The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 112: The Church Is the Bride (2024)
Episode Date: April 21, 2024Christ is the head of the Church. The Catechism describes Jesus’ relationship to his Church as “a personal relationship…expressed by the image of bridegroom and bride.” Fr. Mike points out how... important this is by reminding us that, underneath all of the doctrine and the dogma, God is madly in love with you. If we always remember this love, everything else will fall into place. Today's readings are Catechism paragraphs 792-796. This episode has been found to be in conformity with the Catechism by the Institute on the Catechism, under the Subcommittee on the Catechism, USCCB. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in a Year podcast
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in Scripture and passed down
through the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
in God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home. This is day 112. We're reading paragraphs 792 to 796. As always, I'm
reading from the Ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes the Foundations of Faith approach,
but you can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. You can
also download your own Catechism in a year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications today is day 112 reading paragraphs
792 to 796 yesterday we talked about how the church essentially is one body the church is the
body of christ and today we're going to continue to talk about that how christ is the head of this
body yesterday we ended by talking about how all believers are united, that even though we're diverse, even though the Holy Spirit's gifts are
diverse, since the Holy Spirit is one, therefore the church is one. Now today
we're emphasizing even more powerfully, I guess, that Christ is the head of this
body and that's so so important because he unites us with him in his Passover.
That's paragraph 793. Christ provides for our growth, right? So
the head provides for the growth of the body and that's 794. And then also in
paragraph 795, Christ and his church make up the whole Christ. And that's
something really, really important to recognize that yes, the head, that's truly
Jesus. And the body, that's truly Christ, of course. But there's this reality that
the most profound depths of
Who or what essentially the body of Christ is is head and body united? That's the whole Christ In fact in paragraph 795, we're gonna have a number of different quotes from different saints
We have a quote from st. Augustine and a quote from Pope st
Gregory the great as well as a quote from st. Thomas Aquinas and a quote from st. Joan of Arc
So paragraph 795
will have a bunch of quotes. They're incredible. And then in paragraph 796, the last paragraph
today, it's kind of a longer one, but we'll talk about how the church is the bride of Christ. We've
referenced that in the past, but I think it's important to recognize that as paragraph 796
states, the Lord God himself prepared for his people to recognize that his people
would be considered his bride. I mean think about how in the Old Testament
idolatry was akin to adultery, right? To turn away from this covenant relationship
with the Lord God was akin to adultery and so that makes sense that here is
Jesus the bridegroom and here is the church the bride therefore when we're faithful
We're living this faithful covenantal relationship and when we're unfaithful, it's not just kind of like oh we slipped up
It is that that depth of I guess you might even say it, you know personally betrayal
Against our bridegroom because since we are his bride if that makes any sense today
we have these two images Christ the head of body, the body of Christ as the church
and the church as the bride of Christ.
We're praying about that, talking about that today,
reflecting on that today.
So let's say a prayer.
Father in heaven, we praise you and give you glory
in the name of your son, Jesus Christ.
We ask you to please receive our praise,
receive our thanksgiving.
And also Lord God, hear our prayers.
Hear our prayers as a broken body,
hear our prayers as a broken body hear our prayers as a hurting body
Here are prayers as your bride
Who so often we have fickle hearts so often
We don't live as your faithful bride and yet you keep calling us back to yourself
You keep being a faithful bridegroom. You keep being a faithful God and father brother and lover
We thank you so much God.
Thank you so much for loving us and for being faithful even when we are not.
Help us to choose you this day and every day of our lives. In Jesus name we pray. Amen.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
As I've said a couple times now, it is day 112. We're reading paragraphs 792 to 796.
Christ is the head of this body.
Christ is the head of the body, the Church. He is the principle of creation
and redemption. Raised to the Father's glory in everything, He is preeminent,
especially in the Church through whom He extends His reign over all things.
Christ unites us with His Passover. All His members must strive to resemble Him until Christ be formed in them.
For this reason, we are taken up into the mysteries of His life associated with His
sufferings as the body with its head, suffering with Him, that with Him we may be glorified.
Christ provides for our growth.
To make us grow toward Him our head, He provides in His body the Church,
the gifts and assistance by which we help one another along the way of salvation. Christ
and His Church thus together make up the whole Christ, Christus Totus. The Church is one
with Christ. The saints are acutely aware of this unity. St. Augustine once wrote,
Let us rejoice then, and give thanks, that we have become not only
Christians but Christ himself.
Do you understand and grasp, brethren, God's grace toward us?
Marvel and rejoice, we have become Christ.
