The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 13: A Single Deposit of Faith
Episode Date: January 13, 2023In today’s “In Brief'' section, Fr. Mike reviews the relationship between Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture, emphasizing that both make up the single deposit of Faith. He also explains how the... Magisterium is able to interpret authentically and authoritatively the Word of God. Lastly, he reminds us that the way the Church prays and lives, reveals who the Church is. Today's readings are Catechism paragraphs 96-100. 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 Schmidt and you're listening to the Catechism in 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 Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is day 13.
Welcome back, everybody.
Reading paragraphs 96 through 100,
a few reminders as we get started.
I'm using 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
that will be just fine.
If you want to download your own catacasem
in the year reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And also, I don't know if you know about this,
but you can follow, you can subscribe to this podcast.
By clicking on subscribe or follow wherever you would listen
to your podcast for daily notifications, as I said,
it is day 13, and we just have the in brief.
There are five paragraphs, aka almost about five sentences, that we're going to spend
time with today.
And so it is a summary, obviously, of what we just read, where we just heard the last
couple days.
So we talked about this.
We talked about the transmission of divine revelation.
That's what we've been focusing on for the last few days.
And so here's God who loves us so much.
He wants to reveal himself.
So fully
to us, he does in Jesus Christ and through the Holy Spirit. And then the apostles pass this
on to us in two ways, right? Through the power of the Holy Spirit. I'm working through the
church. That revelation, the fullness of revelation of God in Jesus Christ is passed on orally
and in writing. And so in that's then passed down through Apostolic succession. We talk
to all about that. Also, we talked about how there is sacred tradition and sacred scripture, make up the
posit of the word of God, right, the posit of faith there, and that we need a reliable
interpreter of that, the magisterium.
So that's kind of my summary, and now we're going to get what the cataclysm summary is.
Again, these are basically five simple sentences that we're going to take a little deeper look at after we say this prayer.
Here we go. Let's pray, Father in heaven.
Oh, Lord God, we thank you so much. We thank you for continuing to reach out to us. We thank you for continuing to speak to us. We thank you for continuing to call us closer to you. Lord God, you have not abandoned this age. You have not abandoned this generation.
But you, in the power of your Holy Spirit, continue to pour out your goodness, your grace,
your love, and your truth upon every heart that seeks you. Lord God, you even pour out
your grace and truth and love upon hearts that don't seek you. God, help us. Help us to
be hearts that are open to your love,
that are open to your grace, that are open to your truth, and help us to never forget what you've
done in our lives. Seal the knowledge of you and seal the knowledge of truth in our hearts.
Seal the graces that you've given to us, deeply into our lives, and help us always,
that you've given to us, deeply into our lives, and help us always, always to pursue you,
because you will never stop pursuing us. In Jesus' name we pray. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, amen. As I said in this day 13, we're reading paragraphs
96 through 100, again, five brief sentences, essentially, these five brief paragraphs. But just
remember, we can pay attention to like, oh wait, I've heard these things before.
This is simply a reminder of what I already know, so I can get it deeper into my heart
and deeper into my life.
Here we go.
Paragraphs 96-100.
In brief, what Christ entrusted to the apostles, they in turn handed on by their preaching and
writing under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit to all generations until Christ returns in glory.
The E-Verbom stated, sacred tradition and sacred scripture make up a single sacred deposit
of the Word of God, in which, as in a mirror, the pilgrim church contemplates God, the
source of all her riches. David also states,
the church in her doctrine,
life, and worship,
perpetuates and transmits to every generation
all that she herself is,
all that she believes.
Thanks to its supernatural sense of faith,
the people of God as a whole never ceases to welcome,
to penetrate more deeply,
and to live more fully from the gift of divine revelation.
The task of interpreting the word of God authentically has been entrusted solely to the magisterium
of the church, that is, to the Pope and to the bishops in communion with him.
All right, as I said, five sentences.
That is all we have today.
That's why today is going to be kind of a little nugget day, this kind of bite-sized pieces. And one of the things I want to highlight again is just
something that might have been a little bit of a surprise to some people.
Typically, we think, oh, okay, divine revelation is the Bible, right? That's the Word of God. Yes, you are not wrong.
But also we recognize that sacred tradition and sacred Scripture
as a whole, they make up the single sacred deposit of the Word of God,
which is necessary for us.
And why can we say that that's necessary?
Why can we say that divine revelation includes
the sacred tradition and not merely sacred scripture?
Well, we can say it for a number of reasons.
One of those reasons being,
the scripture kind of points this out.
