Sunday Homilies with Fr. Mike Schmitz - 8/31/25 Freedom and Joy

Episode Date: August 30, 2025

Homily from the Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time Humility is nothing other than acknowledging and living the truth. Humility is not pretending to be someone other than we are. It is nei...ther pretending to be better nor pretending to be worse than we are. But is the freedom and the joy of living the full truth about ourselves. Mass Readings from August 31, 2025: Sirach 3:17-18, 20, 28-29 Psalm 68:4-5, 6-7, 10-11Hebrews 12:18-19, 22-24a Luke 14:1, 7-14

Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 with your spirit. A reading from the Holy Gospel according to Luke. Glory to you, Lord. Chapter 14, verse 1 and verses 7 through 14. On the Sabbath, Jesus went to dine at the home of one of the leading Pharisees, and the people there were observing him carefully. He told a parable to those who had been invited, noticing how they were choosing the places of honor at the table.
Starting point is 00:00:52 When you are invited by someone to a wedding banquet, do not recline at table in the place of honor. A more distinguished guest than you might have arrived, been invited by him, and the host who invited both of you may approach you and say, give your place to this man. And then you would proceed with embarrassment to take the lowest place. Rather, when you were invited, go and take the lowest place, so that when the host comes to you, he says, he may say, my friend, move up to a higher position.
Starting point is 00:01:21 Then you will enjoy the esteem of your companions at the table for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled. But the one who humbles himself will be exalted. Then he said to the host who invited him, when you hold a lunch or a dinner, do not invite your friends or your brothers or your relatives or your wealthy neighbors. In case they may invite you back and you have repayment, rather, when you hold the banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. Blessed indeed will you be because of their inability to repay you. For you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous. the gospel of the Lord.
Starting point is 00:02:02 Praise to you, Lord, Jesus Christ. Did you have a seat? So, not too long ago, I came across this post online. It was a normal, like, a normal, like, birthday post from a dad to their son. And it's the kind of thing you'll see on Instagram, you know, a bunch of pictures of the kid and, and so the post, or like on Facebook, whatever. And it was very normal. Again, as I say, you see it all the time. And it was very sweet.
Starting point is 00:02:26 The dad is just posting saying, like, you know, about his child, like, hey, you're the best, you know, the post was, you're the best kid. Like, you're the best brother to your siblings, you know, that the best son I could ever dream of. Like, you're just the best kid ever. I remember seeing that. I think a lot of seen, that's super sweet. Like, that's very nice. It's a great thing for a dad to say. And then, you know, there's something in you sometimes, and I have this something in me sometimes, that at the same time I was reading that and thinking, oh, what a nice thing for a dad to say.
Starting point is 00:02:53 I was like, well, that's not true. Because it's not, right? I mean, again, it's a super nice thing to say, really sweet thing to say. But like, really? Like, he's the best kid ever. Out of all the kids who've ever existed, your son is the best brother to his, I was just thinking like, I don't know, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:03:13 And it goes both ways, of course. I mean, you see dads walking around with a t-shirt that says world's best dad. And I think, okay, really? When was the competition? Like, who was invited? Well, actually, you realize that that t-shirt was probably given to that dad by who?
Starting point is 00:03:25 By his own kids. And of those kids, how many other options did they have? to be able to say you're the world's best dad. One, I mean, so again, hey, hopefully you can tell I'm joking. I'm just kidding. And I'll be, I'm not saying don't do this. I'm just saying what happens when someone says, hey, you're the best ever.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Or someone says, you're the greatest. And you know that you aren't. What happens when someone's praising you and you know the truth? I think of myself, years ago, I was given one of the classic, world's best boss mugs, you know, coffee mugs, kind of like Michael Scott that he bought from himself at Spencer's gifts. I was given that by someone. I don't even remember who. I wrote, don't remember who it was because I never use it. Like, I don't even use it in private because because the reality is I know the truth. I see it and I'm like, no, it's not true. Not even
Starting point is 00:04:17 close to true. And everyone who works with me, no, it's like, no, not even the best in the room. Like, it's that, it's that bad. But it's just, that's the start. I have to know the truth. And that's, and also, it's not a sad thing. To know the truth is not a sad thing. I would say this. To know the truth, to acknowledge the truth, and to live the truth is not sad. It is the first step towards freedom. It's the first real step towards joy because that step is humility. And that's all. Right, right? We have the first reading today and the gospel. But the first reading from Syrac, he says this. He says, conduct your affairs with humility and humble yourself, the more, the greater you are. You know, this is helpful helpful for us to understand this, that Syrac is not saying, hey, when you're being,
