are under his loving protection.
And this is really remarkable,
because as paragraph 239 states,
this language of faith, right?
This fact that God has revealed Himself as Father
indicates two main things.
And the first thing that spells out in 239
is that God is the first origin of everything
and transcendent authority, right?
That He is the beginning, That everything comes from him.
That's one of the reasons why God is in so many ways. We say more an image of the Father than of
the mother. That's one of the reasons why God has revealed Himself. Why God has done this is
mystery to me, right? I don't know why God has revealed Himself more primarily as Father than
as Mother, but one of the explanations that many have offered is that God's father creates outside of himself.
A mother creates inside of herself. And so here's God who creates ex nihilogy, creates out of nothing,
and that the world itself, right, that didn't just state inside of him, and that now the world's a part of him,
it was created outside of himself, kind of like, here's a male and female coming together,
that would be that their roles, right, in this kind of way, that's one of the ways in which we can kind of sort to begin to understand.
And as it says, talking about God's Father indicates two main things.
God is the first origin of everything and transcendent authority.
That, yes, he is the start of it all, and it's a transcendent authority.
He's not part of it. He's over it.
At the same time, he's imminent, and that's the next part.
Is that at the same time goodness and loving care for all of his children.
And I love this that the Catechism highlights that God's parental tenderness can be also
be expressed by the image of motherhood, which emphasizes his imminence, right?
That closeness between creator and creature.
And this is one of our problems, right?
We live in this broken world, and so we can make a fight out of anything.
Yes, God has revealed Himself as Father.
That's not a slight on motherhood at all.
And yes, there are times when the Lord says,
how long like a mother hen I wish to draw you to myself,
that this doesn't have to be, again, we as human beings,
we like to fight over.
Things that are important, I'm not saying it's not important.
But we can also just say,
oh, God, have you revealed yourself to us and why? For what purpose? And so one of the purposes
by which God has revealed Himself as Father is because He creates us out of Himself like a Father,
like a Father would. At the same time, like a mother, it says, which emphasized God's
imminence, the intimacy between creator and creature.
And so we realize this, and even the Catechism in paragraph 239 continues to highlight this
fact, that the limitations of analogy, right?
The limitations of our language.
It goes on to say, the language of faith, thus draws on the human experience of parents
who are in a way the first representatives of God for man.
Totally, yeah, absolutely.
Here's the limitation.
But this experience also tells us
that human parents are fallible
and can just figure the face of fatherhood and motherhood.
We ought, therefore, to recall that God
transcends human distinction between sexes.
He is neither man or woman, he is God.
And that's just so important for us.
The last note I want to just highlight
before we move on to the last point here
is that I've talked to people so many people who have said things like, you know, I have a tough time
relating to God as father because of my broken relationship with my father or my father's,
you know, the wounds that he inflicted on me or my mom or our family, that kind of situation.
And it's helpful to recognize this last sentence in paragraph 239.
It says, God also transcends human fatherhood and motherhood, although he is their origin
and standard, no one is father as God is father.
That reality, I'm remembering someone saying lean into this.
If you have a good father in your life, lean into that, and recognize that all those great
qualities of your father, they are perfect in God the Father.
And if you had a rough relationship with your father,
if you had a rough dad,
someone who might have been not just distant,
not just cruel, but maybe downright, you know, evil,
you can see in that evil the flip side,
you have to almost see it like a negative image
for all the evil that one's own father
might have brought into the world and brought into your life.
God the Father is opposite that. And I think it's, and it might not be easy, but I think it's
really important, particularly when it comes to not only our personal healing, but to understand
what is Fatherhood supposed to be. Again, all of our notions of Fatherhood come from God who
truly is Father. They all fall short, but he's the standard.
Again, no one is father as God is father.
We talked about this before.
We read the whole section, but paragraph 240 says that Jesus revealed that God is father in an
unheard of sense. He is father, not only in being creator, he's eternally father.
In relation to his only son, who is eternally son, in relation to his father.
Again, the deepest identity of God is Trinity, what he is, who he is in his own being before what he does.
And that's one of the keys to 41 says, for this reason, the apostles confess Jesus to be the word in
the beginning was the word, the word was with God and the word was God. This is very clear,
expression in the very beginning of John's gospel that the
early Christian faith professed that Jesus was and is. He eternally is, right? He eternally
is one with God. That the word, the second person of the Trinity, Jesus himself was God
in the beginning. And that's very, very important that he was with God and was God. Lastly,
lastly, we talked once more about the Niceno Consent of the Paulus and Creed,
which is, I think everyone should practice saying that at least twice a day.
The Nicene Creed in 325, and the Council of Constantinople in 381, talking about this
expression that's given to us as we formulate every Sunday that Jesus is the only begotten
son of God, born of the Father before all ages. God from God, light from light, true God from true God, begotten, not made,
consubstantial with the Father.
Again, there's hardly a way we can emphasize more clearly.
The God is eternally Trinity, eternally Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Consubstantial, co-eternal, co-equal.
And what one person of the Trinity is, we're
going to find this out, where one person of the Trinity is, where one person of the Trinity acts,
they all are, and they all act. And that's remarkable. And again, another mystery. But what that
means also for you and for me right now in this moment, we pray for the Holy Spirit to come and
help us to hear, help us to understand, help us to listen, and help us to move forward.
And that means that the Father's also with us. We pray to the Son and ask Jesus to be with us,
and to present us to His Father. We ask Jesus to have mercy upon us, and the Father is there
with this Holy Spirit. Where one person of the Trinity is, the entire Trinity is. When one person acts the whole Trinity acts and
God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit love you and
They're with you right now with me right now
And so we just you turn to them right now and know that you're not alone
We're with you and they are with you
so
Let's keep praying pray to the God who's with you right now
you. So let's keep praying.
Pray to the God who's with you right now.
Pray for the people who are praying for you right now.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.