The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 360: Hallowing God’s Name (2024)
Episode Date: December 25, 2024What does it mean to hallow God’s name? We are not the source or cause of God’s holiness. As the Catechism says, we hallow God’s name so it may be glorified, loved, and known. Jesus instructs us... in the Our Father to petition and desire that we be drawn into God’s plan of loving kindness. In time, God’s name is hallowed in how we live and how we pray. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 2807-2815. 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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I'm Father Mark Mary Ames with the Franciscan Friars The Renewal. My brothers and sisters at the service of becoming saints and falling in love with Jesus
and Mary and the Most Holy Rosary, the team here at Ascension Press have put together the Rosary in a Year podcast.
Each day we're gonna have a 10 to 15 minute episode
where we're just gonna work through the basics of the rosary. Who is Jesus? How do we encounter Jesus?
Who is Our Lady? What does it mean for us to be in relationship to her?
We're going to go through the Hail Mary, the Our Father, each of the different mysteries.
And then we're going to bring in some Saint writings on the mysteries and some sacred art that speaks on the mysteries and all of this
to help enrich our prayer, to renew our prayer, to help us fall in love with Jesus and Mary and to fall in love with the Rosary again. If you want to join us on this journey, you can begin by going to assentgenpress.com
forward slash rosaryinayear to download the prayer plan and by listening and praying with us
through the Rosary in a Year podcast. Alright, look forward to the journey with you.
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 360 all the way around. We're reading paragraphs 2807 to 2815. As always, I'm using the Ascension
edition of the Catechism, which includes a 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 your reading plan for those last six days by visiting ascensionpress.com
slash C-I-Y. Although there is some satisfaction in checking off the days, I have to admit,
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daily notifications. I know we guys here, we have three day, 360 all the way
around the world. Um, amazing, right? 360 degrees circle. It's a,
we come full circle almost after this day, five more days, but you get it.
You guys, thank you. Thank you so much. If you've been,
if you're here it's because you've been listening and maybe just jumped in. Maybe this is your first day,
in which case, Hey, welcome. And that's weird. But I thank you for all of you have supported the
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and I want to share the love a little bit.
So thank you so much.
Speaking of sharing the love, here's a segue.
Today, we're talking about the first petition
in the Lord's Prayer, the first petition in the Our Father,
which is, hallowed be thy name.
And so let's highlight this.
The first question people always ask when it comes to what does it mean to hallow God's
name?
Are we saying, well, here's, I'll let the catechism speak for itself.
Paragraph 2807 says this, the term to hallow is to be understood here, not primarily in
its causative sense.
Only God hallows, only God makes holy, but above all, in an evaluative sense, to recognize as holy,
to treat in a holy way, right? So, when every time you've been praying the Lord's Prayer and
prayed, Father, hallowed be thy name, you're not making it holy by saying, hallowed be your name,
hallowed be thy name, right? It's not a causative sense, but in an evaluative sense,
to recognize as holy, God, may your name be glorified, may your name be known,
may your name be loved, right?
May you be loved.
And that's hopefully, hopefully you've known that.
And if you didn't know that, well then,
it only took 360 days of reading the Catechism
to get there.
So here we are.
We're also gonna talk, we're gonna continue to talk about
what's the depth to which the holiness of God
can be hallowed, right?
The holiness of God can be hallowed, right? The holiness of God can be known and
loved and revered. And yeah, just talk about the holiness and sanctification of God's name
among the nations and how paragraph 2814 will highlight this. The sanctification of
His name among the nations depends inseparably on our life and on our prayer. And so we'll get there.
Right now, though, let's say a prayer.
In the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit, Amen.
Father in heaven, we praise you and glorify you.
We actually do.
We ask, we pray that your name is hallowed,
that your name is known,
that your name is revered and loved above all other names.
First of all, Lord God, we ask that we,
that we revere your name, that we glorify your
name by our words and our actions, how we live, how we treat each other, how we pray.
May we love your name, Lord God, above every other name.
Let us love your name above every other name.
Let it be the sweetest name to our ears and the name that is a soothing balm to our hearts.
Lord God, your name heals.
Hallowed be your name.
Your name revives.
Lord God, hallowed be your name.
Your name gives life.
God, hallowed be your name.
Your name reconciles.
Lord God, hallowed be your name.
Your name saves us from everlasting death
and brings us to you. Lord, hallowed be your name. Your name saves us from everlasting death and brings us to you. Lord, hallowed
be your name.
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 360. We're reading paragraphs
2807 to2815. Hallowed be thy name.
The term to hallow is to be understood here not primarily in its causative sense – only
God hallows, makes holy – but above all, in an evaluative sense – to recognize as
holy, to treat in a holy way.
