The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 56: Man’s First Sin (2025)
Episode Date: February 25, 2025Together, with Fr. Mike, we explore the nature of man’s first sin or our “freedom put to the test.” Fr. Mike unpacks the importance of us understanding that freedom is not the power to “do wha...t we want,” but rather, the power to “do what I ought.” Though the story of the first sin is that of our first parents, Fr. Mike emphasizes that we still repeat the grave error of the first sin in our own lives by preferring our own perceived “goods” over the “goods” of our Creator and Father in heaven. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 396-401. 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 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
to 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 56, you guys!
Well done!
We're reading paragraphs 396 to 401.
I don't know if you know this, but I'm using the Ascension edition of the Catechism, which
includes the Foundations of Faith approach, which I love.
I have to say this, I know sometimes I slip into this thing where I talk about how much
I love this Catechism, but I love this Catechism.
You can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church if
you like.
Also, if you would like,
you can download the catechism in your reading plan
by visiting ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And also, if you like, you can click follow or subscribe
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and daily notifications.
And I know that there are people who keep reaching out
saying I'm not gonna do it.
I'm not gonna subscribe, I'm not gonna follow.. I'm not gonna subscribe. I'm not gonna follow.
And I'm okay with that.
I'm okay with that.
It's all good.
You know, original sin affects all of us in different ways.
I'm just kidding.
But that's what we're talking about today.
We're talking about original sin.
Paragraph 395 to 401.
Oh, golly.
You know, we talked about this yesterday,
the fall of the angels.
The day before, the reality of sin,
the fact that we're made to be in relationship with God and we reject
God and that's the heart of sin. God, I know what you want, I don't care, I want
what I want. Here is Satan, the evil one who has fallen, he rejected God and his
reign, better to reign in hell than to serve in heaven. And today we have
original sin. Where freedom has been put to the test the God has created us in his image and established us in his friendship when I say
Us, of course, I mean man human beings now we can only live this friendship in free submission to God now
That's that can sound backwards
That's the second sentence that we'll hear today that we can only live this friendship with God in free submission to God again
That can sound to so many people
Uncomfortable it can sound very unpleasant like wait you live in
Friendship in submission. How is that? Well, you don't live in friendship in submission to
You know your neighbor necessarily
in friendship in submission to your neighbor, necessarily. But we do live in friendship in submission to the only one who is truly God. It's very similar, analogously, obviously,
very similar to a marriage where St. Paul writes in his letter to the Ephesians, he
says, submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. Talking to husbands and wives,
it says, submit to one another out of reverence for Christ talking to husbands and wives It says submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. There is the sense of I place myself beneath you
I place myself at your service out of love, right?
Well, I place myself at your service in the proper order of things now with husbands and wives
It's almost this race to serve right almost this race to submit to the other out of love
But when it comes to the to, when it comes to God Himself, we can live this friendship only in free submission to God where we respond
with His obedience of faith. Our posture is, Father in heaven, I trust you. And this is
the horror of sin. Our posture to God should be, Father in heaven, I trust you. And yet we find out that in man's first sin,
the distortion that entered into man's heart
was that I can't trust God.
He is not my father, he is a tyrant.
He's not a dad, he's a dictator.
And this is the heart of, in so many ways,
the rejection and the rebellion
of human beings against God.
You know, there is this line in paragraph 397.
It's only the second paragraph we're gonna hear today,
and it's the very first line.
It says, man, tempted by the devil,
let his trust in his creator die in his heart.
This is the heart in so many ways.
This is the heart of sin,
that we were created in friendship with God. Remember,
remember in Genesis 1 and 2, man and woman walked in harmony with God, you know, in the garden,
that figurative language, that beautiful imagery of they lived in right relationship with God.
They trusted him and God loved them and they loved God back. They let God love him. They let God love
them. And yet, but after we were tempted by the
devil, man let his trust in his creator die in his heart. And it goes on to say,
all subsequent sin would be disobedience toward God and lack of trust in his
goodness. I mean, let's look at, and right now, and look at any kind of sin in the
world. It says all subsequent sin would be disobedience
toward God and lack of trust in his goodness.
So we recognize that every sin is disobedience,
of course, because God, I know what you want,
I don't care, I want what I want,
and a lack of trust in his goodness.
Why would we say that?
We would only say that in some ways
if we thought I'm actually choosing better
than what God would offer me, right?
