The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 15: Interpreting Scripture (2024)
Episode Date: January 15, 2024How do Catholics interpret Scripture? Fr. Mike breaks down the three basic principles for interpreting Scripture: attentiveness to the content and unity of the whole Bible, reading Scripture within th...e living Tradition of the Church, and attentiveness to the analogy of Faith. These criteria allow the Church to interpret Scripture accurately and prevent us from taking Scripture out of context. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs are 109-114. 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
Discussion (0)
I'm a name's 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 15, we're reading paragraphs 109-114,
just before 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. Also, to download your own Catechism in your reading plan, you can visit
AscensionPress.com slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, you can click Followers, Subscribe in your podcast app for daily notifications.
Also, I said lastly, but here's what I mean by lastly.
Just a quick thank you to all those who have supported the production of this podcast with
your prayers and financial gifts.
It would be impossible to do this without you.
But here we are, day 15.
We've passed the two-week mark.
And you guys, this is one of those things,
but I'm just so, so grateful that we're journeying together
in this way because, you know, it's different.
It's different as we said before.
But here we are as a community once again,
saying, I want to learn more.
God, I want you to reveal yourself even more
because he's revealed himself, obviously,
through Sacred Scripture, I'm talking about that today,
and Sacred Tradition, but so often often we just, we don't know.
And so this is such a great gift
to be able to be in the place where we are right now,
literally right now,
to be able to just die more deeply.
So in the past, meaning yesterday,
and the day before, we were talking about,
here's how God has revealed Himself fully, right?
His fullness of His revelation is through his son and his deeds
and his words that gets committed to writing in some ways sacred scripture and give it to handing
on sacred tradition and it interpreted by the Magisterium. Okay, we got that. We also talked yesterday
about how God wanted to reveal himself to us and he has spoken one single word, one utterance with Inhumia expresses himself completely.
And so we just, we venerate St. Cyscripture, right?
And we recognize how truly inspired
and how true St. Cyscripture is today.
We're gonna talk about how the Holy Spirit
is not only the inspire of St. Cyscripture,
but the interpreter of Scripture.
And so here's how do we, as Catholics, interpret
the Bible? That's so important. And here in just paragraphs 109 to 114, we're going to
be given some real basic principles. In fact, they're going to be three criteria for interpreting
Scripture in accordance with the Holy Spirit who inspired the Scripture. The first is,
we need to be attentive to the content and unity of the whole Scripture. So basically, the
whole Bible, we don't just take out one piece, we look at the whole Bible.
Secondly, we read the scripture within the living tradition of the whole church.
So not just scripture, but also the fathers of the church, sacred tradition, all those.
And thirdly, we have to be attentive to the analogy of faith.
And so those are the three criterion that we'll look at in order to interpret scripture correctly.
And those are the three criterion that we'll look at in order to interpret Scripture correctly.
And those are the three criterion, the criteria criteria.
Yeah, those are the three things that are going to be spelled out in today's section.
So here we get, let's get started.
Let's say a prayer, Heavenly Father, we are, thank you so much.
We're so grateful.
We are so grateful for you that you are.
And that you reveal yourself to us, that you reveal the depth of your heart to us,
that you gave us your only beloved son so that we might not perish, but that we could have eternal
life. And you give us your Holy Spirit to guide us and to continue to guide us into all truth.
Lord, help us, help us to read the scriptures according to your spirit, help us to live
according to your spirit so that we can pray according to your spirit and we may buy your will and buy here a gracious gift. Do
well with you, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit for all eternity. We make this prayer in Jesus' name,
in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. As I said, it's day 15.
We're reading paragraphs 109 to 114.
The Holy Spirit, interpreter of Scripture.
In sacred Scripture, God speaks to man in a human way.
To interpret Scripture correctly, the reader must be attentive to what the human authors
truly wanted to affirm and to what God wanted to reveal to us by their words.
In order to discover the sacred author's intention, the reader must take into
account the conditions of their time and culture, the literary genres in use at that time, and the
modes of feeling, speaking, and narrating then current. As they verbom says, for the fact is,
that truth is differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing,
in prophetical and political texts, and in other forms of
literary expression.
But since Sacred Scripture is inspired, there is another
and no less important principle of correct interpretation
without which Scripture would remain a dead letter.
De VĂ©rom states that it is this.
Sacred Scripture must be read and interpreted in the light
of the same spirit by whom it
was written.
The Second Vatican Council indicates three criteria for interpreting Scripture in accordance
with the Spirit who inspired it.
First, be especially attentive to the content and unity of the whole Scripture.
