The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 35: Formation of Trinitarian Dogma
Episode Date: February 4, 2023Fr. Mike explores the formation of the Church’s dogma on the nature of the Trinity. He unpacks the terms used by the Church in an attempt to explain the nature of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. H...owever, as Fr. Mike reminds us, with the story of St. Augustine and the child on the seaside, the Trinity is a mystery that none of us can fully comprehend. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 249-252. 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 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.
It is day 35, we're reading paragraphs 249 to 252.
It's only a few short paragraphs, but they're action-packed more on that in a second.
A few reminders.
Before we get started, I'm using the ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes
the foundations of the faith approach, but you can follow along in any recent version
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Also, you can download your own Catechism in your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash cyy and lastly, you can.
I don't know if you know this, you can.
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As I said, it is day 35 of reading paragraphs 249-252.
What does that look like?
Well, we've just gone from talking about how the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father
and the Son, or, you know, for've just gone from talking about how the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, or you know, for our Eastern brothers and sisters,
how the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father through the Son, again, both of those are phenomenal.
But we're also talking now today, specifically about the formation of the Trinitarian Dogma.
Now, that is a lot of big words. Well, I apologize, but there's going to be even more big words,
because at some point, from the very beginning, here's what we're gonna talk about.
From the beginning, God has been revealing Himself
as a communion of persons, right?
He's been revealing Himself as one being, right?
But also God reveals Himself as Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit.
And so over the course of time, here's the Old Testament.
We already talked about those four shadows.
Those kind of like, God, you know, slightly slowly
revealing Himself as a Trinity, but then also in Jesus, in sending the Holy Spirit.
Okay, wow, there's a father and the son and the Holy Spirit.
There's something about them, but also Paul's letters.
In fact, we have, say, the second letter to the Corinthians, his first letter to the
Corinthians and his letter to the Ephesians, where he says something like the grace of the
Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you
all.
So we're going to talk about that today. So there is this revelation here of the Trinitarian dogma, right?
But then in order to clarify, what do we mean by,
here's God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit,
the church has started to use certain words.
So, words that it's taken from philosophical traditions,
words like substance and person or hypostasis or relation.
So those are some of those words that we're going to be using on the church.
Use them from the beginning to try to capture.
What is it to say that God is both father, son, and Holy Spirit, but that the father isn't the son.
The son isn't the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit is not the Father, right?
But they all are God.
So how do we capture that?
And so the church has used a formulation of these kinds of words.
So that's what we're talking about today in four short paragraphs we're going to look
at.
How that Trinitarian Dogma was formulated.
Tomorrow we're going to talk about more deeply the dogma of the Holy Trinity.
But today here is the formation of the Trinitarian dogma in order to just dive as deeply
as we possibly can today.
Let us call upon the Trinity.
Father in heaven, we ask you,
in the name of your son Jesus Christ,
to send your Holy Spirit to enlighten our minds,
to enliven our hearts, just please help us to begin,
even just begin to understand, or even capture,
just take us, help us to begin, even just begin to understand, or even capture, just take us,
help us to take one closer step into the mystery of who you are in yourself, because who
you are in yourself is God.
And we are nothing without you.
And we are everything with you.
So you love everything that is, that we are, you love us infinitely, help us to know
as deeply as we possibly can what and who you are, so we can love you and glorify you
for what and who you are.
In Jesus' name we pray, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
As I said, it is day 3-5, it's day 35, reading paragraphs 249 to 252.
The Holy Trinity in the teaching of the faith.
The formation of the Trinitarian dogma.
From the beginning, the revealed truth of the Holy Trinity
has been at the very root of the church's living faith,
principally by means of baptism.
It finds its expression in the rule of baptismal faith,
formulated in the preaching, ketichesis, and prayer of the church. Such formulations are already found in the
Apostolic writings such as this salutation taken up in the Eucharistic
liturgy, the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all. During the first centuries, the
church sought to clarify its trainitarian faith both to deepen its own understanding of the faith and to defend it against the errors that were deforming it.
This clarification was the work of the early councils,
aided by the theological work of the Church fathers,
and sustained by the Christian people's sense of the faith.