And so, in adoration, this invocation is sometimes understood as praise and thanksgiving. But this petition is here taught to us by Jesus as an optative, a petition, a desire, and an expectation in which God and man are involved.
Beginning with this first petition to our Father, we are immersed in the innermost mystery of His Godhead and the drama of the salvation of our humanity.
Asking the Father that His name be made holy draws us
into His plan of loving-kindness for the fullness of time, according to His purpose for which
He set forth in Christ that we might be holy and blameless before Him in love.
In the decisive moments of His economy, God reveals His name, but He does so by accomplishing
His work. This work, then, is realized for us and in us only if his name is hallowed by us and
in us.
The holiness of God is the inaccessible center of his eternal mystery.
What is revealed of it in creation and history, Scripture calls glory, the radiance of his
majesty.
In making man in his image and likeness, God crowned him with glory and honor.
But by sinning, man fell short of the glory of God.
From that time on, God was to manifest his holiness by revealing and giving his name,
in order to restore man to the image of his Creator.
In the promise to Abraham and the oath that accompanied it, God commits himself but without
disclosing his name.
He begins to reveal it to Moses and makes it known clearly before the eyes of the whole
people when he saves them from the Egyptians.
He has triumphed gloriously.
From the covenant of Sinai onwards, this people is his own, and it is to be a holy, or consecrated
– the same word is used for both in Hebrew – nation, because the name of God dwells
in it.
In spite of the holy law that again and again their
holy God gives them, you shall be holy for I the Lord your God am holy, and although
the Lord shows patience for the sake of His name, the people turn away from the holy one
of Israel and profane His name among the nations. For this reason, the just ones of the Old
Covenant, the poor survivors return from exile and the prophets burned with passion for the name.
Finally, in Jesus, the name of the Holy God is revealed and given to us, in the flesh,
as Savior, revealed by what He is, by His Word, and by His sacrifice.
This is the heart of His priestly prayer,
Holy Father, for their sake I consecrate myself, that they also may be consecrated in truth."
Because He sanctifies His own name, Jesus reveals to us the name of the Father.
At the end of Christ's Passover, the Father gives Him the name that is above all names,
Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.
In the waters of baptism, we have been washed, sanctified, justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ
and in the Spirit of our God.
Our Father calls us to holiness in the whole of our life and since He is the source of
our life in Christ Jesus who became for us wisdom from God and sanctification, both His
glory and our life depend on the hallowing of His name in us and by us.
Such is the urgency of our first petition.
Saint Cyprian wrote,
By whom is God hallowed, since He is the one who hallows?
But since He said, You shall be holy to me, for I the Lord am holy, we seek and ask that
we who are sanctified in baptism may persevere in what we have begun to be.
And we ask this daily, for we need sanctification daily, so that we who fail inseparably on our life and our prayer.
St. Peter Casologus wrote, when we live wickedly. As the apostle says, the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles
because of you. We ask then, that just as the name of God is holy, so we may obtain
his holiness in our souls. Tertullian further wrote, When we say, Hallowed
be thy name, we ask that it should be hallowed in us, who are in him, but also in others
whom God's grace still awaits, that we may obey the precepts that obliges us to pray for everyone, even our enemies.
That is why we do not say expressly, Hallowed be thy name in us, for we ask that it be so
in all men.
This petition embodies all the others.
Like the six petitions that follow, it is fulfilled by the prayer of Christ.
Prayer to our Father is our prayer if it is prayed in the name of Jesus. There we have it, paragraph 2807 to 2815, this first petition.
I'll use the same word, beautiful.
It's beautiful.
Okay, we already said this when it came to the very first
thing that people think, we're making God's name holy,
nope, what we are doing is we're evaluating,
we're recognizing God is holy,
we're treating it in a holy way.
And it's just incredible that it says in the middle
of this paragraph, it says, this petition is here taught
to us by Jesus as an optative.
It's a petition, a desire, and an expectation
in which God and man are involved.
We're immersed in this prayer.
We're immersed in the innermost mystery of his Godhead
and the drama of salvation of our humanity.
So asking the Father that his name be made holy
draws us into his plan of loving kindness
for the fullness of time, which is incredible.
And just remember, when we read the Bible, if you haven't done that yet, I encourage
you, maybe in five days, you'll start that.
But I encourage you, if you haven't read the Bible, we have this slow revelation of God's
name.
That's what paragraph 2808 says.
It says, in the decisive moments of his economy, right?
That economy of salvation, the story of salvation, the way God worked it out? In those decisive moments, God reveals his name,
but he does so by accomplishing his work.
And this is this remarkable thing.
