The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 67: The Humanity and Divinity of Christ
Episode Date: March 8, 2023Father Mike teaches us more about the divine and human natures of the second person of the Holy Trinity, the Word that became flesh, Jesus Christ. Jesus became like us in all things but sin; as such, ...he has a human soul, intellect, will, and body without losing any of his divinity. Fr. Mike tells us that in his human nature, Jesus thought with a human mind, worked with human hands, and loved with a human heart. Christ needed to learn things, and he increased in wisdom and understanding. The full humanity and true divinity of Jesus is a great mystery of our faith. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 470-474. 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
and God's families we journey together toward our heavenly home.
It is day 67.
You guys, I forgot to mention this,
but it's only, you know, 293 days.
No, 298 days left to go.
You guys are doing so well.
Is that right? That's accurate.
I think that's accurate.
We're reading paragraphs 470 to 474.
Only five short paragraphs today
because we're diving deeply into that mystery
of how is God made man?
And also, what is the mind of Jesus?
How does he intellect all about how does he learn?
Did he learn?
So, did I venture into that?
I am 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.
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As I said, the St.
67 paragraphs, 474, 74,
big question in 470.
The header is called,
How is the Son of God?
Man.
And one of the things we realize is that when we say Jesus Christ is true God and true man,
He became human without losing His divinity, and he remained divine without losing his humanity.
And this is just remarkable. Not only will we talk about the fact that Jesus' human nature,
or the human nature, was assumed not absorbed, right? We remember we talked about this yesterday,
one of the heresies that would say that when God took on human nature, it was like
alchiceltzer in the drop of water, just absorbed the whole thing and just, yes, he took on human
nature originally, but then ultimately, I don't say lost it, but essentially absorbed, obliterated,
almost dissolved it because how could human nature contain divinity? Which, yeah, that's a great
question. It's the mystery of the incarnation.
So one of the things the church has been affirming is that human nature was assumed, not absorbed,
in the sense it wasn't overridden.
In fact, Jesus had what we say, we say it like this, that Jesus had a human soul with all
of its operations of intellect and will and of his human body.
Now that is really, really important.
Jesus had a human soul with his operations of intellect and will, meaning he had a human
intellect, had a human will and a human body. Now that's going to be really important because
it's in Christ's human body, in that will that he conforms his will to the will of the Father,
he ascends intellectually and with everything he is to the Father's will, he obeys the
Father in everything as a human being, and of course also as a divine being.
And this is really, really important that there's nothing that Christ did not assume
of human nature except our brokenness.
He didn't assume our sin.
He became like us in all things, but sin. Now, in parallel fashion, this is all in paragraph 470,
in parallel fashion, the church had to recall on every occasion that Christ's human nature
belongs as his own to the divine person of the Son of God who assumed it. Right? So, yes,
Christ's human soul, operations of intellect and will, human body, and also, and every occasion.
His human nature belongs as his own to the divine person of the Son of God who assumed it,
which means that everything that Christ is and does in this nature derives from one of the Trinity.
This is so important. In this paragraph, just I invite you to take a look at paragraph 470.
Every sentence clarifies something
even more profound about Jesus. For example, the very next sentence after what I just said
is the Son of God therefore communicates to his humanity his own personal mode of existence
in the Trinity. Reflect on this the Son of God, we are, second person of the Trinity, communicates
to his humanity, his own personal mode of existence in the Trinity. What does that mean? That means
that what's the personal mode of existence in the Trinity? Well, he is the Son of the Father.
He is that second person of the Trinity. He receives the Father's love and he pours himself back out
in love to the Father, and that love is the Holy Spirit, right? It's a third person of the Trinity.
So Jesus communicates to his humanity
that mode of existence.
He communicates to his humanity
that true reality of being the only begotten son
of the Father, which is just incredible.
And I just, it's amazing.
So we're talking more about that.
Also, the other thing we're gonna look at today,
again, only five short paragraphs,
is Christ's soul and his human knowledge.
Now, remember that when we use the term his human soul,
we are referring to a lot of things,
but what is its operations of intellect and will?
So that we think, like, or intellect, that's our brain.
Well, yes and no.
