The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 99: Symbols of the Holy Spirit
Episode Date: April 9, 2023Fr. Mike explores the different symbols the faithful use when discussing the Holy Spirit, such as fire, water, and anointing. We examine how these symbols help us more fully apprehend the person of th...e Holy Spirit. Fr. Mike unpacks the meaning of each symbol, as well as each symbol's connection to the Old Testament. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 694-701. 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 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 by Ascension.
In 365 days, we will read to The Catechism of the Catholic Church discovering our right-dead
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home. This is day 99. You guys,
congratulations, are almost there. Almost a day 100, which is amazing. We're reading paragraphs
694-701. I'm using, as always, the ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes the
foundations of faith approach. You can follow along with any, any recent version of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church. I'm also using the Catechism and your reading plan when you can get at ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y. You also can click follow or subscribe
in your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications. As I said, it is day 99,
paragraph 694 to 7-1. Yesterday we talked about the joint mission of the Sun and the Spirit. So
that yeah, just although they are distinct two different persons of the Holy Trinity,
they are inseparable in their mission here.
Also, we talked about the proper name of the Holy Spirit being Holy Spirit,
and the titles of the Holy Spirit.
Today, we're going to look at a number of symbols of the Holy Spirit.
So, we have everything from water, anointing, fire, cloud, and light.
The seal is the symbol close to that of anointing, the hand, the finger, and the dove today.
So we recognize that Jesus is the image of the invisible God. So Jesus is that full manifestation.
And we actually, you know, he and taking on flesh, God becomes visible. God becomes tangible in some
ways, you know, incarnate, the incarnation, right? He, the infreshment of God. At the same time,
you know, we think of the Father, you know, sometimes
whether to our detriment or whether it's in a helpful way, we think of the Father in the way we
picture Fatherhood. The Holy Spirit is unique because the Holy Spirit, I mean, while again,
all the persons of the Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit are purely material, except for the
Son who was taken on humanity, right? He has a body now, even though he's more than just his human body.
That's a whole mystery.
Obviously right there, that hypostatic union.
But the symbols of the Holy Spirit, because how do we imagine the Holy Spirit?
Well, typically in the terms we just mentioned, the symbols.
So the Holy Spirit isn't water, but the Holy Spirit is symbolized many times by water.
The Holy Spirit is symbolized by anointing.
Remember that anointing oil, the Holy Spirit is symbolized by fire. Remember the The Holy Spirit is symbolized by anointing. Remember that anointing oil.
The Holy Spirit is symbolized by fire.
Remember the Holy Spirit coming upon the apostles
at Pentecost in fire, also Elijah,
who called down fire on Mount Carmel.
You also have the Holy Spirit symbolized by cloud
and light.
Remember when in the Old Testament,
when that fire, that Holy Spirit, that cloud,
and lightning, storm came upon Mount Taber.
You also have our Mount Sinai, I mean to say, and also you have Jesus on the mountain transfiguration,
where he's enters into the cloud, and there's this light. He's transfigured before them.
You have the seal, which is a symbol just like a 19, because we're, the anointing is that seal of the
Lord. We have the hand. Jesus heals the sick and
blesses the little children by laying hands on them, and the Apostle to the same in his
name. We also have the finger in paragraph 700. It talks about, it even quotes Luke chapter
11 verse 20 where Jesus says, if he said, it is by the finger of God that Jesus casts out
demons. So the finger and then also lastly the dove from the very beginning beginning in Genesis with Noah, to that dove that comes upon the Lord Jesus
at the baptism, the moment of his baptism.
So we have all these images, these symbols of the Holy Spirit.
So we've launched into them, we're going to learn a bit more about them.
And also I'm going to invite you to, as you listen to them, these symbols and kind of
the explanation.
They're all rooted in Scripture, but they're also have a place in the life
of the church right now. My invitation is to be able to say, okay, this is, this is how
I can, in some ways, apprehend the holy and immaterial, the pure spirit of the Holy Spirit
that sometimes as being human beings, right? It helps us to at least have symbols, even
though we know again. The Trinity is pure spirit. We also know that there are these images that help us conceptualize. There
are images that help us have access to who God is. And so that's what we're doing today,
looking at these symbols, these images of the Holy Spirit. So we pray. Father in heaven,
we give you praise and glory. Thank you so much for revealing yourself as Father.
Thank you for giving us your Son has one of us in his humanity and divinity and thank
you for sending your Holy Spirit upon us.
