The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 271: Love of God (2025)
Episode Date: September 28, 2025We continue our overview of the Ten Commandments by looking at the two parts: love of God and love of neighbor. Together they form a “coherent whole,” and there is a unity between the two. While t...he Catechism shows us our obligation to follow the Commandments, it also reminds us that, “What God commands, he makes possible by his grace.” Fr. Mike emphasizes that even though it may be challenging at times, we are not alone. Jesus is here to help us keep his Commandments. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2064-2082. 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.
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We can't lose our faith the way we lose our car keys.
We either give it away or we let it decay because we don't use it.
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz.
And in my new book, Unshakeable, building a life of virtue in a world of chaos,
I tell faith-filled stories that inspire you to live a life of virtue that flows from the unshakable power of God.
Although we're surrounded by a culture that mocks virtue,
we can feed ourselves stories that really do uphold what is good and promote a virtuous life.
When we live this way, we experience freedom and joy like never before.
It's my prayer that the stories in my book, Unshakeable,
will inspire you to fight the battle for a virtuous life
and win through trust in an unshakable God.
Order your copy at ascensionpress.com.
Hi, my 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 here 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 271. Amazing. We're reading paragraphs 2004 to 282. As always, 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.
you can also download your own catechism in a year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash CIY, and you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates and daily notifications today.
Day 271 paragraphs 2064, not 2064, yeah, 264, into 2082.
We're talking about the decalogue.
Remember, the decalogue literally means the 10 words.
And so first, we're looking at the decalogue in the church's tradition.
You might have noticed that when yesterday, when I read the 10 commandments, I read the 10 commandments,
I read three different versions from the book of Exodus, from the book of Deuteronomy,
and then the classical catechetical numbering and catechetical explanation of those
Ten Commandments.
Where did that come from?
Great question, Camper.
The short answer is St. Augustine.
Well, they have the longer answer in paragraphs 2065 and 266.
But we highlight the fact that when we're looking at the Ten Commandments, we're looking
at a whole, right?
We're looking at not just a bunch of arbitrary dictates, right?
not just a bunch of kind of random suggestions or even random commands, but they have a coherent whole
that the first three commandments have to do with love of God. In the last seven commandments have to do
with love of neighbor. And we recognize that from the early days of the church, there's a unity,
and that's the second section here, the unity in the decalogue, that to love God, I can't love God
without loving my neighbor. And to love my neighbor, because he's made a guy's image and likeness,
is to love God. Right. So there's a connection. There's a unity there. Now we also are looking at
It's two or three more obligations here.
One is, or not obligations, but headers, I guess you'd say.
One is the decalogue and the natural law,
recognizing that the commandments that are found in the decalogue
could be things that people might be able to discover
simply by looking at the human heart
and looking at if I have a sense of what a human person is,
and if there is a God, then that God deserves my worship.
And if the human being is made in God's image and likeness,
although we wouldn't know that naturally.
but if that's true, I could discover that I should treat them in a certain way.
So there's a unity between the Decalogue, right, the Ten Commandments and the natural law.
Also, there's an obligation, meaning that this is not an optional.
In fact, I think my mom used to have a somewhat ironic slash sarcastic bumper sticker on the back of her car that says something like they're called the Ten Commandments, not the Ten Suggestions or something like that.
I don't know.
I may have been something along those lines.
We recognize that there's an obligation, that we have an obligation to follow God's commands and that we,
can't do it without Jesus. So that's what we're looking at today. So in order to look at all of
these things, right, from the decalogue in the church's tradition, to the unity of the Ten
commandments, the decalogue of the natural law, and also the obligation that we find ourselves
in. We recognize we need God's help. And so we come to our Father with prayers. Father in
Heaven, we thank you. We thank you so much. Thank you for bringing us to this place. Thank you for
speaking your word to us. Your word, above all words, the word, the name of your son, Jesus Christ.
your word made flesh. But also, Lord God, thank you for speaking those 10 words to us.
These words that reveal not only your will, but reveal your heart. They reveal you.
So, Lord, we ask that you please, as we come into contact once again with your words,
that we allow ourselves to be transformed by contact with you. In Jesus' name, we pray.
Amen. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
It is day 271. We're reading paragraphs 26.
64 to 2082.
The Decaholog in the Church's Tradition
Infidelity to Scripture and in conformity with the example of Jesus,
the tradition of the Church has acknowledged the primordial importance and significance of the Decahologue.
