The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 333: The Psalms (2025)
Episode Date: November 29, 2025The Psalms are essential and powerful prayers. Through praying the Psalms, we are giving praise to God and expressing our belief while simultaneously nourishing our faith. In the Psalms, we are remind...ed of God’s love, faithfulness, and presence, even in the dark moments of our lives. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2590-2597. 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)
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 a 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 triple three.
and Day 33, we're reading paragraphs 2590 to 2597.
As always, I'm using the Ascension Edition of the Catechism, which includes a foundation 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
and c.I.
And lastly, you can click follow or subscribe to your podcast app for daily updates and daily
notifications because today is day 333.
It's Nugget Day.
I mentioned yesterday that we didn't talk too much about the Psalms, that section there.
So after we read the in-brief, after we read the Nuggets, I thought, let's go back and take a look at yesterday's paragraphs on the Psalms.
Not like overly deep dive, but, you know, let's investigate.
How about?
So today we're just going to enter into this nugget.
So we call upon our Heavenly Father, we call upon Him in the name of the Father and of the Son of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Father in heaven, in this name of your Son, Jesus Christ, we ask you to please, please receive our thanks.
Receive our praise.
Lord God, the Psalms, the Psalter is your gift to us so that we can praise you the way you deserve.
These prayers are your gift to us so that our hearts have a way of expressing the truth
and the depths of our hearts, but also reaching the truth and the heights that is you.
That's what's true about you and who you are.
So we thank you.
When we ask you to please help us not only pray, and when we're praying instantaneously, Lord God, help us to pray.
Well, we don't know how to pray as we are, but also when we pray the same,
psalms Lord God help us to pray the psalms not in an empty way not in an hollow way but help us to pray
the psalms in a way that is alive and dynamic where your words change our hearts as often as we
read them as often as we utter them or sing them let your words change our hearts let your words
become our words that your heart become our heart we make this prayer in the mighty name of
jesus christ our lord amen in the name of the father and of the son and of the holy spirit
Amen. It is Day 33. We're reading paragraphs 2590 to 2597.
In brief, prayer is the raising of one's mind and heart to God, or the requesting of good
things from God. God tirelessly calls each person to this mysterious encounter with
himself. Prayer unfolds throughout the whole history of salvation as a reciprocal call
between God and man. The prayer of Abraham and Jacob is presented as a battle of faith marked by trust
in God's faithfulness, and by certitude in the victory promised to perseverance.
The prayer of Moses responds to the living God's initiative for the salvation of his people.
It foreshadows the prayer of intercession of the unique mediator, Christ Jesus.
The prayer of the people of God flourished in the shadow of the dwelling place of God's
presence on earth, the ark of the covenant, and the temple, under the guidance of their
shepherds, especially King David, and of the prophets. The prophets summoned the people to conversion
of heart, and while zealously seeking the face of God like Elijah, they interceded for the
people. The Psalms constitute the masterwork of prayer in the Old Testament. They present two inseparable
qualities, the personal and the communal. They extend to all dimensions of history, recalling God's
promises already fulfilled and looking for the coming of the Messiah. Prayed and fulfilled
in Christ, the Psalms are an essential and permanent element of the prayer of the church. They are suitable
for men of every condition and time.
There we have it. Paragraphs 2590, 2597 little nuggets there today.
So let's go back to paragraph 2585, just because, you know, yesterday we read the section
on the Psalms, but didn't really talk too much about it.
So let's highlight the fact that, okay, it says this.
It says that these are sacred books, and they reveal to us the development of the Psalms
show a deepening in prayer for oneself and in prayer for others.
So it says in paragraph 2585, it says, thus the Psalms were gradually collected into the
five books of the Psalter. And Salter means praises, the masterwork of prayer in the Old Testament.
Now, this is very important for us. Remember, praise. How important praise is in our relation
with the Lord. How important praise is in our relationship with God. Remember, Judah.
Judah means what? Praise. Let Judah go up. Let praise go up first. And so we realize that when we
pray the Psalms, especially, I mean, not just at the beginning of the day, at any time, but there
are many, many Psalms of praise. And it is incredible, an incredible way to start one's day
or any time during one's day to give God praise and to do that through praying the Psalms.
So incredible. Now, it goes on in 2586. It highlights the fact that the Psalms, they both
nourish the people in their faith and also expressed the people's faith. It is one of those
kind of situations where the Psalms both, and this is what happens to us now. The Psalms,
they teach us how to pray and the Psalms can become our prayer, right? They nourish,
us, they feed us, but they also become the thing that expresses the depths of our heart.
And this is so important. Because what do they do? It says here that the prayers of the Psalms,
they recall the saving events of the past, yet extend into the future, right? So recognize that
the Psalms remind us of God's goodness. They remind us of God's faithfulness. And if you ever read
the Psalms, like almost every other one is, remember God, this is what you've done, this is what you've done,
this is what you've done. Reminding the people, this is what God has done. This is what he's done.
and it reminds us that, okay, the God who was faithful in the past is faithful now and will be faithful
in the future. It's so important for us to understand this. It's so important for us to realize this.
Prayed by Jesus himself. You know, Jesus himself prayed the Psalms and he fulfilled the Psalms and they are
essential to the prayer of the church. They're not, remember, we've already talked about this.
This is not one of those situations where we say, oh, the Old Testament is dead and defunct. It's no longer
useful for us. It's no longer true. It's no longer a part of our patrimony. No, it is still the Word of God.
We pray the Psalms because they remain the Word of God.
Even though Jesus Christ prayed them and fulfilled them,
they remain an ever-present and ever-powerful way to pray.