Different as the books which comprise it may be, Scripture is a unity by reason of the unity
of God's plan, of which Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the Holy Spirit. but the Scripture has been opened since the Passion. Since those who from then on have understood it,
consider and discern in what way the prophecies
must be interpreted.
Second, read the Scripture
within the living tradition of the whole church.
According to a saying of the Father's,
sacred Scripture is written principally
in the Church's heart rather than in documents or records.
For the Church carries in her tradition
the living memorial of God's Word.
And it is the Holy Spirit
who gives her the spiritual interpretation of the scripture,
according to the spiritual meaning,
which the Spirit grants to the church.
Third, be attentive to the analogy of faith.
By analogy of faith, we mean the coherence
of the truths of faith among themselves
and within the whole plan of revelation.
Okay, there we are.
As I said, paragraphs 109 to paragraph 114.
Okay, so let's go back to 109.
Once again, the church is reminding us, in sacred scripture, God speaks to us in a human
way.
That's just so important, right?
Remember, we highlighted this yesterday. The author of Scripture is the Holy Spirit.
And the author of Scripture is the human author.
They are both truly authors.
Now, though that might seem like a contradiction,
it is not, it is a paradox.
It's a mystery that they're both the human authors.
But here's to understand this,
to interpret Scripture correctly,
we must be attentive to what the human authors
truly wanted to affirm and to what God wanted to reveal to us by their words.
So we have to discover the sacred author's intention.
And that's so important.
We have to keep that in mind.
Why?
Because we realize that scripture transcends cultures.
It transcends time.
It goes, you know, there are phrases that you and I will use in the course of our daily
lives. That if you were to translate them into another language, it would be nonsense, right? goes, you know, there are phrases that you and I will use in the course of our daily lives
that if you were to translate them into another language, it would be nonsense, right?
It would be gibberish.
There's also things that other languages, they're called idioms as one example, right?
There's in other languages, if you try to translate that into English, it just, it seems
like, what are you saying?
We recognize the here's sacred scripture, which is written over essentially a 2000 year time period.
I mean going back to Abraham four thousand years ago and Jesus two thousand years ago,
that's what we're talking about now. You have it's spanning cultures. You see, you see,
have it spanning generations. You have this recognition that the human author is going to be
affected by their culture. They're going to be affected by the modes of feeling and
speaking and narrating then current. So, as they verbom stated, the fact is that the truth is
differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing in preferedical,
political texts and other forms of literary expression. So, not only do we have to take into
account the human author's intention and like their time period and whatnot, but also what is the literary genre of this?
So as the kind of maybe big example I could give is Genesis chapters one through 11 essentially
are prehistory.
And then 12 to the end of Genesis are they're giving us a history.
But prehistory is going to be really, really unique.
So Genesis one and Genesis two are a true account of the creation of the world.
And that's the reality. It's a true account of the creation of the world.
Now, at the same time, is it a true biological account of the creation of the world?
Well, no, that wasn't the Sarah Dotha's intention. It was not to give a biological account. It was to give the substantial account.
It was to give the reason account. Like, It was to give the reason account, like,
why did God create the world?
Who created the world?
In the case of the early chapters in Genesis,
the question that science asks are what and how?
The questions that faith asks are also who and why.
And so keep that in mind as we're reading scripture
at the same time.
So we try to discover the sacred author's intention.
And I love this because the church continues by saying,
but that's important to the big, but since sacred scripture is inspired,
meaning it's not just the sacred author.
If sacred author is not the only author, the other author is the Holy Spirit.
So since sacred scripture is inspired, God breathed, right?
There is another and no less important principle of correct interpretation
without which scripture would remain remain a dead letter, and it's this.
Sacred Scripture must be read and interpreted in the light of the same spirit by whom it was written.
So we recognize that there was a human author, and there is a divine author.
And so yes, we have to interpret this.
Like, okay, so Matthew says this, and Luke says this other thing.
Oh, I can make an account for some of those differences by difference in the temperament of the individuals,
so difference in their knowledge, difference in their cultures they were coming from,
because Matthew was Jewish and Luke was originally a Gentile. But the main author, or the other
full author is the Holy Spirit. So we must read and interpret all the books of scripture
by the light of the same Holy Spirit. And so must read and interpret all the books of Scripture by the light of the
same Holy Spirit. And so here's the three criteria for interpreting Scripture according to the
Holy Spirit. Number one, be attentive to the content and unity of the Holy Scripture. What that
means is that we never isolate one text and say, okay, this is the definitive thing. What I mean by
that is we never take a text out of context.
And that's really, really important.
In fact, every text is read in light of every other text, right?
The whole Bible is seen as a unity.