Ever since St. Augustine, the Ten Commandments have occupied a predominant place
in the catechesis of baptismal candidates and the faithful.
In the 15th century, the custom arose of expressing the commandments of the Decalog in rhymed
formulae, easy to memorize, and in positive form. They are still in use today. The catechisms of the
church have often expounded Christian morality by following the order of the Ten Commandments.
The division and numbering of the commandments have varied in the course of history. The present
catechism follows the division of the commandments established by St. Augustine, which has become
traditional in the Catholic Church. It is also that of the Lutheran Confessions. The Greek fathers
worked out a slightly different division, which is found in the Orthodox churches and reformed
communities. The Ten Commandments state what is required in the love of God and love of neighbor.
The first three concern love of God and the other seven love of neighbor. St. Augustine writes,
As charity comprises the two commandments to which the Lord related the whole law and the prophets,
so the Ten Commandments were themselves given on two tablets. Three were written on one tablet
and seven on the other. The Council of Trent teaches that the Ten Commandments are obligatory for Christians
and that the justified man is still bound to keep them.
The Second Vatican Council confirms,
the bishops, successors of the apostles,
receive from the Lord the mission of teaching all peoples
and of preaching the gospel to every creature
so that all men may attain salvation through faith,
baptism, and the observance of the commandments.
The unity of the decalogue.
The decalogue forms a coherent whole.
Each word refers to each of the others and to all of them.
They reciprocally condition one another.
The two tablets shed light on one another. They form an organic unity. To transgress one
commandment is to infringe all the others. One cannot honor another person without blessing God
his creator. One cannot adore God without loving all men his creatures. The decalogue
brings man's religious and social life into unity. The decalogue and the natural law.
The Ten commandments belong to God's revelation. At the same time, they teach us the true humanity of man.
They bring to light the essential duties, and therefore indirectly, the fundamental rights inherent
in the nature of the human person.
The decalogue contains a privileged expression of the natural law.
St. Ironaeus wrote,
From the beginning, God had implanted in the heart of man the precepts of the natural law.
Then he was content to remind him of them.
This was the decalogue.
The commandments of the decalogue, although accessible to reason alone, have been revealed.
To attain a complete and certain understanding of the recalogue,
requirements of the natural law, sinful humanity needed this revelation. St. Bonaventure wrote,
A full explanation of the commandments of the decalogue became necessary in the state of sin
because the light of reason was obscured and the will had gone astray. We know God's
commandments through the divine revelation proposed to us in the church and through the voice of moral
conscience. The obligation of the decalogue. Since they express man's fundamental duties towards God
and towards his neighbor, the Ten Commandments reveal in their primordial content grave obligations.
They are fundamentally immutable, and they oblige always and everywhere.
No one can dispense from them. The Ten Commandments are engraved by God in the human heart.
Obedience to the commandments also implies obligations in matter which is in itself light.
Thus, abusive language is forbidden by the Fifth Commandment, but would be a grave offense only as a result of circumstances or the offender's intention.
Apart from me, you can do nothing.
Jesus says, I am the vine, you are the branches.
He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit.
For apart from me, you can do nothing.
The fruit referred to in this saying is the holiness of a life made fruitful by union with Christ.
When we believe in Jesus Christ, partake of his mysteries, and keep his commandments,
the Savior himself comes to love in us, his father and his brethren.
our father and our brethren. His person becomes, through the spirit, the living and interior rule of our
activity. Jesus stated, This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.
In brief, What good deed must I do to have eternal life? If you would enter into life,
keep the commandments. By his life and by his preaching, Jesus attested to the permanent validity
of the Decaholog. The gift of the Decaholog is bestowed from within the covenant
concluded by God with His people. God's commandments take on their true meaning in and through
this covenant. In fidelity to Scripture and in conformity with Jesus' example, the tradition
of the Church has always acknowledged the primordial importance and significance of the Deca log.
The Decaholog forms an organic unity, in which each word or commandment refers to all the
others taken together. To transgress one commandment,
is to infringe the whole law.
The Deco-Log contains a privileged expression of the natural law.
It is made known to us by divine revelation and by human reason.
The Ten Commandments, in their fundamental content, state grave obligations.
However, obedience to these precepts also implies obligations in matter, which is, in itself, light.