For if he is the head, we are the members.
He and we together are the whole man.
The fullness of Christ, then, is the head and the members. But what does head
and members mean? Christ and the Church. St. Gregory the Great said,
Our Redeemer has shown Himself to be one person with the Holy Church whom He has taken to Himself.
St. Thomas Aquinas wrote, Head and members form as it were one and the same mystical
person.
A reply of St. Joan of Arc to her judges sums up the faith of the holy doctors and the good
sense of the believer when she said, About Jesus Christ and the Church I simply know,
they're just one thing, and we shouldn't complicate the matter.
The Church is the Bride of Christ.
The unity of Christ and the Church, Head and members of one body, also implies the distinction
of the two within a personal relationship.
This aspect is often expressed by the image of bridegroom and bride.
The theme of Christ as bridegroom of the Church was prepared for by the prophets and announced
by John the Baptist.
The Lord referred to Himself as the bridegroom.
The Apostle speaks of the
whole Church and of each of the faithful members of His body as a bride betrothed to Christ
the Lord so as to become but one spirit with Him. The Church is the spotless bride of the
spotless Lamb. Christ loved the Church and gave Himself up for her that He might sanctify
her. He has joined her with Himself in an everlasting covenant and never stops caring for her as
for his own body.
St. Augustine wrote, This is the whole Christ, head and body, one formed from many.
Whether the head or members speak, it is Christ who speaks.
He speaks in his role as the head, expersona capitis, and in his role as body, Ex persona
corporeis.
What does this mean?
The two will become one flesh.
This is a great mystery, and I am applying it to Christ and the Church.
And the Lord Himself says in the Gospel, So they are no longer two, but one flesh.
They are, in fact, two different persons, yet they are one in the conjugal union.
As head, he calls himself the bridegroom.
As body, he calls himself bride.
Okay, so there we are, paragraphs 792 to 796.
Again, just let's finish up this recognition of Christ as the head of this body.
There is something so powerful.
I love this paragraph 792 where it says that, of course, Jesus is the principle of this body, there is something so powerful. I love this paragraph 792, where it says that,
of course, Jesus is the principle of creation,
he's the principle of redemption,
raised to the Father glory in everything he is preeminent.
Of course, that is, you know, quoting scripture,
it's quoting Colossians chapter one, verse 18.
In everything he is preeminent, it goes on to say,
especially in the church through whom he extends his reign
over all things, why is that the case? Let's just highlight this for one second.
He says, of course, raised to the Father's glory, Jesus in everything is preeminent.
But then it goes on to say, especially in the church through whom he extends his reign over all
things. Well, because remember what Jesus announced, especially Matthew's gospel.
In Matthew's gospel, the refrain Jesus constantly is proclaiming is,
the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.
What is that? That's the reign of God is at hand.
How does the grace of Jesus Christ that he won for us in his life, death, and resurrection come to us?
Well, it comes to us through his church.
It comes to us through his body on earth.
It comes to us through the Holy Spirit that he's given to us to become that body of Christ on earth and so in
Everything Jesus is preeminent
Especially in his church through whom he extends his reign over all things So as often as the church continues to grow and continues to bring God's grace to the world Christ's
Preeminence right his his reigning is made present. It's made real on this earth. And so that that's the reason
That's what's so important that we're talking about,
you know, the church as the body of Christ.
We go on to say, paragraph 793,
Christ unites us with his Passover.
And this is the challenge, oh my gosh.
All his members must strive to resemble him
until Christ be formed in them.
And it goes on to say, for this reason,
we are taken up into the mysteries of his life
Associated with his sufferings as the body with its head suffering with him that we may be glorified and that is
Wow, what a massive call that that again our lives need to be patterned after the life of Jesus
And again not not to say we have to all live in Middle East but it is to say
We have to live those virtues that he lived.
We have to have the same kind of heart that Jesus had.
We have to unite our sufferings with him
because here is the body of Christ.
When we suffer, it gives God glory, right?
It does, and this is the mystery here.
We're gonna talk about the mystery of suffering later on.
But today we can recognize once again,
remember Jesus Christ accomplished the
salvation of the world through his suffering and through dying and through
conquering death through his resurrection. If we're the body of Christ, then of
course we would suffer with him. Of course we've experienced glory with him
as well, but then you know it's often been said no cross no crown, right?