Because that's, I mean, very, very rarely
does anyone, if ever, does anyone ever actually choose a sin because they think they'll be more
miserable once they've chosen a sin. Typically, it's, ah, I know God said this, but I don't know,
I think I'll be better off if I do this other thing, if I do contrary to what the Lord has asked
me to do. And so it's a lack of trust in his goodness.
So all subsequent sin would be disobedience toward God.
God, I know what you want.
I don't care what I want, what I want.
And a lack of trust in his goodness.
And it goes on in paragraph 398 to say,
in that sin, man preferred himself to God.
He chose himself over and against God.
And that reality is we have to always remember who we are in front of God.
That yes, you have dignity, you have goodness, that dignity, that goodness comes from the Lord.
Therefore, before God, we're always after. Is that makes sense? Before God, we're always after.
Before God, we're always second. Before God, we're never in first place. He always gets the first place.
He always gets to be the center of our lives
because he is the source of our lives.
And so what happens?
Well, we sin and there's tragic consequences.
We're gonna talk about those tragic consequences today,
both personally and interpersonally.
In fact, even cosmically, Because in paragraph 401 it says,
"'After that first sin,
"'the world is virtually inundated by sin.'"
You know, the first sin of just saying,
God, I don't care, I want what I want,
led to murder, led to brokenness,
led to disaster in humanity.
And we're living that now.
"'After that first sin,
"'the world is virtually inundated by sin
That's where we find ourselves
So, you know again just like yesterday just like the day before when we're talking about this brokenness
It is so important for us to know that we don't just have brokenness. We have a God who enters into brokenness
We don't just have sin
We have the God who conquers sin and forgives us of our sin who's taken our sin upon himself
And so we call upon that God now in prayer.
Father in heaven, we trust you.
We trust you because you did not abandon us to the domain of death.
You did not abandon us. You did not let us go in our brokenness.
When we rejected you, you did not reject us.
You keep on calling out to us.
You keep on reaching out for us.
Lord God, you sent the prophets. You revealed your word to us. You revealed your out to us. You keep on reaching out for us. Lord God, you sent the prophets.
You revealed your word to us.
You revealed your heart to us.
You gave us your son, Jesus Christ,
to atone for sin and to show us the way to you,
to send us your Holy Spirit.
And so God, we ask you once again,
in the name of your son, Jesus Christ,
send us your Holy Spirit.
The advocate, the one who convicts us the one who leads us into all truth
My god send that Holy Spirit
To guide and protect us as we walk forward
Talking about sin talking about the reality of sin knowing that it's not simply outside of us
But it is truly inside of us that brokenness is not just around us, it's in our own hearts as well. So we ask you please send your Holy
Spirit to mend what was broken, to make whole what has been shattered and bring
bring back to life what has died. In Jesus name we pray. Amen. In the name of
the Father and of the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen. As I said we're reading
paragraph 396 to 401.
Original Sin.
Freedom put to the test.
God created man in his image and established him in his friendship.
A spiritual creature, man can live this friendship only in free submission to God.
The prohibition against eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil spells this out,
for in the day that you eat of it, you shall die.
The tree of the knowledge of good and evil
symbolically evokes the insurmountable limits that man, being a creature, must freely recognize and respect with trust.
Man is dependent on his Creator and subject to the laws of creation and to the moral norms that govern the use of freedom.
Man's First Sin
Man, tempted by the devil, let his trust in his Creator die in his heart, and abusing his freedom, disobeyed God's command.
This is what man's first sin consisted of. All subsequent sin would be disobedience toward God and lack of trust in his goodness.
Subsequent sin would be disobedience toward God and lack of trust in His goodness. In that sin, man preferred himself to God, and by that very act scorned Him.
He chose himself over and against God, against the requirements of His creaturely status,
and therefore against His own good.
Constituted in a state of holiness, man was destined to be fully divinized by God and
glory.
Seduced by the devil, he wanted to be like God, but without God, before God, and not
in accordance with God.
Scripture portrays the tragic consequences of this first disobedience.
Adam and Eve immediately lose the grace of original holiness.