Thank you for your Holy Spirit's work in creation, your Holy Spirit's work in redemption,
your Holy Spirit's work of sanctifying this world.
We ask that you please make us new, create us a new, redeem us once again,
and save us for your sake so that we can glorify you and so that we can be instruments of your
salvation in this world by the power of the Holy Spirit. 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, it is a 99-rewarding
paragraphs, 694-701 symbols of the Holy Spirit.
paragraphs 694-701 symbols of the Holy Spirit. Symbols of the Holy Spirit Water The symbolism of water signifies
the Holy Spirit's action in baptism, since after the invocation of the Holy Spirit, it becomes
the efficacious sacramental sign of new birth, just as the gestation of our first birth took
place in water, so the water of baptism truly signifies that our birth
into the divine life is given to us in the Holy Spirit. As by one spirit we were all baptized,
so we are also made to drink of one spirit. Thus the Spirit is also personally the living
water willing up from Christ crucified as its source, and willing up in us to eternal life.
Anointing. The symbolism of anointing with oil also signifies the Holy Spirit to the point of becoming
a synonym for the Holy Spirit.
In Christian initiation, anointing is the sacramental sign of confirmation, called
chrismation in the churches of the East.
Its full force can be grasped only in relation to the primary anointing accomplished by the
Holy Spirit, that of Jesus.
Christ in Hebrew, Mashiach means the one anointed by God's Spirit.
There were several anointed ones of the Lord in the Old Covenant, preeminently King David.
But Jesus is God's anointed in a unique way.
The humanity this unassumed was entirely anointed by the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit established him as Christ.
The Virgin Mary conceived Christ by the Holy Spirit who, through the angel, proclaimed him
the Christ at his birth, and prompted Simeon to come to the temple to see the Christ of
the Lord.
The Spirit filled Christ, and the power of the Spirit went out from him in his acts of
healing and of saving.
Finally, it was the Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead.
Now, fully established as Christ in his humanity, victorious over death, Jesus pours out the
Holy Spirit abundantly until the Saints' Constitute, in their union with the humanity of the Son
of God, that perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, the
whole Christ in St. Augustine's expression.
Fire. While water signifies birth and the fruitfulness of life given in the Holy Spirit,
fire symbolizes the transforming energy of the Holy Spirit's actions. The prayer of the Prophet
Elijah, who arose like fire and whose word burned like a torch, brought down fire from heaven
on the sacrifice on Mount Carmel.
This event was a figure of the fire of the Holy Spirit
who transforms what he touches.
John the Baptist, who goes before the Lord in the spirit
and power of Elijah, proclaims Christ as the one
who will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire.
Jesus will say of the Spirit,
I came to cast fire upon the earth
and with that it were already kindled.
In the form of tongues as of fire,
the Holy Spirit rests on the disciples on the morning of Pentecost
and fills them with himself.
The spiritual tradition has retained this symbolism of fire
as one of the most expressive images of the Holy Spirit's actions.
As St. Paul writes to the Thessalonians,
do not quench the Spirit.
Cloud and Light
These two images occur together in the manifestations of the Holy Spirit.
In the theophanes of the Old Testament, the cloud, now obscure, now luminous, reveals the
living and saving God, while valing the transcendence of His glory, with Moses on not Sinai, at the
tent of meeting, and during the wandering in the desert, and with Solomon at the dedication of the temple.
In the Holy Spirit, Christ fulfills these figures.
The Spirit comes upon the Virgin Mary and overshadows her so that she might conceive and give
birth to Jesus.
On the mountain of transfiguration, the Spirit in the cloud came and overshadowed Jesus,
Moses and Elijah, Peter, James and John, and a voice came out of the cloud saying,
This is my son, my chosen, listen to him.
Finally, the cloud took Jesus out of the sight of the disciples on the day of his ascension,
and will reveal him as son of man in glory on the day of his final coming.
The seal is a symbol close to that of anointing.
The father has set his seal on Christ, and also seals us in him.
Because this seal indicates the indelible effect of the anointing with the Holy Spirit
in the sacraments of baptism, confirmation, and Holy orders, the image of the seal,
Sraghis, has been used in some theological traditions
to express the indelible character imprinted by these three unrepeatable sacraments.
The Hand
Jesus heals the sick and blesses little children by laying hands on them.
In his name, the apostles will do the same.
Even more pointedly, it is by the apostles in position of hands that the
Holy Spirit is given. The letter to the Hebrews lists the imposition of hands among the fundamental
elements of its teaching. The church has kept this sign of the all-powerful outpouring of the Holy
Spirit in its sacramental epiclesis. The finger. It is by the finger of God that Jesus cast out demons.
