Sunday Homilies with Fr. Mike Schmitz - 12/15/24 Face to Face: Til We Have Faces
Episode Date: December 14, 2024Want to walk through Advent with Fr. Mike? Join us for daily video Advent reflections in the Ascension App: https://ascensionpress.com/pages/frmikeadvent Homily from the Third Sunday of Adve...nt. How can we see the Lord face to face til we have faces? We tell ourselves so many stories. Some of these stories are true and some of them are not. One challenge we have is to tell true stories...about ourselves and about the Lord. In order to be able to see the Lord face to face, we will need to know ourselves and some before God as our true selves. Mass Readings from December 15, 2024: Zephaniah 3:14-18 Isaiah 12:2-6Philippians 4:4-7 Luke 3:10-18
Transcript
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz.
I'd like to invite you to join me this upcoming Advent on the Ascension app.
Here's a question.
What if you knew that December 25th, Christmas Day,
was the day that you were going to wake up dead?
I know that sounds morbid, but if there's a reality of our life would have to change, right?
The way we would live Advent would have to change.
We'd have to live it with intentionality.
We'd have to live it with purpose.
We have to live it with grace.
If you want to join me every day of this upcoming Advent from December 1st to December 25th,
download the Ascension app and join the wait list,
or you could go to ascensionpress.com slash Father Mike Advent
to join, download the Ascension app today.
The Lord be with you.
A reading from the Holy Gospel according to Luke.
Chapter 3 verses 10 through 18.
The crowds asked John the Baptist,
What should we do?
He said to them and reply,
whoever has two cloaks should share with the person who has none.
And whoever has food should do likewise.
Even tax collectors came to be baptized, and they said to him,
Teacher, what should we do?
He answered them, stop collecting more than is prescribed.
Soldiers also asked him, and what is it that we should do?
He told them, do not practice extortion.
Do not falsely accuse anyone and be satisfied with your wages.
Now, the people were filled with expectation,
and all were asking in their hearts whether John might be the Christ.
John answered them all saying,
I'm baptizing you with water.
But one mightier than I is coming.
I'm not worthy to loosen the thongs of his sandals.
He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire.
His winnowing fan is in his hand to clear his threshing floor
and to gather the wheat into his barn.
But the chaff, he will burn with unquenchable fire.
Exorting them in many other ways,
he preached good news to the people.
The Gospel of the Lord.
May you have a seat.
So when it comes to my family,
this happened at Thanksgiving.
We do this thing as adults where all the siblings, we draw names for each other to see who gets,
who gets, we get presents for each other.
And it's one of those situations where no one wants me.
And I understand this.
And I know it's my, I know it's my fault because I don't know if you remember back
the day when you used to make Christmas lists.
So I don't know if you made Christmas lists as kids, but like, as a kid, I think
sometimes there's a lot of freedom.
Like, yeah, here's all the things that I want.
And I think 80 to 90% of them.
My parents were like, yeah, no, I don't think so.
I was one of those little trucks you could, like, drive with, you know, like the kid trucks.
or a little motorcycle, it's fine.
I'm past it.
I can buy my own now.
The point is this.
The point is, my siblings do not like getting my name.
Why?
Because I don't like making Christmas lists.
Or having a thing of like, here's my problem.
My problem is either I don't want to tell them what I want,
or I don't know what I want.
I think both realities are there because I don't know if you've had this experience
where someone says, well, what is it?
You know, what is it you want for Christmas?
What do you want for your birthday?
What do you want to do this weekend?
And sometimes it's like, well, I'd rather not tell you because I feel weird about telling you
because if you knew what I wanted, if you knew what I wanted to do, like you might not like
it.
You might think less of me.
You might think differently, whatever that is.
Or sometimes the reality is, I don't know.
I have no idea what I want.
And this is not just when it comes to Christmas.
I actually remember talking with a couple.
You know, I worked with a lot of marriage prep couples.
And a lot of times, part of the process of getting married is to go to Target or wherever
and get on the gift registry.
And a lot of times it's really, really, really fun.
I've talked to couples who are like,
no, it was so much fun.
We had put together this whole list.
