Sunday Homilies with Fr. Mike Schmitz - 12/22/24 Face to Face: Fear to Fiat
Episode Date: December 21, 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 Fourth Sunday of Adv...ent. I'm not going to fear what I don't know, I am going to trust who I do know. We can wait in excitement and joy...we can also wait in fear. We fear the dark and might fear death for the same reason: the unknown. We can fear the unknown in the afterlife and we can fear the unknown of our own inner life. God's mercy leads us to a place of trust. Mass Readings from December 22, 2024: Micah 5:1-4 Psalms 80:2-3, 15-16, 18-19Hebrews 10:5-10 Luke 1:39-45
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Hi, my name's 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 1 verses 39 through 45.
Mary set out and traveled to the hill country in haste to a town of Judah
where she entered the house of Zechariah and greeted Elizabeth.
When Elizabeth heard Mary's greeting,
the infant leaped in her womb,
and Elizabeth filled with the Holy Spirit.
Spirit, cried out in a loud voice and said,
Blessed are you among women.
And blessed is the fruit of your womb.
And how does this happen to me that the mother of my Lord should come to me?
For at the moment the sound of your greeting reached my ears,
the infant in my womb leaped for joy.
Blessed are you who believed that what was spoken to you by the Lord would be fulfilled.
The gospel of the Lord.
Wait should have a seat.
So I, you know, the day like today, obviously, as Christmas is like three days away,
I always think about Christmas Eve, two days away from now.
And as a kid, Christmas Eve was just one of those, one of those nights where, you know,
I'd lay awake and so much excitement, so much joy, so much anticipation, so much just like
that, that sense of like, I couldn't wait until it got light because when it got light,
we could go down the hallway and wake up our parents.
And it was just one of those situations where there was this yearning for the day to arrive,
right?
I couldn't wait for the light.
I can wait for the sun.
I can wait when it be light enough to get out of bed and wake up my parents.
And it was exciting.
And there was a lot of fun.
But when I was thinking about that, getting ready for today, this Sunday,
I was thinking about how many other nights there were like that.
What I mean by that, how many other nights there were as a kid when I couldn't sleep
and I couldn't wait for the sun to come up, but not because I was excited, not because I was like,
Now it's joyful because I was afraid.
I mean, I don't know if this is a normal thing, if this is just me.
But there are a lot of nights when I was a kid.
And I just, and I couldn't sleep because I was just so scared.
And I just wanted the night to be over.
And I wanted the sundar rise so that I didn't have to be alone anymore.
I wanted the sundarize so I didn't have to be afraid anymore.
And look it back in that and think, like, what was I afraid of?
Because there wasn't a lot to be scared of.
What was it looking forward to?
what I was looking forward to was, again, the daylight when I wasn't alone, when I could see.
That was the thing.
That's what I was looking forward to.
I was looking forward to when the sun would come up and then I would be able to see because
I realized that I was afraid of the dark.
That's it.
You know, it's such a common fear.
In fact, I read this article, a man, Dr. Martin Anthony, he had noted this.
He said that this is a common fear for all human beings.
He said, in the dark, our visual sense vanishes and we're unable to detect who or what
is around us.
We rely on our visual system to help protect us from harm.
He said, being scared of the dark is a prepared fear.
And I was like, oh, yeah, what is that?
It's a prepared fear.
What is it to have a prepared fear?
Prepared for what is the question.
I think it's this.
Prepared for what we can't see.
Prepared for the unknown that we can't know.
And in the dark, I don't know what's there.
So the question is, how can I be prepared for what's there if I don't know what's there?
How can I be prepared for what I can't see if I can't see it?
How can I be prepared for the unknown?
You know, for this last four weeks of Advent, we've been preparing.
That's the whole point of Advent, right?
It's a season of preparation for three things, right?
The season to prepare to celebrate Christ's first coming at Christmas,
to prepare to recognize him as he comes into our daily lives.
And thirdly, to prepare for his second coming, right, that final coming.
So this whole season of Advent from December 1st until today,
we've been asking that question, like, what if we knew,
what if we knew that December 25th was our last day on this planet?
