The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 49: We Are Created For Worship (2025)
Episode Date: February 18, 2025There is a solidarity among all of God’s creatures because all are oriented to give glory to God. We learn that God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh day, sanctifying it and bl...essing it. Fr. Mike tells us that all creatures were made with a view to the Sabbath, created for the worship and adoration of God. We are all called to the sacred task of worshiping God and nothing else should take precedence over it. We end with an “In Brief” review of all we have learned in recent sessions about the physical world, the spiritual world, angels, and creation. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 344-354. 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
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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 49. You guys, we are one day shy of 50.
That's incredible. We're reading paragraphs 344 to 354, the end of that
section on heaven and earth. I'm using, if you don't know, the Ascension edition of
the Catechism, which includes the foundation of faith approach. It is, you
know, you can use any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church and
you'll get so much out of it.
I love this. I don't want to gush, but I really love the Ascension Edition.
It just, anyways, that's all. I love it.
To download your own Catechism and your reading plan, you can visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
You can also click follow or subscribe if you like to receive daily updates and daily notifications.
As I said, it's day 49 paragraphs, 344 to 354.
We're concluding that that paragraph five on heaven and earth. We talked about angels.
We talked about how angels in the life of the church.
We also talked about the visible world that God created.
And today we're continuing what we said yesterday.
There is an interdependence among all creatures, right? We talked about that.
We talked about how man is the summit of the Creator's work. Today in paragraph 344, we recognize
that there's also a solidarity among all creatures, noting that we all have
the same source, right? We all have the same Creator and we all have the same
end. That's so important, recognizing that all of creation, like everything, from us
human beings, man and God's image and likeness, down to minerals, down to atoms.
We all have the same creator, down to time,
and we're all ordered toward the same end. And that same end is from all of us. Human beings made of God's image and likeness,
destined for eternity and
subatomic particles are all ordered towards God's glory. And now, so atoms, they have to do it, right? Minerals have to.
We talked about this before,
like creatures of the earth and of the water and of the sky,
they automatically, by their very nature,
glorify God in themselves.
We get to choose, we get to choose.
I mean, our being, of course, glorifies God.
The fact that you exist, actually pause on that one.
The fact that you exist gives glory to God.
But we have a choice, right?
So we go on in paragraph 345 and 346 as we're talking about this heaven and earth
We recognize that God who created time
He created the world and in bright in six days and rested on the seventh day
This is you know from Genesis chapter 1 we recognize that that is poetic
But also very true language and one of the things that it highlights to us, for us, is that in those six days,
God created this place, this world that's oriented towards worship.
That's what the seventh day is. Seventh day is this place that we're invited into.
In fact, if you remember going back to Genesis chapter one, and you have the story of creation,
if you remember going back to Genesis chapter 1 and you have the story of creation, you know on day 1 2 and 3 you have
God making these places right this space and in days 4 5 & 6
God makes the beings that occupy those those places those spaces So if God makes the heaven and earth you have the Sun that rules and the and the moon that rules
What what do they rule? They rule that the heavens essentially, right?
And then you have the water and what's made in days 5 is the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, water
and sky. And then on day three you have the land that's made and what rules the land is creatures
and man. And so you have this sense of it's poetic language that reveals a truth and what the truth is
is that God has created in creation, He's a what you might call a cosmic temple, right?
This is this is how the early readers of the scriptures like we we sometimes get so preoccupied with our
Our cosmology right our vision of what the world is which oftentimes is strictly material, right?
Just here's the stuff that we forget that all of creation is ordered towards God's glory and all of creation is oriented towards the
worship of God. That's what the seventh day is, the Sabbath day. So we're gonna talk about
that today. That in paragraph 346, God in creation, God laid a foundation and
established laws that remain firm on which we can rely with confidence. Then
we're called to be faithful to that foundation
and faithful to those laws.
And it's so incredible that all of creation
was fashioned with a view towards Sabbath.
All creation was fashioned with a view towards worship.
In fact, we're gonna hear a quote from St. Benedict
that says, nothing should take precedence
over the work of God, AKA solemn worship.
And that's so, so important for all of us.
We recognize that everything God made heaven and earth is
Oriented towards worship of him bringing us into relationship with him
Remember, this is not a new idea for us who've been following the catechism for the last 49 days
Because remember in a plan of sheer goodness God willed to create this world
Why so that he might share his goodness with us?