What God commands, he makes possible by His grace.
right and there we have it paragraphs 2064 to 2082 wow there's just so much here obviously because
there's a lot of paragraphs here including some nuggets at the end including that amazing final nugget
we'll get to that at the very end but okay yesterday you might have noticed as i said at the beginning
of this episode you might have noticed that there are three versions of the decalogue we have
one from exodus 20 from duteroni five as well as this classical catechetical version of
the ten commandments you also might have noticed i mentioned this yesterday i believe
that other denominations, other, as it says, other confessions,
they have a different numbering or different ordering of those Ten Commandments.
Where does that come from?
Well, we have St. Augustine to thank for some of these.
In the fourth century, you have St. Augustine who was attempting to communicate
these Ten Commandments, synthesizing both the Book of Exodus and the Book of Deuteronomy
into a way that was memorable, right?
So not taking anything away, not leaving anything out of the commandments of God,
but numbering them according to what he thought would be most helpful for people to
accept, understand, and embrace, live out, remember, right? So we also share this with Lutheran
Confessions. It goes on to talk about how the Greek fathers worked out a slightly different division.
So here's Augustine, right? He's in the West. He's a Latin father. The Greek fathers worked out a
slightly different division. Again, looking at Exodus, looking at Deuteronomy, which is found
in the Orthodox churches and in reformed communities. So reformed communities like Calvinist
communities and some other maybe evangelical free type communities, they'll have a different
numbering at times unless they default to Augustine's version of numbering the commandments.
So that's all that comes from. Moving on, as I mentioned before, the commandments, 10 of them
are divided into two kinds, right? Remember the great commandment. The great commandment is to love
the Lord of God with all your heart, mind, soul, and strength, and to love your neighbor as
yourself. The first three commandments, all about love of God. The last seven commandments,
all about love of neighbor. And we recognize and it's so powerful, so incredible, that the
catacism here makes that point of saying, that's a unity, because if I'm going to honor the Lord
God, then I need to love my neighbor. And when I do love my neighbor, I therefore honor God. And so it's
just, there's a whole. It says this, the decalogue brings man's religious and social life into unity.
In that sense of, like, you're not called to have, again, a private faith. We said this so many
times, not called to have simply a private faith that I don't live in relationship with others, but a
personal faith that I live in community, that I live in all of my areas, all the aspects of
life. Moving on. The decalogue, we're kind of going through fast, I don't mean to, the decalogue
and the natural law. Remember that God is inscribed in the human heart, a sense of right and a
sense of wrong, and that we can come to know good and evil, we can come to know right and wrong
to varying degrees by simply by human reason. Remember St. Paul writing to the Romans chapter one,
he talks about this. He says, no, that again, since we've been granted reason, we've been given
an intellect, one of the things we can do is we can discern good and evil. We can discern right
and wrong. At the same time, because we're fallen, our intellect is darkened. And because we're
fallen, our will has been weakened. And so we absolutely need revelation. So not only could we know
this, we can know these truths by natural reason, it's God's revelation that clarifies. If you
want to say it like this, we can see, like your eyeballs, your eyeballs can see. But if your vision
isn't perfect, if your vision isn't 20-20 and in the fall, in some ways like this, our spiritual
vision, or our intellect, is not 2020. You can still see stuff. Most people can still see things.
So you can see, but it's like, ah, it's not crisp. It's not clear. You put on your glasses,
that's like revelation, where here is the natural law. Okay, I can see that there is a tree in front
of me, but you put on those glasses and realize, okay, here's the detail of the tree. Similarly,
I can see that treating others with respect and dignity is a good thing. We put on God's
revelation, and we can see clearly not only the reason why it's a good thing, but how deeply
that reason goes. That makes sense? How is that analogy for you guys? The last two things,
the obligation of the decalogue. This is, I love how the church is getting into this in these last
two paragraphs here, 272 and 2073. He says this, since they express man's fundamental duties
toward God and his, toward his neighbor, the Ten Commandments reveal, in their primordial content,
grave obligations. These are fundamentally immutable, and they oblige always,
and everywhere. So no one can dispense from them, that these are engraved by God in the human heart.