All the things we want is we like set up our new apartment,
our new house, whatever the thing is.
It can be really, really fun.
But sometimes it's not fun.
In fact, one couple I worked with years ago,
their biggest fight of their relationship up to that point
was over a cast iron skillet.
What they had done is they went out to the store,
whatever store was, and he saw this cast iron skillet.
This is it.
This is awesome.
He pictured himself, you know.
cast iron skilleting like all day and she saw the price and the price was very expensive.
I think they said it was $500.
I looked online.
I don't know any $500 cast iron skillets.
Maybe they might have been exaggerating, but that was the number in her mind.
She was like, it was a $500 cast iron skillet.
She's like, we can't put this on a registry.
He's like, why not?
And she said, because what will people think if we put a $500 cast iron skillet on our registry?
And he said, well, they'll think maybe we'll pass.
on that and get him a $20 hand towels.
Like, he was like, no big deal.
Maybe people, maybe our siblings will all want to join in and buy us this cast iron
skillet together.
She's like, yeah, but what kind of people will they think we are if we put this $500
cast iron skillet on a registry?
And it was the biggest fight.
Because why?
Because her fear was what all of our fears are.
Like, if I tell you what I actually want, I'm now revealing my heart to you.
And I don't know if I really want to reveal my heart to you because what will you
think if you actually see me? What will you think if you actually see what's in my heart?
What will you think if you actually know me? Here's a third Sunday of Advent. We've been doing
this series for the last bunch of weeks where we realize the whole goal of Advent is to repair
ourselves, right, for the three arrivals of Christ, to prepare ourselves to celebrate Christ's first
coming into the world at Christmas, to prepare ourselves to recognize his coming into the world.
now in prayer and scripture and daily lives, but above all, to prepare ourselves to be able
to stand before the Lord face to face at his second coming, the final coming. We don't know
when that's going to be. So what we've been doing this whole Advent is, what if December 25th
was the day you died? And you knew it. How would we live Advent differently if we knew that on
December 25th we will wake up dead? How did we live this Advent if we knew that on December 25th,
we would stand before the Lord face to face.
So here's Godete Sunday, which is rejoice.
Would I rejoice?
That's the big question.
If I today, or December 25th, woke up and had to stand before the Lord face to face, would I rejoice?
You know, in the reading today, it says, rejoice, Josian.
Why?
Because the Lord your God is in your midst.
Like, that's the reason for rejoicing.
But here's the big question.
The big question is.
do I want that? Do I want him to be near? Do I want him to be in my midst? Do I actually,
do I even want to see the Lord face to face? Because I know that, I know we know the right answer.
Of course I do. But is that the true answer? Like I can tell myself, yeah, yeah, that's what I want.
But here's, we have to, like, on this Sunday, let's stop and ask the question, is that really what I want?
Because our capacity for self-deception is very, very high, which is one of the reasons
why we have to be careful with the stories we tell ourselves.
This is so important.
We have to be careful with the stories we tell ourselves.
In order to be prepared to see the Lord face to face,
I need to be aware of the story I'm telling myself.
Because every one of us, we have a narrative running through our minds, right?
Like, this is how we see ourselves.
This is how we see other people.
We have this narrative.
This is how God sees me.
You have this narrative that says,
this is how I have to be in order to be loved by God.
This is how God sees us.
the question we have to ask is, is that story, is that narrative, are those stories true?
So it's no secret that my favorite movie of all time is It's a Wonderful Life, not just for Christmas.
I love it all the whole year round.
I love It's a wonderful life, right?
It's the story of George Bailey, this man who dreams of leaving his small, shabby little burnt out Bedford Falls town and making it big, right?
He wants to build skyscrapers.
He wants to do something incredible with his life.
He wants to make a name for himself.
And yet every time he tries to leave Bedford Falls, he wants to make.
falls, he gets stuck. So what's he end up doing? He ends up saving his family's business
and actually saving his family in the process. He saves many other people's businesses and their
livelihoods and their families as well. He marries, Mary Hatch, and they have four kids. And the story
that George Bailey tells himself is that he is a failure. The story that George Bailey tells himself,
he sees all of this. Like, yeah, yeah, he saved his family's business, but it's some old run-down
building alone. He tells himself the story that he really is a warped, frustrated young man.
