The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 339: Prayer of Praise
Episode Date: December 5, 2023We examine both prayers of praise and also the “nuggets” for this section on the forms of prayer. Fr. Mike emphasizes that praise is giving God glory for who he is. He also emphasizes that the Euc...harist is the ultimate prayer of praise, and that every time we pray we are joining our lives to the saints and prophets who have gone before us. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2639-2649. 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)
I'm a name's Father Mike Schmanzger, and you're listening to the Catechism in your 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 the 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 toward our heavenly home.
This is day 339. We are reading paragraphs 2639 to 2649. 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, but visiting ascensionpress.com slash cyy.
And you can click follow or subscribe on your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications. As I said, today's day
339, we were reading at the end. We're coming to the end of this article.
Before we move on to chapter two, which is coming tomorrow, we're going to finish up. We talked
about prayer of petition, prayer of intercession, prayer of thanksgiving. We talked about blessing
and adoration a couple of days ago today. We have this final way of, that's not the final way of praying, but it's another way of
praying called the prayer of praise.
And paragraph 2639 summarizes it very, very quickly, just so simply.
It says this, praise is the form of prayer, which recognizes most immediately that God
is God.
That's it.
It says the Lord's God for His own sake, gives Him glory quite beyond what He does, but
simply because he is. One way you can make a distinction is saying prayers of thanksgiving,
prayer of thanksgiving is giving God thanks for what he's done or what he does. Prayer of praise
is giving God glory for who he is. So we're going to talk about that today and then we're going
to add some nuggets at the end of this little section here before we dive into tomorrow and section chapter 2 on the tradition of prayer.
But today we're going to continue these different ways in which the modes in which the manners
in which we can give God our prayer and it's through praise.
So let's give God praise right now in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit.
Father in heaven, we can do.
We give you praise.
We give you glory for who you are.
You are eternal God.
You are the good God. You are the God who is love, you are the God who is justice
and you are mercy in one.
And we give you thanks for the ways in which you've given us your justice and your
field to us, your mercy, the ways in which you have called us to be your sons and daughters
and made us so by the Holy Spirit. Receive our praise right now. Receive our prayer of praise in the name of Jesus Christ,
our Lord. Amen. The name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
It is day 339. We are reading paragraphs 2639 to 2649.
Prayer of praise.
Praise is the form of prayer, which recognizes most immediately that God is God. It
lads God for his own sake, and gives him glory quite beyond what he does, but simply because
he is. It shares in the blessed happiness of the pure heart who love God and faith before
seeing him in glory. By praise, the Spirit has joined to our spirits, to bear witness that
we are children of God,
testifying to the only Son in whom we are adopted, and by whom we glorify the Father.
Praise embraces the other forms of prayer and carries them toward Him who is its source
and goal, the one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist.
St. Luke in his gospel often expresses wonder and praise at the marvels of Christ,
and in his acts of the apostles stresses them as actions of the Holy Spirit, the community of Jerusalem,
the invalid healed by Peter and John, the crowd that gives glory to God for that,
and the pagons of Pesidia who were glad and glorified the word of God.
who were glad and glorified the Word of God. Address one another in Psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and making melody
to the Lord with all your heart.
Like the inspired writers of the New Testament, the first Christian communities read the book
of Psalms in a new way, singing in it the mystery of Christ.
In the newness of the Spirit, they also composed hymns and canticles in the light of the unheard
of event that God accomplished in His Son, His incarnation, His death which conquered death,
His resurrection, and ascension to the right hand of the Father.
Daxology, the praise of God, arises from this marvelous work of the whole economy of salvation.
The revelation of what must soon take place, the apocalypse, is born along by the songs
of the heavenly liturgy, but also by the intercession of the witnesses, martyrs.
The prophets and the saints, all those who were slain on earth for their witness to Jesus,
the vast throng of those who, having come through the great tribulation, have gone before
us into the kingdom, all sing the praise and glory of Him who sits on the throne and of the Lamb.
In communion with them, the church on earth also sings these songs with faith in the midst
of trial.
By means of petition and intercession, faith hopes against all hope and gives thanks to
the Father of lights from whom every perfect gift comes down.
Thus faith is pure praise.
The Eucharist contains and expresses all forms of prayer, it is the pure offering of the
whole body of Christ to the glory of God's name, and according to the traditions of East
and West, it is the sacrifice of praise.
In brief, the Holy Spirit who teaches the church and recalls to her all that Jesus said
also instructs her in the life of prayer, inspiring new expressions of the same basic forms of prayer,
blessing, petition, intercession, thanksgiving, and praise. Because God blesses the human heart,
it can in return bless him who is the source of every blessing.
Forgiveness, the quest for the kingdom, and every true need are objects of the prayer
of petition.
Prayer of intercession consists in asking on behalf of another, it knows no boundaries
and extends to one's enemies.
Every joy and suffering, every event and need can become the matter of our thanksgiving
which, sharing in that of Christ, should fill one's whole life.
Give thanks in all circumstances.
Prayer of praise is entirely disinterested and rises to God, lads him, and gives him glory
for his own sake, quite beyond what he has done, but simply because he is.
Alright, there we have it, paragraph 26, 39 to 26, 49.
This is so, so key.
I mean, we would say that back in the day, this is clutch.
When he comes to the prayer of praise, it is such,
you know what I'm gonna say, it's such a gift.
If it is, this recognition, this go back to 26, 39.
Once again, we talked about this.
Great.
Praise is the form of prayer which recognizes most immediately that God is God.
It lords God for his own sake and gives him glory quite beyond what he does, but simply
because he is.