And that's what worship is all about God bringing us into deeper and deeper relationship with him. It's not for God.
We know this, right? When we hit the section of the Catechism on worship
specifically, we're gonna be reminded of that again and again. Worship is not for
God. It is God's way of bringing us into deeper and deeper relationship with him.
And then in paragraph 349, we're gonna highlight the eighth day. The
eighth day is the day of the resurrection and how powerful that is.
And then we also have a little nugget day. So it's combo of paragraphs 344 to 349
which are the end of this section and then nuggets of 350 to 354. If
you're following along in your catechism you can see that very clearly. But we're
gonna start by praying and then we're gonna launch in to today's
reading.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and thank you.
Thank you so much for covenant-ing yourself to us,
for giving yourself to us, for making us your children,
for calling us to be part of your family.
Lord God, in making us for worship,
you have made us for joy.
In making us for worship and orienting our lives
towards worship of you, you've extended the invitation for us
to dwell in your presence.
Help us to live each day, to live each day with you.
Tell us to live each day for you.
Help us to see in this work of creation
the invitation to be in relationship with you.
Never let us be parted from you.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
The name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
As I said, it's day 49, we're reading paragraphs 344 to 354.
There is a solidarity among all creatures
arising from the fact that all have the same creator
and are all ordered toward his glory.
As St. Francis of Assisi prayed, May you be praised, O Lord, in all your creatures, especially
Brother Sun, by whom you give us light for the day.
He is beautiful, radiating great splendor, and offering us a symbol of you the Most High.
May you be praised, my Lord, for Sister Water, who is very useful and humble, precious and
chaste. May you be
praised, my Lord, for Sister Earth, our mother, who bears and feeds us, and produces the variety
of fruits and dappled flowers and grasses. Praise and bless, my Lord. Give thanks and
serve Him in all humility.
The Sabbath, the end of the work of the six days. The sacred text says that, on the seventh day, God finished His work which He had done,
that the heavens and the earth were finished, and that God rested on this day, and sanctified,
and blessed it.
These inspired words are rich in profitable instruction.
In creation, God laid a foundation, and established laws that remain firm, on which the believer can
rely with confidence, for they are the sign and pledge of the unshakable faithfulness
of God's covenant.
For his part, man must remain faithful to this foundation and respect the laws which
the Creator has written into it.
Creation was fashioned with a view to the Sabbath and therefore for the worship and
adoration of God.
Worship is inscribed in the order of creation.
As the rule of St. Benedict says, nothing should take precedence over the work of God,
that is, solemn worship.
This indicates the right order of human concerns.
The Sabbath is at the heart of Israel's law.
To keep the commandments is to correspond to the wisdom and the will of God as expressed
in His work of creation.
The Eighth Day But for us, a new day has dawned, the day
of Christ's resurrection.
The seventh day completes the first creation, the eighth day begins the new creation.
Thus, the work of creation culminates in the greater work of redemption.
The first creation finds its meaning and its summit in the new creation in Christ, the splendor of which
surpasses that of the first creation. In brief, angels are spiritual creatures who
glorify God without ceasing and who serve his saving plans for other
creatures. As St. Thomas Aquinas stated, the angels work together for the benefit
of us all.
The angels surround Christ their Lord. They serve Him especially in the accomplishment of His saving mission to men.
The Church venerates the angels who help her on her earthly pilgrimage and protect every human being.
God willed the diversity of His creatures and their own particular goodness, their interdependence and their order.
He destined all material creatures for the good of the human race.
Man and through him all creation is destined for the glory of God.
Respect for laws inscribed in creation and the relations which derive from the nature
of things is a principle of wisdom and a foundation for morality.
Okay, as we said, there's the reading today.
The little nuggets at the end, which is so good, that last piece reminding us of the
reality of angels and the fact that the angels surround Christ their Lord.
Remember that angels are all oriented towards their whole heart, their whole lives.
Whether angels have hearts, you know, but you know, their whole self, their whole beings are
devoted to the Lord, fully surrendered, fully given to the Lord.
And that's incredible.
You know, I know people so often will say like,
ah, you know, we become angels when we die.
A, we don't, we have already said that,
we've already established that.
