Sunday Homilies with Fr. Mike Schmitz - 08/03/25 Memento Mori

Episode Date: August 2, 2025

Homily from the Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time. Remember you will die. Remember you have died. We are called to live a new life. But we cannot live a new life until we have allowed our ol...d life to die. We need to remember that we will die in the future. Christians also have the chance to remember that we already have died. Mass Readings from August 3, 2025: Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:21-23 Psalm 90:3-4, 5-6, 12-14 and 17Colossians 3:1-5, 9-11 Luke 12:13-21

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Welcome to Sunday homilies with me, Father Mike Schmitz. I hope today's homily inspires and motivates you, and I also hope that it leaves you hungry for the one who gave everything to feed you. If you want to get this in other Sunday Mass resources sent straight to your inbox, sign up at ascensionpress.com slash Sunday, or by texting Sunday to 33777. You can also follow or subscribe on your podcast app for weekly notifications. God bless. The Lord be with you.
Starting point is 00:00:31 A reading from the Holy Gospel according to Luke. Chapter 12 verses 13 through 21. Someone in the crowd said to Jesus, Teacher, tell my brother to share the inheritance with me. He replied to him, friend, who appointed me as your judge and arbitrator? Then he said to the crowd, Take care to guard against all greed. For though one may be rich, one's life does not consist of possessions.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Then he told them a parable. There was a rich man whose land produced a bountiful harvest. He asked himself, What shall I do? For I do not have space to store my harvest. And he said, This is what I shall do. I shall tear down my barns and build larger ones. There I shall store all my grain and other goods. And I shall say to myself, now as for you,
Starting point is 00:01:20 you have so many good things stored up for many years. Rest, eat, drink, and be merry. But God said to him, you fool. This night your life. life will be demanded of you, and the things you have prepared, to whom will they belong? Thus will it be for all those, all those, who store up treasures for themselves, but are not rich in what matters to God. The gospel of the Lord.
Starting point is 00:01:51 Laged out of a seat. So years ago, I came across, I would think, maybe the most intimidating prayer that I've ever prayed in my life, and I come back to it again and again. At the same time, it was very interesting. I think I came across this prayer, I think maybe when I was in high school, at the same time when I was in high school, I was 15, 16 years old. And I would go to the local parish, St. Francis of the CCC parish. And on Saturday mornings, I would pray.
Starting point is 00:02:16 I made a kind of commitment when I was in high school that I'd make one holy hour a week. So I'd kind of park myself in front of the tabernacle on a Saturday morning and pray. But off to the side of the tabernacle, like not facing it, but literally to the side, was one of my favorite paintings I'd ever come across. Painting was of St. Francis of Assisi. And it was as cool, like the light was cool and he had his cowl up, you know, the hood was up. And in his hands, he was holding a skull, human skull. And he just was looking, you couldn't even really see his face.
Starting point is 00:02:43 You're just looking at the skull. You can tell he's looking at the skull. And I remember because Saturday mornings was also when they cleaned the church. And so there'd be people all around, you know, cleaning up. And I remember one morning in particular. There are these two or three women talking with each other. And one of them said, oh, I, father put that up here. I think I really like it.
Starting point is 00:03:00 And I really liked it. And this other woman's like, why would he do that? Why would he have this painting of St. Francis of Assisi, like looking at a human skull, she thought it was so unnerving and so unsettling, so out of place. But the first woman and I, we just, there's something about that image, that picture, that painting that resonated with me. And I just, I loved it because it connected something, even with me at 15 or 16 years old
Starting point is 00:03:26 with something about this, this, there's Latin phrase, right? The Latin phrase is, Memento Mori. Remember your death. And what I just implicitly knew was that that is a good thing to do. Like St. Francis, Vassisi, realizing, hey, my life is not going to go on forever. I need to remember my death. And that in so many ways I think has, I know it's dictated his life, dictated the course of his life, dictated the course of my life.
Starting point is 00:03:55 This knowledge that every one of us needs to take into the depth of our hearts and realize that it could all be gone. Like in the blink of an eye, everything we hold, everything we hold dear, everything we're worried about even, everything we're worried about even, everything we hate, it could all be gone. In fact, not just it all could be gone, it all will be gone. So momento mori, in fact, this is kind of interesting.
Starting point is 00:04:23 Over the last, a little bit, I was visiting a family. When I'm with this family, sometimes they really like, kind of watch TV a bit, a bit, early streaming services. And so when I'm visiting them, oftentimes it's the time where I will watch like a guilty pleasure type TV shows. And so I think reality TV is all guilty pleasure. I don't think there's anything good necessarily in it. But I was watching one of these reality TV shows.
