The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 66: True God and True Man (2024)
Episode Date: March 6, 2024We explore the truth that Jesus Christ is fully God and fully man; he is one person with two natures, both Divine and human. Fr. Mike explains that we call Mary the Mother of God because, from the ver...y moment of his conception, Jesus was fully God and fully human. Fr. Mike also goes over heresies in the history of the Church that have denied the humanity of Christ, rejected the divinity of Christ, or confused the fact that Jesus is the Son of God by nature. The Church has always responded by affirming that Jesus Christ is truly the Son of God who became a man and our brother without ceasing to be God and Lord. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 464-469. 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 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 to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home. It is day 66. We're reading paragraphs
464 to 469. 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. Also, if you want to download your own Catechism in
a year reading plan, you can visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
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You know, as I said, is day 66.
We're reading paragraphs 460, 4469.
Yesterday we talked about why,
why did the Son of God became man?
Why did the word become flesh?
And we answered that question by saying,
he came to save us by reconciling us to the Father.
That member that was the first reason.
Secondly, that we might know God's love.
Third, to be our model of holiness and fourth,
so we could become partakers of the divine nature.
And just remarkable, right?
Well, today, we're going to the church,
gosh, it's one thing to say.
It's one thing to say, Jesus one thing to say Jesus Christ is truly God
You know Jesus Christ is Lord we talked about that a couple days ago, but then the question comes up
Well, what do you mean?
What do you mean that Jesus Christ is true God and true man?
And so what happens is we're gonna look at today the heresies basically the challenges to the understanding of who Jesus truly is
Right, we know that Jesus is the second person of the Trinity,
become flesh, but what does that mean, right?
What does it mean to say that Jesus is true God
and true man?
What does it mean to say he's both divine and human?
And so we're gonna look at a couple different heresies.
We're gonna look at the fact that the first heresy,
really first heresies that popped up were actually more
to have denied Christ's humanity
than they'd have denied Christ's divinity.
The first thing was actually he only appeared to be human
He didn't really become human one of the first heresies
We also looked at we're gonna look at the Nestorian heresy and the story the Nestorian heresy
Was regarded Jesus Christ as a human person joined to the divine person of God's son
And so we had to have to clarify that that no
Jesus is has one is is a one divine person of God's Son. And so we had to have to clarify that, that no, Jesus is a one
divine person with a human nature and a divine nature, right? He's one divine person with two
natures, human and divine. That's going to be very, very important. That was Consul of Ephesus
talked about that. We're also going to talk, it was a Consul of Ephesus that proclaimed that Mary
is truly the Theotokos, right?
She is truly the mother of God because the person, the being, the one who was conceived in her womb was truly
the Son of God.
From the moment of his conception, had already been, had eternally been in fact the Son of God who became man at one point in time, right?
So he, it's incredible, incredible. He joined himself. This
divine person joined his divine nature to human nature, which is remarkable.
So then after that, of course, the Monophysites, they affirmed that when the
second person of the Trinity, the oldy me-gotten son of the father, joined
his divine nature to the human nature that the human nature had ceased
to exist. And so that was why in 451 the Council of Calcedon confessed that nope, actually that human
nature and that divine nature coexisted essentially, you want to say it like that, in one divine person,
in one, we say it like this, in one hypostasis. That's the technical term here. Again, you guys, it's remarkable. But these are some of
the heresies that came up and asked the question, what is it to say that Jesus is Lord? What is it
to say that He is the Son of God? You know, it is our misunderstanding of some of these heresies and
the church's subsequent clarification of this. I don't know if you ever go online. And typically,
in our conversations with, not just
our conversations with non-Christians generically, but there are a number of Muslims, our Muslim friends
who, I would say this, since we have lacked a degree of clarity in the way we've articulated
how Jesus Christ is truly God and truly man. There are a number of Muslim,
you might call them apologists,
who are kind of basic, I don't wanna say it like this,
but kind of twist in some ways,
the Catholic teaching about who Jesus truly is
in order to deny his divinity.
Now, for us, we want to understand who Jesus truly is
so that we can love him, right?