In order to articulate the dogma of the Trinity,
the Church had to develop its own terminology with the help of certain notions of philosophical origin, words like substance, person, or hypostasis,
relation, and so on. In doing this, she did not submit the faith to human wisdom,
but gave a new and unprecedented meaning to these terms, which from then on would be used to
signify an ineffable mystery, as Pope Paul VI said,
infinitely beyond all that we can humanly understand. The Church uses, first, the term
substance rendered also at times by the words essence or nature to designate the divine being in its
unity. Second, the term person or hypostasis to designate the father, son, and Holy Spirit in the real distinction
among them.
And third, the term relation to designate the fact that their distinction lies in the relationship
of each to the others.
Okay, so as I said, it's four short paragraphs that are absolutely action-packed.
So let's just review these four paragraphs as we said from the beginning to paragraph
249.
The revealed truth, a holy Trinity, has been the very root of the Church's living faith.
I mean, we've said this many times that the core doctrine, the central mystery of Christianity
is the mystery of the Trinity, which of course incorporates the mystery of the incarnation,
but is a really big deal.
And also, we keep coming back to this, that it finds this expression in the rule of baptismal faith. That word baptism is very important. Why? Because here is Jesus at the end of Matthew's
gospel who says what? He says, go there for and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. This is so critical every
single person who is a Christian was baptized in that trinitarian formula. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
And so this is really, really important.
Of course, here's Paul in 2 Corinthians 13, 13.
Also, 1 Corinthians 12, any Ephesians 4, with something like these words, the grace of
the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit.
Be with you all.
So we have in that scriptural designation, both Jesus saying, get baptized all nations
in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Also he Paul with his greeting, the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit.
There is this clear revelation of God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
But the question is, what does that mean?
How can we clearly communicate this to people who are saying, well, maybe the
Lord Jesus is like a demigod because he's, man, we know that.
He's also God, we know that.
So the closest thing we understand is that, yeah, he's like a, like Hercules, that kind
of idea, right?
That his father was Zeus and his mother was, whoever that human being was, he was Jesus,
whose father was God and whose mother is Mary.
So maybe something like this.
And so in the church, in order to really figure out what is it, who is it that Jesus really
is, it's very clear from the Gospels that Jesus is claiming equality with the Father.
And also that he speaks of the Holy Spirit in the sense that, oh, this Holy Spirit is
also sounds like Holy Spirit is co-equal,
but at the same time, it seems like both of them defer to the Father, so that, you know,
here is the all the big questions.
And so in paragraph 251, here's the church.
And I love how it just says it so clearly and so succinctly, in order to articulate the
dogma of the Trinity.
The church had to develop its own terminology
with the help of certain notions of philosophical origin.
Yes, we have biblical language,
which is absolutely irreplaceable, right?
Biblical language is God's revelation to us
through the sacred text.
And yet, it says a lot, but there's more to be said, right?
That the mind keeps wanting to apprehend,
but what exactly, how can we articulate this? And so there's more to be said, right? That the mind keeps wanting to apprehend, but what exactly, how can we articulate this?
And so there's these philosophical notions
like substance, person, hypostasis, relation.
And again, the church in 252 says,
what do those words mean?
Well, the term substance in 252 says,
and also you could use the word essence or nature
to designate the divine being in its unity.
In fact, there's a priest, his name is Father John Harden
and he has some definitions, right? a priest, his name is Father John Harden, and he has a
definitions, right? And one of his definite definitions for the term substance is a
being whose essence
requires that it exists in itself, and you use this some Latin here. He says it is an
on's per se, which means a being by itself or an on's in se, meaning it being in itself.
And so that's that the being itself, the being itself is
the substance. What is that? The essence. Now, he makes the distinction here for this is from the
modern Catholic dictionary. He makes the distinction between substance and accident. So this is a little
philosophic, philosophie, philosophy lesson for everybody, an accident in the substance. Okay, the substance is the being by itself or the being in itself.
The accident whose essence is to exist in another meaning.
So the color purple doesn't exist on its own.
The color purple is an accident.
You only experience the color purple than when it's like a purple purple linen.
So linen is the substance, right? That's the essence. That's the thing in itself.
Purple is the accident. The linen would still be linen if it was red, if it was white, if it wasn't dyed at all.