So, yes, 73 different books with a bunch of different authors.
But the Holy Spirit is the divine author who authored all of them.
So again, when you hear the Bible, when you read the
Bible, you can sometimes really get the flavor of, wow, this is a different human author.
That's true, but it is always the same divine author. And that's true. So we always have to
read every text in light of the whole. That's just so important. Secondly, we read scripture within
the living tradition of the church. And that is so so important because what do we mean by that?
Well, it means that we don't read scripture on its own. We don't believe in this idea of scripture alone because
scripture didn't come out of nowhere. It came out of their tradition of the church, and as we've talked about many times,
St. Paul wrote, told fast to the traditions that you were taught, whether by written word or orally,
right? So both spoken by us or written down by us. So we realize the sacred tradition and sacred
scripture are both incredibly valuable, not just incredibly valuable, but essential. And so we
always read scripture within the living tradition of the church. That's kind of like those fence posts
that I was talking about a couple days back. Third, we're attentive to the analogy of faith.
And that's one of the ones that, one of those statements that we can say, okay, what is
analogy of faith?
And we're going to end on this.
So the new Catholic, it's like Lapedia talks about this.
It says, originally, that word analogy is a mathematical term.
The Greek word means proportion, and was borrowed by philosophers to refer to the relationship
between concepts of things that are partly the same and partly different, right? So we know that's what analogies that are partly the same and partly different.
So we know that's what analogies are, partly the same, partly different.
But it means proportion.
So this goes back to Romans 12 verse 6.
St. Paul, when he was writing to the Romans, one of the things he says, he says, having gifts
that differ according to the grace given to us, let us use them.
If prophecy in proportion to our faith, so that term, proportion, again the Catholic Encyclopedia,
says, the Pauline injunction is given that this gift of prophecy must be exercised according to
the proportion of faith, right? We said that already. No prophet is to be accepted who proclaims
anything opposed to the one faith proper to the one body of Christ.
Such preaching would be out of proportion to or beyond the objective truth entrusted to the Christian community.
And so, and so what that is, it is highly the fact that every article of faith, every truth in the faith,
is in relationship to every other truth of the faith.
Meaning, I cannot come up with a new interpretation that's contradictory or out of line or disproportionate to the other truths
of the faith. They all have to be one. They all have to be harmonious, essentially. So, going on,
the news Catholic and psychopinius says, the analogy of faith, therefore, has always been associated
with the one unchanging faith of the church. It is closely related to the analogy of faith, therefore, has always been associated with the one unchanging
faith of the church. It is closely related to the notion of tradition and soon became a norm
for the early Christian writers. They saw a, quote unquote, proportion in the manner in which the
New Testament complements the Old Testament and in which each particular truth contributes to the
inner unity of the entire Christian revelation. Okay, so I know that that can sound so
jubbly like you know word salad time, right?
What I'm trying to say what the church here is trying to make clear is that
all of the articles of faith are in proportion or are in relationship to every other article of the faith. And in that relationship, in that proportionality to each other, there is never going to be
one that cancels out another.
So when we read scripture, we always read scripture in proportion, right?
We always read scripture in light of everything that we believe, scripture, tradition, and
the Magisterium have revealed.
So these three criteria, right, we're attentive
to the content and unity of Scripture, pay attention to the whole Bible. We read Scripture
within the living tradition of the whole church. So we recognize that the Scripture is written
principally in the Church's heart, not just in documents and records. And thirdly, we're
attentive to the analogy of faith, meaning that what we read scripture, we always keep in mind all that God has revealed
in scripture, in tradition, and through the Magisterium.
It's kind of a way of just being able to say,
just like we mentioned before,
here are those guardrails, right?
Here's that fence that's around that island
is jutting out of the ocean,
stay inside these,
and you can just run and explore and
play and dive deeply into the scriptures.
I'm mixing my metaphors here, but that's what we're trying to say when we talk about these
three criteria.
It's so good.
These three criteria of interpreting scripture, according to the spirit who wrote it, as
well as trying to discover the sacred author's intention.
This is just a gift.
I think it's so powerful that we have these tools and these criterion
for being able to interpret scripture
and being able to dive deeply,
because that's what, oh man,
it's what gives us that freedom to be able to
just open up the Bible and say,
I'm not gonna be steered wrong, right?
I'm not gonna be brought off track
because I'm being attentive to all three of these criteria and I'm just
reading it from the heart of the church.
And that's such a great consolation and such a great comfort and gives us such great
confidence.
So, with confidence, I hope that you and I can dive into Scripture today and for the
rest of our lives.
And I want to let you know that I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you know that I am praying for you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.