The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 14: The Eternal Word of God (2025)
Episode Date: January 14, 2025Fr. Mike reflects on the sacredness of Scripture and why the Church venerates Scripture with great reverence. He helps us understand the mystery behind the powerful reality that God speaks to us throu...gh human authors. Most importantly, Fr. Mike reminds us that the eternal Word of God is both living and true. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 101-108. 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 14.
We are reading from paragraphs 101 to 108.
And if you want to know, I'm using the Ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes the
Foundations of Faith approach.
You can follow along, of course, with any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church.
You can also download your Catechism and your reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash C I Y.
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you're listening to this.
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So as I said, it is day 14.
We're reading from paragraphs 101 through 108.
Again, keep this in mind.
We're in part one pillar one what we believe
We're diving more deeply into divine revelation and we're speaking specifically now about the revelation of God in article 3
the one we're starting today is on sacred scripture and how Jesus Christ is the unique word of sacred scripture and
Gosh you guys one of the things you're gonna hear some of the things you're gonna hear
And not only is the motivation of God who just said again who wants to speak like a father to his children
That's the here's the motive of God who just loves us
We're also gonna hear what is the church's stance towards sacred scripture
And one of the things you'll hear is that the church has always venerated the scriptures as she venerates the Lord's body and this this
powerful powerful note about how we esteem sacred scripture in such
an incredible way. But then also, if you've ever wondered, so what is it that
Catholics believe about the Word of God when it comes to how is it transmitted
to us? In what way is it God's Word? In what way is it true? In what way, how does it come to us?
Now, we've, for the last couple days,
have talked about the transmission of sacred scripture,
but this day, in the next couple days,
we are gonna look at, well, what is sacred scripture?
Like, it's okay, it's God's words, but what does that mean?
And then how do we read it
in light of knowing that it's God's word?
How is it that we understand it?
So that is what we're gonna look at today.
And so that is just, I don't know,
I just think that it's so powerful
to be able to recognize today.
We're gonna hear even more clearly
than we have maybe ever have in our lives
what it is that the word of God really is,
how we approach the word of God
and why the word of God comes to us like it does.
So let's pray.
Father in heaven, we thank you so much. Thank you for loving us to a point where you want to reveal
yourself to us. Thank you for loving us in such a way that you've given us your Word, your only
beloved Son, your only begotten Son, Jesus Christ, your Word made flesh and how Jesus Christ has revealed you fully to
humanity and how your Holy Spirit has continued to operate, how your Holy Spirit has continued
to move in the people of God, how the Holy Spirit has continued to guide us.
We ask you to please send that same Holy Spirit to renew in our hearts a love of your Word,
to renew in our hearts an understanding and a desire for your Word and to renew in our hearts a love of your word, to renew in our hearts an understanding
and a desire for your word, and to enlighten our minds so that we can understand you and
understand your word, all so that we can follow you more closely.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Spirit, amen.
As I said, it is Day 14.
We're reading paragraphs 101 to 108. In Article 3, Sacred Scripture.
Christ, the unique Word of Sacred Scripture.
In order to reveal Himself to men, in the condescension of His goodness, God speaks
to them in human words.
David Erbam states, Indeed, the words of God, in the words of men are in every way like
human language, just as the word of the Eternal Father, when he took on himself the flesh
of human weakness, became like men.
Through all the words of sacred scripture, God speaks only one single word, His one utterance
in whom He expresses himself completely.
St. Augustine once wrote, You recall that one and the same word of God extends throughout
Scripture that it is one and the same utterance that resounds in the mouths of all the sacred
writers since he who was in the beginning God with God has no need of separate syllables,
for he is not subject to time.
For this reason, the church has always venerated
the scriptures as she venerates the Lord's body.
She never ceases to present to the faithful
the bread of life taken from the one table
of God's word and Christ's body.
In sacred scripture, the church constantly finds
her nourishment and her strength,
for she welcomes it not as a human word, but
as what it really is, the Word of God.
Dave Verbum states, In the sacred books, the Father who is in heaven comes lovingly to
meet his children and talks with them.
Inspiration and Truth of Sacred Scripture
God is the author of Sacred Scripture.
Dave Verbum states, The divinely revealed realities, which are contained and presented
in the text of Sacred Scripture, have been written down under the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit. Further Dave Verbum states, For Holy Mother Church, relying on the faith of
the Apostolic Age, accepts as sacred and canonical the books of the Old and New Testaments, whole
and entire, with all their parts, on the grounds that, written canonical the books of the Old and New Testaments, whole and
entire, with all their parts, on the grounds that, written under the inspiration
of the Holy Spirit, they have God as their author, and have been handed on as
such to the Church herself. God inspired the human authors of the sacred books.