Starting point is 00:05:02 humble, you're pretending. I think sometimes we think that humility is pretending. So C.S. Lewis wrote about this once at one point, and he said this, he said, humility is not a pretty woman trying to believe she's ugly or a clever man trying to believe that he's a fool. Humility is being honest about what you are and also not thinking about yourself all the time. So humility isn't pretending. And it's also humility is not negative. In fact, I would say this. I would say there is a freedom and humility and there is a joy in humility because what? Here are students, we're starting, this is the beginning of our semester. And so many of our students show up and they can show up because they perform it in the past. Like the whole life has been about performance. And so it's like,
Starting point is 00:05:44 okay, I performed in the past and now I'm here to, I guess, continue performing. I had to try to manage people's impression on me. So now I'm going to keep trying to manage people's impression of me. And so many students, so many people just experience the burden. that pressure of trying to keep up the illusion. I mean, just think about this. Consider the amount of energy we put into our performance. How much energy we put into trying to appear to be perfect. How much energy we put into kind of what you might call like impression management
Starting point is 00:06:20 that I can't let them see this about me, because I can't let them know this about me. But humility is acknowledging and walking and living the truth, whatever that truth is. I mean, because the reality is you could be pretty great at something, and it might not mean a lot. So I have a friend named Annie Hickman. Annie Hickman lives down in Texas, and at one point, he's a Catholic speaker, just incredible man. But Eni was telling this story about in Texas, they have these massive like barbecue conventions where they have some, I guess, barbecue influencers, and people will come from all over the place not only to have the barbecue, but to meet the barbecue pit masters.
Starting point is 00:07:00 In fact, there is this one place. It's called the Texas Open Fire Meetup. And meet is M-E-A-T. Very clever. But they have a thing where it's meet the master pit master. And people, thousands of people, will line up to meet someone who makes barbecue. And it's their dream of their life to meet the barbecue master. And we've never heard of them.
Starting point is 00:07:24 They're good at it. But like, wait, but who knows it? I don't know if you know a man, his name, a Stephen N. Bunting. I saw Stephen Bunting a year or two ago, maybe, I think it was only a year ago, 2024. He's a, he throws darts, plays darts. He's very, very good dartist, whatever that is. And I had never heard of him before, but he was at the world's match play darts competition in Dublin. And they had him in this video of his walkout song. And his walkout song was the song Titanium. And he's just an ordinary looking guy.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Just throws the darts probably in his basement or in a pub on a regular basis, but it's very, very good at it. And the crowd was going absolutely crazy. They wanted his autograph. They wanted to give him a high five. They were cheering from them. He got on stage and he, I mean, it was crazy, the amount of people who were shouting the song at him because they wanted him to win. And you probably have never heard of Stephen Bunting. And again, it gets great. Property good pit masters. Awesome. Stephen Bunting, great. For them, if they want to have freedom. They need to have the freedom of humility. What's the freedom of humility? The freedom of humility is this. Okay, I'm good at this, living the truth, right? I'm good at this. And that's what it means.
Starting point is 00:08:41 I'm good at barbecue, and that's what it means. I'm good at darts. And that's what it means. I'm good at this thing. This is what humility is. The freedom of humility is, I'm good at this, and that's all it means. I have my older sister, her name's Beth. I shouldn't have said that. My oldest sister, her name is Beth, we'll just call her Beth. And basically, As long as she's been an adult, Beth has gone on tour with different people and done wardrobe. And so she first had an internship with Prince down in the Twin Cities. And it was interesting. Later on, she had, she worked for Ricky Martin.
Starting point is 00:09:11 If you remember who Ricky Martin is, leaving Lovita Loca. And it was one of the situations where Prince didn't like her for the same reason that Ricky Martin loved her. Apparently, Prince liked to be kind of fond all over and just like that sense of like, you're the best thing ever, you're amazing, you're incredible. And my sister, Beth, is kind of unimpressed by celebrity, right? She's just kind of like, okay, you know, you're great. I'll do your wardrobe and I'll do my best job, but I'm also not going to fond over you. Ricky Martin loved that because he'd been in Minuto since he was like 12, 13 years old.
Starting point is 00:09:40 So people, his whole life, have been just making a big deal out of him. And at one point, he turned to my sister and he said, you know, Beth, the thing I love about you is that you dress, treat me normally. Just treat me like I'm nothing special. And my sister looked back at him and said, well, you aren't. You aren't special. You are normal. She's like, it's not like you're curing cancer.
Starting point is 00:10:01 You sing and you dance. And he was like, yeah, like that. You know, got that sense of because that's it, right? Again, humility is not pretending. It's not pretending I'm not good at barbecue. It's not pretending I'm not good at darts. It's not pretending I'm not good at singing or dancing. It's not pretending like I'm not good at sports or math.