God's name and his work are so inextricably connected
to each other.
It goes on to say, this work then is realized for us
and in us only if his name is hallowed by us and in us.
And so we have this in the paragraphs that follow how we talked about this so
many times, right?
How God is known through his creation that all creation cries out the glory of
God. Paragraph 28 10 reminds us that when God started this to walk with Abraham,
brought him into covenant and to Moses and
in all these things, God is very solely revealing more deeply his name and he does this again
through his works.
It's incredible.
And then you have the prophets and the people who are exiled in paragraph 20, 11, who longed
to have a passion for the name of God and for the work of God, right?
A passion for the name of God and for God to act in this world.
And that's so amazing.
Remember we talked about how the name of Jesus is unique
because the name of Jesus is also His presence.
We utter the name of Jesus, He is present
and His presence is His power.
So here's the name of God.
And when we reflect on the name of God,
we know the name of God because of what He's done.
And incredible.
In Baragraph 28 28 12 highlights the whole
Kind of puts a put a
Ribbon on the whole thing where paragraph 28 12 says finally in in Jesus the name of the Holy God is revealed and given
To us in the flesh as Savior
Revealed by what he is by his word and by his sacrifice. Remember this whole connection
They're making the point of saying that God's name and his actions, right? God's name and His works are inextricably connected.
And so, the holy name of God in Jesus is fully revealed and fully given to us in the flesh as
Savior, revealed by what He is, by His word, and by His sacrifice, by what He said and by what He
did. And that's why as Christians, that's what we are meant to do.
We're meant to reveal the name of Jesus, reveal the name of God,
the name of every other name by what we say, by what we do.
Which is a high call, right? Obviously, it is a lot to ask, a lot to shoot for.
But you're made for that. You're made for more.
Yeah, to realize this, that God reveals
Himself in His words and His works, and we're made to reveal Him through our words and through
our works. And yet, obviously, we fail. That's why I love this quote from St. Cyprian. It's
the second little paragraph of paragraph 28-13. It says, we ask that God's name is holy. We
ask for this daily, for we need sanctification daily.
So that we who fail daily may cleanse away our sins
by being sanctified continually.
We pray that this sanctification may remain in us.
Again, God has revealed himself through his words
and through his works.
We're meant to reveal him through our words and works,
and yet, man, we just crash and burn more often than not,
right?
So here's Cyprian who says, okay, we ask for this daily.
Why?
Because we need sanctification daily.
We ask for mercy daily.
Why?
Because I sin daily.
So that we who fail daily may cleanse away our sins by being sanctified continually.
We pray that the sanctification may remain in us.
Amazing, incredible.
And all depends.
It depends.
God's name is either known or
not known. I don't know if you caught this last part. It's the last thing we'll say.
God's name is either known or not known, depending on how we live and depending on how we pray.
Here's the reality of it is this is Jesus's name is known or not known depending on how you live and depending on
how you pray and how I live and how I pray. That's a tall order and yet let's go all
the way back to Saint Peter Chrysologus. He says, it is this name that gives salvation
to a lost world. That's true. It's this name, the name of God, to give salvation to a lost world.
But we ask that this name of God should be hallowed in us through our actions,
for God's name is blessed when we live well, but it's blasphemed when we live wickedly.
God's name is blessed when we live well, but it's blasphemed when we live wickedly.
And so we ask then that just as the name of God is holy,
so we may obtain his holiness in our souls. So we just pray, we pray always, always, always
that God's name is known, that God's name is loved and glorified, hallowed.
But it's only going to be hallowed if we live well and pray well. Of course, we're broken.
I mean, we know this, right? This is the newsflash. We're broken. Okay, gotcha.
I thought you said that on day 360. I would have missed it. We're broken and yet we're loved,
broken and blessed. We've wandered away and yet we're wanted.
We are lost and yet we're loved.
We struggle and yet he strives after us.
And so this day I just say,
if you've fallen, let yourself be caught.
If you've wandered away,
let the divine hunter hunt you down.
If you strayed away from the rest of the flock,
let the good shepherd seek after you and find you.
I know I need to let him find me.
I know I need to let him catch me.
I know I need to let him rescue me one more time.
Many, many, many, many more times.
That's why we need to pray for each other.
We're coming to the end of our year together.
We're coming to our end of 365 days together.
And so we need, you know, the next step,
what step are you gonna take in six days?
We have five more days after this day.
What step are you gonna take in that sixth day
to continue to walk in the Lord?
What am I gonna do?
How am I gonna let the Lord continually hunt me down
and bring me home?
I want God's name to be known by how I live
and by how I pray.
And I want that to be the case for you.
Because of that, I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.