David Rebum states, to compose the sacred books, God chose certain men who, all the while he employed them in
this task, made full use of their faculties and powers, so that, though he acted in them
and by them, it was as true authors that they consigned to writing whatever he wanted written
and no more.
The inspired books teach the truth.
Dave Rebom states, Since therefore, all that the inspired authors or sacred writers affirm
should be regarded as affirmed by the Holy Spirit, we must acknowledge that the books
of Scripture firmly, faithfully, and without error teach that truth which God, for the
sake of our salvation, wished to seek confided to the sacred Scriptures.
Still, the Christian faith is not a religion of the Book.
Christianity is the religion of the Word of God, a Word which is not a written and mute
word, but the Word which is incarnate and living.
If the scriptures are not to remain a dead letter, Christ, the eternal word of the living God, must, through the Holy Spirit, open our minds to understand the Scriptures.
Okay, so this is so good.
I don't know if you're experiencing this like I'm experiencing this.
I love this particular section of the catechism.
It's so powerful and it starts out by, but once again reminding us that the motivation that God
has in revealing himself to us. 101 says, in order to reveal himself to men in the condescension of
his goodness, God speaks to them in human words. And that's so important for us to establish. Now,
that might be overly obvious. Of course, God speaks to us in human words, but not really,
because God could reveal himself in any way he wanted in any way he could imagine which is probably
Thousand different ways more than we could have ever imagined
But he speaks to us in human words and it's just so powerful because they use this image, you know Dave Erbom
Which we hear from regularly obviously it's very very important document
Uses this this image
He says indeed the words of God expressed in the
words of men are in every way like human language just as the word of the
Eternal Father Jesus right when he took on himself the flesh of human weakness
became like men so there's this way in which here is the incarnate Word of God
Jesus Christ who became one of us but also God's Word spoken to us is spoken
in human words and that's just so
powerful and just real to realize that here's God's divine condescension.
Again it talks about the condescension of His goodness. What's that mean? That
means He stoops down to us and He speaks to us as it says later on as a father
speaks to His children and that's so powerful. Once again paragraph 103 just
to highlight this for this reason, the reason that they said these are the words of God
Right. This is this is God's self revelation of himself for this reason
The church has always venerated the scriptures as she venerates the Lord's body and no that's that's an interesting thing
I will try to almost every time I have my Bible if I put it down if I set it down
I'll always try to kiss it before I set it down. And that's just kind of a little mini devotional thing
that I'll typically do.
And one of the reasons is because it just reminds me
that this is the sacred text, right?
This is the word of God that's been handed to me,
not only by my parents and their parents and generations,
handed to me by the church, of course,
but also given to us by the Lord himself. And I just think about you so I always try to you know
Venerate it like that and kiss it before I put place it down. I don't always do that, but it's there
I remember being at a conference for youth and it would there was a
Eastern Catholic a priest and one of the things he did was, you know as Catholics we have
Eucharistic processions, right? So we have the consecrated host, Jesus Christ incarnate here in the Eucharist and we have processions, right?
Here's the Eucharist in the monstrance and we adore the Lord, we worship the Lord in the Eucharist.
But this Eastern Catholic priest, he also had a procession of the Word of God. He had actually a
large Bible and it was ornate and beautiful inside, of course, where the words of God,
you know, the word of God scripture.
And so he had a procession with that
and he blessed the people with the word of God.
And it was just so cool to see, you know,
what the catechism says here,
that the church has always venerated the scriptures
as she venerates the Lord's body.
And that was kind of a really tactical and tangible way
that I saw that happen.
Now, in 104 talks about this.
The church constantly, through Second Scripture,
the church constantly finds her nourishment
and her strength.
And I just think that is true for any of us
who have journeyed through the Bible in a year.
We recognize that I was being fed every single day.
That every time, even if I didn't understand everything
out of the reading that day, even if it didn't really pertain necessarily to my
life that day I was nourished I was fed and not only nourished and fed I was
strengthened and that's so so important that we realize that the church
constantly has to go back to we as Christians constantly have to go back to
the Word of God now the last of, among the last two points I wanna make
of this reading for today is two things.
One is, if you were to ask the question,
okay, the gospel of Matthew, who wrote the gospel of Matthew?
And if you were to answer, God did, you'd say yes.
And if someone were to say, Matthew did, you'd say yes.
So this is very, very important.