The Finger. It is by the finger of God that Jesus cast out demons.
If God's law was written on tablets of stone by the finger of God, then the letter from
Christ entrusted to the care of the apostles is written with the Spirit of the living God,
not on tablets of stone, but on tablets of human hearts.
The hymn, Vanny, Creator, Spiritus invokes the Holy Spirit as the finger of the Father's right hand.
The Dove. At the end of the flood, whose symbolism refers to baptism, a Dove, released by Noah,
returns with a fresh olive tree branch in its beak as a sign that the earth was again habitable.
When Christ comes up from the water of His baptism, the Holy Spirit in the form of a Dove comes
down upon Him and remains with Him.
The Spirit comes down and remains in the purified hearts of the baptized.
In certain churches, the Eucharist is reserved in a metal receptacle in the form of a dove,
Columbarium, suspended above the altar.
Christian iconography traditionally uses a dove to suggest the spirit. All right, there we have it, day 99, all of these images
of the Holy Spirit. Again, from water to the dove, some of them probably you were very familiar with.
When it comes to water, one of the most present images of the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit's actions,
right, we have not only the fact that in our first birth, our gestation, as it says, took place
in water.
So the water of baptism truly signifies our birth into the divine life given to us by
the Holy Spirit.
So that makes sense.
Also, the flood, right?
We have the recognition that St. Peter is going to say that just as Noah was saved through
the water, so we are saved, you know, by the ark.
So we are saved from death to sin through baptism.
And so there's this recognition of again,
be saved through the water.
Again, we have anointing, which is so clear.
Aointing is one of those symbols of the Holy Spirit.
In fact, go back to yesterday when we talked about how
that the anointing and the presence of the Lord,
there's no separation, right?
But the moment the body comes in contact with Christ,
the moment it comes in contact with the anointing, with the Holy Spirit, which is just that image
that St. Gregory of Nissa had used yesterday. But today, we talk about this recognition that Jesus,
the Messiah, or again, in Hebrew, Meshiyah, right, means the anointed by God's Spirit. So every time
there's an anointing, this is a symbol, an image of the Holy Spirit, primarily here in the old
covenant with King David.
But other times, we have prophets and kings who are anointed and then fully established
in Jesus Christ.
Now, fire is very remarkable because it's kind of set in contrast to water.
It says, while water, in paragraph 696, while water signifies birth and the fruitfulness
of life given by the Holy Spirit, fire symbolizes the transforming energy of the Holy Spirit's
actions. Which is, and I love the fact that the Catechism references the Holy Spirit, fire symbolizes the transforming energy of the Holy Spirit's actions.
Which is, and I love the fact that the Catechism references the Prophet Elijah, who not
only arose like fire and whose word burned like a torch, but also he brought down fire
on the sacrifice of Mount Carmel.
And he's just so, so powerful.
And so such an incredible image that Jesus even later on, he says, I came to cast fire
upon the earth.
And would that it were already kindled.
And then the Holy Spirit does come down upon the apostles
and the disciples in Pentecost,
in the form of tongues as a fire, right?
So just incredible.
And that's one of the reasons why St. Paul writes
to the Thessalonians and says,
do not quench the Holy Spirit.
Why? Because you quench fire.
You don't quench other things.
You just quench fire.
I guess you quench their stir.
Anyway, anyways, back to our story.
We have fire, anointing, water, and then these last five images.
We have cloud and light.
That's kind of one image together.
They occur together in the ancient manifestations
of the Holy Spirit.
Remember how that cloud by day led the people of Israel
through the wilderness. Remember how that cloud was luminous
at night and it was a pillar of fire and that just reveals not only the presence of the saving God, but also the transcendence of his glory that the cloud, you know, light and the Holy Spirit,
overshadows the Virgin Mary when she
conceives Jesus Christ in her womb.
And again, that same kind of thing where when Jesus is out on the Mount of Transfiguration
and they enter into the cloud.
The voice came from the cloud saying, this is my son, my chosen list name.
Listen to him.
That cloud is a symbol of the Holy Spirit.
So even on the Mount of Transfiguration, we have the Father speaking, we have the Word Jesus Christ Himself, and we have the Holy Spirit in the form of a cloud,
which is remarkable. The seal, of course, same kind of thing. We're going to talk more and
more about seal as a symbol that's close to the anointing when we talk about the sacraments. That's
going to come up in quite a few days from now, but it's worth just noting, okay, today we have
the anointing, that's a very clear symbol of the Holy Spirit, but also the seal, being very, very incredible, powerful symbol of the
Holy Spirit, Holy Spirit's actions.
