The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 38: Summary of the Trinity
Episode Date: February 7, 2023We have arrived at the “nugget day” or In Brief section for the paragraphs examining the nature of the Father in the Trinity. Fr. Mike reiterates some of the “nuggets” of wisdom from these pas...t few days. He emphasizes the importance of how Baptism allows us to share in the life of the Holy Trinity. We conclude this section with a reflection on this profound call to share in the glory of the Trinity even though it exists “in the obscurity of faith.” Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 261-267. 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
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in the Year podcast,
where we encounter God's plan of your 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,
it is day 38 where reading paragraphs,
261 to 267, it's a nugget day once again,
or nug days as we might say,
I don't know if we've say this,
but because we're going through the in brief here
at the end of that section,
we just have been reading about the most holy Trinity,
we get, oh my gosh, you guys, incredible.
As always, I'm always using the ascension edition
of the catacism, which includes the foundations
of Faith Approach, but you can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of
the Catholic Church.
Also, you can download your own Catechism and your reading plan by visiting AscensionPress.com
slash C-I-Y.
And I don't know if you know about this.
I mentioned it yesterday.
I don't know if I've ever mentioned it before that.
You can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications.
Again, it's day 38.
We're reading paragraphs 261 to 267.
It's nugget dates, the in brief with summary of everything we've been talking about.
So what have we been talking about?
We've been talking about how the revelation of God as Trinity is the heart of the Christian
history.
Not only does God reveal himself as Trinity,
not only in the manner he reveals himself, right?
It's the sun who reveals the fact that the father is not just a father to Israel,
not just a father in the order of creation,
but that the father is eternally father, which is remarkable,
and that the second person of the Trinity, the sun, is eternally the sun.
And then the father and the sun are revealed by the Spirit. It's just, is remarkable, but then also the Lord is eternally the sun. And then the Father and the sun are revealed by the Spirit.
It's just remarkable. But then also the Lord is inviting us to share his own blessed life. He's
inviting us into the mystery of the Trinity. As I've said before, I think one of the most incredible
lines in the Catechism so far is from Catechism 221, right? 221, where it says,
by sending his only son and the Spirit of love
in the fullness of time, God has revealed his inner most secret.
God himself is an eternal exchange of love,
father, son, and Holy Spirit,
and he's destined to share in that exchange.
And so that was the last section.
And this section we've been reading is all about how,
how does that work?
So we talked about words like substance,
we talked about words like essence and nature and person
and hypostasis, we also talked about some incredible words
like theologia and Okonomia, right?
Theology and Economy, that theology refers
to the mystery of God's inmost life
within the blessed Trinity, that's who he is in himself,
an economy or Okonomia, all the works by which God reveals himself and communicates his life.
So whenever you hear that phrase, the divine economy, again, you might think, like, use other
words, I'm like, I get it, I totally understand.
But we're referring to all the works by which God has revealed himself and communicates
his life.
And so in the divine economy, God reveals the fact
that he is Father and Son and Holy Spirit,
but also that he's one God,
but also that the Father is the one from whom all things come.
The Son is the one through whom all things come,
and the Spirit is the one in whom all things are.
And so it's just one of those incredible gifts, right?
We also talked about the divine works
and the Trinitarian missions.
That was yesterday, right? Where we noted that the whole divine economy, We also talked about the divine works and the Trinitarian missions.
That was yesterday, right?
Where we noted that the whole divine economy, remember the whole way in which God communicates
Himself and invites us into his life, is the common work of the three divine persons.
So it has, if it were as the Holy Trinity has only one in the same nature, so too does it
have only one and the same operation. And yet it is just remarkable.
There is the sense that we recognize that when one person of the Trinity is present, they
are all present. When one acts, they all act. And yet in a very distinctive way. And that's
why we had quoted yesterday, the second Council of Consent, an awful kind of a few times,
where it states, one God and Father, from whom all things are, as I said earlier today,
and one Lord Jesus Christ, through whom all things are, and one Holy Spirit in whom all things
are.
