The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 75: Jesus’ Infancy and Hidden Life (2024)
Episode Date: March 15, 2024Fr. Mike explores the mystery of Jesus’ infancy and hidden life. We first take a look at Jesus’ Baptism, circumcision, and the Epiphany. Fr. Mike discusses that Jesus’ circumcision shows us that... salvation comes from the Jews. The Epiphany shows us that salvation does not stop there, it extends to all of us. Later, we examine Jesus’ hidden life. Fr. Mike emphasizes the importance of Jesus’ obedience to not just his Father in Heaven, but to his earthly father and mother as well, and how we can imitate that obedience. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 527-534. 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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Thank you and God bless.
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 75, reading paragraphs 527 to 534 more about the hidden life of Jesus' infancy.
All of that, 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.
Also, you can download your free Catechism
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It's amazing.
Also, just a quick thank you to all those who supported the production of this podcast
It is so incredible. Thank you for your prayers. Thank you for your financial gifts. We could not do this podcast without you
I know I couldn't I mean I mean it every day
I am telling you I say I pray for you every day and it is completely true a hundred percent true
And I'm so grateful. You know, as I said, it's day 75 and as we continue yesterday, we talked about how the fact that the whole life of Jesus is with two days ago,
that whole life of Jesus is a mystery. Yesterday,
we talked about his infancy like in that sense of the preparations,
John the Baptist prepared from the Liturgy of Advent prepares for Christ.
And then here's Christmas today. We're going to look at these other,
I guess you could call them two mysteries.
One is the mysteries of Jesus's infancy and
Secondly the mysteries of Jesus's hidden life. So the mysteries of Jesus's infancy are things like his circumcision, right? the epiphany is
His manifestation of Jesus as the Messiah to the world and so you have the Magi later on you have of course his manifestation
It by his baptism by John and the Jordan as well as the wedding feast at Cana where he
Performed that's the word he performed his first miracle and so revealed his glory
So those are three kind of what you might call epiphanies
But the one we'll focus on today, of course is the infancy epiphany
Which is the visit of the wise men and what that represents? We're also gonna look at two other infancy mysteries
One is the presentation of Jesus in the temple, that
this encounter with him by Simeon and Anna and what they both say about him in
the temple. And then lastly the infancy mystery of the flight into Egypt. Like
why, what is it that Jesus is doing when they when he and Mary and Joseph have to
flee into Egypt and when he comes out of Egypt what is what does that say? Also
that's the first batch of mysteries right the
infancy mysteries the second one we're gonna looking at today are the
mysteries of Jesus's hidden life meaning okay so he had a life of labor he had a
life of obedience he had a life of silence and and those all are very very
important things that reveal something to us a life of silence a life of labor a life of obedience
That we don't really we don't really see much
We do have the finding of the child Jesus in the temple in paragraph 534
But other than that all we know is that the life of Jesus was marked by
ordinariness right it was marked by silence and obedience and work and
It was marked by silence and obedience and work.
And this obedience to not only to his mother and legal father, Joseph,
but also how that prefigures his radical
and total obedience to his father in heaven.
We'll talk about that today.
So these mysteries, the mystery of Jesus's infancy
and the mysteries of Jesus's hidden life.
And so as we launch into this, remember,
whenever we're walking among mystery,
we just ask the Lord for his grace.
We ask the Lord for his guidance and his illumination.
So we pray, Father in heaven, we do trust you.
And we know that we need you.
We know that we need your light to guide us,
your voice to call us by name.
And so as we reflect on these this infancy the infancy mysteries infancy narrative of Jesus is we reflect on his being
presented in the temple his being lost and being found as we reflect on his
hidden life in Nazareth in the silence that marked the vast majority of his
life the obedience that marked all of his life and the work that marked the vast majority of his life the obedience that marked all of his life and
The work that marked his life
We just ask you to enter into the silence of our own hearts enter into
The ways in which you are calling us to be obedient not only to you but also to those people who are in our lives that
That you are calling us to be obedient to enter into our work Lord God with your grace with your own hands you
worked and so we ask that you please enter into the work of our hands you've
sanctified work help our work this day be sanctified in you no matter what what
it is we're doing let it be all for your glory and for the salvation of the whole world. In Jesus name we pray.