What if we knew that December 25th was the day that we were going to die?
What if we knew that on December 25th, we would wake up dead?
We would wake up and see the Lord face-to-face.
And so the first week we talked about this need that if that was going to happen,
if we were going to get ready to see the Lord face-to-face,
we were going to spend all of Advent getting ready to see the Lord face-to-face,
then we have to deal with our shame.
We have to be able to be willing to step out from behind our shame
and come into the Lord's presence.
That was the first week.
The second week we talked about how the one who began a good work in us
we'll continue to bring it to completion.
So there's so much in us that fact that we don't have hearts that love God the way he needs to be loved,
that it's incomplete, but God makes up for what's incomplete in us.
And last week we talked about the reality that we cannot see the Lord face to face till we have faces
until we are willing to acknowledge the truth about ourselves.
And willing to know the truth about ourselves,
that's the only time when we can have faces with which we'll come before the Lord face to face.
and today, just days before Christmas,
here's the question,
what if the notion of dying
and seeing the Lord face to face
doesn't give rise in our hearts to joy or to excitement,
but what if the thought that in three days,
December 25th, we're afraid?
And I asked the question, like,
what would be the reality that would elicit this kind of fear in our hearts?
And I think it's the same reason we're afraid of the dark
because it's the unknown.
Right? Death in so many ways is the unknown.
I'm afraid of what I don't know.
I'm afraid of what's there.
And I don't know what's there.
And this is often our fear, right?
Our fear is, I don't know what's there.
I don't know about life after this life.
What's it like?
What's going to happen?
I believe that one of the reasons why fear of the dark and fear of death,
fear of the future, is connected because it's all fear of the unknown.
We don't know.
What's better to stay.
here in this life or to go to the next. If you went through junior high school in America,
you probably at some point had to read Shakespeare's play Hamlet. Maybe you didn't even read
the whole thing, but at some point you might have been asked to memorize Hamlet's soliloquy,
right? This famous to be or not to be. That is the question. And if you know anything about
the play, I remember memorizing this and having no idea what Hamlet was talking about. I had no
context whatsoever for what he was asking. But what he was asking is, the big question is,
is what's better to be, to go on living, or to not be, to die.
That's the question at the heart of every person in the midst of pain and suffering.
I know there's so many people who have been joining us, who journey with us,
who that's you, that's right now in the midst of pain and suffering.
Here's the question, what's better to be in the midst of pain and suffering or not to be.
To the context of Hamlet's pain and suffering is the fact that in the play,
his uncle has murdered his father and then has married his mother,
and that Hamlet's father's ghost has appeared to Hamlet and has told him to avenge his death by
killing his uncle.
That's his suffering.
If you've seen the Lion King, you know the story.
That's exactly the same story.
And so Hamlet goes on after he says, to be or not to be, that's the question.
He says, whether to his nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
or take arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them.
Basically, should I keep on living?
should I keep on battling because this life is a battle,
should I keep on struggling because this life is a struggle?
He goes on to say, to die, to sleep, no more.
And by sleep, to say we end the heartache
and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is air to,
to his consummation devoutly to be wished,
he goes on to say, like, how awesome would it be?
To just not have to keep fighting,
to not have to keep battling,
to not have to go through this torment he had,
knowing that his father was murdered by his uncle,
knowing that he's supposed to take that next step
and actually avenge his father,
it would be so much better, so much better if I was just done
and I know so many of us can be in that place
where you've lived through so much pain
that you might think so much better
if it was just over.
But when we say that, I want the night to be over.
I want the struggle to be over.
The reality, of course, Hamlet goes on.
He says, to die, to sleep,
for a chance to dream.
I, there's the rub.
for in that sleep of death what dreams may come
when we have shuffled off this mortal coil must give us pause
and this reality must give us pause meaning
what's going to be there
what is it that is in the unknown
what is it that's part of this life after this life
because we don't know what that is it is unknown
and I don't know what comes next
so I'm afraid
we have this fear
and I think that fear brings us to this fourth Sunday of Advent.
You know, in the gospel today, we have Mary who visits Elizabeth.