So we can know the truth and we can love him in truth, but also so that we can explain it. Again, not just to our Muslim
friends, but to any friend, to be able to say when they ask us, what do you mean that Jesus
Christ is true God and true man? What do you mean that he is both human and divine? To be able to
say it at least in some ways, oh, we're not saying this or we're not saying that, but we are saying,
you know, this other thing. That's what we're kind of looking at today. And again, it's going to be, there might be some
new words that you I have never heard of before, like, Gnosticism or Gnostic Dositism. That's one
of the, that's one of the first heresies we're going to talk about a little bit. The name Nestorian,
we've got some guy named Nestorius. It just happens to be his name. So the name the heresy after the
guy. And so I guess if you become, you know, influential enough in your heresy, then
you get to have a heresy named after you.
So like the Arian heresy named after Arius.
Um, but nonetheless, what we're looking for is the ability not only to know who
God is so we can love him, but also to be able to explain.
So again, not to be confused.
There might be some kind of words you might not have heard.
Gnostic, dosatism, Nestorianism, Homo Ussias,
these words, you're gonna get the context
as we move along.
So I just invite you not to be distracted or sidetracked
by some words that might not be immediately,
apparently understandable,
but know that we're going to give some context
ultimately.
Okay, so here we go.
Let's get started.
Let's pray and then launch into paragraphs 464 to 469.
Father in heaven, we know that you've given us your only begotten Son.
We know that in Jesus Christ, one divine person, there were two. Nature's human and divine. In so many ways we don't know how
the details, in so many ways we don't know exactly what that means. Father we ask you to help us to
understand how your eternal, only begotten Soned into time and entered into our world, into this life
in a unique way, in a unique way, in the Incarnation. Help us to understand it just more deeply today
so that we can love you and rejoice and give you praise and glory for what you have done
in our lives and in the life of every human being by uniting your divinity to our humanity,
you have forever changed our humanity. And we thank you. Help us to live like this this day
and every day. We make this prayer in Jesus' name, amen, in the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit, amen. Okay, so we're going to dive into that again. It's day 66 for reading paragraphs 464 to 469.
Here we go.
True God and True Man.
The unique and altogether singular event
of the incarnation of the Son of God
does not mean that Jesus Christ is part God and part man,
nor does it imply that He is the result
of a confused mixture of the divine and the human.
He became truly man, while remaining truly God.
Jesus Christ is true God and true man.
During the first centuries, the Church had to defend and clarify this truth of faith
against the heresies that falsified it.
The first heresies denied not so much Christ's divinity as His true humanity, such as Gnostic
Dositism.
From apostolic times, the Christian faith has insisted on the true incarnation of God's
Son come in the flesh.
But already in the third century, the church in a council at Antioch had to affirm against
Paul of Samosota that Jesus Christ is Son of God by nature and not by adoption.
The first Ecumenical Council of Nicaea in 325 confessed in its creed that the Son of
God is Begotten not made, consubstantial, that is, Homo Uzius with the Father, and condemned
Arius who had affirmed that the Son of God came to be from things that were not, and
that he was from another substance than
that of the Father. The Nestorian heresy regarded Christ as a human person joined to the Divine
Person of God's Son. Opposing this heresy, Saint Cyril of Alexandria and the Third Ecumenical
Council at Ephesus in 431 confessed that the word, uniting to Himself in His person, the flesh animated by a rational soul, became man.
Christ's humanity has no other subject than the Divine Person of the Son of God
who assumed it and made it His own from His conception.
For this reason, the Council of Ephesus proclaimed in 431
that Mary truly became the Mother of God by the human conception of the Son of God in her womb, stating, Mother of God, not that the nature of the Word or his divinity received the beginning
of its existence from the Holy Virgin, but that, since the Holy Body, animated by a rational
soul, which the Word of God, united to himself according to the Hebostasis, was born from
her.
The word is said to be born according to the flesh.
The Monophysites affirmed that the human nature had ceased to exist as such in Christ
when the Divine Person of God's Son assumed it.
