The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 58: Man’s Spiritual Battle
Episode Date: February 27, 2023Fr. Mike explores the hard battle which each and every one of us must face, the battle with sin. Together, we examine the mystery of us being both free and under the power of the Devil. Fr. Mike empha...sizes that if we are unaware of our wounded nature, it can lead to grave errors in our own lives. If we have an attitude that, “since I’m made good, then everything I’m drawn to must be good,” we can fall into temptation and evil. We conclude on a hopeful note; however, that even after we sinned, God did not abandon us to the “domain of death,” and with God’s grace, evil will never have the last word. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 407-412. 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 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.
This is day 58 and we are reading paragraphs 407 to 412.
Of course, I'm using the ascension edition
of the Catechism, which includes the foundations
of the faith approach.
You can follow along with any recent version
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
If you want to download your own Catechism
in a year reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com,
slash C-I-Y, and lastly, you can click follow or subscribe.
In your podcast app for daily notifications
and daily updates, as I said,
it's day 58, we're reading paragraphs 407 to 412.
You guys were still in the midst of looking at
and examining original sins.
So one of the things we ended with, in paragraph 405.
Now we ended with 406 yesterday,
talking about the differences,
plagianism, right, you don't really need God's grace or the heresy, heresy, heresy
playgenism, heresy the Protestant Reformation, which would talk about that
human nature is completely corrupt, right?
So either you don't need God's grace because you're pretty much intact, or
you absolutely do need God's grace in the sense because you are depraved.
Now, the Catholic worldview is in between that.
That we absolutely do need God's grace.
But not because we're depraved, but because we're deprived.
But that what that sets us up for is a spiritual battle.
In fact, the end of paragraph 405 says this.
Of course, talk about baptism.
And baptism by imparting the life of Christ's grace,
eases original sin.
So I mean, we still experience the consequences,
but it eases original sin and turns a man back toward God.
But then it says, the consequences for nature,
weakened and inclined to evil, persist in man in summon him to spiritual battle.
And that's what we're gonna talk about a little bit today that paragraph 407 begins with the words a hard battle.
Dot, dot, dot. And that's a recognition that every single one of us, we find ourselves born into a situation,
born into the condition where,
because of that first sin, because of the fact
that we've lost that original justice, right?
That original righteousness before God,
we've lost that original holiness.
We've even lost, you know, remember,
we talked about this before,
that with that first sin, trust died in the human heart.
And with the recognition of, to live a life of trust, to live a life of obedience, a loving
obedience to the Father, we have to fight for that trust.
And in fact, we know that God fights for us.
I mean, that's part of what the mystery of the passion of our Lord is, that his life,
death and resurrection and ascension into heaven is part of that battle for us.
So going back to what we're going to talk about today,
a couple things.
paragraph 407 highlights this fact
that because of that first sin,
the devil, the evil one, right,
has acquired a certain domination over human beings.
Even though we still remain free as human beings,
and that's this mystery of,
here is this, we belong to the power of darkness and captivity,
and yet here is the Lord Jesus who has defeated the powers of darkness, and yet we still
experience the consequences, right?
We still experience the consequences of this death, the dominion of the evil one in this
world.
And so we have to be aware of this.
And if we're not aware of this paragraph 407 highlights, if we're not aware that we
have a wounded nature inclined to evil, that can give rise to incredibly serious errors in how we educate people, in how
we do politics, how we do social action, how we look at morals.
I mean, look at it like this.
If we forget or ignore or don't even know the fact that we have a wounded nature, then
we think, well, we could be inclined to think, well, anything, I've made good because you make it part of the story, right? You make it the
beginning of the story where God made human beings and this whole world and declared that it was
good. And you might think, oh, then what, then I'm fine. In that case, whatever I want must be fine.
If I made good, then whatever I want must be good. Or if I made good and God doesn't make junk, then everything that I'm inclined to,
everything that I'm attracted to or drawn to, that must be fine too, that must be good
as well.
But the full story is, we are made good, but broken.
We are inclined to evil.
And so we have to kind of be unguarded against even our own hearts.
That's one of the things that is at risk if we forget the reality of original sin.
But going on, today we're going to hear about more things.
For example, the consequences of original sin and of all of our personal sins put the world as a whole
in the sinful condition that St. John describes as the sin of the world.
Now, what does that mean? That's in paragraph 408.
And one of the things it means is that here we are in this place where
the context of our lives we find ourselves in a place where we have to fight not only against
ourselves, right, our broken human nature, but also against this, you know, the quote-unquote
the world, meaning the fact that we have a fallen human nature and human beings create culture.
Therefore, we have fallen human culture as well. That's one of the ways that
this expression, the sin of the world, can be understood. Now, beyond that, beyond this, we recognize
the last section we're going to read today. It's only three paragraphs long from paragraph 410 to 412.
