The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 357: God, “Our” Father
Episode Date: December 23, 2023God’s love has no bounds, and neither should our prayer. Fr. Mike emphasizes that when we say “our” we are highlighting that we have become God’s people. We belong to God, not in a possessive ...way, but in an “entirely new relationship”. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2786-2793. 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)
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz 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 New Year's brought 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 357.
We are reading paragraphs 2786-2793.
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 and a year reading plan to mark up these last
nine days.
If you want, by visiting Ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y,
and you can click follow or subscribe
on your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications.
As I said, today is day 357,
we're eating paragraphs 27, 86, 27, 93.
We're talking about yesterday.
We talked about father, right?
Abba, our dad, which is incredible.
Remember those last two points of the gift of adoption?
Requires on our part, this paragraph 2784,
the gift free gift of adoption.
Requires on our part,
continual conversion and new life.
Praying to our father should develop
in us two fundamental dispositions.
First, the desire to become like him
and second a humble and trusting heart.
This is so good, so good.
Today we're emphasizing the first word
in the our father, the our part of the our father, which makes sense that we hit it second. Well, A, because in priority, right?
We, the primary thing is, do we know to whom we are speaking? Do we know to whom we are praying?
We need to know God as Christians. We need to know God as our as Father. But also our makes sense
if we were saying the Lord's Prayer in Latin, it'd be called the Potter and O, and Potter is the first word, and Nooster is the second word. So maybe it makes
sense that we say our second, and for many reasons, anyways, for highlighting the hour.
And the recognition is we do not pray to my father, we pray to our father who art in heaven,
which is beautiful. One of the things that says in paragraph 2789, it says,
when we pray to our father,
we personally address the father of our Lord Jesus Christ. And by doing so, we do not divide the
Godhead since the father is its source and origin. The rather confess that the Son is eternally
begotten by him and the Holy Spirit proceeds from him. So that's something we recognize is people say,
well, you know, I feel like I'm giving too much attention to one person of the Trinity to the
neglect of the others.
Well, maybe that could be the case where I can understand how a person might feel that way.
But when we pray to our Father, we ask we personally address the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
He's personally addressed me because that's He's the first person of the Trinity.
But in doing that, we're not dividing the Trinity, right?
We're not dividing the Godhead because the Father is its source and origin.
We also are confessing the Son as eternally begotten by the Father and the Holy Spirit
proceeds from the Father.
So we're not confusing the person, we're not mixing them all up like, oh, when you talk
to the Father, you're also talking to the Son and the Holy Spirit in the same sense.
No, because we have a personal relationship, but they personal, try personal God.
We're not confusing the person's, but it says in the last line of paragraph 2789, when
we pray to the Father, we adore and glorify Him together with the Son and the Holy Spirit.
So they're not confused in the sense of they're not just kind of all mixed, all part of the
mix.
But when we pray to the Father, we adore and glorify Him together with the Son and the Holy
Spirit.
So there's this great way in which, man, whenever we're talking to the Lord God, we're talking to the Trinity, but also personally to the father
and to the Son and Holy Spirit. It's just beautiful. So let's talk about this. Let's talk about
this. But first, before we talk about Pergav 27, 86, 27, 93, let us first talk to our Father.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
amen, Father in heaven. Give me praise and glory. Glory. We ask that you please receive that.
Be glorified now and always. Be glorified in our words, in our works. Be glorified just by the very
fact that our heart is beating. The very fact that we breathe and we know that we live and breathe
in and because of you. Let every breath we take, let every thought we have, every word we utter, everything
we do, let it all, even our rest, Lord God, let it all be for you, let it all be done in
you.
May it all glorify you and may all of it be used to sanctify our brothers and sisters.
Those around us, Lord God may you be known and loved.
And may our neighbor and everyone in this world
come to know and to love you as well.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen,
and the name of the Father,
and of the Son of the Holy Spirit, amen.
It is day 357, we are reading paragraph 2786 to 2793.
Our Father.
Our Father refers to God.
The adjective, as used by us, does not express possession, but an entirely new relationship
with God.
When we say our Father, we recognize first that all His promises of love, announced by
the prophets, are fulfilled in the new and eternal covenant in His Christ.
We have become His people, and he is henceforth our God.
This new relationship is the purely gratuitous gift of belonging to each other.
We are to respond to grace and truth given us in Jesus Christ with love and faithfulness.
Since the Lord's Prayer is that of his people in the end of time, this hour also expresses
the certitude of our hope in God's ultimate promise.
In the New Jerusalem, he will say to the victor,
I will be his God, and he shall be my son."
When we prayed to our Father, we personally addressed the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
By doing so, we do not divide the Godhead, since the Father is its source and origin.
But rather confess that the Son is eternally begotten by Him,
and the Holy Spirit proceeds from Him.
We are not confusing the persons, for we confess that our communion is with the Father and
His Son Jesus Christ in their one Holy Spirit.
The Holy Trinity is consubstantial and indivisible.
When we pray to the Father, we adore and glorify Him together with the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Grimatically, our qualifies a reality common to more than one person.
There is only one God, and He is recognized as Father by those who, through faith in His only Son,
are reborn of Him by water and the Spirit. The Church is this new communion of God and men.
United with the only Son who has become the first born among many brethren,
she is in communion with one and the same Father, in one and the same Holy Spirit.
In praying our Father, each of the baptized is praying in this communion.
The company of those who believed were of one heart and soul.