Faced with this heresy, the 4th Ecumenical Council at Calcedon in 451 confessed,
Following the Holy Fathers, we unanimously teach and confess one and the same Son,
our Lord Jesus Christ.
The same perfect in divinity and perfect in humanity.
The same truly God and truly man, composed of rational soul and body,
consubstantial with the Father as to His divinity, and consubstantial with us as to His humanity.
Like us in all things but sin.
He was begotten from the Father before all ages as to His divinity, and in these last
days for us and for our salvation was born as to His humanity of the Virgin Mary, the
Mother of God.
We confess that one and the same Christ, Lord, and only begotten Son, is to be acknowledged
in two natures without confusion, change, division, or separation.
The distinction between the natures was never abolished by their union, but rather, the
character proper to each of the two natures was preserved as they came together in one
person, or prosopon, and one hypostasis.
After the Council of Calcedon, some made of Christ's human nature a kind of personal
subject.
Against them, the Fifth Ecumenical Council at Constantinople in 553 confessed that,
There is but one hypostasis, or person, which is our Lord Jesus Christ, one of the Trinity.
Thus, everything in Christ's human nature is to be attributed to His divine person as
its proper subject, not only His miracles,
but also His sufferings and even His death. He who was crucified in the flesh, our Lord Jesus
Christ is true God, Lord of glory, and one of the Holy Trinity. The Church thus confesses
that Jesus is inseparably true God and true man. He is truly the Son of God who, without ceasing to be God and Lord, became a man and our brother.
What he was, he remained.
And what he was not, he assumed, sings the Roman Liturgy.
And the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom proclaims and sings,
O, only begotten Son and Word of God, immortal being. You who deigned for our salvation to become incarnate of the Holy Mother of God and ever
Virgin Mary, you who without change became man and were crucified.
O Christ our God, you who by your death have crushed death.
You who are one of the Holy Trinity glorified with the Father and the Holy Spirit, save
us.
Okay, so it's incredible. One of the reasons why we have church councils
is because there are challenges, right?
There are misunderstandings.
There are teachings that are contrary to the faith.
And so the church has to answer and has to say,
okay, what is the truth?
What is it that we actually believe?
What is it that we actually know about Jesus or about any of the the mysteries of our faith?
And so here we go from the very very beginning. We recognize that the first heresies
denied not so much Christ's divinity as his true humanity. You know, for fornostics, it was the
material world that was, you know, evil. It was fallen and it it was what we needed to shake off.
And so they would say that,
no, it would be improper to divinity,
to actually take on humanity,
to actually get hungry, to actually digest,
to actually sleep, like all these things,
and not only that, to suffer and to die,
that was so abhorrent to them
that they denied Christ's divinity,
or sorry, they denied his humanity in the first place.
And yet from apostolic times from the very beginning,
we have Christian faith has insisted the true incarnation
of Jesus Christ come in the flesh.
So that's so important.
There's also the other heresy in the third century.
It says here in paragraph 465,
in the church council at Antioch had to affirm
against this guy named Paul of Samosota that Jesus Christ is son of God by nature and not by
adoption because Paul of Sama Sota was saying that he was the son of God, but
only by adoption. Meaning here is the gospel story that talks about how Jesus
was baptized in the Jordan River. The Holy Spirit comes upon him and the father
declares this is my my son. And so Paul of Samosota would claim that,
well, that's when the father adopted Jesus.
That's when, if he had divinity,
that's when it came upon him.
And the church is like, no, absolutely not.
Very, very important to recognize
that Jesus is the son of God by nature, not by adoption.
We're sons and daughters of God by adoption.
Jesus Christ is unique.