Amen. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. As I
said, it is day 75. We're reading paragraphs 527 to 534.
The mysteries of Jesus's infancy. Jesus's circumcision on the eighth day after his birth is the sign of his incorporation
into Abraham's descendants, into the people of the covenant.
It is the sign of his submission to the law and his deputation to Israel's worship, in
which he will participate throughout his life.
This sign prefigures that circumcision of Christ which is baptism.
The Epiphany is the manifestation of Jesus as Messiah of Israel, Son of God and Savior of the world.
The great feast of Epiphany celebrates the adoration of Jesus by the wise men, Magi, from the east,
together with his baptism in the Jordan and the wedding feast at Cana in Galilee. In the Magi,
representatives of the neighboring pagan religions, the Gospel sees the first fruits of the nations, who welcome the good news of salvation through the Incarnation.
The Magi's coming to Jerusalem in order to pay homage to the King of the Jews shows that
they seek in Israel, in the Messianic light of the Star of David, the one who will be
King of the Nations.
Their coming means that pagans can discover Jesus and worship Him as Son of God and Savior
of the world only by turning toward the Jews and receiving from them the Messianic promise
as contained in the Old Testament.
The epiphany shows that the full number of the nations now takes its place in the family
of the patriarchs and acquires Israeletika dignitas, the dignity of Israel's birthright.
The presentation of Jesus in the temple shows him to be the firstborn son who belongs to
the Lord.
With Simeon and Anna, all Israel awaits its encounter with the Savior, the name given
to this event in the Byzantine tradition.
Jesus is recognized as the long-expected Messiah, the light to the nations and the glory of
Israel, but also
a sign that is spoken against.
The sort of sorrow predicted for Mary announces Christ's perfect and unique oblation on the
cross that will impart the salvation God had prepared in the presence of all peoples.
The flight into Egypt and the massacre of the innocents make manifest the opposition
of darkness to the light.
He came to his own home, and his own people received him not.
Christ's whole life was lived under the sign of persecution.
His own share it with him.
Jesus' departure from Egypt recalls the Exodus and presents him as the definitive liberator
of God's people.
The Mysteries of Jesus' Hidden Life
During the greater part of his life, Jesus shared the condition of the vast majority
of human beings, a daily life spent without evident greatness, a life of manual labor.
His religious life was that of a Jew obedient to the law of God, a life in the community.
From this whole period, it is revealed to us that Jesus was obedient to his parents
and that he increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man.
Jesus' obedience to his mother and legal father fulfills the Fourth Commandment perfectly
and was the temporal image of his filial obedience to his Father in heaven.
The everyday obedience of Jesus to Joseph and Mary both announced and anticipated the
obedience of Holy Thursday.
Not my will.
The obedience of Christ in the daily routine of his hidden life was already inaugurating
his work of restoring what the disobedience of Adam had destroyed.
The hidden life at Nazareth allows everyone to enter into fellowship with Jesus by the
most ordinary events of daily life.
As Pope Paul VI stated,
The home of Nazareth is the school where we begin to understand the life of Jesus, the
school of the gospel.
First then, a lesson of silence.
May esteem for silence, that admirable and indispensable condition of mind, revive in
us a lesson on family life.
May Nazareth teach us what family life is, its communion of love, its austere and simple
beauty and its sacred and inviolable character, a lesson of work.
Nazareth, home of the carpenter's son, in you I would choose to understand and proclaim
the severe and redeeming law of human work.
To conclude, I want to greet all the workers of the world, holding up to them their great
pattern, their brother who is God.
The finding of Jesus in the temple is the only event that breaks the silence of the
Gospels about the hidden years of Jesus.
Here Jesus lets us catch a glimpse of the mystery of his total consecration to a mission
that flows from his divine sonship.