Starting point is 00:10:23 But it's also not thinking that because I'm good at barbecue or darts or sports or math. that I'm more than that. All it means, if I'm good at sports or darts or whatever it is, all it means is that I'm good at sports or darts. If I'm not good at them, all it means is I'm not good at them. You know, there's actually a woman named, her name is Carol S. Dweck. She works at Columbia. She wrote a book called Mindset. And I love this truth. Her thing is like, even if you're not good at something, to not say like, oh, I'm bad at math, that's it, full stop. That's what she calls a fixed mindset. But to say, yeah, currently struggle with math or currently struggle. with darts, currently struggle with barbecue, I currently struggle with sourdough. A lot of you do that.
Starting point is 00:11:04 But if I work at it, I can get better. See, I love that because that shows that we know the truth. If I'm good at this, that's all it means. If I'm bad at this, that's all it means, but it also can mean that I could get better. Why? Because humility is nothing other than acknowledging and living the truth about ourselves. And again, how often we're just weighed down by the fear and the anxiety of losing what we believe we deserve. If I'm good at this, then I deserve something else. Remember, humility is not beating yourself up. Humility is not thinking less of yourself.
Starting point is 00:11:43 Humility is simply being honest and saying, okay, these are my strengths and these are my weaknesses. That's just what's true about me. This is what is about me that's lovely. And these are the things about me that are not lovely. Humility acknowledges, yeah, there's some great things. but also humility has to acknowledge the truth. And this is one of these deep truths about every one of us is,
Starting point is 00:12:05 I am not yet who I should be. That's humility. I'm not yet who I should be. Another piece of another big, big concept of humility is, above all, like I'm not the center of the universe. But there's a massive freedom in that humility. And look at the gospel today. Here's Jesus.
Starting point is 00:12:27 And he says the whole thing about when you go to a banquet, don't take the position of honor. Don't take that number one spot, but go to the lowest spot. Now, we have to keep this mind. Remember, humility is not pretending. Jesus is not saying, hey, pretend and go to the lowest spot because then, you know, you'll manipulate your host into bringing you up higher.
Starting point is 00:12:45 He's not saying pretend, because if you want to know who Jesus had some of the harshest words for in the gospel, all of the gospels, it was hypocrites. And hypocrites just simply means actor or pretender. So Jesus is not saying, hey, pretend that you belong to the lowest. What he's telling us is this, live the truth. and you know you only know one person's heart. You know, we only know our own lives. We know we only know our own story.
Starting point is 00:13:15 And the truth is, here's me walking into a room. Here's you walking into a room. Is that based on what I know about me, I don't know anything about it. I don't know the secret lives of anyone else. But based on what I know about me, I deserve the lowest spot. That is the only truth I can think of.
Starting point is 00:13:33 Based on what I know about me, When I walk into a room, I don't know anyone else's heart here. I don't know on the surface of their lives, they're this and that. It doesn't matter, but based on what I know about me, I deserve the lowest spot. And so freedom is this. Freedom is taking the lowest spot,
Starting point is 00:13:47 not because I'm pretending, but because I am so glad to be here that I'm grateful even for the lowest spot. Like, to be able to actually have that freedom of humility that says, like, oh my gosh, like, I'm glad I made the cut. Like, I'm glad I'm even at the feast. I'm glad I'm even at the table.
Starting point is 00:14:04 Like me, someone like me, is here. That's joy. That's also the joy of humility. Because that's what humility also brings. Humility doesn't just bring freedom. Humility brings joy. You know, the humble person is the one who laughs easily. A humble person laughs easily.
Starting point is 00:14:19 Of course, at things that are funny, maybe more than anything, the humble person can easily laugh at themselves. The humble person can easily laugh at themselves. I have a couple nephews. One just graduated college. and his younger brother just went off to college. And Max, the older brother, was talking about his younger brother, Alex. And we were working at his camp together.
Starting point is 00:14:42 And Max, as the older, was the emcee of the camp and did a great job. And his younger brother, Alex, was a junior counselor. And we're just talking about Alex as he's going off to college. He's getting in with high school, going off to college. And Max just kind of stepped back. And at one point, he said, you know, I've always admired about Alex. He's always been able to laugh at himself. Even when he was a little kid, he said, we have videos of him.
Starting point is 00:15:02 And we're making fun of him. Like, we're teasing him. and he just laughs. We're making fun of like he's interested in dinosaurs. And he's like, yeah, is that goofy? He's interested in the science. Like, isn't that goofy engineer? All his Legos.
Starting point is 00:15:14 And he just, we can make fun of him. And he just can such, he can so easily laugh at himself. And Max has said, that's something I've always admired about him. That, you guys, what that is, that's so powerful. Why? Because what it reveals is that for Alex, at least in this context, he's not threatened. You can laugh at yourself and you're not threatened. He's not defensive.