In fact, St. Paul himself makes it relatively clear
in this second letter to the Thessalonians when he says,
so then, stand firm and hold fast to the traditions
that you were taught by us,
either by word of mouth or by our letter.
Remember going back over the last couple days,
we noted that divine revelation has come to us
orally and in writing.
We didn't just make that up, that comes from here sacred scripture, where sacred scripture
itself says, yeah, this is what we've passed on to you orally or in writing.
Not only that, but we also recognize the role of the church, the role of the church to
be able to give us divine revelation.
I mean, think about this.
We have the canon of scripture, the list of the books of the Bible, all 73
books. That's that list of the books in the Bible isn't in the Bible. Where does it come
from? Well, it comes from sacred tradition. And so we recognize that everybody, everybody who
reads the Bible and says, yep, these are the books. They're relying upon an authority outside of
the Bible. They're relying upon sacred tradition. So we can say really clearly
that sacred tradition and sacred scripture make up a single sacred deposit of the word of God. We need
both because without either we would be deficient essentially. And so that's really important as
we just kind of highlight this. Moving on from there, paragraph 98 states, the church in her doctrine,
life, and worship,
perpetuates and transmits to every generation
all that she herself is, all that she believes.
Now, the first part of that statement,
I think we would all say, oh, that obviously,
where it says, the church in her doctrine,
that yeah, in her teaching, doctrine simply,
indicates teaching, that the church in her doctrine
perpetuates and transmits
to every generation what she is and what she believes. But the statement is not just that
the church in our doctrine, meaning like here's the teachings, but in her life and her worship
perpetuates and transmits to every generation all that she herself is, all that she believes.
That is so important. It's so real. There are many people who have come to an intellectual conversion to Jesus
or an intellectual conversion to the Catholic faith.
Meaning, they've read their way into the church,
which is beautiful, it's powerful, it's amazing.
And then they show up to a parish.
And they say, oh, wow, this is not like what I read.
Because every parish is slightly different,
they might go to Mass and like, wait a second,
I, they might know the beauty, the mystery,
the power, the reality of the Mass.
And then they show up for a daily Mass at whatever church
and they're thinking, oh my gosh, this is what that is.
Oh, goodness gracious, like that can be a situation.
But the church is highlighting the catechism here.
Quoting day verbum is highlighting. no, actually that does reveal what and who the church is.
That the life and worship of the church, not the broken life, not necessarily a broken
worship or the cheap worship or maybe someone isn't actually doing what they should be doing
at mass, but the way the church prays and the way the church lives does reveal who the church is and what the church believes.
Now here's what I mean.
There's this phrase, lexarande, lexcredendi.
And what that means in English is the law of prayer is the law of belief, meaning that
the way the church prays actually reveals the way the church, what
the church believes. And so I would invite every one of us to pay attention to the prayers
that are uttered during the Mass, because this is revealing something deeply about what it
is that we believe as followers of Jesus Christ. And that's so powerful. Also, we recognize
the church inner doctrine, as we said, yep, life and worship perpetuates
and transmits to every generation all that she herself is,
all she believes.
There's this element where sometimes you'll have Christians
who will say, well, you know, kind of challenge Catholics
and say, well, where's that in the Bible?
Where did you get that idea?
Like, that's not necessarily explicitly there.
And we'd say, okay, a couple things to keep in mind.
One thing to keep in mind is, as we already noted,
second Thessalonians, where second Thessalonians, Paul,
notes that there are things that we believe
that were not written down, that were simply spoken
by word of mouth, right?
Okay, so things that we believe that are not
strictly speaking in sacred scripture,
but are part of sacred tradition.
That's second Thessalonians.
Also, the church has the authority to teach why, because in 1 Timothy 315 is very, very important.
1 Timothy 315, St. Paul is writing to Timothy.
And he basically says, I hope to come to you soon.
This is verse 14.
But I'm writing these instructions to you so that if I am delayed, you may know how one
ought to behave in the household of God, which is the church
of the living God, the pillar and bulwark of the truth.
Now, that is very, very important.
Why?
Because it highlights the fact that here is scripture
saying that the church is the pillar and bulwark of truth.
A lot of times, you have people who say,
no, no, scripture is the pillar and bulwark of truth.
Okay, okay, I believe the scripture is true.
We're going to talk about that more in the days to come.
But scripture itself says that the church is the pillar and bulwark of truth, and we have
to pay attention to that.
We can't dismiss that or ignore that or deny that because it is true.
So we recognize that the church, yes, in her doctrine, written down, sacred scripture,
and in her doctrine, sacred tradition, but in her very life.
It's also that last piece, the very life.
It got an example that I think it might go back, back in the day to a movie called The
Few Good Men.