Did you not know that I must be about my Father's work?
Mary and Joseph did not understand these words, but they accepted them in faith.
Mary kept all these things in her heart during the years Jesus remained hidden in the silence
of an ordinary life.
Okay, so here we are, paragraphs 527 to 534. Gosh, you guys, it's incredible. I mean, okay, so we
do, of course, we have these four really pretty significant mysteries of Jesus's
infancy. Circumcision, epiphany, presentation in the temple, and the
flight into Egypt. And all of them, again, as I said, they're mysteries. And so even
if I pull out some points about them,
there's so much more.
So Jesus is his circumcision.
What is that a sign of?
It's a sign of his incorporation
into Abraham's descendants, right?
If you're a male and Jewish,
in order to be brought into the covenant,
you had to be circumcised.
And so here is his mother and legal father
who are bringing him into the covenant. what it is a sign of it is a sign that prefigures
The circumcision of Christ that is baptism because what brings us into the covenant in the new covenant in the New Testament
What brings us into the covenant is baptism? And so it's just radical this obedience even of
Mary and Joseph to be able to bring the child Jesus to be circumcised on the eighth day,
which is just remarkable. Not only that, we also have the presentation in paragraph 529, but before that we have the epiphany.
And what's the epiphany? Again, it's a fact, A.
B. It's also this sign that, yes, salvation is from the Jews.
Jesus makes that very clear in John
chapter 4 and at the same time salvation is for the whole world and the Magi
right the wise men visiting from the East who are not Jews who come to do him
homage who come who saw a star and they bring gold of frankincense and myrrh
these gifts it's a sign of the nations who will welcome
the good news of salvation through the incarnation.
This is one of those where the circumcision
is an incredible mystery of Jesus as a Jew.
The epiphany is an incredible mystery
for us who are not born Jewish,
but have been grafted onto the tree,
as St. Paul writes about,
that we're not descendants of David.
We don't share in that genetic home,
or that genetic family,
but we're brought into the family of God
through baptism, through grace, which is incredible.
And God wants us all,
that God wants every person on this planet
to know him, to love him, and to serve him
in such a way as to live with him forever
in this, in the next life.
And so the epiphany is a sign of this.
Yes, circumcision is a sign of the fact
that Jesus is coming from the Jews,
salvation comes from the Jews.
And the epiphany is that sense of, and doesn't stop there.
It goes to the whole world.
Now paragraph 529 talks about the presentation
of Jesus in the temple.
As we know, if we were to read the Bible,
that the firstborn male of all the animals
and human beings had to be redeemed. So firstborn male of all the animals and human beings had to be redeemed.
So firstborn male of sheep, goats, cattle, all those would be sacrificed.
Human beings? No, no sacrifice there.
They would sacrifice something in the place of that human being, right?
So you would sacrifice a lamb or you'd sacrifice some other kind of animal.
For Mary and Joseph, we know that they were so poor that they offered the minimum sacrifice.
Not because their hearts were small, but because their pocketbooks were small.
So they offered a pair of turtle doves or two young pigeons, but to redeem Jesus back.
That's the whole point.
He's the firstborn of Mary.
Therefore, he belongs to God.
And there's that sense of, again, obedience in his mother and father not only in having him
circumcised but also in this presentation in the temple. While he's there you have Simeon and Anna
who highlight the fact that this is the long-awaited Savior.
You know Simeon who was promised that he would not die until he had seen the Lord's anointed.
He said, now Lord let your servant go in peace. Your word has been fulfilled.
My own eyes have seen the salvation which you have prepared in the sight of every
people.
I like to reveal you to the nations and the glory of your people Israel.
This, this, this incredible, like here is the one, here is the Messiah.
And also Anna, Anna, who prophesies that here is Mary.
And here is Mary and
Here is Jesus who is destined for the fall and the rise of many in Israel a sign of contradiction
But also that Mary will be pierced with the sword her own heart will be pierced with the sword
and so there's that that sense of
That that mystery then last mystery of Jesus's infancy we have the flight into Egypt and the massacre of
the innocents.