They become afraid of the God of whom they have conceived a distorted image, that of a god jealous of his prerogatives. The harmony in which they had found themselves,
thanks to original justice, is now destroyed. The control of the soul's spiritual faculties
over the body is shattered. The union of man and woman becomes subject to tensions,
their relations henceforth marked by lust and domination. Harmony with creation is broken. Visible creation has become alien and hostile to
man. Because of man, creation is now subject to its bondage to decay. Finally,
the consequence explicitly foretold for this disobedience will come true. Man
will return to the ground, for out of it he was taken. Death makes its entrance
into human history. After that first sin, the world is virtually
inundated by sin. There is Cain's murder of his brother Abel and the universal corruption
which follows in the wake of sin. Likewise, sin frequently manifests itself in the history
of Israel, especially as infidelity to the God of the Covenant and as transgression of the law of Moses.
And even after Christ's atonement, sin raises its head in countless ways among Christians.
Scripture and the Church's tradition continually recall the presence and universality of sin
in man's history.
Gaudium et Spez from the Second Vatican Council states, Man has also upset the relationship which should link him to his last end. And at the same time, he has broken the right order that should reign within himself,
as well as between himself and other men and all creatures."
Okay, so there we are, going back to the very beginning.
We have here original sin, freedom put to the test.
We know this. We know that in order to love, we have to be free.
And God made us to love. Which means, God, if he wants, if he wants us to be the
people he has made us to be, he, I guess quote-unquote, has to, he has to allow us
to be free. Because without freedom we can't love. We just be robots who are
programmed to do what we were told be robots who are programmed to do what
we were told.
Now God wants us to do what we're told, but he wants us to do that out of freedom.
I love this, it just, mmm.
It says here, the tree of the knowledge of good and evil symbolically evokes the insurmountable
limits that man being a creature must freely recognize and respect with trust.
I think sometimes people look at the, you know, oh there was a fruit in some garden
and you ate the fruit and that's just kind of like the, you know, oh, there was a fruit in some garden and you ate the fruit
and that's just kind of like this, you know,
childish or silly kind of a thing.
But we recognize here that no, this symbolically,
this tree of the knowledge of good and evil symbolically
evokes the insurmountable limits that a man,
being a creature, must recognize and respect with trust.
Right, we have to recognize that we're dependent
on our creator and we're also subject to the laws
of creation and the moral norms
that govern the use of freedom. Like that just because we can do something doesn't mean we ought to do something. That ultimately freedom is
not, freedom is not the power to do whatever I want.
Freedom is ultimately the power to do what I ought.
And I'm not really free if I can just do what I want. I just then I'm a slave to something else, right?
I'm a slave to my senses. I'm a slave to my impulses. But true freedom is the
power to do what I ought to do. And man violated that. Now it goes on to say,
as I mentioned before in paragraph 397, tempted by the devil, we let, or man, let
his trust in his Creator die in his heart and abusing his freedom disobeyed
God's command
That's what the first sin consisted of I love how it's described
You know, we said all subsequent sin will be disobedience and a lack of trust disobedience toward God and lack of trust in his goodness
But there is this in paragraph 398 it unpacks that even more it says this in that sin men preferred himself to God
Am I that very act scorned him.
Again, we prefer ourself to God,
and by that very act, scorned.
So sometimes I flip into saying man and then we,
just because here we are as humanity,
it's kind of like all of our story,
even though we have our first parents
who originally sinned.
It's, you know what I'm saying?
So hopefully you can go with me on the language like this.
So in that sin, man preferred himself to God.
In all of our sins, we prefer ourselves to God.
And by that very act scorned, God goes on to say,
he chose himself over and against God,
against the requirements of his creaturely status
and therefore against his own good.
What are the requirements of his creaturely status?
That means, okay, we're creatures,
he's the, God is the creator.
Therefore, if we're choosing ourselves, creatures, over the creator, this is a violation ofly status. That means, okay, we're creatures, he's the, God is the creator. Therefore, if we're choosing ourself,
creatures over the creator,
this is a violation of our status.
It's also against our own good
because God is the source of all good.
So if I'm choosing myself, you know,
the receiver of good against the one who gives good,
I am violating my own good, right?
I love this.
It's just incredible that we were created,
human beings were created in a state of holiness.
Therefore, we were destined to be fully divinized
by God in glory, but we wanted to grasp that, not receive it.
I don't want to just simply meant to be divinized,
we're meant to be like God.
That's God's plan.
But rather than receive that, here we are,
our first parents, wanting to grasp that for ourselves.
And it says this, this last line of paragraph 398,
seduced by the devil, he wanted to be like God,
but without God, before God, and not in accordance with God.