The line is you did not abandon him to the domain of death. We get that from the fourth eucharistic prayer in the Roman
right. It's incredible. Even after we sinned, even after we
disobeyed, Lord God, you did not abandon us to the domain of
death. But in your mercy, you came to the aid of all of us. So
after the fall paragraph 410 says, man was not abandoned by
God on the contrary, man calls him in a mysterious way, herald the coming victory over evil
and his restoration from the fall.
And we just recognize that evil does not have the last word.
Yes, we have broken hearts, we have broken relationships.
This universe that is good and beautiful remains broken and yet we're not abandoned in
our brokenness. This is so very important to us.
Now, the last big question that the catechism is going to ask in today's section, in paragraph 412 is
but there's a big but, but why did God not prevent the first man from sinning? Why did not
God prevent Adam or Eve from sinning in the first place. And there's an answer. In fact, we get two answers from St. Leo the Great and from St. Thomas Aquinas.
But in order to hear that answer, you're going to have to listen to what we have to say today.
So, oh, man, you guys, here we are. Day 58, reading paragraphs, four, seven to four,
twelve. Let's say a prayer and launch into today's reading.
Father in heaven, give you praise and glory.
Thank you so much. Thank you so much for bringing us to this day. We ask you to please
send your Holy Spirit to enlighten our hearts. Send your Holy Spirit that we can belong to you
fully, not just for 20 minutes every day, but belong to the, let every minute of every day,
belong to you. Lord God, we find ourselves in a hard battle. And yet you've not abandoned us
in the middle of the battle. You're with us in the midst of this battle. And so we just call out to you. Lord God, we find ourselves in a hard battle. And yet you've not abandoned us in the middle of the battle. You're with us in the midst of this battle. And so we just call out to
you. We call upon the name of your son Jesus Christ to send your Holy Spirit to be with us, to
guard us, to fight in us and to fight for us in Jesus' name we pray. Amen. And the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. As I've said, like 12 times today, it is day 58, we are reading paragraphs 407-412.
A Hard Battle
The doctrine of original sin, closely connected without a redemption by Christ,
provides lucid discernment of man's situation and activity in the world.
By our first parents, sin, the devil has acquired a certain domination over man, even though man remains free.
Original sin entails captivity under the power of him, who henceforth had the power of death,
that is, the devil.
Ignorance of the fact that man has a wounded nature inclined it to evil, gives rise to serious
errors in the areas of education, politics, social action, and morals.
The consequences of original sin and of all men's personal sins put the world as a whole
in the sinful condition aptly described in St. John's expression, the sin of the world.
This expression can also refer to the negative influence exerted on people by communal situations
and social structures that are the fruit of men's sins.
This dramatic situation of the whole world, which is in the power of the evil one, makes
man's life a battle.
As Gaudium Atspaz stated, the whole of man's history has been the story of Dower combat
with the powers of evil stretching so our Lord tells us from the very dawn of history
until the last day.
Finding himself in the midst of the battlefield, man has to struggle
to do what is right, and it is at great cost to himself and aided by God's grace that he
succeeds in achieving his own inner integrity. You did not abandon him to the domain of death.
After his fall, man was not abandoned by God. On the contrary, God calls him, and in a mysterious way heralds
the coming victory over evil and his restoration from his fall. This passage in Genesis is called
the Proto-Evangelium, the first gospel, the first announcement of the Messiah and Redeemer of a
battle between the serpent and the woman and of the final victory of a descendant of hers.
The Christian tradition sees in this passage an announcement
of the new Adam, who, because he became obedient unto death, even death on a cross, makes
amends superabundantly for the disobedience of Adam. Furthermore, many fathers and doctors of
the Church have seen the woman announced in the proto-Evangelium as Mary, the mother of Christ,
the new Eve. Mary benefited first
of all and uniquely from Christ's victory over sin. She was preserved from all stain of
original sin and by a special grace of God committed no sin of any kind during her whole
earthly life. But why did God not prevent the first man from sinning? St. Leo the Great
responds, Christ's inexpressible grace gave us blessings better than those the demons envy had taken
away.
And St. Thomas Aquinas wrote, there is nothing to prevent human nature as being raised
up to something greater, even after sin.
God permits evil in order to draw forth some greater good.
Thus St. Paul says, where sin increased, grace abounded all the more. And the exultate sings, oh happy fault, that earns so great, so glorious, every deemer.
Okay, so here we are finding ourselves towards the end of this section today about original
sin.
You know, tomorrow we're going to go over the bullet points, it'll be nugget day
once again.