The story he tells himself is summed up when he states that everyone would have been better off
without him, that he's worth more dead than he is alive. That's the story that George Bailey
looked at his whole life through that lens. But in the movie, this is crazy. In the movie,
we get to see George through the lens of God, right? God is revealing George's story to Clarence the
angel in order to get him to save George Bailey.
and we get to see the truth.
The story George Bailey was telling himself
is, my life is a failure, I'm a failure.
But the story from God's perspective,
the true story is,
no, actually, George, you really had a wonderful life.
Now, imagine living our lives like this,
because we do this all the time.
Imagine going through life and telling yourself a story
that isn't actually true or isn't the full truth.
So we do this even if we don't realize it.
Because often we don't realize the story
we're telling ourselves. In fact, I came across this man who was giving some examples.
Sometimes we interpret other people's behaviors, even our own behaviors, through a particular
lens, the story we tell ourselves. And so maybe you're telling yourself the story. He gives
the example of like that you're a procrastinator. That's what you do. That's how you see yourself.
You're a procrastinator. And so you keep seeing yourself as one who fails to be disciplined.
You see like, nope, I fail to work out when I said I would. I failed to complete the books that I
thought I would complete. I have all these projects that I've never actually finished.
You know, a different perspective might be that you see yourself as someone who has gotten
some great things done in spite of being distracted.
Another story you can tell yourself is that you're passionate about learning things and
that's taken priority over some of the other tasks that you're doing.
You might tell the story that you see yourself as someone who acknowledges, actually,
I'm just tired.
I'm not a procrastinator.
I'm not a failure.
I just need some rest before I can begin the next thing.
Another example could be like, here you have a spouse.
And here's someone who's upset with their spouse because they were rude or they were short that day
or because they left this mess in the house.
But someone else could have the exact same experience and tell themselves a story that's different about their spouse.
Maybe that, yeah, that makes sense.
They were short because they've been working hard at their job.
Yeah, there's a mess, but they really went out of the way to cook a nice meal.
the yes some things aren't perfect with them but but they're tired they maybe they need some comforting see
we can look at the same event and tell ourselves different stories the stories we tell ourselves are
critically important and when we stand before god again when we stand before god face to face
we have to stand before god as we are not as we think we are not as we wish we were we have to
stand before god with the true story
Because that's the whole goal, right?
The whole goal is to stand before the Lord face-to-face with our true faces.
But here's the reality.
How can I stand before the Lord face to face if I'm not willing to actually come before him
as I actually am, as my face actually is right now?
You know, my favorite story, my favorite novel of all time, is C.S. Louis's Till We have Faces.
And it's the story of, it's an interesting story.
Whenever I recommend it to people, I need to give them some caveats.
And the caveats are that this is C.S. Lewis doing a modern retelling of an ancient Greek myth
of Eros and Psyche, because they read it like, this is weird and bizarre.
It's set in this pagan kingdom named Glom in a pagan world.
And it follows the protagonist, who is the princess of Glom, who ultimately becomes the
queen of Glom.
Her name is Orioel.
And Oriole, one of the first things you learn about her is that Orioel is ugly.
She's reminded of this her whole entire life.
That she's ugly.
Father will remind her again and again how ugly she is.
She's hideous.
She has a younger sister named Redavall.
And Naredival is pretty, but she's shallow.
And they don't really get along very well.
The two of them ultimately get another half-sister named Psyche.
And as Psyche is born, she is as graceful as she is beautiful.
She's as gracious as she is beautiful.
And Oriwal, rather than resenting the beauty of her little sister, loves her little sister.
And Psyche loves Oriel back.
And they have this incredible, just deep and powerful relationship
that Oriol sees herself almost as a substitute mom for Psyche.
And Psyche returns her love with such authenticity and honesty.
They love each other very, very deeply.
But at one point, Psyche has to be offered,
has to be sacrificed to what they call the God of the Mountain.