I mean, our thoughts happen in our brain
but there's a thing
That is super super brain is above Supra maybe say Supra brain where we have we have a mind not just a brain
And that intellect right that mind
He's a human mind
And here is Jesus who in his human soul is the operations of a human mind, right? That mind is a human mind. And here is Jesus who in his human soul, he
has the operations of a human mind, right? An intellect and a human will, that ability
to choose. And so the question is, how does that human mind grow? How does that human mind
learn? Is Christ's intellect, did he get, was he immediately born and he could
speak in the church would say no? As a human being, right, because he had a human nature,
he, sorry, he's a divine person with a human and divine nature, but both of those, in his
human nature, he had to learn. And so this is really important. This is why the Son of
God could, in paragraph 472, this is why the Son of God could in paragraph 472 This is why the Son of God could could when he became man
Increase in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man
He would even have to ask questions now at the same time the cataclysm
We're gonna hear this at the same time
this truly human knowledge that he had
Express the divine life of his person which may one means is, yes, he had to learn. He had to grow.
That human knowledge of God's Son expressed the divine life of his person.
These are the quotes we have from Maxmas, the Confessor. The human nature of God's Son,
not by itself, but by its union with the Word, new and showed forth in itself everything that pertains to God. So yes,
his human intellect was limited, had to grow at the same time. That human intellect is united,
united with the divine, right? With the divine intellect, the divine nature that he would have.
And with how does that work? It is a mystery, but we're going to talk a little bit about that mystery today.
Tomorrow we'll look at Christ's human will and the Christ's true body.
But today we're sticking with Christ's soul, his intellect, human knowledge, and this reality that is so profound.
Okay, well, with all that introductory stuff out of the way, let's say a prayer, a Father in heaven. We thank you.
We thank you for the mystery. It's confusing as we might be
the mystery of the incarnation of your Son, Jesus Christ, that second person of the Trinity, the word
that became flesh and dwelt among us. And we saw His glory, the glory as of a Father's only Son,
because Father, you so loved the world that you gave your Son,
so that everyone who believed in Him by not perish,
but might have eternal life.
Today, help us to know more and more about your Son.
Help us today to accept Him even more fully.
Help us today to be loved by Him and to receive that love
as we are loved by you and receive your love. In Jesus' name
we pray, amen, and the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. As I
said, in the day 67, we're reading paragraphs 470 to 474. How is the Son of God, man? Because human
nature was assumed not absorbed in the mysterious union of the incarnation,
the Church was led over the course of centuries to confess the full reality of Christ's human
soul with its operations of intellect and will and of his human body. In parallel fashion,
she had to recall on each occasion that Christ's human nature belongs as his own to the divine
person of the Son of God who assumed it.
Everything that Christ is and does in this nature derives from one of the Trinity.
The Son of God therefore communicates to his humanity his own personal mode of existence
in the Trinity.
In his soul as in his body Christ thus expresses humanly the divine ways of the Trinity.
As Gaudium at Spez stated, the Son of God worked with human hands.
He thought with a human mind.
He acted with a human will and with a human heart he loved.
Born of the Virgin Mary, he has truly been made one of us, like to us in all things except
sin.
Christ's soul and his human knowledge.
Upon an area of Laudicea asserted that in Christ the divine word had replaced the soul
or spirit.
Against this error, the church confessed that the eternal sun also assumed a rational
human soul.
This human soul that the Son of God assumed is endowed with a true human knowledge.
As such, this knowledge could not in itself be unlimited.
It was exercised in the historical conditions of his existence and space and time.
This is why the Son of God could, when he became man, increase in wisdom and in stature,
and in favor with God and man.
And would even have to inquire for himself about what one in the human condition can learn
only from experience.
This corresponded to the reality of his voluntary emptying of himself, taking the form of a slave.
But, at the same time, this truly human knowledge of God's Son expressed the divine life of his person.
As St. Maximes, the confessor, wrote, The human nature of God's Son,
Not by itself,
But by its union with the Word,
New and showed forth in itself everything that pertains to God.
Such as first of all the case,
With the intimate and immediate knowledge
That the Son of God-made man has of his father.
The Son in his human knowledge
Also showed the divine penetration he had
Into the secret thoughts of human hearts.
By its union to the divine wisdom in the person of the Word and Carnot, Christ enjoyed in his
human knowledge the fullness of understanding of the eternal plans he had come to reveal.
What he admitted to not knowing in this area, he elsewhere declared himself not sent to reveal.
He elsewhere declared himself not sent to reveal.
Okay, so, wow, isn't, I mean, there's a mouthful, obviously, but it is so incredibly beautiful.
Again, yesterday, I know it was a long day,
with a lot of heresies, the one heresy,
well, we're really focusing on as a Polonarius,
I've allowed to see, I don't know if you caught that,
it was in paragraph 471, he asserted
that in Christ, the divine word had replaced the solar spirit, right?
So that Jesus didn't have a human soul to have a human spirit, that his divinity kind
of basically just like, no, that'll be in the place there.