That's a quote from St. Maximus, the confessor.
I wanna be like God, I wanna be like God, but without God.
I wanna be like God, before God, ahead of him.
And I wanna be like God, not in accordance with God.
I don't wanna do it the way he wants me to do it.
This is, oh man, we get that tattooed of our hearts,
like, oh my gosh, Lord, that is my life.
Yeah, I want your promises the way I want them.
Yeah, I want your blessing, but without you,
how many times does that mark,
that twisted, distorted, broken heart mark our lives?
I wanna be like God without God. I wanna be like God without God.
I wanna be like God before God
and I wanna be like God not in accordance with God.
Now scripture portrays the tragic consequences
of that first disobedience.
We're gonna talk tomorrow about some of the consequences
of that first sin for all of humanity.
But immediately they lose that grace
of being in right relationship with God
and immediately they become afraid of the God
of whom they have a conceived a distorted image.
Remember, remember up to that point,
they knew the God was a good dad.
Up to that point, they knew, they knew the God was a father
and now, nope, he's a tyrant.
Now, nope, he's a dictator.
A God jealous of his prerogatives.
That's the distorted image they have.
And that's the distorted image that so many of us inherit.
And paragraph 400 goes on.
There's a lot of consequences here.
Again, we'll talk more about consequences tomorrow
of original sin, but it says here,
the harmony in which they had found themselves,
thanks to original justice, is now destroyed.
So number one, control of the soul's spiritual faculties
over the body. So previously in original justice, original holiness, there were
these preternatural gifts that human beings had, like this complete
unity, control of the spiritual faculties over the material, over the body, bodily
faculties. So there's this integrity there and there's this power that we've lost.
The union of man and woman becomes subject to tensions. Our relationships are now marked by
lust and domination. Harmony with creation is broken. So visible creation has become alien
and hostile to man aka mosquitoes, you know, or the fact that creation is now hostile to us.
Up to this point, we lived in harmony with creation and with each other and with God, but now it's broken
Because of man creation even is broken is now it says here creation is now subject to its bondage of decay
Which is a quote from Romans chapter 8 verse 21 and then finally, of course the one another
devastating consequence of sin. Finally, the consequence explicitly foretold for this disobedience. Remember that consequence?
If you eat of it, you shall what you shall die. That consequence explicitly foretold
for this disobedience will come true. Man will return to the ground. And now for the
first time ever, death makes its entrance into human history. God did not make death, nor does
he rejoice in the destruction of the living, says the book of wisdom. For the
first time here, death makes its entrance into human history, and after that first
sin, the world is virtually inundated by sin. Every one of us is touched by it,
every one of us is affected by it. That last line before the quote from the
Gaudium et spes in paragraph 401, it says,
scripture and the church's tradition
continually recall the presence and universality
of sin in man's history.
Every one of us is touched by this.
And tomorrow we're gonna talk about
what are some of those immediate ways
that we have been touched, we've been marked,
we've been affected and afflicted by sin.
But of course, through all of this,
through all of this, God did not abandon us
to the domain of death.
God did not abandon us in the midst of our brokenness.
In our rebellion, God did not rebel against us.
In our rejection of Him, God did not reject us.
And so today, as we continue to listen,
as we continue to pray,
as we continue to walk as followers of Christ, disciples of Jesus,
we remember, yes,
we suffer these consequences of original sin and the ones we'll mention tomorrow.
But we also
rejoice in the gifts of grace that God continues to pour out on us in His Son Jesus Christ.
And so we have confidence. We have confidence even in this broken world. We have confidence that God himself
continues to reign, that God himself continues to conquer and the first place he gets to conquer in my life is my own heart.
My own heart that has that distorted image of God.
But he is a good God and he is a good dad and he's a good father.
So we trust in him. I'm asking
I'm just inviting you all because I know that we all have these places in our
lives that are just they are they're they're they're wrecked they're broken
they're tempted to not trust God but today today remember it wasn't always
like this it wasn't always like this our first parents got to walk in harmony
with God and that's what he wants ultimately for all of us
to be back in that right relationship
and ultimately to lift us up to that place of divinization.
You don't have to grasp for it.
We simply have to receive it.
So that's what I'm praying for.
Please pray for each other, because again, Day 56,
we're still trucking away, but we have to keep pressing play,
gotta keep getting up and moving forward.
So I'm praying for you, please pray for me.
My name's Father Mike, I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.