And so Oriwell is convinced that as Psyche is offered to the God of the Mountain,
that they thought maybe the God of the Mountain is a beast or some kind of monster.
And she thinks that as Psyche's sacrificed to the God of the Mountain, that she's going to be destroyed or devoured.
Well, it turns out that the God of the Mountain was not a monster.
The God of the Mountain is Eros, right?
The God of the Mountain is the God of Love.
That the God of the Mountain is love.
And as Psyche is given to him, he loves Psyche.
And Psyche loves him back.
And at some point, Oriole will find that.
out that Psyche is not dead, that she hasn't been ripped apart by some monster or some beast,
that she actually is in love with the God of the Mountain. And even more, she's happy with the God
of the Mountain. And even worse, she's happy with the God of the Mountain without Oriole. And that leads
Oriwal to have this resentment and this bitterness, both towards this sister that she loved and also
toward this God of the Mountain, blaming him for stealing her sister's heart from her.
So she does this manipulation.
That means that psyche loses her love.
It means that she cannot any longer live with the God of the Mountain.
She has to actually, she's doomed to spend the rest of her life on earth walking alone
through this life.
But here's the thing, as she goes off, or he will also sees herself as being doomed.
In the story she tells herself is that the gods have stripped her of the only one she's
ever really loved in her life.
The story she tells herself is that the gods are cruel.
gods don't care about her, and the gods are willing to strip her and take her only love away.
Because she's able to say up to that point that her little sister was hers.
The most beautiful woman in the world, the most gracious woman in the world, loved her like a mom.
And at the end of Oriwell's life, it's fascinating, it's such a good book.
Oriole has become a virtuous old woman, but she doesn't realize she'd become virtuous.
And she spent the last part of her life writing her book.
This is her, like, Magnus Opus, right?
This is a story of her life.
This is her accusation against the gods.
These are all the ways that the gods have done her wrong, that they've been unjust to her,
that they've been cruel to her, they've been harsh to her.
And she has this massive book.
And at one point, she's written this whole thing with her case against it, again, her accusation
against the gods, her case against the gods, and she's going to present it to them.
At one point she has this vision, where she actually is standing among the pantheon of
God.
She can't see them in their faces, but she knows that they are there.
She wants to read her book.
But then she looks down and she sees that what's in her hand isn't her big book.
what's in her hand is this scraggly little scroll.
That's her writing.
But it doesn't even look like her writing.
She said the writing even looked like her,
like her as harsh as her father's words.
She says, she looks at this and she says,
I looked at the scroll in my hand
and saw it once that it was not the book that I had written.
It couldn't be.
It was far too small and too old,
a little shabby crumpled thing,
nothing like my great book that I worked on all day, right?
This is the story that she's been telling.
This is the story.
This is how I see the world,
how I see myself and how I see the gods.
She said,
I thought I would fling it down and trample upon it, yet I found myself unrolling it.
It was written all over inside, but the hand was not like mine.
It was all vile scribble.
Each stroke meaning it savage likes a snarl and my father's voice.
A great terror and loathing came over me.
I said to myself, whatever they do to me, I will never read out this stuff.
Give me back my book.
She realizes, again, what was in her hand was actually, here's how I see things.
Her great book was this How I See Things, but this is actually the book of truth.
In her hands was the true story.
In her hands was the truth about her own heart.
And so, Oriol's voice meant to accuse the gods, but this came out instead, is what she wrote.
But already, I heard myself reading it.
And what I read out was like this.
I know what you'll say.
You'll say that I was shown a real God and not to know it.
Hypocrats, I do know it.
As if that would heal my wounds.
You know well that I never really began to hate you until Psyche began talking of her
and her lover and her husband.
Why did you lie to me?
You said that a brute would devour her.
Well, why didn't it?
I'd have wept for her and buried what was left to her
and built a tomb, but to steal her love from me.
I would, it would be far better for us
if you were fowl and ravening.
We'd rather you drank their blood
than stole their hearts.
We'd rather that they were ours and dead
than yours and made immortal.
She goes on, and she was on
and she is revealing the truth of her heart.
And she kept claiming to love Psyche, but she would rather that Psyche be dead and hers
than alive in someone else's.