Now against this error, the church confessed that the eternal sun had also assumed a rational
human soul.
And that's so important.
Why?
Because one of the things we realize is just what God
even sped as stated at the end of paragraph 470. This is so important. The incarnation was not simply,
I was not at all God absorbing humanity. It was the fact that in taking on a human nature, God
worked with human hands. God, he much better
says this. He thought with a human mind, he acted with a human will and with a
human heart he loved. Why is that so important? Because in all of this, one of
many reasons, because in all of this, Jesus Christ is redeeming the whole life of
humanity. Right? In this, Jesus Christ is living in full union, in full obedience to the Father,
not only as the eternal divine Son,
but in that human nature.
So here's a human nature,
a human intellect, a human will,
that consistently is obedient,
consistently is willing what the Father wills.
And this is so vitally important for us
because there's not one aspect of humanity,
not one aspect of the human reality that Jesus has not entered into and has therefore redeemed.
And that is so, so important for us. Again, paragraph 472. It says, the human soul that the Son
of God assumed is in doubt with a true human knowledge. So because of that, that knowledge could not be unlimited.
Again, as I mentioned in the long intro today,
is we recognize that Jesus wasn't born speaking every language,
that he had to learn, Aramaic, right?
If he had to learn Greek,
he had to learn Latin, if you ever learned Latin,
you have to, he probably didn't know English,
we'll say it like that.
Now, obviously, the eternal God,
there's nothing he doesn't know.
But in assuming a true human soul, like intellect and will, he actually assumed true human knowledge, which means it says this, it's, oh gosh, it's so good. He would even have to inquire for himself
about what one in the human condition can learn only from experience. Had asked questions, questions that he wouldn't know the answer to.
And then this is again, this corresponds to the reality, it says in paragraph 472, this
corresponds to the reality of his voluntary emptying of himself, taking the form of his
slave.
Again, just highlight this, it seems shocking.
Well, it actually doesn't seem shocking.
It is shocking. Well, it actually doesn't seem shocking. It is shocking that God would love us so much that he would empty himself and take on
limited a limited human intellect, limited human will, limited human power in a body that
actually could suffer and die.
We'll talk about that tomorrow.
But this is remarkable that even the limit
his intellect so that he could live like us in all things, taking the form of a slave.
Now the Catechism, the church wants to make it very, very clear at the same time. This
paragraph 473, at the same time, this truly human knowledge, it's truly expressed the
divine life of his person. I love that. That quote we already read now twice from St.
Maxx, the confessor, the human nature of God's son, not by itself, the by its union with the word,
new and showed forth in itself, everything that pertains to God. That is one of the reasons why
Jesus could say whoever has seen me has seen the Father because truly he's always been,
for eternity is the second person to train right. From eternity, he is the son of the father.
And even when he assumed that human nature,
he remained the son of the father.
Oh, so incredible, so incredible.
Last thought, last paragraph, 474.
It goes on to say, by its union to the divine wisdom
in the person of the word incarnate. So that's so good.
The Christ enjoyed in His human knowledge the fullness of understanding of the eternal
plans he had come to reveal.
So Jesus, he didn't walk around thinking like, what's happening now?
Why are they torturing me?
Why are they arresting me?
Why are they rejecting me?
He knew going into this with the knowledge, the divine wisdom.
He enjoyed in his human knowledge the fullness of understanding the eternal plans he had come
to reveal.
And so we can realize this that here is God who embraced suffering, knowing fully what
would happen to him.
You know, I think for you and for me one of the things that hurts the most about
About suffering is not just necessarily the moment of suffering, but knowing that it's coming, right?
Knowing that it's on its way
And here's Jesus
Who enjoyed in his human knowledge?
The fullness of understanding of the eternal plans. It come to reveal and
We can just sit back and marvel at that.
Actually, we should enter into that in prayer and recognize, God, in taking on human nature,
you knew what you were doing.
You knew you would be rejected.
You knew that you would be despised.
You knew that the people you were giving your heart to would be the people who would pierce your heart.
And that's God's love for you.
That's God's love for me today.
See, what we're talking about today is in this whole, these last six, seven days.
Again, we say it so many times, it's not just about information transfer, but it's about
transformation.
It's about falling in love with this God.
So knowing more and more about his intellect and his will, knowing more and more that he had to grow, but at the same time, as he grew,
he had this, in his human knowledge, the fullness of understanding of the eternal plans he'd come to reveal, and said, yes to that. Every breath said yes to that with every heartbeat.
Man, it can actually break your heart if you pray about it.
And so I hope you're praying about it.
I know I am.
Man, and I'm praying for you.
Please, please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
you