But today, we find ourselves reminded that because of original sin we find ourselves in a
hard battle and one of the things we need to remember when it comes to original sin is we cannot
forget that we are good but broken because if we forget this, you know, there was one of the
thinkers of the more recent era, I guess, Jean-Jacques Rousseau. I remember hearing about someone like
Jean-Jacques Rousseau who had this idea,
and this is a paraphrase of his idea, so it's really simplified, is that, you know, we would be
born as blank slates, right? So you could find the noble savage, someone who hasn't been corrupted by
their society, they haven't been corrupted by civilization or modern, modern human beings,
and you find them in their, they're a tabula rasa, right? They're a blank slate, and they're the
noble savage where it's only culture that corrupts a person.
Now, the Catechism does say very, very clearly
in paragraph 408 that we exert
a negative influence on the world.
Here's what it says.
It says this expression, the sin of the world,
can also refer to the negative influence exerted
on people by communal situations and social structures
that are the fruits of men's sins.
So what it's saying is, yes, broken people create broken structures, right?
So people who are unjust in ourselves, like we've lost original justice, we can create
social systems that are also unjust. But the sin, the personal sin, the brokenness,
that came first. And that was what created like social sin, right? If that makes any sense,
but see people like Russo and others, they would say, no, no, no, it's our society that created
the brokenness. So if we can just tweak, if we can just fix society, then we fix the brokenness.
And the church has a more sober. I think the church has a more realistic view. And that is,
oh, no, no, we arrived broken. We made good, right? But then because of original sin, we come on the scene as human beings now, broken. And
because of that brokenness, we create more brokenness. Well, we can also create good things,
right? There's beauty, there's justice that we can fight for, there's we can still love.
And that's the thing. It's always holding these things in tension. And that is just the
challenge every one of us gets to experience. But if we forget
the fact that there is original sin in that line, I want to highlight this once again, the last
line of paragraph 407, ignorance of the fact the man has a wounded nature and client to evil
gives rise to serious errors in all these different areas of life. And so just we have to keep
on mind that original sin also, if we forget original sin,
then the redemption that was given to us by Jesus Christ
is kind of rendered somewhat meaningless.
If we weren't dead in our sins,
then Christ dying for our sins is kind of like,
hey, hey, bro, thanks.
But we recognize that this is not a hey bro to the Lord himself.
This is, oh my goodness.
Lord, if you had abandoned me, if you had not come and died for me, if you had not come and lived
in human nature and rescued us from slavery to the evil one, we would be dead in our sins. And so
we have to, we have to understand and never can ever forget the reality of original sin and the fact that
Christ has transferred us from the power of darkness to his own glorious kingdom. We've been brought
into baptism. We have brought into that new kingdom. Now, at the same time, paragraph 409 highlights
this fact, this dramatic situation, right? The dramatic situation that is quoted in 1 John, chapter 5, verse 19, the whole world, which is in the power of the evil one,
means our life is a battle.
And that is, I think that's encouraging.
I think that's a really encouraging word.
Why? Because if life was a cruise ship,
and all of a sudden you were under attack,
that would be really difficult.
It'd be really difficult. It'd be crushing.
But if life is a battleship and you're under attack,
you kind of expect that, don't you?
I mean, does that kind of make some sense?
Where if I thought that all me out and out
and out on this field for a picnic,
why are all these people shooting at me?
That's chaotic.
But if you know, oh no, no, I'm in a battlefield.
I know why these people are shooting at me.
I expected this to know that life is a battle. It's not, I don't think, doesn't contribute to having a negative attitude towards life. I think it
helps us. I think it helps us have a prepared attitude. I think it gets our hearts ready for the battle.
And so, as God even sped us, it says, the whole of man's history has been the story of
Dauer combat with the powers of evil stretching. So our Lord tells us from the very dawn of history, right? Genesis chapter 3, until the very last day. We find ourselves, I'm paraphrasing now,
we find ourselves in the midst of the battlefield, and we have to struggle to do what is right.
And it is that great cost to ourselves, and made it by God's grace that we succeed and achieving
our own inner integrity. That's remarkable. The struggle to do it is right.
It's a great cost.
I mean, think about this.
This is just the church is reminding us.
It is going to come at great cost to you.
But also, you will have God's grace.
You'll be able to succeed at achieving your own inner integrity, which is incredible.
What a great promise.
What a great reality that we can experience this inner integrity in our lives today.
Not on our own, but with God's grace and with great cost to ourselves. Now, the very last three paragraphs, as we mentioned before,
paragraph 410, after the fall, man was not abandoned by God. In fact,
they're in Genesis chapter 3, verse 15, there is what is called the proto-evangelium, or the first gospel,
right?
So, evangelical, gospel, good news, proto-first, right?