That's the truth of her heart.
And this is the reality.
Her whole life, she had told herself, the truth is, I love my little sister,
or than anyone's ever loved anyone in the world.
But the truth is, she'd say, I don't care.
That the gods have taken her away and to give her a life of bliss, a life of happiness,
a life of joy, I don't care.
That's the truth of her heart.
In fact, she goes on to write.
She says,
should I care for some horrible new happiness which I hadn't given her and which separated her
from me? Do you think I wanted her to be happy that way? It would have been better if I'd seen
the brute tear her in pieces before my eyes. You stole her to make her happy, did you? I'll thank
you to let me feed my own. I need no tidbits from your table. Did you remember whose the girl was?
She was mine. Mine. Do you not know what the word means? Mine. And then there's this voice,
the voice of the judge that says one word.
And that word is enough.
And in that moment she realizes the truth.
She realized that she had, again, she told herself one story.
And she says, the voice I read it in, that whole story, was strange to my ears.
There was given to me a certainty that this at last was my real voice.
See, this is all of us, right?
We have a story that we tell ourselves.
We have a story that we look at God through.
We have a story lens that we look at ourselves through.
It's the whole thing.
But at some point, we have to realize that at last, this is my true story.
This is her speech.
This is the true story.
The true story is she didn't love like she claimed to love.
At last the judge spoke and asked the question, are you answered?
She said, yes.
And this is the key.
The key of the whole entire book, C.S. Louis says this.
He says, the complaint was.
the answer. The complaint was the answer. Because why? Because the whole Magnus opens where her
accusation against the gods, that wasn't a true story. Her real complaint, the real truth of her heart,
that was the answer. You know, all throughout scripture, there are complaints. All throughout
scripture, there are scriptures, there are these times where people actually reveal their hearts.
Luke chapter 15, it's the story of the prodigal son. You know the story. Here's this man, he has two sons.
And of course, we know the story.
We also know that both sons have their speeches.
Both sons have their stories that they look at the father through, that lens.
So what's the younger son?
Right?
The younger son goes off.
And at one point, he realizes he wants to come home and he has his speech.
He says, okay, this is what I'm going to do.
I'll get up and go to my father.
And he says, this is my speech.
I'll say to my father, father, I've sinned against heaven and against you.
I no longer deserve to be called your son.
Treat me as you would treat one of the hired workers.
So he gets up and does that.
Right.
He's rehearsed his speech.
You can imagine him all the way home, getting ready.
to give that speech.
This is how I see the world to his dad.
And he begins his speech.
Right, father runs out to him, embraces him, kisses him.
And he says, Father, I've sin against heaven and against you.
I no longer deserve he called your son.
This is his lens.
The lens is this.
The lens is, I see myself as having been disqualified.
So let me approach you as a slave.
And his father speaks the truth.
No, you're my son.
He gives me a robe, a ring, sandals, a feast.
Why? Because my son was dead and now he's alive again.
This is what has to happen.
We have to reveal to God what our true story is so we can reveal to us with the actual stories.
We have to be willing to reveal to the Lord what's in our hearts so that what do we really want
so that he can reveal to us the truth.
The older son has a speech as well.
The older son comes in from the field.
Here's the celebration that his brother's alive now refuses to come in.
And when his father comes out to bring him in, he has his speech.
And what's his speech?
His speech says, look, all these years, I'm not.
I have slave for you.
And not once did you give me even a young goat to feast on with my friends,
but when your son arrives who squandered your property with prostitutes,
for him you slaughtered the fat and calf, that older son, he had a speech as well.
And his speech was, I'm a slave.
His speech was, yeah, I'm here stuck at the home, but living with you, I'm living as a slave.
And what happens?
the father speaks into that as well and says, no, here's the true story.
He says, son, you're with me always.
Everything I have is yours.
But now we must celebrate.
Both sons had their speeches.
Both sons had their stories that they said, this is the truth.
And they both needed the father to say, actually, here's the real truth.
You know, I think is fascinating.
One of the things I think is fascinating is that the older son, he's saying, like, you've never feasted with me.
you've never feasted for me, you've never thrown a party for me.