I love how the Catechism highlights.
What does this make manifest?
Well, it makes manifest the opposition of darkness to the light.
As John says in his Gospel, he came to his own home and his own people received him not.
Makes manifest the opposition of darkness to light.
I think it's remarkable.
We'll say this many many times
Here is God who is
Invulnerable, right? You can't hurt God
But God makes himself one of us and think about this from the moment that God made himself vulnerable
Human beings tried to kill him
Like from the very moment
God make it made himself hurtable. We tried to hurt him. From the very moment God made himself mortal, you
know, in the person of Jesus here in the Incarnation. We tried to kill him.
I think that says something about the heart of human beings. I think it says
something about the reality of the opposition of darkness to light.
That if God came close to me, if God came close to you,
would I receive him with love or would there be so much resentment in my heart
that I would lash out against him? It's worth reflecting on that so I can know my own heart.
But it says this in paragraph 530, Christ's whole life was lived under the sign of persecution.
His own share it with him.
Christ's whole life, from the moment he's born,
he has to flee into Egypt and avoid being killed.
And his whole life is lived under the sign of persecution.
And his own, if we belong to him, we share that with him.
Of course, his departure from Egypt recalls the Exodus again another mystery and presents him as the definitive liberator of God's people
Here's Moses who is the liberator of God's people
Here's Joshua who come leads the people into the promised land and here's Jesus who is the new Moses
He's the new Joshua
Then we go into these last couple paragraphs for today the mysteries of Jesus is hidden life and as I mentioned
Part of the mystery is his obedience. I love this paragraph 531. During the greater part of his life,
Jesus shared the condition of the vast majority of human beings, a daily life spent without
evident greatness, a life of manual labor. And that's just that reality, his simple
life. Here is God himself. And it goes to the point of being able to highlight that there's
no life that's beneath the Lord. I mean there's no work that's beneath the Lord. We've talked many
times about how in Scripture work is held up as something that is noble. Work is held up as
something that is honorable. That there is no task that is beneath you. There's no task that's beneath
me. Here is the Lord Jesus. If I ever think, if I ever think, if we're ever tempted to think that
there is work that's beneath us, we have to just remember that for essentially 30 years of his life,
Jesus spent that day in and day out a life of manual labor.
Now, he also had religious life and the religious life in paragraph 531 was that of a Jew obedient to the law of God, a life
in the community. And so it's really, really important for us to understand
also that it's not as if Jesus created this whole new
religion, he did not, he fulfilled the old covenant, right?
He fulfilled the religion that God had revealed and given
to the people of Israel.
And so there's this obedience that he has,
not only to his parents, not only to his community,
also to the law of Moses.
There's something powerful about that. In paragraph 532, I love this, Jesus' obedience to his community, also to the law of Moses. There's something powerful about that.
In paragraph 532, I love this,
Jesus' obedience to his mother and legal father
fulfills the fourth commandment perfectly
and was the temporal image of his filial obedience
to his father in heaven.
And there's that the everyday obedience of Jesus
to Joseph and Mary, everyday obedience,
that's just that simple everyday obedience
of Jesus to Joseph and Mary, both obedience. That's just that simple everyday obedience of Jesus to Joseph
and Mary, both announced and anticipated, the obedience of Holy Thursday, where in the
Garden of Gethsemane he said, not mine will father, but your will be done. And I just,
there's this remarkable note, you know, the virtue of obedience. I think in our day and
age, when we think obedience, we think like dog training, right and yet
in the old wedding vows
What did couples vow to love? Yes, of course to honor. Yeah, absolutely
but to love to honor and obey and
There's something really profound about that. I can love someone, of course.
I can honor someone, of course.
But can I obey them?
Because obedience implies a depth of trust.
I mean, love, of course, requires trust.
And honor requires trust.