That's the accident. The linen itself is the essence. It's the substance, it's what it is. And the accident, of course,
is the die, right? So that's kind of a way we can begin to understand how are we philosophically
trying to apply these terms to the existence and the essence of God? Who God is? What God is in
himself? What God is by himself is that that's his essence, that's his substance. Now, secondly,
the term person or hypostasis to designate the father, son, and Holy Spirit in the real distinction
among them. So this is one of those terms, a hypostasis. Again, going back to Father John Hardin in his
modern Catholic dictionary, he says this, it's an individual, complete substance existing entirely in itself and
incommunicable substance.
And so it goes on to say, the term used by the church to identify the persons in the
Trinity and the union of two natures in one divine person in Christ.
A person is a hypostasis in Dal with reason.
So what are we saying?
We're saying that hypostasis and nature are related to each other.
In such a manner that the hypostasis is the bearer of the nature and the ultimate subject
of all being and acting. While the nature is that through which the hypostasis exists and
acts, that's going to be the most helpful sentence. You were saying, that was helpful,
Father. Yes, that was helpful. Here's why I'll say it again.
Hypostasis and nature are related to each other
in this manner.
Hypostasis is the bearer of the nature
and the ultimate subject of all being an acting.
That's the person, right?
While the nature or the substance
is that through which the hypostasis exists and acts.
So the hypostasis or the person is father.
And the essence through which the father acts
is the nature of God, the very being of God.
Hypostasis is the sun, and the person is the sun.
And the essence or substance through which the sun acts
is the nature of God, right?
The essence or substance of God.
Now, if that sounds confusing, that's okay because what it pulled Paul to the sixth say,
he said, he said, this is used to signify an ineffable mystery.
Here's his quote, infinitely beyond all that we can humanly understand.
And you're like, I can't even understand the words you're saying, Father, much less
than mystery of the Trinity, which makes me say, let's tell this story once again.
There's a story about St. Augustine.
In St. Augustine, in the early centuries of the church, is walking along the coast of
the Mediterranean on the northern shores of Africa.
I'll put them there, that's where I think the story takes place.
And he's walking along, he's trying to ponder the mystery of the Trinity, trying to figure
out, you know, with these, with whether he's using to ponder the mystery of the Trinity, trying to figure out
whether he's using these terms hypostasis or person or substance.
He's just trying to figure out the Trinity and he realizes he can't do it.
He's really just pondering and meditating and reflecting on this.
And the story goes that as he's walking along, he happens upon a young boy who is digging
a hole in the sand, in the beach.
And what the boy is doing is he has a shell or the sand in the beach. And with the boys doing it, he's as, you know,
a shell or a bucket of some sort.
And he's running to the ocean, running to the sea,
and he's filling up the bucket,
and he's running to the hole he had dug,
and he pours the water into the hole.
And he runs back to the sea, fills it up with water,
runs back to the hole, pours the water into the hole.
Cindy got some watches in for a little bit,
and he says, you know, what do you ask? What are you doing?
And the little boy says, I'm trying to empty this sea into the hole I've dug.
And Cindy Guston, with very little time for children, says silly boy, silly child, you couldn't
possibly fit that entire sea into this small hole that you've dug.
And that's when the little boy stops and looks up at the venerable St. Augustine Bishop of Hippau and he says,
and neither can you fit the infinite mystery of the Trinity into your finite mind and disappears.
That kind of situation. Okay, so maybe in an apocryphal story, I don't know, but it does capture where we're at.
We can only grasp some things about God. And this is what these terms are trying to do. These terms are trying these substance,
some things about God. And this is what these terms are trying to do. These terms are trying these substance, the divine being and its unity, person or hypostasis to designate father, son and Holy Spirit,
and the third term, relation, to designate the fact that their distinction lies in relationship of each the others.
The father is father because of the son. The son is son because of the father and the Holy Spirit is that bond of love between the two of them.
Okay, you guys, if you're head is spinning, that's okay.
This is like deep theology, and we're only scratching the surface why, because, A, my mind
is limited as well, and B, the mystery of the Trinity is the central mystery of our faith.
And it is mystery that is ineffable and unplumable.
So we try to get as much, and try to plum as much as we possibly can.
And then we say, Lord, make up for what I lack. And then we move on. Just like we're doing today,
we're going to move on and just say, okay, Lord, I trust in you. I know that you are Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, Trinity of Persons, one God, unity in being, and Trinity in Persons.
God, unity and being, and Trinity in persons. So, and I love you, and we're called to love him.
So let's love the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as he's revealed to us.
So, pray for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
Thanks.