So sometimes we can imagine that on this in brief day, right, the summary day or the
nugget day, that we're simply restating, the cataclysm is simply restating what we've
been hearing for the last couple of days.
There is that, but there's also some new things.
In fact, today, we've talked about the Apostles Creed in the past.
We talk about the Nicene Creed or the Nicino Consent and Apolloting Creed, but we also,
I think there's a reference we had made a couple days ago to the Athenation Creed.
Today we're actually going to hear a little blurb, a little excerpt from the Athenation
Creed, which is if you have a chance to look up
Athenation Creed, it's long.
It's probably one of the reasons why we don't say it in the context of Mass, because it's
very, very long, but it's very, very beautiful.
And we're going to hear a little section from the Athenation Creed as part of the nugget
of a paragraph 266.
And so, there's a beauty that we're invited into today.
So just invite us all, all of us,
to simply reflect on these bullet points, reflect on this in brief, reflect on each of these nuggets.
As we just kind of allow what we've heard over the last couple of days, just sink from our minds
into our hearts. So let's pray and ask God to do that. Father in heaven, we know, we know that we desire to know who you are and you are yet
you are mystery.
We can't know you fully, but in some ways we can love you fully.
We want to know you more, we want to even more than know you more, we want to love you
more.
Help us to know you more so that we can love you more and above all Lord God by your grace. Send your spirit to open our hearts so that we can love you more and above all Lord God, by your grace, send
your spirit to open our hearts so that we can love you the way you deserve. Send your
grace in our hearts so that we can love you the way you love us and bring us into your
own blessed life, bring us into that relationship where you are Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
We make this prayer in the mighty name of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen, in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Once again, this is day 38 paragraphs, 261 to 267.
In brief,
the mystery of the most holy Trinity is the central mystery of the Christian faith and of Christian life.
God alone can make it known to us by revealing himself as Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit. The incarnation of God's Son reveals that God is the eternal Father,
and that the Son is consubstantial with the Father, which means that, in the Father and with the
Father, the Son is one and the same God. The mission of the Holy Spirit sent by the Father in the name of the Son and by the Son
from the Father reveals that with them the Spirit is one and the same God.
As we state in the Nicene Creed, who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified.
Saint Augustine stated, The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father as the first principle and by the eternal gift of this
to the Son from the communion of both the Father and the Son. Pope Paul VI stated,
by the grace of baptism, in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
we are called to share in the life of the Blessed Trinity, here on earth in the obscurity of faith,
and after death in eternal light.
The Athenation Creed states,
Now this is the Catholic faith.
We worship one God in the Trinity, and the Trinity in unity, without either confusing the
persons or dividing the substance, for the person of the Father is one.
The Sun is another, The Holy Spirit is another. But the Godhead of the Father,
Son and Holy Spirit is one. Their glory equal their majesty, co-eternal.
In separable in what they are, the divine persons are also inseparable in what they do.
But within the single divine operation, each shows forth what is proper to him in the Trinity,
especially in the divine missions of the Son's incarnation and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
So there we have it, paragraph 261 to 267, the nuggets that we have been given.
And we want to highlight the fact that here is this summary, here's this in brief what the church has been trying to communicate to us. Now, tomorrow, we're gonna launch into some of the divine attributes.
In fact, one of the divine attributes that we're gonna highlight tomorrow
is the fact that God is almighty, right?
He is omnipotent.
But before that, we have this, not just the attribute of God,
like here's one of the words that can describe one of the qualities, right?
Or attributes of God, but we've been listening for the last couple days, but who God is in Himself?
Like, what's his deepest identity? And so again, 261 reminds us, the mystery of the most holy
Trinity is the central mystery of the Christian faith and of the Christian life. And we've heard
this a thousand times, and it's really important, though, we can never, never, ever forget it,
or underestimate it.
Because God alone can make it known.
God alone can reveal to us that He is one God but three divine persons.
And of course, He does this through the incarnation.
That when the second person of the Trinity takes on a human nature in Jesus Christ, He reveals
that God is eternal Father father as he is eternally son.
And then we have the mission of the Holy Spirit, as it says in paragraph 263,
sent by the Father in the name of the Son and by the Son from the Father.