On the last three here, we have the hand, the finger, and the dove.
The hand is the hand of Jesus that blesses, but also, I think it's really important for
us to note that it is by the apostles' imposition
of hands that the Holy Spirit is given.
We have that in Acts 8 for 17 and 19, Acts 13, verse 3, and in Acts 19, verse 6.
But we have this recognition that the Holy Spirit is imported to others to the imposition
of hands.
And, in the letter to the Hebrews, paragraph 699 highlights that the imposition of hands. And, in order to the Hebrews, paragraph 699 highlights,
that the imposition of hands are listed among
the fundamental elements of its teaching.
So, we recognize this, happens,
the imposition of hands happens over the gifts at every mass,
right, where the priest extends his hands
over the bread and wine that are about to become
the body and blood of Jesus.
We know that the imposition of hands happens
in every ordination, that every time a man is ordained
a deacon or a priest or a bishop, there's a laying on of hands there and that's
so clear, goes all the way back to Jesus, goes all the way back to the apostles.
Last two, the finger.
We recognize I love this because it is by the finger of God that Jesus cast out demons.
Now remember in the Old Testament that God's law was written on tablets of stone by the
very finger of God.
That's the image that was used.
And yet here we are in the New Covenant.
And we have the spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone, but on tablets of human
hearts, which means that that was written by the finger of God on your heart and on my
heart as an image.
The last, of course, is the image of the dove, which goes all the way back as we said to
Noah in reverse to baptism.
A dove, at least by Noah, returns as we said to Noah in reverse to baptism.
A dove, at least by Noah, returns with a fresh olive tree branch and its beak is a sign.
The earth was again habitable.
When Jesus comes up from the water of his baptism, Holy Spirit and the form of a dove comes
on upon him, remains with him.
I love this last note.
It just reminds us of the diversity in the church. That in certain churches, particularly,
I'm familiar, I think, with churches in the east,
that they're Tabernacle, right?
That they might not call it a Tabernacle,
but the Eucharist is reserved in a metal receptacle,
all we'll call it a Tabernacle,
they might call it a Columbarium,
but it's in the form of a dove.
Now, a lot of, in the West, our Tabernacles
are typically not in the form of a dove.
They could be just in the form of some kind of box.
They could be in the form of maybe even something that would make it look like the arc of the
covenant.
I've heard, I've seen tabernacles that are made to look like the womb of the Virgin Mary.
So, or even that are embedded into crucifix.
But in some churches, the Eucharist is reserved in the middle or the receptacle in the form
of a dove called the Columbarium.
And that is to highlight what?
What's to highlight many things, but one of the things
that's to highlight is what I mentioned,
I think yesterday or the day before,
that what Jesus has made possible by his incarnation,
life, death, and resurrection, ascension to heaven.
The Holy Spirit makes actual.
And here's Jesus who at the last supper, and on the cross gives us, gives his body and
blood, right?
He offers it to the Father, is a sacrifice, offers it to us as that perpetual covenant that
it's made real, brought present, I say, with to us, by the Holy Spirit.
So it makes sense that that Eucharist
will be reserved in the form of a dove.
I don't know, that seems to make sense to me.
If there's another reason for that,
I'll have to look it up and check it out.
But gosh, those today, here day 99, you guys,
we are one day, one day away from day 100.
If you're stuck this long, I'm just, it's amazing
because I've said this before, I will say it again.
Sometimes when we just have the catacasem,
it is different.
It's kind of different sometimes to find our place
in the story, although we know that this is, you know,
this is Acts chapter 29.
This is the life of the church that has existed now
for 2,000 years.
And this is the wisdom the church has fought for.
The wisdom the church has been revealed to us
and it can't on to us.
Now we're receiving that.
And that's what an incredible gift that you and I are in this place where after 99 days,
we know what we didn't know before.
Hopefully, hopefully we love the Lord in a way that we didn't necessarily, where we
weren't able to love him before.
We are praying right now for the Holy Spirit to enter our hearts so that we can love God as
he truly deserves, so we can love God as he has willed us to love him so that we can love God
with all of our heart, mind, soul and strength. We can only do this by the power of the Holy Spirit,
and so we just ask the Holy Spirit to come upon every person listening to these words,
so that we can say yes to the Lord. We can know him more truly and follow him more closely.
I am praying for you. Please be here for me, my name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.