Starting point is 00:04:45 And actually the season I was watching with this family was from March of 2020. And as the season was progressing, they kept mentioning COVID or this coronavirus, all these kind of things. And I was thinking, wow, this is fascinating. I'm watching what I lived through five years ago. We all lived through five years ago and they have no idea what's coming. And it was one of those fascinating things. Of course, reality TV like really thrives on drama and thrives on conflict
Starting point is 00:05:10 and thrives on all these unresolved issues. And it was fascinating to watch as all these things were coming up to be kind of standing outside and watching, knowing that as they're giving the day, oh, this is March 10th or this is March 11th, March 12th, knowing that in a day, all of the things they're fighting, about will be over because their season will be over because this conflict will be over because what the coronavirus was going to do was going to render it all essentially meaningless. It's going to say that you are so stressed about all of these things. You're fighting about all these things, attentions over all these things.
Starting point is 00:05:50 And tomorrow, you're going to get a phone call that says, hey, your season is over and it's all going to be gone. I think that's just life, right? That's all of us. And I think when we know that, Lamento Mori, when we know that, we can fall into one of two camps. One is, in a blink of an eye, it will all be gone, therefore none of it matters.
Starting point is 00:06:11 Like all these tensions, all these stresses, all these things that people are going through on this reality TV show, you know what, it's not going to matter at all because it's all going to be done. One way to look at life is like the first reading. That coalesh, right, the teacher says, vanity of vanities. Now, it's a bad translation for us because it doesn't mean like a mirror over your dresser. It doesn't mean having being vain. Vanity of vanities simply means meaninglessness of meaninglessness. That it's all vapor. It's all smoke. Everything we get worried
Starting point is 00:06:37 about, everything we love, everything we want to hold on to. It's all just smoke. One of the ways of looking at life is that's it. None of it means anything. So it all, it's all going to end. Therefore, rest, eat, drink, be merry because you're going to die. That's not the actual Christian position. That's not actually the Catholic view of life. The Catholic view is the opposite. It's all going to end. Memento Mori, remember your death. It's all going to end and it all matters. It's all going to end, therefore, Memento Mori. Remember, it's all going to end, therefore, how well you live. In fact, I would say this. the scriptures today are keep pointing us back to this question of okay since it's all going to end
Starting point is 00:07:27 what will you value the most because we could we could fall into the coales trap the ecclesiastes trap that says a vanity they vanities right it's all smoke so all that you're working for it's all going to be gone all your all your possessions it's all going to be gone everyone you love it's all going to be gone work hard it's all going to be gone it's all just smoke or or we could have this position that Jesus seems to offer in the gospel today. It's very, very brief. It's only a couple sentences. This guy comes up to Jesus and says,
Starting point is 00:07:56 tell my brother to share the inheritance with me. Jesus doesn't help him. Because I wonder if one of the reasons Jesus doesn't help him is because he knows, okay, fine, I'll make your brother share the inheritance with you. And then what? Okay, now you have money. Great, and then what?
Starting point is 00:08:15 It all means nothing without God. because I think the message of today's readings, the message of this weekend is, yes, remember your death, Memento Mori, but also remember God. Remember your death and remember God. If you're going to have a, if we're any of us are going to have a proper valuation of life of what we care about, what we live for, we have to remember our death, we have to also remember God. Now, I invite you to pause on this right now. Here we are, first weekend in August.
Starting point is 00:08:50 What are you worried about right now? Like, what is keeping you up at night right now? What are the things that you're realizing that you're holding on to or working so hard for or stressed over or you have to get this done and that done and all these things? What is breaking your heart right now? I think there's even a pause on this one to realize if you are here right now
Starting point is 00:09:20 and you have a broken heart for whatever reason to know this, to know that your heart will not remain broken. Over the course of this last summer, I've been able to speak with a lot of people who have had devastating things happen in their lives. Tragic things happen in their lives. Some of the worst imaginable crises and their hearts are truly broken. But to realize that your heart will not stay broken. You know, there's a study out of University of Chicago. So Dr. Linda Waite, she did the study on marriages, on unhappy marriages. And she researched, I think, was 600 and almost 700 couples
Starting point is 00:10:11 who would describe themselves as in unhappy marriages. She followed these couples, those who stayed together and those who divorced. She found this something fascinating. She found that those who stayed together, five years later, two-thirds of them, the vast majority of them, five years later reported that they were no longer stressed about the same things they were stressed about and actually said that they were now they would describe their marriages as happy marriages. These couples that if you took a snapshot, a slice of their marriage in that point, five years before this, who would say, I'm in an
Starting point is 00:10:44 unhappy marriage, I need to escape this thing. But those who stayed together, five years later reported, no, I'm actually in a happy marriage. And those people who divorced, very, very few of them reported any increase in happiness. What was overwhelming them at the moment, what seemed like A crisis at the moment, what broke their heart at the moment. Their hearts didn't stay broken. And I think the word is, neither will be yours. Why, Momentumori, we have to remember, it will all be gone. But also, remember God.
