The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 18: The Unity of the Testaments
Episode Date: January 18, 2023Fr. Mike unpacks the vital unity between the Old and New Testaments. Together, we examine prefigurements and types from the Old Testament being fulfilled in the New. We also examine the importance of ...the study of Scripture for each and every Catholic. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 128-133. 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)
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.
It is day 18, reading paragraphs, 128 through 133.
I'm using the ascension edition of the Catechism, FYI, which includes the foundations of faith
approach.
You can use that, you can also follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of
the Catholic Church.
Also, to download your own Catechism and your reading plan, you can visit ascensionpress.com
slash C-I-Y.
Lastly, you can follow or subscribe to follow along and receive daily updates and daily
notifications and whatever place you listened to this podcast.
That makes sense.
Makes sense to me.
Today we're going to talk about, we're kind of getting towards the end of this little mini
section where we're talking about God's plan.
If you're goodness, right?
Obviously, the revelation of God.
Yesterday, we talked about the canon of Scripture and how here is God who reveals himself to the Old Testament, the New Testament, specifically
speaking in the Gospels. Today we're going to kind of recover something that we heard yesterday,
and the church really needs to be adamant about this or is adamant about this, and that is the unity
of the Old and New Testaments. Again, I've mentioned this yesterday, but there are so many people who have this thought
that because of the new covenant,
because of the new testament,
because of what Jesus revealed,
the old covenant, the Old Testament
is defunct, is void, is useless, is purposeless,
and the church really, really wants to do away
with any of that temptation to think that way.
In fact, the church highlights today, the unity of the old and new testaments.
Again, the comment temptation is, it seems like there's two different kinds of gods, like
God of the Old Testament, the God of the New Testament.
As Dwight Trude would say, false.
That is not true.
In fact, the more and more we dive deeply into Scripture, both Old and New Covenants, Old
and New Testaments, the more and more we dive deeply into Scripture, both old and new covenants, old and new testaments, the more and more we see.
There is a vital unity between the Old Testament and the New Testament,
and we absolutely need them both.
Lastly, we're also talking about sacred Scripture in the life of the church,
and just how, how, I want to say, deathfully important to put it out,
how deathfully important sacreder scripture is for us
For anyone who wants to be able to follow after Jesus with their whole heart with their whole life So that's what we're talking about today. Let's say let's say prayers we get started
Father in heaven, we give you praise and we thank you on this day
We thank you for revealing yourself to us. We thank you for all of the years
the countless generations that it took for you to reveal yourself in time to us.
We thank you for the fullness of time. When you revealed yourself to us in the person
of your son, Jesus Christ our Lord, thank you for the Holy Spirit that you sent upon the church
who continues to lead us, who continues to lead us, who continues to
goddess, who continues to teach us.
Give us a love, not only just to know more about you, give us a love for Scripture.
Put in our hearts a desire to seek after you, a desire to read your word, a desire to hear
your word proclaimed, and a desire to share your word with everyone in our lives, with
everyone we love and everyone on this planet, especially
for those who've never heard your word, Lord, or those who have, they thought they heard your word,
they think they hear your word, but they're mistaken. We ask that you please correct our mistakes,
correct our errors and bring all of us into the light of your truth. In Jesus' name we pray, Amen.
And the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, Amen. As I said,
it's days 18, it's the 18 reading paragraphs, 128 to 133.
The unity of the old and new testaments, the church, as early as apostolic times, and then
constantly in our tradition, has illuminated the unity of the divine plan in the two
testaments through typology, which discerns in God's works of the Old Covenant prefigurations of what he accomplished in the fullness of time in the person of his incarnate son.
Christians therefore read the Old Testament in the light of Christ crucified and risen. Such typological reading
discloses the inexhaustible content of the Old Testament, but it must not make us forget
that the Old Testament retains its own intrinsic value as revelation reaffirmed by our Lord
Himself. Besides, the New Testament has to be read in the light of the Old. Early Christian
Catechesis made constant use of the Old Testament
as an old saying put it, the New Testament lies hidden in the Old and the Old Testament
is unveiled in the New.
Typology indicates that dynamic movement toward the fulfillment of the divine plan when
God will be everything to everyone. Nor did the calling of the patriarchs and the exodus
from Egypt, for example,
lose their own value in God's plan
from the mere fact that they were intermediate stages.
Sacred Scripture in the life of the church,
the Revom states,
and such is the force and power of the Word of God
that it can serve the church as her support and vigor
and the children of the church as strength
for their faith, food for the soul, and a pure and lasting font of spiritual life. Hence,
access to Sacred Scripture ought to be wide open to the Christian faithful.