So, the proto-evangelium is Genesis chapter 3, verse 15, in which the Lord God is speaking
to the snake and the serpent, right?
And he says, I will put enmity between you, the evil one, between you and the woman, between your offspring and hers.
They will strike at your head while you strike at their heel.
Is one of the translations of this.
But here is God's promise, that's promise.
And the passage in Genesis announces the Messiah, right,
who's gonna have a battle between the serpent,
and also the woman.
And the church has an ancient, ancient tradition. The fathers, doctors of the
church have seen that woman announced in the Proof to Evangelium as Our Lady, as Mary. And she's
called the new Eve. You know, St. Paul refers to Jesus Christ as the new Adam. And the church
fathers, doctors of the church, we refer to Our Lady as the new Eve, because not only is she the one in so many ways who
crushes the head of the serpent because of her son Jesus, right, because of God's grace in her life.
But here is this powerful, powerful affirmation of the Maccalaureate conception in paragraph 411,
where it states, Mary benefited first of all and uniquely from Christ's victory over sin. How?
It says, she was preserved from all state of original sin. And that's part of the doctrine of the macular conception,
was that the moment of her conception Mary was preserved from all esteemed of original sin by
the future merits of her son's life, death and resurrection, over the merits of her son's future,
life, death and resurrection. And she also had a special grace of God because of that, she committed
no sin during her whole or through life.
And so there is this recognition that
here in the Proof of Evangelium as God is
promising that there will be enmity between the evil one and between the woman between
the offspring of Satan and the offspring of the woman that
Satan's head would ultimately be crushed. And so just like in Genesis chapter two and three, there's the fall team, right?
You have Adam and Eve as the fall team.
They disobey God.
You have in the new testament, you have the redemption team.
You have the new Adam, Jesus and the new Eve, Mary, who obey God and by obedience, by
trust, they restore what was lost in the fall, which is incredible.
Now, at the same time, the last question, this section of the Catechism asks is paragraph
412, but why did God not prevent the first man from sinning?
God could have done this.
Why didn't he just step in?
Why didn't God show up early and get in the way between the serpent and the woman?
Why didn't God just do something?
And the answer, of course, is going to be a mystery. But St. Leo the Great and St. Thomas Aquinas,
they show us, and the answer is, more,
but the answer is greater, meaning.
St. Leo the Great says,
Christ's inexpressible grace
gave us blessings better than those
the demons envied taking away.
Something better there, something more there.
And Salmas Aquinas also said, there's nothing to prevent human natures being raised up
to something greater even after sin.
The God permits evil in order to draw forth some greater good.
Remember, one of the reasons why we know that we believe we have faith, we declare that
God allows evil in the world is to preserve our freedom, right?
So that we can truly love. And secondly, because we believe we trust that God
allows sin because he knows he can bring about a greater good. And that's every, every Easter,
we sing this thing. The word is the exultate. And we sing a happy fault that earns so great,
so glorious every Deemer. You know, St. Paul also, he says, we're sin-increased, grace abounded all the more.
And so I know that's an article of faith, that's an area where we just have to lean into this and say,
I really got it, is it true that you could have stopped the sin from happening,
you could have stopped the evil from happening, but you didn't because you knew you'd bring about a greater good.
If that's the case, then please help me to trust you.
That is so critical.
That's part of the battle.
We mentioned that it is a hard battle.
This life is a hard battle.
Part of that is not just the battle against evil and the battle against the brokenness
and suffering in the world.
It also means it's a battle of trust.
It's a hard battle to be able to say, okay,
God, I hear what you're saying and I'm going to trust you. I hear what you're declaring
to me and I'm going to trust you. I wish that you had taken away all sin, that you didn't.
I wish you took away all suffering, but you didn't. You did transform it though. You
made sin able to be forgiven. You made a suffering able to be
Redeemed and transformed to something more powerful. And so that part of the battle. Man, oh man. That is that's real
And that maybe might might be the battle where you find yourselves today
It might be the case that you find yourselves in the middle of that battle that just says, okay, God
Maybe things aren't the worst they've ever been in my life.
But can I still trust you?
Or maybe this day is the day where it's, this is the worst season of your entire life.
And on this day, the God's saying, I know, and I haven't abandoned you to this.
It maybe today is a day where you've lost loved ones, or maybe a season where you've lost loved ones or maybe a season where you've lost
loved ones or you're losing them right now.
It's a day maybe to be reminded that in the midst of that brokenness, in the midst of that
suffering, the God did not abandon you to the domain of death, but He came in mercy to
the aid of all.
He's coming in mercy to your aid and my aid as well.
That's why we need each other.
That's why we need to pray for each other.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Michael.
Can I wait to see you tomorrow?
God bless.
you