So they are serious. To violate these sins is grave. There's grave matter. Remember, this says
grave obligation, these ten commandments. At the same time, obedience to the commandments also
implies obligations and matters which are themselves light. So we've talked in the past about
mortal sin and venial sin, about how mortal sin requires grave matter and full knowledge of the
grave matter and full consent of the will regarding the grave matter. Now, not all of the ways in which
we could violate the Ten Commandments would necessarily be grave matter. For example, let's take the
Fifth Amendment. That's the example they used in 2073. The Fifth Commandment, thou shalt not kill,
which strictly speaking is the Hebrew and Greek term murder, right, to not shall not take an innocent
human life. To say that, like, yeah, to violate that, to take an innocent human life, that's always
going to be grave matter. But there are also variations about this prohibition to murder. For example,
using harsh language against someone else or abusive language towards someone else that would fall
under the umbrella of murdering your neighbor. Jesus makes that connection when he says,
he've heard it was said, thou shall not kill. But I say to you, anyone who grows angry with their
brother is liable to judgment. Anyone who says, Raqa, or you fool to your brethren, be liable to
the Sanhedron. So Jesus makes it clear that, yes, murder.
is always going to be that grave matter. But there are some other sins underneath this umbrella,
as it's noted here in 2073. He says this, thus abusive language is forbidden by the Fifth
Commandment. Makes sense. But it would be a grave offense only as a result of circumstances
or the offender's intention. So someone could use abusive language and that wouldn't necessarily
be grave matter. But you can imagine the circumstance or the offender's intention where that would
be grave matter. For example, if you were to say, here's abusive language, that is, I don't know,
I don't want to say what's not great, what is, you're in your car, someone else is in their car,
and you kind of shout out some abusive language, they don't hear it, no one else hears it,
but you've done that. Okay, that would not be a good thing, right? That would be a sin.
But it wouldn't necessarily be grave matter. Now, see, you take those exact same words,
and you say them to your mom. You say them to your dad. Now, those circumstances,
And the dynamic of that relationship, that could make that those same words, that exactly said
the same way, it could elevate that to becoming grave matter.
So there are some things, again, under the category of these grave sins that wouldn't be
grave necessarily except as a result of circumstances or the offender's intention.
I hope that makes some sense.
Now, before we conclude today and before we jump into tomorrow where we're going to talk about
the First Commandment, about just love of God, so great, I'm so excited about this,
we are reminded in 2074 and later on in 2082 apart from me you can do nothing this is going to be
necessary for us let's look at this more closely remember jesus's words in john's gospel i'm divine
you are the branches he who abides in me and i and him he it is that bears fruit for apart from me
you can do nothing you guys we are called to the heights of holiness these commandments we're going to dive
deeply into are going to be challenging. Not necessarily everyone, but they're going to be
challenging. They're going to challenge our complacency. They're going to challenge what we're
accustomed to. They're going to challenge our preconceived ideas. They're even going to challenge
our will. Like, do I want this? Do I want holiness? That's going to be a big question. In all of
this, we need to be reminded that apart from Jesus, we can do none of this. That we absolutely
need Jesus and his help and the power of His Holy Spirit in order to move forward.
It says this, this is so important, again, because this is not just about you becoming holier.
It says, when we believe in Jesus Christ, partake of his mysteries, and keep his commandments,
the Savior himself comes to love in us, his father, and his brethren, our father, and our brethren.
And they realize this, this is so important.
When we say yes to the Lord and virtue, the Savior himself comes to love in us, his father, and his brethren, our father and our brethren.
And we can't do that on our own.
We can't.
We absolutely, it's impossible,
which is one of the reasons why if you want another highlightable verse,
another underlinable verse, is 2082.
What God commands, he makes possible by his grace.
What God commands, he makes possible by his grace.
We are going to face a number of commandments over the next coming weeks.
Some of them, again, as I said this before,
maybe many times, but I know I just said it like two minutes ago.
Some of them, no problem.
Got it.
Lord, dial it in.
No big deal.
Some of them, incredibly daunting.
Some of them, I don't know how in the world, I'm going to live this way.
Yet, God will never command us to do something that we're unable to do.
God will never ask of us anything that's impossible.
What God commands, he makes possible by his grace.
This is one of those things to stitch on a pillow and sleep on a,
it every night. What God commands, he makes possible by his grace. You do not have to do this
alone. Not only can't you, we can't do it alone, you don't have to do it alone. Because God is going
to meet us with his commands, starting tomorrow. We already has for the last 271 days. But tomorrow,
he'll meet us with even more commands. Maybe there are reviews for us. Maybe they're new to us.
But what he commands, he makes possible by his grace. So do not be afraid.
Do not be afraid. Do not be afraid. Have courage. The Lord is with you. I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.