For this reason, in spite of the divisions among Christians, this prayer to our Father
remains our common patrimony and an urgent summons for all the baptized.
In communion by faith and Christ and by baptism, they ought to join in Jesus' prayer for the unity of His disciples.
Finally, if we pray the our Father sincerely, we leave individualism behind because the love that we receive frees us from it.
The hour at the beginning of the Lord's Prayer, like the us of the last four petitions, excludes no one. If we are to say it truthfully, our divisions and
oppositions have to be overcome. The baptized cannot pray to our Father without bringing
before him all those for whom He gave His beloved Son. God's love has no bounds. Neither
should our prayer. Praying our Father opens to us the dimensions of His love revealed in Christ, praying with
and for all who do not yet know Him, so that Christ may gather into one the children of
God. God's care for all men, and for the whole creation has inspired all the great practitioners
of prayer, it should extend our prayer to the full breadth of love whenever we dare to
say our Father. a prayer, it should extend our prayer to the full breadth of love whenever we dare to say
our Father.
Right?
There we have it, paragraphs 2786 to 2793.
A couple of things, just to highlight.
Paragraph 2786, right away.
This is incredible.
Our Father refers to God.
Yes, duh.
Okay.
Got that.
But it goes on to say this adjective, as used by us, in this case, does not express possession.
It's not, in the sense, okay, this is my God or this is our God and no one, it's to the
exclusion of other people.
It does not express possession, but an entirely new relationship with God.
I don't know if you ever thought of that.
I have to confess this.
I don't know if I've ever really pondered.
I've pondered the fact that, yes, when we say hour, it means what it says in paragraph
2790, that we pray as the church, right?
So it's not my God, it's our God.
But I don't know if I've ever really reflected on what it says in 2786, that it does not
express possession, but an entirely new relationship with God.
That it's 2787, and goes on to say,
we have become his people at henceforth, he is our God.
In this new relationship is the purely gratuitous gift
of belonging to each other.
That's incredible.
You belong to God, and he belongs to you.
I can't, can we imagine?
You belong to God, and he belongs to you. Can we imagine? You belong to God.
And he belongs to you.
Not possession, but this entirely new relationship.
It might even mean this.
It might even mean that actually we belong to each other as Christians.
Like that, that not only, yes, God is yours and you are his, but also we belong to each
other.
Because again, this is our, not just my God.
If I said my God, yeah, I belonged to him, he belongs to me.
But our God, our Father, that I belong to him and he belongs to me and we belong to
each other.
And there's something about that.
I think it's worth reflecting on.
That's one of the reasons why here in the Catechism
It pauses on this one word this one word hour. I love as it says, you know paragraph 2789
We highlighted that already that when we pray to our father
We personally address the father of our Lord Jesus Christ
But we're not dividing the Godhead or confusing the dot Godhead, right?
We confess that our communion is with the father and his son Jesus Christ in, in their one Holy Spirit. And so that's so beautiful and so, so clear. But let's move on. There's
something powerful. The last two paragraphs here, paragraph 2792 says, finally, if we pray
the our Father sincerely, we leave individualism behind because the love that we receive frees
us from it. You think, what does that mean? We leave individuals behind. Well,
it doesn't mean the sense that you're no longer an individual, but individualism.
Individualism might have the tendency to exclude someone.
That, okay, I'm in and you're out. But if we pray the our fathers sincerely,
we have this new kind of love that frees us from the exclusive kind of individualism.
It goes on to say, the hour at the beginning of the Lord's Prayer, like the us of the last four petitions,
excludes no one.
If we are to say it truthfully, our divisions and oppositions have to be overcome.
And that leads us into the last, very last paragraph that I think,
ah, it pierces my heart again.
I don't know what to tell you.
It says, the baptized cannot pray to our Father without bringing before him all those for
whom he gave his beloved son.
God's love has no bounds.
Neither should our prayer.
That's convicting.
Because I think, even though I've said it so many times, that we don't pray to my Father,
we pray to our father.
What I'm saying is I'm ultimately saying, God, this is my relationship with you, which
is true, but it's also too small.
God's love has no balance, neither should our prayer.
Because it goes on to say, praying our father opens to us the dimensions of his love revealed
in Christ, praying with them for all who do not yet know him, so that Christ may gather into the one, into one, the children of God.
That's incredible.
So what should happen?
God's care for all men all of creation should extend our prayer to the full breadth of love whenever we dare to say our Father.
I think it might have been Saint Teresa of of Avala who had said that she could
she could pray the Lord's Prayer. I mean, she could you can meditate on each word or each phrase
of the Lord's Prayer for the rest of her life, even just meditating on this first word, our.
And even this last point, God's care for all men and for the whole creation
should extend
our prayer to the full breadth of love whenever we dare to say our Father, to be able to say
God, bring everyone, bring everyone into the banquet, bring everyone in that net of your
love that you poured out on the world and sending your son and poured out on the whole world
and giving us your Holy Spirit.
What an incredible, incredible gift. Lord, God, can you pour it into my heart, that same depth, that same full breadth of your love whenever
we dare to say our Father. That's a great thing to reflect on, a great prayer to pray and a great
thing to long for. Remember, the whole point, the whole point is, I desire to become like him,
and I want to have a humble and trusting heart. And so, we pray to our Father, our Father, God, make my heart like yours, make my heart
like yours, excluding no one, because your love excludes no one.
That's our prayer.
It's incredible.
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.