At one point, if you've seen it, you know what the story is, here's the Tom Cruise movie,
and here is, there's a soldier, and he is stationed in Guantanamo Bay, and he gets killed by his
fellow soldiers who are carrying out this thing that they were calling a code red.
Now, a code red was apparently an off-the-books term or phrase used to indicate the ways in which
fellow soldiers would keep their fellow soldiers in line.
Kind of a thing like they'd meet out some discipline to the fellow soldiers
to bring up to scratch or kind of whatever. So it's kind of a hazing kind of thing, kind of a
disciplinary thing, and this one was not only violent, but it ended up with the death of this guy.
Anyways, so here's the courtroom scene, and they're trying to figure out, was there a code red
that was issued, right? Was what did this come from the top down? What happened?
Was it just these two soldiers had accidentally
murdered this fellow soldier?
Or did they have orders from above?
Okay, so here's the courtroom.
And at one point, there is one of these soldiers on the stand.
And Kevin Bacon's character, he's also in this movie
because of course he is.
And he's a lawyer and he's saying,
here's the military handbook for life down in Guantanamo Bay.
He says, soldier, turn to the page in the handbook
that tells you about code reds.
And the soldier kind of is confused and he says,
well, there's no page that talks about code reds.
Like seriously, so are you here trying to tell me
that this big thing that you say happened
to this code red thing that everybody knows about and actually is one of the ways they keep
soldiers in line down here is not even in the military handbook that covers everything
from A to Z here in of life on in Quentana, Moby and the soldiers like I'm sorry sir, there's
no code red in this book.
So basically Kevin Bacon's character is trying to deny the reality or the existence of code reds because it's not in the book. And so Kevin Bacon walks away smuggly,
he's kind of proved his point. And Tom Cruise, the opposing counsel, right, he walks up pretty smuggly
as well. It takes the book from Kevin Bacon's character and says, hands it to the soldier again
and he says, okay, soldier, point to the page where it shows you how to get to the dining hall, how to get
to the mess hall, how to get, you know, fed that the cafeteria and the soldier looks confused
and says, no sir, there's, there's, it doesn't tell you how to get to the cafeteria here.
It doesn't have, does it tell you how to get to the dining hall in, in this book, in Tom Cruise's
character says, wait, are you telling me that Then in the six months you were down there,
you didn't eat one meal.
And now, no, sir, we had three squares a day,
every day.
And he said, well, how did you find it?
If it wasn't in the book, and the guy answers,
the soldier answers, he says, I guess I just followed
the crowd at chow time.
And this is the point.
In case, thank you for letting me recap this movie
from the 1990s.
The point there is, the Kevin Bacon character was me recap this movie from the 1990s. The point
there is the Kevin Bacon character was saying, is it in the book? If it's not in the book,
it must not exist, right? And the Tom Cruise character is saying, yes, there is a lot of
instructions, a lot of very important information that's in this book. But there are also things
that are part of life on the base in Guantanamo Bay that are not written in the book.
And the same thing is true when it comes to our Christian faith.
There are so many things written in the book, absolutely.
But there are also so many things that are not written in the book, but are part of life following after Jesus.
We have written, tradition, and we have spoken tradition, right? We have sacred scripture
and sacred tradition. And that is so, so very important that we understand that that's all part
of what we call the deposit of faith. Lastly, the task of interpreting the Word of God authentically
has been entrusted solely to the Magisterium of the Church, that is to the Pope and the Bishop's
in communion with him. And that's one of those things we just again come back to.
We realize that this magisterium, this magister, right, the teacher has been able to interpret
authentically and authoritatively the word of God for us.
And therefore we don't need to be concerned or worried.
We know that we have a teacher that when Jesus said to the apostles, he who hears you,
hears me that at the last, when Jesus ascended to apostles, he who hears you, hears me, that at the last,
when Jesus ascended to heaven,
he says, go therefore, make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I've commanded you,
and be hold on with you always,
until the end of the age that he meant it.
And so God is still with us, in his word,
he's with us in his sacraments,
he's with us in the church,
he still teaches us through the Holy Spirit
working through the Magisterium.
And so, yeah, it's always living.
It's always active.
The God's word is alive and it comes to us every single day.
God keeps speaking to us just like today.
As he's speaking to us every single day.
As I said, little nugget today.
So, here we go.
Maybe it wasn't so small, but, you know, five paragraphs, five sentences. There's a lot of meat on them bones.
Anyways, you guys, I am so grateful.
Tomorrow will be day 14, you guys.
Thank you so much for being part of this journey.
I am so grateful for you, and I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
And thanks for the mic, and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.