There's no glorification, no resurrection unless there's a suffering, unless suffering unless there's that death and we're called if we're members of his body
Do not just say I belong to this institution the church
What we're called to do is enter into his life death and resurrection in our lives
It's just incredible and paragraph 794. We don't do this on our own
It says Christ provides for our growth right to make us grow toward him our head
He provides in his body the church the gifts and assistance by which we help one another along the way of salvation again
So so important for us to recognize that here is this massive call not just our members of the club
You know, I'm part of the church. That's not it. It's I've been brought into this relationship where
We have been configured to Jesus so fully that we've been not just made Christians,
as St. Augustine says in paragraph 795, we're not just made Christians.
In this mysterious way, we've been made Christ Himself.
Again, this is so incredible that going all the way back to the early centuries of Christianity,
here are those first Christians that saw an unbreakable and indispensable union between
belonging to Christ and belonging to the church.
I love the fact that they included a quote from St. Joan of Arc here in paragraph 795.
It's the last quote of paragraph 795.
Because St. Joan of Arc's story is that she was on trial by church officials, church officials
and government officials.
It was all a mix and all
mess and that's why I love the fact that they included this because we recognize that you know
the church is not guiltless right? Yes the church is the bride of Christ. We're going to talk about
that in a second. Church is the body of Christ of course and those who hear the church hear Jesus
Christ. We know this at the same time there has been some great messiness in the church. And
here is St. Joan of Arc who's on this you know quasi church trial, quasi civil
trial and she's being investigated, examined, cross-examined and they asked
her about the church and Jesus and I love it she said this. Again in this
moment where here's this woman who's being unjustly tried by this unjust church court at the moment and she says about
Jesus Christ and the church I simply know they're just one thing and we
shouldn't complicate the matter there's something so simple about that but also
so powerful and especially for anyone who's ever been you know hurt by
members of the church or even been hurt by the institution of the church
to be able to have that same kind of faith as Joan of Arc.
As she's facing execution and death,
she's still able to simply declare about Jesus Christ
and the church, I simply know they're just one thing
and we shouldn't complicate the matter.
What a great witness to faith because, man,
at the cost of her own life, but she still recognized
that even when the church is broken broken the church is still the body of
Christ and the bride of Christ and this is so powerful and beautiful paragraph
796 this is kind of the last stuff we're talking about I love how paragraph 796
highlights that the theme of Christ as bridegroom of the church was prepared
for by the prophets and announced by John the Baptist as I mentioned at the the beginning of this episode, go back to the ancient prophets. Why did they
talk about the relationship between the covenant people of God and God himself? Was that relationship
of marriage? Like think about the book of the prophet Hosea. Hosea would talk about how he
married Gomer, that prostitute who was unfaithful to him, but she was still his bride and he was
still her groom. And so that's laying the foundation.
Of course, John the Baptist and then the Lord himself referred to himself as the bridegroom. And then the Apostle, that's Paul.
Whenever you hear the term the Apostle,
that means Paul. He speaks of the whole church and of each of the faithful members of his body as a bride
betrothed to Christ the Lord, so as to become but one spirit with him. Of course later on in Ephesians chapter 5, St. Paul says, Christ loved the church and gave
himself up for her so that he might sanctify her, that she's that spotless
bride of the spotless lamb. It was just so so important and so incredible for us.
Because why? Because we can maintain, it's the last thing, I apologize, we can
maintain again an argument for the veracity or you know the truthfulness, the
reality of the institutional church
And yes, of course we can do that
But let's kind of get past that for just even one second
Maybe you can say father Mike you get past that for one second
Okay, here I am getting past it for one second. You can get past that for one second and recognize
The depth to which God himself loves you
Hmm the depth to which God himself loves you
By calling you and me more deeply into his church Which is the call of love the call to be even more
Conformed to him as his body and the call to allow ourselves to be loved by him as his bride
That truly as st. Paul said he's loved us and poured himself out for us
as a bridegroom laying down his life for his bride.
And that's you and that's me and that's right now.
And so in this moment, I just invite all of us
once again to just recognize, oh my goodness, Lord,
as you have made me a Christian, you,
you made me another Christ, you've made me
part of your body, but also
You have betrothed yourself to me
Here's the Lord God who has chosen you out of all eternity
who has chosen you to be his bride and loves you with a unique and eternal and
infinite and incredible love
And just we just ask God to help us receive that love today and to live in that love today. Let's pray for each other in that way. We are the
body of Christ. We're the bride of Christ and we pray for each other. Pray for
each other as brothers and sisters. Pray for each other as fellow travelers. Pray
for each other as fellow strugglers and sinners. I am praying for you. Please
pray for me. My
name is Fr. Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.