Paragraph 105 and paragraph 106
are making it very, very clear that 105 105 says God is the author of sacred scripture
So yes, God is the one he is the one I mean that in fact Dave Verboom states this that
Holy Mother Church relying on the faith of the apostolic age accepts as sacred and canonical, right? So
Official we want to say it like that the books of the Old and New Testaments
Whole and entire with all their parts on the grounds
That written under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit
They have God as their author and have been handed on as such to the church herself
So God is the author and and then it goes on to say God inspired the human authors of the sacred books
So God is the author he inspired those authors of the sacred books now we can sometimes picture What that look like as God is the author, he inspired those authors of the sacred books. Now we can sometimes picture what that looked like
as God is inspiring Matthew to write the Gospel of Matthew.
What's that look like?
In fact, I've seen a painting of Matthew writing
the Gospel of Matthew.
It is not a photograph, it's a painting.
An artist's rendering of what that looked like.
And here's Matthew and he's got his quill out
and he's got some parchment in front of him.
And there's an angel whispering in his ear
and he's kind of attentively listening to this angel
as he's writing down these words.
That's some people's image of what that would be like.
And I don't necessarily,
that isn't necessarily what's endorsed by paragraph 106.
Another one would be that, you know,
here's someone who just goes into a trance,
you know, the eyes roll back a little bit
and they just start writing and,
oh, I guess that's what God wants written.
The better image is given to us here in paragraph 106.
It says, to compose the sacred books,
God chose certain men who all the while
he employed them in this task.
So again, he's God's initiator here.
He's the one who's guiding them.
They made full use of their own faculties and powers.
So that though he acted in them and by them,
it was as true authors that they consigned to writing
whatever he wanted written and no more.
So the idea here is grace and free will, right?
I mean, it's one of those things like, wait a second,
how is it possible that God is the author of Matthew's gospel
and Matthew's the author of Matthew's gospel
at the same time without violating the freedom of Matthew
or without violating the power of God
And the answer is I don't know and the answer is it's a mystery
The answer is we experience this every single time you and I cooperate with God
We cooperate with God freely
But in that freedom he gives us his grace to do what we could never do without his grace
And this is exactly what's happening when God employed the use of those individuals who wrote the sacred
scriptures. So that's one of the reasons why Matthew's gospel sounds different
than Luke's gospel. It's one of the reasons why Maccabees sounds
differently than Isaiah because different people wrote them using their
own different skills, their different faculties, their different way of
writing. And it's so powerful, especially when you and I go through the Bible in a year
We can hear the difference because we realize we Genesis sounds it reads way differently than the book of Sirach
It's but they're both inspired
by God
Just written by different human authors and that's just so powerful so powerful and this is so important paragraph 107
That's just so powerful, so powerful. And this is so important, paragraph 107,
the inspired books teach the truth.
This is very, very important.
What do we believe?
We believe that the Bible is true.
Here's the long quote,
since therefore all that the inspired authors
or sacred writers affirm
should be regarded as affirmed by the Holy Spirit,
we must acknowledge that the books of scripture firmly,
faithfully, and without error teach that truth which God that the books of scripture firmly, faithfully, and
without error teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see
confided to the secret scriptures.
Now, so when I say truth, what do I mean?
I mean truth as it comes to reality, truth as it comes to our salvation.
So keep this in mind, we've talked about this in the past when we go through Genesis,
those first number of chapters of Genesis where it talks about the creation of the world,
that's not meant to be read as a biology textbook, as a chemistry textbook, it's not a physics
textbook.
It is a true story and it's a true account of creation and the fall.
That's a true account, that's a true story.
It doesn't have to be historically and literally true to still be true, if that makes any sense. Again, so there's no
error in it, we have to understand what kind of book we're reading. The example I
always give is it would make no sense for me to pick up a geometry textbook
and read through it and say, oh my gosh, this is ridiculous, this is the worst
poetry I've ever read, it doesn't even rhyme, right? Because it's not a poetry
book, it is geometry textbook. As we need to read the scriptures as they've been written and for the purpose they've been written
That's what we'll talk about tomorrow. It was just so powerful
The last note is what I mentioned a couple days ago that the Christian faith is not a religion of the book
it's a religion of the Word of God and
That Word of God is a capital W, right?
And that Word is incarnate and living and that's the Word that comes to us.
Like when we pick up scriptures, we are encountering not a dead letter.
We are encountering the Word who is alive. When we hear scripture proclaimed to us,
we are hearing the Word of God alive in our lives, in this world and in our hearts.
And so I'm just praying that all of us not only continue to walk in this catechism in a year,
but that all of us continue to find our nourishment through the scriptures,
find our nourishment through the Bible, because every time we read the Bible,
every time the Bible is proclaimed, the word of God, capital W, word, capital G, God,
the word of God comes to us and meets us where we're at
As a father speaks to his children. He lovingly comes to us. So I'm praying I'm praying that that you and I
That we can be the kind of people who are listening to our Father's voice. I am praying for you
Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.