But if I'm going to place myself in your hands, if I'm going to do what you ask of me, it
means I have to trust you." And the obedience of
Christ in the daily routine of his hidden life was already inaugurating his work of restoring what
the disobedience of Adam had destroyed. Remember, we talked about this, that all of Christ's life
is a mystery and that his whole life is a mystery of redemption. Remember paragraph 517, that in his
incarnation, it was part of redemption, in his hidden life was part of redemption in his hidden life was part of redemption in his word part of redemption all
These pieces in here today his obedience was part of the way that he redeemed the disobedience of Adam
This is incredible
Incredible. I love Pope Paul the sixth reflection on life of Nazareth. It was pretty remarkable how he just said yes
You're going back. There's this lesson of silence that's learned in Nazareth. It is pretty remarkable how he just said, yes, you're going back. There's this lesson of silence that's learned in Nazareth. There's a lesson in family life that's learned
in Nazareth. And there's a lesson of work that's learned in Nazareth.
Now think about those three things, silence, family life and work. These are mysteries
that Jesus enters into and he redeems them. He changes them. He transforms them. So you and I, when we find ourselves in times of silence,
we have to esteem that silence,
which is an admirable and indispensable condition of mind,
but also lesson on family life that we are all born into broken families.
We're part of broken families and we bring the brokenness ourselves.
And yet family life is a communion of love.
It has beauty. It has a sacred and inviolable character. And lastly that lesson of work. I
Think it's remarkable. That's why Pope Paul the sixth says
To conclude I want to greet all the workers of the world holding up to them their great pattern their brother Who is God their brother worker who is God?
lastly, we have the finding of the child Jesus
in the temple, the only event that breaks the silence of the Gospels. And here, it says in
the Catechism 534, Jesus lets us catch a glimpse of the mystery of his total consecration to a
mission that flows from his divine sonship. He is totally, even though he's in Nazareth,
even though he's 30 years, it looks like to us, all there is is silence,
family life and work.
It seems like he's living off mission.
No, in this event, Jesus allows us to catch a glimpse
of the mystery of his total consecration to a mission
that flows from his divine sonship.
This is as important as the last thing.
He was not off mission when he was living
those 30 years in silence.
He was not off mission when he was living those 30 years in silence. He was not off mission
when he was living those 30 years as in a hidden life. He had total consecration
to this mission that flowed from his divine sonship, which is just so
important for us. You know, God has placed a mission in your life. He has a task.
He has something He wants you to accomplish and maybe something you're
accomplishing currently. Maybe it's something that has not yet been
fulfilled, maybe not come to fruition yet.
But God has a mission for your life.
Just because it might not be happening right now, just because it might not be on the surface
right now, just because it might not be known right now, doesn't mean that you cannot still
at this moment be totally consecrated to this mission.
Because it flows from identity,
right? It flows from relationship. We know that our relationship as God's children in baptism,
right? We're now sons and daughters of God in our baptism. Therefore, we have this relationship
with God and that gives us our identity, tells us who we are, and then that feeds our mission.
Here is Jesus. Those 30 years, he was not just kinda sitting around.
In some mysterious way,
he lived a life of total consecration to this mission
that flowed from his relationship to his father,
that flowed from his identity.
And we get to do the same thing.
I don't, that makes sense, I just, oh man, that,
I love that, it's incredible.
I know this is a little bit longer today,
I'm sorry about that.
I get, maybe I just get too excited about like breaking down every single paragraph
But man, we start talking about Jesus and I I go a little nuts. So I'm sorry. Oh brother
Well you guys oh tomorrow tomorrow we get to talk more more about Jesus the mysteries of Jesus's public life
Yes today yesterday private life hidden life infancy
tomorrow mysteries of Jesus's public life this baptism of Jesus, the temptations and all the rest as they said it in
the opening of Gilligan's Island. Anyways, oh man, okay, this is ridiculous.
I'm drawing this on way too long. I'm just so excited and so glad, so
proud of all of you for making it to day 75. This has been an incredible gift, an
incredible journey,
ups and downs for sure, difficulties absolutely and yet here we are on day 75. I am praying for
you, please pray for me. My name is Father Mike and I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.