And this is one of those things.
Again, we can exercise this.
You know, remember, praise goes up.
Praise go up first.
Judah, what is that though?
Again, we are praising God for who he is. So who is God?
That this is so beautiful.
You can actually exercise this at any given moment.
We know.
We could say, Jesus, you are Lord.
God, you are Father.
God, you are one God, Father, Son, Holy Spirit.
Basically, we're telling God who he is.
God, you're the Lord of Lords.
You're the King of Kings.
You are the Prince of Peace. you are the Great I Am.
That Lord Jesus, you are the Son of Man and Son of God.
Like all of these, you're the Savior, Holy Spirit, you are the sanctifier.
You know, Father, you are the Creator of all.
You know, all of those things, basically, we're giving up, we're naming him in so many ways.
I'm not maybe not naming him as much as it is,
describing his attributes in the so many ways.
Right?
We're praising God simply because he is.
I love the next sentence says this,
it shares in the blessed happiness of the pure heart
who love God in faith before seeing him in glory.
Just so remarkable.
And then the next line, again, I want to go through
line by line, but I could because it's so good.
And it highlights the Trinity, the Spirit, the Son, and the Father.
It says this, it says, by praise, the Spirit is joined to our spirits, to bear witness
that we are children of God, testifying to the only Son in whom we are adopted, and by
whom we glorify the Father.
And this is just so incredible that we recognize that praise, praise encompasses all
other forms of prayer. Praise embraces all other forms of prayer that when we turn to the Lord in
intercession, in petition, we turn to the Lord with blessing him and giving him that glory,
the prayer of praise embraces all of that. It is remarkable. And then there is a kind of praise,
there is a kind of prayer that you and I do on a regular basis. Maybe even
every day that encompasses and expresses, that contains and expresses every other form of prayer.
And that he says in 2643, the Eucharist. Remember that Eucharist, I mean Thanksgiving.
But the prayer of the Eucharist, the offering of the Son to the Father and the power of the Holy Spirit, what we do in the Mass says this,
the Eucharist contains and expresses all forms of prayer.
It is the pure offering of the whole body of Christ to the glory of God's name and, according
to the tradition of both East and West, it is the sacrifice of praise.
Now I would also go on to say that it is the sacrifice of thanks, aka Eucharistia,
but also if we go back to the Old Covenant, there's a number of different sacrifices, all
the different sacrifices.
The sacrifices of praise, Thanksgiving sacrifices of intercession and petition, Thanksgiving
sacrifices of all sorts, but there is one sacrifice that the rabbis would say, not in the Bible,
but outside the Bible. The rabbis interpreted this whole thing and they said there's one sacrifice that the rabbis would say, not in the Bible, but outside the Bible.
The rabbis interpreted this whole thing and they said, there's one sacrifice, one kind of sacrifice
that will exist in the age to come, in the kingdom to come when the Messiah has returned,
or Messiah has arrived, and made all things new.
What would happen is every other sacrifice would cease except for the Toda offering,
or the Sank Thanksgiving sacrifice.
And here we are in the new covenant.
And every sacrifice, there is no more sacrifice of the old covenant.
They're all done.
There's no place in the world you go where there is Jewish sacrifice.
There is only one sacrifice that remains and it is the sacrifice of the Eucharist, the
Toda offering, sacrifice of Thanksgiving and of praise.
And that's remarkable.
Do you and I get to participate that in that
every every day if we want to and we can do this no matter what and again paragraph 2642 highlights this we can do this no
matter what no matter what kind of circumstances or seasons are in our lives the saints revealed to us something powerful the saints
revealed to us that they gave God praise no matter what their circumstances no matter matter what seasons they were going through, even in the midst of great tribulation.
In fact, it says in paragraph 2642, it says, the prophets and the saints, all those who were slain on earth for the witness to Jesus, the vast throng of those who having come through the great tribulation,
have gone before us into the kingdom, all sing the praise and glory of him who sits on the throne and of the Lamb.
Now, key note here, next line.
In communion with them, the church on earth, that's us.
Also sings these songs with faith in the midst of trial.
We are also singing the song, these songs with faith in the midst of trial.
To recognize every time you pray, no matter the season you're going through, no matter
the difficulty you're experiencing, every time you pray, you're joining your heart, your faith,
your life, the life lives of the prophets and the saints who have gone before us.
We do sing these songs with faith in the midst of trial. The next line by means of petition and
intercession, remember those other kinds of prayer, petition and intercession. Faith hopes against all hope
and gives thanks to the Father of Lights from whom every perfect gift comes down. Thus faith is pure
praise. Is that remarkable? That's remarkable. Faith is pure praise. And so if you ever want to
strengthen your faith, there's many ways to do it, many ways to strengthen
your faith, but one way to strengthen your faith is to simply give God praise for who
he is.
To give God thanks for what he does.
And so we do that today.
I invite you, please, all of us, on this day, take a time after you hit pause or after
you hit stop here, to be able to even
give yourself a pause of some silence, give yourself a pause of even maybe even 30 seconds
or 60 seconds and just pray in your prayer of praise.
Remember, this is not about information transfer, it's about transformation.
And in these prayers, in this time, in this section, this last pillar of the catacasem,
it is everything is about not just knowing more about prayer, but it actually is about exercising prayer.
It's deepening that relationship with God.
So after you press stop or whatever you're going to do, I invite you to enter into some
silence and to offer God, even if you want to do it out loud, it would be awesome.
If you could do it out, if you're in a place where you could do this out loud, to be able
to give God praise, to praise God and glorify Him for who He is.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Make.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
you