But in some ways, we become like the angels.
You know, Jesus says something along those lines.
In what way?
Well, at least in this way, that if we're in heaven,
that means we're wholly surrendered, wholly given our over.
Our whole lives, our whole everything we are
is given to the Lord, is oriented towards love of Him.
And in that sense, that's one of the ways in which,
yeah, in death, those who enter heaven are like the angels
because we get to be fully devoted to the Lord, which is incredible.
And also, I love this reminder that the angels
help the church on her earthly pilgrimage and protect every human being.
You know, we didn't necessarily specify the reality of guardian angels yet, but that hints at it at least.
Now, let's go back to paragraph 344 and following. This is important.
We already talked, as I mentioned at the beginning of this,
about the interdependence of creatures, right?
So the sun and the moon, the cedar and the little flower,
this is from paragraph 340 from yesterday.
The eagle and the sparrow,
the spectacle of the countless diversities
and inequalities tell us that no creature in itself
is self-sufficient.
Yes, so we're interdependent.
But also, there's this solidarity among all Yes, so we're interdependent. But also, there's this solidarity among all creatures.
So we're interdependent, and also,
there's this sense of we're held together, right?
We're held together by the fact that we all come from God,
and we're all oriented towards,
ordered towards the glory of God.
And that's why I love Saint Francis of Assisi's prayer.
It reminds me of the prayer of the book of Daniel,
that, you know, sun and moon praise the Lord. It reminds me of the prayer of the book of Daniel that you know
Sun and moon praise the Lord
It goes that Shadrach Meshach and Abednego or Hennani Asri Meshil
If you remember those three men in the fiery furnace from the fiery furnace
they lift up their voices and they praise God from the midst of the fiery furnace and
Part of what they praise God for is you know for cold and chill for frost and snow for dew and rain all these things
And here st. Francis who's kind of extending that when he has his praise and prayer
of the Lord because of his creatures. Brother Sun, sister moon, sister water,
sister earth, those kind of things, which is incredible. But all of that and the
even more incredible thing is that all of creation, everything that exists, is
oriented towards worship. I mentioned
this before, but we recognize that here is God who created the world in six days,
according to Genesis chapter 1, which is again poetic language, but it is
a poetic language that reveals some powerful and really, really powerful
truth. For example, we have this recognition that in the first
three days, just a reminder, I know I said this at the beginning, but let's be reminded of
it, in the first three days of creation, God solves the problem of formlessness.
Remember, there's this book, it's a great book called Walking with God by Tim
Gray and Jeff Cavins, and they say this, that God solves the problem of
formlessness in those first three days. So, he separates light from darkness, sky
from ocean, and land from the waters. But the next three days, they parallel those
first three and they solve the problem of emptiness. Right? So formlessness is
solved by the separating of light from darkness, sky from ocean, land from
waters. The next three days solve the problem of emptiness. So God fills the
form He'd given. Fourth day fills the first day. The day and night are filled with the sun, moon, and stars.
The fifth day fills the second day.
The sky and the ocean are filled with birds and fish.
Finally, the sixth day, the land,
is filled with animals, plants, and human beings.
And that's neat for us, but what we don't catch often
is that the temple structure of creation is built
in the first three days and then furnished in the second set of three days.
But it's not completed until the seventh day.
This is so vastly important.
When it says the heavens and the earth were finished, this cosmic temple, God rested on that day,
sanctified it and blessed it.
What it's revealing is it's all oriented towards
worship.
In fact, the word seven,
in the Jewish world, in the Hebrew world,
is the word Shabbat.
In fact, the Hebrew word for swearing and oath is
Shavuah and it's related to the number seven because in Hebrew seven is Shavuah.
It's right so Shavuah and Shavuah. The word Shabbat, which means Sabbath has a connection then. Shabbat,
Shavuah and Shabbat have a connection to the number seven and to the word oath
pointing to the reality that the Sabbath is a sign of the covenant and you can even see this in
Paragraph 21 71 of the catechism which we're getting there
2171 says God entrusted the Sabbath to Israel to keep as a sign of the
Irrificable covenant the Sabbath is for the Lord holy and set apart for the praise of God his work of creation and his saving actions
on behalf of Israel and
Remember that if you've ever studied anything about the covenant,
it's about that deep relationship.