Therefore, the study of the sacred page should be the very soul of sacred theology. The
Ministry of the Word, too, pastoral preaching, catechetics, in all forms of Christian instruction
among which the liturgical homily should hold pride of place is healthily nourished and thrives
in holiness through the word of Scripture.
The Church forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful to learn the surpassing
knowledge of Jesus Christ by frequent reading of the divine scriptures. As St. Jerome said, ignorance of the scriptures
is ignorance of Christ.
Okay, so there we are.
Again, highlighting a couple of things.
The unity of the Old and New Testaments.
Now, we have that unity.
We realize, as we've said so many times,
that the sacred author, the human author of the scriptures
is a real author, and the divine author of the scriptures is a real author. And the divine author
of the scriptures is the real author. So the Holy Spirit, the fact that the Holy Spirit
has guided the writing, inspired the authors, the human authors, that means that all the scripture
has a unity. So the Old Covenant, Old Testament, and the New Covenant, the New Testament,
has a vital unity. And what is that unity?
Well, not only is it part of God's teaching us, right? We've talked about that so many
times that God is taking this as I mentioned yesterday, this raw group of humanity, and
he's revealing himself to them bit by bit. But also, this is so remarkable. Also, there's
this thing we've talked about before called typology.
And typology is that prefigurement, right, that the prefigurations of the Old Testament,
here's got revealing something that gets fulfilled in the New Testament.
So like something like, we have King David, and I don't talk when it comes to the Bible
in the year, so much about King David.
I love King David, even though he's very, very flawed, a human being.
He is the type of Jesus being the king of the universe, right?
David, as king of Israel, is the type of Jesus.
He is fulfilled in the person of Jesus, or another way to say it is,
we have the Ark of the Covenant, as an example.
We're back in the Old Testament, the Ark of the Covenant.
And the Ark inside the Ark is what? Inside the Ark is the mana from the desert. Inside the Ark are the Ten Commandments.
Inside the Ark are Aaron's staff. Right? In those three things, symbolize, they are. Right? The
bread that come down from heaven, they symbolize the Word of God, and they symbolize the priesthood.
So here is that's the type that is fulfilled
in the New Testament in Mary.
Mary is referred to as the Ark of the New Covenant,
or even the New Ark of the New Covenant,
because why?
Because in her was the word made flesh, Jesus Christ.
In her was the bread from heaven, the Eucharist.
In her, and God himself, Jesus himself, right.
In her was Jesus the high priest.
And so you have that, here's the type in the old covenant that's fulfilled in the new
covenant.
And that we see that again and again throughout the scriptures.
And in fact, it's one of the, I don't know, I say fun, but it is a really fun way to read
scripture to realize it's inexhaustible.
In fact, that's what paragraph 129 says.
It says such typological reading,
this closes the inexhaustible content of the Old Testament
at the same time.
So this typology, right, prefigurations,
at the same time, it reminds us,
it must not make us forget.
This typology must not make us forget
that the Old Testament retains its own intrinsic value
as revelation.
And that is so, so important, that we realize that yes, the old is hidden,
there's revealed in the new and the new is hidden in the old, but the old is still good.
And the old is still good. The Old Testament still tells us the truth about who God is.
And that's so so important. In fact, in paragraph 130, it says, the calling of the patriarchs
and the Exodus from Egypt, for example,
they do not lose their own value in God's plan from their fact that they were intermediate stages.
Just because here's the calling of Abraham Isaac and Jacob, here's that motion that the setting
God setting is people free from slavery and Egypt in the Exodus. It's not as if those are no longer
value of value because we've seen the fulfillment in Jesus Christ.
Those have incredible value even if they were intermediate stages.
Okay, so last thing.
This last section, paragraph 131, 132 and 133,
says, sacred scripture in the life of the church.
These three paragraphs are all about how vitally important it is that we as children of God as disciples of Jesus must must have access
to Scripture. Now here's one of the things. There are some stories right back in the day that says,
you know, some people who are kind of anti-Catholic and some of them people who are very pro-Scripture,
which is good. We want to be pro-S pro scripture, but so much so that they would denounce
tradition and say, no scripture alone. There was a kind of a rumor or a myth or a legend,
whatever you want to say, that would not be happy. We'll say gossip. We'll say, I'm a negative myth
that said that the Catholic church kept Bibles locked up and you couldn't actually have a Bible.
Well, that's not exactly true. It'd be more accurate to say that, yeah, I've heard
of stories where they would have in certain churches a Bible that would be locked up.