And Mary, the only reason Mary visits Elizabeth is because just before this, the Archangel
Gabriel visited Mary.
And we know that story.
The archangel visits Mary and tells her this massive news.
He tells her that God's plan is that Mary will be the mother of the Messiah, that Mary
will be the Holy Spirit will come upon her and she'll be the mother of the Holy One, the
Anointed One, the Holy One of God.
And you can imagine that in that moment, here is Mary.
And she could have some fear.
We know she has questions.
She pondered what sort of greeting this might be,
and she asks the question,
how can this happen to me since I don't have no relationship with the man?
She asks her clarifying question, and the angel just says,
you know, how will most high will overshadow you?
Therefore, the child to be born will be called holy.
He tells her God's plan, but virtually everything else is a mystery.
Virtually everything else,
other than the fact that she'll conceive,
God's son is completely and totally unknown.
So we can imagine, here's Mary greatly troubled.
You can imagine, here's Mary, maybe even experiencing fear.
But here's the remarkable thing.
What is her response?
Even in the face of maybe, maybe possibly,
her experiencing overwhelming fear of not having any idea
how this is all going to work out,
how is she going to walk forward,
how is she supposed to live like this?
Her response is,
Behold, I'm the handmade of the Lord.
Let it be done to me according to you.
word. The fear
becomes a fiat.
That fiat, that word in Latin
is a word in English that means
let it be done.
Ultimately, Mary's response to fear is trust.
Ultimately, Mary's response to this unknown
is, let it be done to me.
Mary's response to fear is a fiat.
And she could have experienced fear of what she did not know.
She could have responded to that fear. She could have lived in that fear.
she could have walked in that fear of what she didn't know, but she doesn't.
She chooses another way. Fear becomes fiat, and she's basically saying,
I'm not going to fear what I don't know. I am going to trust what I do know.
And this is the same thing for us.
December 25th, our own death, saying the Lord face-to-face is moments away.
And we can realize, okay, let's tell the truth.
I want to be ready, but I'm afraid.
What we're called to do is we're called to allow that fear to be transformed.
We're called, we're called to transform that fear into fiat as well.
To transform the fear of the unknown into, I'm afraid of what I don't know,
but I know I can trust what I do know. Even more, I know I can trust the one who I do know.
And of course, that makes sense for everyone of us who followed Jesus for the last 22 days.
you've been spending time with Jesus every single day.
So in some degree, maybe even for most of your life,
you know who Jesus is, you know who the Father is,
you know the power of the Holy Spirit.
So you can say, like with confidence, no, no, I know God.
I know that God is good.
I know that He knows my name.
I know that God loves me.
And so, yes, I'm faced with this unknown.
I'm not afraid of the unknown out there.
I'm afraid of the unknown in here.
Like when it comes to death, you might say,
no, actually, I know I can trust God.
I'm not afraid of the afterlife.
But what if I'm afraid of myself?
I'm not afraid of the afterlife.
What if I'm afraid of my inner life?
So when my mom was first diagnosed with pancreatic cancer,
and it was really serious,
I remember talking with her just a couple weeks after the diagnosis,
the serious diagnosis, where they realized the stakes
and realized that it was very lethal.
and I remember her telling me, she's like, you know what, I'm not afraid.
You know, that was so powerful.
There's that sense of like, I'm not afraid.
She did say, she said, but I am sad.
She told him what, said more about it.
She said, yeah, I'm sad.
I'm sad that I'm not afraid of dying.
I'm not afraid of death.
I'm not afraid of coming before the Lord.
But I am sad.
I'm sad of missing out on Christmases as you all get together.
I'm sad for missing out and seeing all the grandkids.
get married. I'm sad that don't live to see the great-grandkids get born or see them grow.
But she said, but I'm not afraid. And then I'm a little sad. And it was powerful. It was such a
great witness. I remember being so just moved by that. But then, you know, a couple weeks before she
died, I remember sitting on her bed in a room. And then it was something different. I remember
her saying that actually she said, honestly, I'm afraid. We talked about what she was.
afraid of and she's like, oh, no, no, I'm not, I'm not afraid of God. I'm not afraid of Jesus.