Now, I love this.
2587, the Psalter is the book in which the Word of God becomes man's prayer.
This is so important.
It's the book in which the Word of God becomes man's prayer.
So how would I express this?
I might have mentioned this before.
I might have mentioned that as a priest, I made a promise that I would pray the Psalms
the liturgy of the hours five times a day. So we have morning prayer, we have daytime prayer,
evening prayer, night prayer, and then a thing called the Office of Readings. I did not really
get into this. It was not something that I was really inspired by. I think I would go to the Psalms
and like I would pray them as best I could. Well, sorry, that's not. That's a lie. I would pray them.
I would read through them and I would say, okay, this is the prayer. But I remember not being very
inspired by them. I remember reading the Psalms, praying the Psalms, and not being overly moved by
them. It was just kind of like, okay, these are the words and I'm praying them, kind of like
I mentioned yesterday, about external worships, kind of going through the motions. But here's
the incredible thing. The more and more I prayed the Psalms, the more and more they became my
prayer. That's why Paragraph 2587 says, they're the book in the Psalter, right? Psalms is the book
in which the Word of God becomes man's prayer. So one example was, I was on a silent retreat at one
point, and it was in the middle of January, somewhere, middle of the winter. I remember
is incredibly cold, like so cold, just like, you know, you can hear trees cracking because it's just so
cold and so silent. I remember leaving this little kind of hut I was in with no running water
and no electricity and it was warm enough, but it was pretty rustic and went out kind of walking
on these trails and I just wanted to talk to God. There was something inside of me and every word
that I thought of, everything I thought of was not enough. It wasn't capturing this moment. It wasn't
capturing what I was going through. And then all of a sudden I found my
myself, just from memory, because I had been for years at that point, I was ordained. And for years,
I've been praying these Psalms every single day, multiple times a day. I just found myself
praying the words of one of the Psalms. And it just, I just started and it just kind of kept
flowing. And it kept being one of these things where I was talking to God in the words of God.
And I discovered that that Psalm actually captured the depths of my heart more than I could
have captured the depths of my heart. And it was just one way that, that again, we go,
right I mentioned yesterday, sometimes belief affects behavior and sometimes behavior affects
belief. I'd been praying the Psalms so many times. Again, very externally, too. I mean,
I want to be better, but, you know, here we are. We do our best. We do what we can. But it had
gotten into my bones. And the Word of God became my prayer. And it's just remarkable how
that's what can happen with the Psalms because, God, come to my assistance. I do not know how to pray
as I ought. Holy Spirit, come and teach me how to pray. I don't know how to pray as I ought. And so praying
the Psalms is incredible like this. And it actually, and the Psalms are great because they're not just
certain kinds of prayers. Like all you get is praise. Well, no, in paragraph 2588, it highlights this.
It highlights that there's many forms of prayer in the Psalms. It says whether hymns, they can do
songs, or prayers of lamentation or Thanksgiving. Sometimes they're individual, sometimes they're
communal, sometimes a royal chance. Sometimes there are songs of pilgrimage or wisdom meditations.
All those different kinds of prayers, lamentation, thanksgiving, individual, communal, songs
of pilgrimage, meditating on God's wisdom, they all can meet us in any given season in our
life. It says, though a given psalm may reflect an event of the past, it still possesses
such direct simplicity that it can be prayed in truth by men of all times.
and conditions.
Just one last thing I want to highlight before we conclude today.
It's in paragraph 2589, and it is maybe the kernel, or maybe the golden thread that goes
through every one of the Psalms of prayer.
It even says this.
It says there are certain constant characteristics.
Again, all those different kinds of prayer, lamentation, Thanksgiving, et cetera, there's
certain constant characteristics that peer throughout the Psalms.
So here's a couple.
Simplicity.
Just remember we talked about this, how important it is when we pray.
to be honest. Just simply be honest. Also, spontaneity in prayer. Yes, we are praying
someone's prayer they wrote down, but this prayer is spontaneous. Next one is, every one of the
Psalms is like this. It expresses the desire for God himself through and with all that is good in
his creation. And so it talks about creation, talks about the desire for God, talk about the desire
for good. How about this one? The distraught situation of the believer who, in his preferential,
for the Lord is exposed to a host of enemies and temptations, but awaits upon what the faithful God
will do in the certitude of his love and in submission to his will. If there's a line to be
underlined today, that is the line to be underlined today. The distraught situation of the believer,
that because you have chosen the Lord, you now find yourself amidst a host of enemies, host of temptations,
but to wait upon what the faithful God will do
in the certitude of his love and its submission to his will.
This is what it comes back to.
We talked to us before.
Humility and trust.
That, yeah, God have chosen you,
and it's led me to a place sometimes of great blessing
and sometimes a place of hardship,
sometimes a place of rejection,
sometimes a place where now I have all these enemies and temptations
because I've chosen you.
and yet at the same time here is God who continues to be faithful and he will do something
in the life of the person who waits upon the certitude of his love and his submission to God's will
and this is the heart the kernel the golden thread that constant characteristic that goes
through almost all of the Psalms and this is the constant characteristic that is meant to go through
our prayer as well this trust this humility I know God yes I may have been led to this place of distress
this place of trial, this place of challenge.
But I know the God who led me to this moment will lead me through this moment.
And that's true for all of us.
We need to hold on to this in our prayer,
this constant characteristic of simplicity, humility, trust, and confidence
that even in the darkest of days, even the darkest of moments,
God is still with us.
And that's expressed in all the Psalms,
which is one of the reasons why it's so good to pray the Psalms.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me. My name is Father Mac. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.