He is the son of God by nature, always, always a son of God. Next, we have the first Ecumenical Council in Nicaea,
big Ecumenical Council. You know what year that was? That was 325. It's one of those years that
people just remember, Council of Nicaea, year 325. And so put that in the old brain bucket,
because there was an area and the Arian heresy was massively, massively popular. And so the church had to speak out
against the Arian heresy. And what happened? What the Council of Nicaea in what year? 325,
that's right. It said that, no, the Son of God is begotten, not made, consubstantial with the
Father. We say that every single Sunday, consubstantial, that Greek word is homoousias. So of the same
substance that, you know you know areas had said that
The Son of God came to be from things that were not there was another there's a time when the Son of God did not exist and
Very very important in Council of Nicaea that we that we clarified and affirmed now Jesus Christ is eternally
Begotten of the Father of the same substance
Consubstantial with the Father so whenever you say that this Sunday, coming up,
whenever that's coming, realize, we say that
because there was the heresy that denied the fact
that Jesus is true God and true man.
Now, after this we have the Nestorian heresy.
Now I say after this, but you know, all these things,
they kind of swirl a little bit too.
Sometimes they happen chronologically,
and sometimes they happen concurrently.
The Nestorian heresy regarded Christ
as a human person joined to the divine person of God's Son. And so the Council of Ephesus in 431
had to declare that no, Jesus is a divine person with two natures. A nature that is human and a
nature that is divine. He has divine nature and human nature, but he's one divine person. Another way to say it,
here at Council of Ephesus says that the word uniting to himself in his person,
the flesh animated by a rational soul became man. That, as 466 paragraph says,
Christ's humanity has no other subject than the divine person of the Son of God who assumed it
and made it his own from the moment of his conception.
And this is the reason that the Council of Ephesus in 431 proclaimed that Mary truly is the mother
of God. The Greek word to say, the way to say that is theotokos or theotokos, right? She's the
mother of God by the human conception of the Son of God in her womb. So obviously, Mary did not
exist before the Son of God existed. Who is, he is eternal, right? He is the only begotten
Son of the Father. He's before all things. He's again, the word
is eternal. Mary was born in time. Mary was human being, she's
just just human being. Yet, yet, here's what the Council of
Ephesus said, what year? 431. Got that. Good. Well done. She,
Mary is mother of God, not that the nature of the word or his
divinity received the beginning of the word or his divinity
received the beginning of his existence from the Holy Virgin, right? Right? So that's,
she's a mother of God, not because his divinity received the beginning of his existence from her,
but that since the Holy body animated by irrational soul, see that, that is the very
important part. We recognize that that's the human nature. The holy body animated by rational rational soul,
which the word of God united to himself according to the hypostasis was born from her. The word is
said to be born according to the flesh. So this is so so important and I don't want anyone to miss
this. We call Mary the mother of God, not because it's not meant to be simply a title of honor to her,
although what incredible honor, but it's saying something about Jesus. It is saying
that from the very moment of his conception, the eternal Son of God, the second person of the
Trinity, united to himself, humanity, like human nature, so that the being in Mary's womb
humanity, like human nature, so that the being in Mary's womb is the second person of the Trinity,
right, that one person, one divine person, with a human and divine nature. Therefore,
the child to whom Mary gave birth is actually God. Therefore, we can say Mary is the mother of God. Does that make sense? No, again, not that she preceded the eternal son of the Father, but that she truly gave birth
to a divine person. Therefore, she is the mother of God. When she gave birth to
Jesus Christ, a divine person with a human and divine nature. This is, again,
it's not about Mary. What it is about is about, here's how fully Jesus has
united his divinity to our humanity.
And so we have the Monophysite heresy in paragraph 467 that affirmed that the human nature had ceased
to exist as such in Christ when the divine person of God's son assumed it. So I've heard it described
that it was like, yeah, at some point here's God's divinity, right, the second person of the trinity,
who became one of us. So,
yes, there's human nature at the beginning, but then it was kind of like this. This is, this is,
here's my image. It's not my image. It's someone else's image. Like this humanity that Christ
assumed gets lost in this sea of divinity. And the example was like Alka Seltzer, right? Here's
a tablet of Alka Seltzer. That would be the humanity that gets dropped
into this sea of divinity.
And it just kind of dissolves, just goes away.
And the problem with this,
because that would say, yeah, there's the incarnation.
God became one of us.
But then the humanity part just dissolved away.