Starting point is 00:15:33 he's going to laugh at yourself when you're not defensive. He's not pretending. And he's not afraid of losing something. Right? Because he doesn't have that need to perform or the need to be perfect or the need to have impression management going on. That's, because that is the joy of humility. To acknowledge and to live the truth about ourselves.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Even the truth that in my heart there is weakness. And in my heart, there is a weakness. unlovely things. In my heart, there are sins. Here's something the humble person can do. The humble person can actually look at their weakness. They can look at their unloveliness. They can look at their sins and they can look at God in chuckle. They can look at the worst parts of their lives and then look at God and like, oh my gosh, God, I'm glad you know me. Like, they look at themselves and say, Lord, what a mess I am. I need you so badly. No, keep this mind. That's not making light of sin. That's not making light of sin. That's not making
Starting point is 00:16:33 light of evil, but it's laughing at your weakness. That sense of, wow, Jesus, I, this is how much I need you. Now, if you're hard, you find it difficult to imagine that, if you're not difficult to picture it, how can you possibly laugh at your weakness? How could you even laugh at how desperately you are needing Jesus? Look at St. Paul, 2nd Corinthians, Chapter 12. What is St. Paul saying in 2nd Corinthians chapter 12. What he says is he's talking all about his weakness, the depth of his broken,
Starting point is 00:17:03 and he says that Jesus speaks to him and says, my grace is sufficient for you for powers made perfect in weakness. Therefore, I'd rather boast most gladly of my weaknesses in order that the power of Christ may dwell within me. Therefore, I rejoice in my weakness. If you can't laugh at your weakness, you cannot boast of it. If you can't laugh at your weakness, you can't rejoice in it. If you can't laugh at your weakness, you can't be humble.
Starting point is 00:17:31 You know, there is one being who, cannot laugh at themselves. And that's Satan. Satan can't laugh at himself. Imagine what a prison a person is in who can't laugh at themselves. J.K. Chesterton once said, he said, the reason why he's joking, but he said the reason why angels can fly
Starting point is 00:17:53 is because they take themselves so lightly. Now, keep this mind. He says angels take themselves lightly, not evil or suffering or good or God, but they take themselves lightly. and that's what if we're going to be saints, that's what we have to do to. Take ourselves lightly and to be able to laugh at ourselves even when we're not the best kid ever, even when we're not the best brother ever, best sister ever, everyone when we're not the best son or daughter ever.
Starting point is 00:18:24 This is the last thing. You know, my dad would always say something when I was growing up. He would never say you're the best kid ever. You'd never say you're the best son. Because two other brothers, like, wow, I won. That would be unfair. My dad would often say this. He would often say, you know, you're a pretty good kid when you're sleeping.
Starting point is 00:18:46 And I always just, I just, I always liked it. Because I mean, eight, because he was joking around and I wanted to be able to laugh at myself. But also, the bar was really low. Yeah, when you're not screwing up, making noise, making a mess, you know, doing disbehaving, all these, you know, talking back, you're pretty good kid. When you're asleep, when what? When all you are is my son. Because that's the depth of it right now.
Starting point is 00:19:18 That's why the second reading from the letter to the Hebrews, it says that there is something that speaks. Here, when the father speaks, it says actually the blood of Christ speaks more eloquently than that of Abel. And what does that mean? Well, the blood of Abel, remember in Genesis chapter four, here's Cain who kills his brother Abel and the God says the blood of Abel cries out to me for what for justice for vengeance for punishment in Hebrew says the blood of Christ poured out sprinkled out there for us
Starting point is 00:19:50 speaks more eloquently than the blood of able that cried out for justice for vengeance for punishment and what does Christ's blood cry out for his blood cry out for mercy his blood cries out for forgiveness his blood cries out this you are my child and I love you. We have to understand this truth. God chose us and has loved us long before we knew of our weakness. God has chosen us and he's loved us. He's claimed us as his and he knew all of the brokenness. He knew all of the weakness. He knew all of the sin and he still says, I want you. Not because you're the best kid, not because you're the best son or daughter, not because you're the best brother or sister, not because you're the best anything. Because he's
Starting point is 00:20:44 claimed us in Jesus Christ. He's washed us in his blood. He's made us his by his sacrifice, his life, his death, and his resurrection. And in baptism, he doesn't say you're the best. In baptism, he says, you're mine. And I love you. And if we just live that truth, remember, humility is acknowledging and living the truth about ourselves. Not just that were weak, but that were claimed, what will that lead us? Where will that lead us? That will lead us to the freedom of humility and the joy of humility.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.