He doesn't even actually want that.
What's he say?
He says, you've never even let me have a young goat to feast on with my friends.
Those last three words, with my friends.
The truth is, he doesn't want to be feasted by his father.
He doesn't want to be celebrated by his father.
He wants to have a life apart from his father.
I don't want to feast with you.
I want to feast with my friends.
See, this is so critically important for every one of us.
There's a story that's somewhere in our hearts.
That's the true story.
There's a speech somewhere in us that we always present before the Lord whenever we come into prayer.
There is something in us that doesn't want to reveal our true heart to the Lord.
Because our speeches, our stories reveal ourselves.
And unless we're paying attention, we won't even know what we think.
We won't even know what we want.
We won't even know our true face.
Go back to Oriwell.
Here's the line she says.
She says, the complaint was the answer.
To have heard myself making it was to be answered.
Lightly men talk of saying what they mean.
When the time comes at which you will be forced at last
to utter the speech which has lain at the center of your soul for years,
which you have all the time idiot-like been saying over and over,
you'll not talk about the joy of words.
And then she says, what I believe is the most critical line
of the entire novel.
She says,
I saw well why the gods do not speak to us openly
nor let us answer
till that word can be dug out of us.
Why should they hear the babble that we think we mean?
How can they meet us face to face
till we have faces?
What do you want?
Now, what do you think you want?
What's the speech that has to be dug out of us?
What is the speech?
What are the words that live inside of us
every single time we approach God in prayer.
Because that's the true story.
And that's the story that we need to allow the Lord to speak into.
I think this is interesting because I could say,
like, I don't know what I want or I'm not willing to tell you.
Go back to the Christmas lists.
If I tell you what I really want, then you'll know my heart.
And I don't know if I want you to know my heart.
I think that's one of the reasons by St. Paul in the second reading today.
He says these words, he says,
have no anxiety at all,
but in everything, make your requests known to God.
Basically, it says, tell God what you want.
That's what honest prayer is.
Just honest prayer.
It's finally like the prayer of the younger son.
It's finally like who says,
no, treat me as you would, one of your hired workers,
that's how I see myself.
Or the prayer of the older son who says,
actually, I don't even want to feast with you.
I want a feast apart from you.
Honest prayer means telling God what you want.
Make your request known to God, which is another way to say, make your heart known to God.
Reveal your heart as it is, reveal your desires as they are.
Reveal yourself as you are, not as you think you would be.
Because this is the key.
No other version of you can stand before the Lord's face-to-face because no other version of you exists.
There's no other version.
There's no you better.
there's no you fixed, there's no you healed.
No other version of you can stand before the Lord face to face
because no other version of you exists.
Only you can stand before God.
And God can't love that version of you
because that version doesn't exist.
That version cannot stand before the Lord face to face
because it doesn't exist.
So what do we do?
What do with that reality?
What we do?
What St. Paul said, we have honest prayer.
We say, okay, God, this is what my heart actually wants.
This is the story I'm actually telling myself.
And this is the last thing.
It's actually pretty simple.
In the gospel today, you heard the crowds and the soldiers
and folks are coming before John the Baptist saying,
hey, what do we need to do?
I don't know if you know this.
He gave everyone the same answer.
Yeah, to some, he said, do share your cloak, share your food,
don't extort, all those things.
But basically, the answer that John gave,
every one of those three groups of people is just start.
Just do the minimum.
Don't steal from people.
Don't extort them.
Don't hoard your things to yourself.
Just start.
That's your first step.
That's my first step today.
On December 25th, we want to be prepared to see the Lord face to face.
But if I keep hiding,
if I keep presenting God,
with, here's my story, here's my speech.
I don't know what the true story is.
I don't know what the true speech is.
I don't know what really is happening in my heart,
or I'm not willing to reveal it to him,
then how?
How could I possibly stand before the Lord face to face?
We have to be honest.
We have to have that moment where we say,
okay, God, good or bad, shallow or deep,
selfless or selfish, this is my heart.
And that's the moment.
we can begin to see the Lord face to face.
Because how can we see the Lord Jesus face to face
till we have faces?