Starting point is 00:11:20 There's more. This is to be able to remember this today. You will die, it will all be gone, and remember God. There is more. There's more to life than just this life. life. So Memento Mori. You know, Memento Mori has been picked up by a lot of stoics. Marcus Aurelius is a Stoic philosopher. He's also the emperor back in the day. And Ryan Holliday has great books on resources on Stoic philosophy and the Stoic virtues. And so Memento Mori
Starting point is 00:11:50 is one of those Stoic virtues. To remember that you're going to die, you have a proper valuation of life. That's good. We can embrace that as Christians. But there's something remarkable, I would say this. Remento Mori is not just about the future. Remember the fact is you're going to die for Christians. it's not just about the future, it's also about the past. What I mean by that is, we Christians would say lamentor-ing, just like Marcus Aurelius. Remember, you're going to die, future.
Starting point is 00:12:13 But we also would say, lamentor more, because we have died. That's what St. Paul says to the Colossians today. We actually get to apply this, remember, both to the future and to the past. St. Paul says, remember, you have died. And as Christians, we die twice, right? we die in the moment of our baptism, because baptism, of course, is where we have our sins washed away. Baptism is where we're brought into the family of God.
Starting point is 00:12:39 Bathism is where we're made a member of the church. But also, baptism is where we get new life, and we cannot have new life unless the old person dies, right? Unless we can't have resurrection unless we enter into the tomb. Baptism killed us in order to give us life. So St. Paul says, remember, you have died already. And I think one of the problems is this. The reality is St. Paul is saying,
Starting point is 00:13:05 you have surrendered any claim you might have had on your own life. That's what he means by, you have died. That when you were baptized, you have surrendered any claim you might have had on your life. It is no longer yours. You have died. So Memento Mori. I mentioned, you die twice.
Starting point is 00:13:28 we died in the moment of baptism, but then there's an ongoing process, as St. Paul says, is putting to death, that which is in us, that has fallen. I fall into this trap, and I think this is so important. I keep forgetting that I've died. What I mean by that is I keep living as if this life is mine. And I have this image outside of my head of someone looking at me laughing and saying, like the angels and saints in heaven, look at me laughing and saying, like, Who is this knock out of the head?
Starting point is 00:13:58 He thinks he's still alive. Like, here's the dead body in the grave, trying to crawl out of the grave. That's why St. Paul says, that's a little gruesome. But that's why St. Paul says, put to death, therefore, put to death the parts of you that are earthly. What I mean by that?
Starting point is 00:14:13 I think what he means by that is put to death, remember you have died, Remento Mori. Put to death the parts of you that keep saying mine. They keep looking at my life and saying, that's mine. Why? Because remember your death. Lamento Mori, you have died. So what are the parts of us that keep saying mine?
Starting point is 00:14:34 Well, St. Paul, in this little section in Colossians, he names three. The parts of us that say mine are parts related to sex, stuff, and speech. And so St. Paul says, put those things, immorality and all, and infidelity, et cetera, the stuff that related to sex. Put that away. How do we do that? Well, you know, it's fascinating. Over the course of the summer, I get a chance to speak with a lot of high schoolers,
Starting point is 00:14:57 a lot of young people. And this is one of those wounds that a lot of young people have, a lot of people have. In fact, I would say about all these things, sex, stuff, and speech, we might not have all three of those that might not be our vices, might not be the things we have to put to death, but at least one of them, probably two of them would affect us. A lot of people are affected by this desire to use other people. And so how does that manifest itself in a person's life? One of the things I tell young people is two things to keep in mind.
Starting point is 00:15:23 If this is something, this is part of the old man that keeps saying mine or keep saying, I want to use people for my own selfish pleasure. Two things to keep in mind. Number one is be patient with yourself. So if you have a problem when it comes to any sin, we have a problem with any kind of besetting vice or any kind of besetting sin or any kind of besetting sin, any kind of thing keeps coming back up, habitual wound,
Starting point is 00:15:42 be patient with yourself. But number two is be ruthless with your environment in the sense that if I keep an open door to any kind of sin but particularly sexual sin, keep an open door to that, just have to shut the door and actually kind of purge my environment of any access to this.