The problem with that is, as others have said,
is that it means that Jesus did not act as a human being,
that his life, his miracles, his suffering, his death,
his rising from the dead weren't done as a human being,
but simply was done as a divine being.
And we recognize that now God did this,
that even the whole purpose of the incarnation, right,
is to bring us close, is to come close to us,
and to bring us close to divinity.
And so if he absorbed and essentially obliterated our humanity, then that doesn't come close to us.
And so the fourth Ecumenical Council, Kelsedon in the year 451, confessed this, following the Holy
Fathers, meaning it goes all the way back.
We unanimously teach and confess one and the same son,
our Lord Jesus Christ, the same perfect in divinity
and perfect in humanity, the same truly God and truly man,
composed of a rational soul and body,
consubstantial with the father as to his divinity
and consubstantial with us as to his humanity.
Again, this is so important, right?
Because the humanity of Jesus did not cease to exist,
did not get obliterated like
Alka Salter in water. This is so important.
He was begotten from the Father, this is this book going back to the Council of Calcedon.
He was begotten from the Father before all ages as to his divinity.
And in these last days, for us and for our salvation,
was born as to his humanity of the Virgin Mary, Mary the mother of God and so goes on and this is
maybe I don't want to say this is the most important part but for me it kind of brings
it hammers at home and this is this begin paragraph 467 in those in the small script we confess
that one and the same Christ Lord and only begotten Son is to be acknowledged in two natures
without confusion change division or division, or separation.
I remember those just so so so important for all these things without
confusion, change, division, or separation. The distinction between the natures
was never abolished by their union, meaning yeah human nature, divine nature,
never abolished by that union, but rather the character proper to each of the
two natures was preserved as they came together in one person,
prosopon, and one hypostasis.
It's just remarkable, incredible.
Man, I think this is not only incredible for us to recognize that Jesus,
one divine person, having a divine nature and a human nature,
is not just technical.
It's not just kind of,
we like to know the nuts and bolts or how the engine works
or whatever you want to say on what's under the hood.
But because it actually matters to us,
it matters that Jesus is fully God.
Cause if he wasn't fully God, we couldn't be redeemed.
It also matters that Jesus is fully human
because if he wasn't fully human, we couldn't be redeemed. It also matters that Jesus is fully human because if he wasn't fully
human we couldn't be redeemed, right? And so here is Jesus who in one divine
person has a human nature just like ours and all things but sin. He became like us
and all things but sin but also has a divine nature which is just remarkable
and incredible. I love this last prayer.
Throman Liturgy says,
what he was, he remained, meaning he was God.
What he was, he remained.
And what he was not, he assumed that he wasn't human,
but he became, he assumed humanity, right?
What he was, he remained divine.
And what he was not, he assumed human.
And the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom,
who just remarkable, golden tongue,
he said, only begetten, we'll close with this because I know it's long, but it's deep, right?
Only begetten, Son and Word of God, immortal being, who deigned for our salvation to become
incarnate of the holy mother of God and ever Virgin Mary, you who without change became man and were
crucified, O Christ our God, you who by your death have crushed death
You who are one of the Holy Trinity
Glorified with the Father and the Holy Spirit
Save us. It is incredible. I know this is exceptionally long today
But this is this is deep. Hopefully this don't be discouraged if you're like what's I still don't know who historian is or
Historians is I don't know the Arian heresy yet
It's okay. What we need to know is
Jesus is one divine person with a human nature and a divine nature again as it says very clearly without confusion
change division or separation and
that means
that means
God has made himself our brother
So that we could become sons and daughters of God.
It's incredible. Tomorrow we're going to talk about how is the Son of God man. Even more deeply,
it's remarkable. It's incredible. It might in some ways be challenging, but at the same time,
hang in there. You guys, I'm so sorry this is so long, but hang in there. This is worth it. It is
worth doing the work because we need to know who Jesus is. We need to know what is the meaning of the incarnation
and how does it affect our lives?
I am praying for you.
They made it through today.
Keep pressing play tomorrow.
Please pray for me.
My name's Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
God bless.