But it would be locked up in the same way that if you remember back in the day, these
have phone books, remember phone books, remember phone booths, and what they'd have is
you'd have a phone booth and you'd have the phone book. And the phone book would be locked
up connected to the phone booth. Why? Not so that you couldn't use the phone book,
but so that you could,
so that no one would steal it.
So there were times when the church made,
the scriptures available,
but had to lock them up.
Why?
Because I remember hearing statistics
that would say something like,
for a village, a parish to have its own Bible,
would be basically the gross income
of every single person in that village to pay for one Bible because it was handwritten, right?
It was copied out because all the materials were very expensive. The production of the Bible
was very expensive. All of that change, of course, with the invention of the printing press,
would thanks be to God, right? That's so amazing. But people would say, yeah, but then the church
was even very, very adamant about not necessarily,
people couldn't have the Bible in their homes.
And that is not necessarily accurate as well.
What the church was concerned with was the translations
of the Bible, because as we know,
we want to make sure that our translations
are as accurate as possible to the original, right?
It's not a matter of like this is a Catholic
interpretation or sorry, a Catholic translation. It would be a matter of we want to make sure this is
an accurate translation. And so yeah, the church at various times throughout history did say, okay,
don't read that Bible, don't read that other Bible, not because we don't want people to read the
Bible, but because we don't want people to read a mis-translated version of the Bible that could mislead people.
But that's how it's so important.
So important to understand that is the church does, it says, access to sacred scripture ought
to be wide open to the Christian faithful.
Absolutely.
We have to be sure to have access to this.
Moving on, study of the sacred page should be the very soul of sacred theology.
I would mention that, yes, the sacred scripture, sacred tradition, and the magic of the church, the very soul of sacred theology should be the study that, yes, there's sacred Scripture, sacred tradition, and the Magistrian with the Church. The very soul of sacred theology should be
the study of the sacred page, the study of sacred Scripture. That doesn't mean we deny
sacred tradition or ignore the Magistrian, but it does mean that all of our teaching,
all of our preaching, all of our instruction, the all of it should be healthily nourished
and thrives in holiness to the word of Scripture.
And this isn't just for priests, this isn't just for theologians, this is for every one of us.
Every one of us. In fact, this is the last thing, I said last thing, but this is the real last thing.
Perigraph 133 says,
The church forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful to learn the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ by frequent reading of the divine scriptures.
Yet, I mentioned yesterday that it's so good that those people, those saints who would
have a copy of the Gospels, and they carried around with them all of the time, that's good
for us.
Why?
Because we need to be nourished by the Word of God.
We need to be nourished by Scripture.
And that last quote by Saint Jerome, which is so powerful and so convicting for so many
of us, especially when we say something like, well, I remember hearing this way back in the day. I haven't heard people say this recently,
but I remember hearing it said when I was maybe in high school, college, maybe early seminary,
but they'd say things like, well, you know, I'm Catholic. I don't need to know the Bible. Of
course, they were saying, hopefully they were saying that tongue in cheek because I think there was
kind of a, again, that stereotype of Catholics who might not be overly familiar with the Bible.
I'm Catholic, I don't need to know the Bible.
Well then you have to bring up St. Jerome's quote, which he says, ìEgdrants of the Scriptures
is ignorance of Christ.
So, someone could say, ìWell, I don't need to know Jesus.î That's essentially, if someone
says I don't need to know the Bible, what they're saying is I don't need to know Christ,
I don't need to know Jesus.
Because St. Jerome will be saying that we need to know
the scriptures. Why? Because it's in the scriptures that we encounter our Lord Jesus Christ.
Yes, in the church, yes, in the sacraments, of course, but ignorance of scripture is
ignorance of Christ. That's why we did the Bible in here. That's why we're doing this,
because I don't know if you've noticed, but virtually almost every one of these paragraphs
has some kind of scriptural reference.
They're almost, it's almost entire, it's entirely based off of sacred tradition and off
of sacred scripture.
So hopefully that's been communicated.
Hopefully that's been something you've been gathering as well.
I'm just so, this is so exciting.
I cannot convey enough how great it has been to be able to walk with you for the last 18
days.
I don't know if you could tell the for the first few days, for me personally,
we're kind of a battle.
The fact that we've gotten to day 18 is just,
it's a relief,
but it's also just, it marks something in my own heart.
I'm so grateful to be able to walk with you in this.
Because it's kind of been a little bit of a,
it's a new challenge,
and I just want to bring you in,
I just want to share that with you,
to kind of bring you in,
to kind of my heart, as we're walking through the catacism in this year.
I'm so grateful for you. And so because of that, I am always, I'm always praying for
you. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God
bless.
you