Starting point is 00:15:56 So, number one, be patient with yourself, but number two, be ruthless with your environment in the sense of I need to get rid of this. In fact, I remember I mentioned this many times before, but there was a young woman, her name's Anastasia. At one point, Anastasia, asked her father, the question of, Dad, what kind of man should I marry? And there's so many things a father could say.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Like, you look for a guy who's virtuous, a guy who loves you more, loves Jesus, more and loves you, all these kind of things. But he just looked at her and he said, find a man who can fast. So when it comes to any of these besetting things, these things are trying to crawl out of the grave, here's St. Paul, saying, put that man to death.
Starting point is 00:16:34 How do we do that? Well, one, be patient with yourself. Two, be worth us with your environment. But third, to be able to say, okay, I might not always be attacked by this particular sin against virtue, against chastity. But you can always learn to control your appetites.
Starting point is 00:16:51 So find a man who can fast. find a person be a person who can fast. So sex, stuff, and speech. So stuff, I think is fascinating. He says that greed that is idolatry, St. Paul says, the greed that is idolatry, that takes stuff which is fine, it's good, that makes it into the absolute ultimate thing. How do you put the old man to death?
Starting point is 00:17:11 How do you put the old self to death when it comes to stuff? I'd say this. Give, the part of us that wants to hoard what we have, wants to hold on to what we have, can only be killed by giving away what we have. And so people say, well, how about this? Embrace random acts of kindness. Those are great.
Starting point is 00:17:28 Random acts of kindness are awesome. Leaving an extra tip, that's wonderful. Seeing a person on the side of the road and giving them some help, that's great. Random acts of kindness are important, but they're not enough. We need to have actually scheduled acts of kindness. We need to have where I look at all that I have, kind of like the man in the gospel, Look at all that I have and say, okay, now, where am I going to give? Where am I going to make a sacrificial gift of myself?
Starting point is 00:17:53 If it's just random acts of kindness, I'll only do it when I feel like it. But if it's scheduled acts of giving, then I get to have the habit of being generous. And I would say this, if I don't, if we don't develop the habit of being generous, which means I've assessed what I have and I've made the decision ahead of time, this is what I'm going to give to help other people on a regular basis. don't cultivate the habit of generosity, the habit of giving, the Holy Spirit will never be able to live in our lives. That's how important generosity is.
Starting point is 00:18:30 So how do I put the old self to death in the area of stuff? Is cultivate the habit of giving. And the last thing St. Paul says, you can write sex, stuff, and speech. He says, stop lying to one another. In fact, that sounds a lot like there's a Canadian psychologist who wrote a book about, like, here's some rules for life. One of those rules for life, he said he noticed this in himself. He noticed that he was often lying. He was often saying things that weren't true. So one of the rules he had was always tell the truth. And then he put kind of parenthetically,
Starting point is 00:18:59 put at least don't lie. Because sometimes it might not be the exact moment to tell the full unvarnished truth. But he said, but at least, at least, the very least, don't lie. So as what St. Paul says, stop lying to one another. Why do we lie? We lie for one of two reasons. Either because we want to get some. something that we want that we don't deserve, right? I don't, I don't, I don't deserve it. So I'm going to tell whatever kind of untruth there is so I can get this thing that I want, but I don't deserve, or I want to get out of something that I actually deserve. So I'm going to tell a lie, saying, oh, no, I never did that when I actually did that. Either I'm going to tell a lie because
Starting point is 00:19:40 I want to get something I don't deserve. I'm going to tell a lie so I can get out of something that I do deserve. St. Paul says, stop lying. Always tell the truth. If we do those three things, if we in these three areas of sex, stuff, and speech, we're not only going to put the old self to death, we will have that new life in Christ. And this is the last thing. Which brings me back to the hardest prayer, the most intimidating prayer I've ever come across in my entire life.
Starting point is 00:20:13 It's a prayer by a man named St. Ignatius of Loyal. who was the founder of the Jesuits. And it's a prayer that I try to pray every day, but it actually is really intimidating. It's a really difficult prayer to pray. But it goes to the very heart of what St. Paul is telling us we have to do today. We have to remember our death, not only the future death that's coming, but also remember our death, the fact that I no longer have any claim on my life.
Starting point is 00:20:37 Here's the prayer. Take, Lord. Receive all my liberty, my memory, my understanding, and my entire will. All I have and call my own, you have given all to me. To you, Lord, I return it. Everything is yours.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Do with it what you will. Give me only your love and your grace. That is enough for me. Take Lord and receive everything I am. It's all yours. Give me only your love. love and your grace. And that is enough. Remember your death. The death that's coming, remember your death. You have already died.

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