So again, both the Father and the Son involved in this.
That's why we talked about that Philial Quake clause that we state in the Nicene Creed.
We leave the Holy Spirit proceeds from the father
and the son. Remember, we also had for Orthodox brothers and sisters, or Eastern brothers and
sisters, that it is acceptable to say, and the Holy Spirit proceeds from the father through the
son. And that comes from Scripture. Again, sent by the father in the name of the son, that's John
chapter 14 verse 26. And by the son from the Father, that's John 15 verse 26.
And that reveals to us ultimately that the Spirit also is God.
The Spirit is also co-equal and co-eternal with God.
And that is just incredible, not only because that's who God is, but then we realize in paragraph
265, Pope Paul VI has stated this, by the grace of baptism,
we were baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
We are called to share in the life of the Blessed Trinity. And I love how he says it,
here on earth and the obscurity of faith and after death in eternal light. Now we are going to talk
about it as the days go on. We're definitely going to talk about, what is it to live in faith on this planet?
Like the obscurity of faith that Pope Paul the sixth says.
But we're also going to talk about what is it to have
that unmediated vision of God?
What is it to have this life with God in heaven?
We're going to be able to reflect on that
when we get to the end things, the four last things.
And yet here we have a little taste
that your destiny, we're called to share
in the life of the blessed Trinity.
Now, even now, as the Holy Spirit dwells inside of you,
and we know, as the next article says,
we know that when the Holy Spirit is present,
so is the Father and the Son.
So here we are called to share in the life of the Trinity,
even though it's in the obscurity of faith, ultimately,
God wants for us, God wills for us, God desires that we share in his blessed life, in eternity,
in heaven, which we're just, just keep on praying for.
I love, as I mentioned before, the Athenation Creed, and this is maybe where we'll kind
of end in a little bit.
The Athenation Creed, as I said, is beautiful and so poetic,
it's so deep and profound, you could pray with it for weeks and months.
But here is this article of the Athenation Creed that makes it clear
that we worship one God in the Trinity and the Trinity in unity,
without either confusing the persons or dividing the substance.
Right? So the Father isn't also the. So the father isn't also the son.
The son isn't also the Holy Spirit.
No, the father is not the son.
The son is not the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is not the father.
So we're not confusing the persons.
We're not mixing them together.
But we're also not dividing the substance.
Remember, the substance is that very divine nature.
So one divine being, three divine persons.
And it goes on to say that their glory is equal.
Their majesty is co-eternal, which again is just,
reflect on that, reflect on the fact that God's glory,
God's majesty exists right now.
So wherever you're listening to this,
it's one of those things where we can just say,
well, you know, I'm really busy with the affairs of my day,
which probably is the case, all of us are.
But in this very moment, in this very moment, God exists in glory. In this very moment, God exists in majesty that God continues to reign.
I mean, we recognize this, that God, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, whatever that means
for God to reign, for God to exist in glory, for His majesty to be real and active in this
very moment.
Whatever that means, that is happening.
So here we are, and we're going through our daily lives, we're going through our daily
affairs, and doing the things we need to be doing, which is really good.
That's one of the ways we actually can give glory to God.
But to realize that in this moment God is enthroned.
In this moment God is glorified.
And that same God who is glorified, that same God who is enthroned, is the same God
who is calling you into his own blessed life.
That even though he's glorified, even though he's enthroned, even though his majesty is without end,
he cares about you.
And that is just absolutely incredible. And I just invite all of us to never,
ever forget that. But yes, we're going to talk about God being Almighty tomorrow, the God being
omnipotent tomorrow. His might is universal, his power is loving absolutely. And that power is loving you.
That that might cares about you.
And he is calling you enemy to share his own blessed life.
So I'm just just asking all of us just pause on that for just a moment.
As we go out or go about our daily business that we recognize,
there's more to this life than just this life.
So, in order to see that and respond to it, we need God's grace.
So we just continue to pray today. I am praying for you. Please, please pray for me. My name is Father Mike and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.
God bless.