You, if you were to cut a covenant with someone else or your tribe with another
tribe or, or any groups of people would cut a covenant with each other.
They're now family and they would establish this family bond.
And here is God who takes the seventh day,
the covenant day and rests on that covenant day.
What he does is he
in that he's inviting human beings who were made on the sixth day, right, in this place put in this
temple, the seal of the temple, and he places them in this place in the creation, right, that's
oriented towards worship and invites them into the seventh day, into his rest, invites them, invites us
into the seventh day, into his rest, invites us into this worship of God.
And that's why paragraph 347 says,
creation was fashioned with a view to the Sabbath, right?
Covenant, and therefore for the worship and adoration of God.
And St. Benedict, the founder of Western monasticism,
this very important influential figure,
says that nothing should take precedence over
solemn worship. That work of God is solemn worship. That's one of the things
that we're just reminded of. You know, you can see in the sidebar there
is a couple different paragraphs 1145 to 1152. If you want to flip over to those
paragraphs you can see what the church is talking about when it highlights the fact that we are all called
to this sacred task of worshiping God.
It just is remarkable, incredible.
And the last line in paragraph 347 says,
this indicates the right order of human concerns,
meaning nothing should take precedence over worship.
Okay, if worship is the priority, right?
If worship is the number one thing that indicates the right
order of human concerns.
There are so many things to be concerned about,
but paragraph 348 reminds us the Sabbath is at the heart
of Israel's law.
And that's so important, right?
That worship of God, if we get that right,
we can get everything else right.
Because what's the great commandment?
To love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind,
soul and strength. How do we love God? We love God through worship.
That's just so clear. Now lastly, the eighth day. Sometimes people ask
the question, okay so if Sabbath not only means covenant but also refers to
Saturday, then why do we go to Mass? Why do Christians worship on Sunday? Well, that's because of
paragraph 349. Not because of 349, but 349 begins to explain this. It's called the
eighth day. But for us, a new day has dawned, the day of Christ's resurrection. So the
seventh day, right? Shabbat, the Sabbath day, Saturday, completes the first creation. The
eighth day, Sunday, begins the new creation. Thus thus the work of creation culminates in the greater work of redemption
This is incredible right so creation amazing incredible why we have the world the temple is established
but the new day of creation the eighth day is
The fulfillment in so many ways because true worship has been given to us by Jesus Christ and
true relationship
I mean not
that there's a false relationship, but a fuller relationship has been given to us in Christ,
where we actually get to become God's sons and daughters adopted in the power of the Holy Spirit
through baptism. It is really incredible. That's why the last line of paragraph 349 says,
the first creation finds its meaning and its summit in the new creation in Christ.
Man, that's amazing. And you guys, and we get to experience this every single Sunday, as well as
every single day, every time we go to the Mass, we get to re-participate. We get to enter into
that place where time and eternity meet, that place where time and eternity touch, that place where
we're invited to be able to say,
I live in the world, I live on day one through six,
but I'm invited to at times to step into eternity.
I'm invited to step into day seven
or even more clearly into day eight,
the day of the new creation, the day of redemption.
And that is just such an incredible gift.
Tomorrow, we get to talk even more.
Gosh, you guys, this is going to be so exciting.
We get to talk about human beings.
And if there's anything people like talking about, it's themselves.
And so tomorrow we get to talk about man, human beings, and how we're made in God's
image and likeness, what all that means as we just continue to just praise God and glorify
God.
I am so thankful for you.
It's 49 days.
And 49 days can be kind of tough, but here you are hanging with it and sticking with this whole thing. I am so, so proud of you. It's 49 days. 49 days can be kind of tough, but here you are
hanging with it and sticking with this whole thing. I am so, so proud of you and
thank you so much for sticking around because it's kind of a big deal.
Sometimes just learning facts can be a little dry, but we know that we're not
just learning facts that we now can recite or quote, are allowing those truths to penetrate
not only our minds and transform them, but penetrate our hearts and set them on fire.
So I'm praying that your heart becomes more and more on fire with the Lord as you and
I are drawn into deeper and deeper worship of God, deeper and deeper love of God.
I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me for that too.
Man, my name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless. and I'm praying for you. Please pray for me for that too. Man, my name's Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.