I'm not afraid of, you know what, the afterlife. She said, what I'm afraid of is the question
of, like, have I covered everything? She's like, well, I've been to confession.
But the question keeps me back to me, have I surrendered everything to Jesus? Like, have I given him
everything? Is there anything that I missed? That was her fear. The fear was, is there anything
that I've missed? Is there anything that I haven't said in confession that I'm supposed to say in
confession? Again, she wasn't afraid of what's out there.
She was afraid of what's in here.
She wasn't afraid of what might be coming in the afterlife.
She was afraid of what might there be in my inner life that I haven't yet given to Jesus.
The question is this, is there anything inside of me that might disqualify me
from being able to see the Lord face to face?
Again, not because I'm afraid of the afterlife, but because I'm afraid of the inner life.
And that's nothing unusual.
there's a man named St. John Henry Newman.
He's the one that we named the Newman Center after.
And John Henry Newman, when he was a young priest,
he has a sermon called Secret Faults.
And that he talks about this, he talks about the fact that for every single one of us,
we have the capacity and the tendency to have these blind spots.
Every one of us, we have this capacity, we have this tendency to deceive ourselves.
We have this capacity to say, okay, I know some of my sins,
but I absolutely don't know all of them.
and my mom was at that place where she was like, no, no, I want to see the Lord face to face,
but is there anything I've missed? Because I realize I have blind spots.
I realize that I have secret faults. It kind of like last week we talked about Oriol.
Right. Last week we talked about the two sons of the father and they have their speeches,
but all of them are blind to the truth of their own hearts, right? All of them are blind to
what their faces really look like. And it's not a matter of what's the truth.
hidden from other people, it's definitely not a matter of what's hidden from the Lord,
because nothing's hidden from the Lord. It's the fear of what's hidden from myself.
What is there in me that I haven't given to Jesus? Because the reality of course is if
I'm going to stand before the Lord face to face, I need to know myself accurately. I need
to be honest about myself. I need to have that moment, that clarifying moment, that
clarity moment that or you will have had until we have faces. The
the clarifying moment that the two sons had when they gave their fathers their speeches.
And we realized that I cannot reveal my face to the Lord
until I have a true sense of myself.
So here's the question. What do I do?
What do I do if I'm afraid?
Well, we already know this.
We transform that fear into fiat.
Well, yeah, but the issue is this.
The issue is, I'm not afraid of the afterlife.
I'm not afraid of what might happen.
I'm not afraid of the unknown.
I'm afraid that my sins are too big for His mercy.
Because if we're going to be honest, that's what we're afraid of.
We're afraid in some ways that what if his mercy isn't strong enough to bear the weight of my sins?
What if his mercy isn't strong enough to bear the weight of my shame?
What if his mercy isn't strong enough to bear the weight of my guilt?
What do I do then?
The answer is still the same.
I'm not afraid of the unknown because I know that I can trust in him.
Fear has to become fiat.
What we're afraid of, has to be discarded in the light of the one that we trust.
Because Jesus is the one who handles our sins.
I don't know if you ever realize this.
We realize this, is that every time we go to confession, he's the one who does the work.
Whenever we come before the Lord in prayer, he's the one who's active.
We can be attentive, we can try to be a focus, we can try to give our best confession we can.
But he's the one who's working, Jesus, working through the power.
of the Holy Spirit is the one who does all of the work.
He's the one who forgives us.
He's the one who redeems us.
He's the one who knows us.
He's the one who carries us.
He's the one who helps us across that bridge
from this life into the next life.
And so the question is not whether I'm afraid of the unknown.
It's do I trust in the one whom I know
for these next couple days?
That's what we're inviting all of us to do.
To acknowledge our fear.
to acknowledge the fear of the unknown
and to replace it with a fiat
to turn that fear into fiat
to transform that fear of what I don't know
to trust of the one I do know
so that because of his grace and his mercy
and his love for you
even the secret parts of your heart
even the nucks and crannies that you don't even know about
that even those can be healed
and you and I can be prepared
to see the Lord face to face.
