The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 83: Jesus and the Temple (2025)
Episode Date: March 24, 2025Given that the Temple was at the heart of Jewish life and worship, Jesus’ relationship with the Temple speaks volumes. Fr. Mike highlights Jesus’ reverence for the Temple and unpacks the remarkabl...e implications of Jesus’ prophecy about the destruction of the Temple. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 583-586. 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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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 83. We're reading paragraphs 583 to 586.
As always, 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 to download your own Catechism in a year reading plan.
Visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And also, you can click follow or subscribe on your podcast app for daily updates and
daily notifications.
As I said, it's day 83.
We're reading paragraphs 583 to 586.
Yesterday, we talked about Jesus and the law.
Today, we're talking about Jesus and the temple.
It's only four paragraphs.
We recognize that we have to understand the importance of the temple.
I remember hearing it described that the temple
isn't just a place of worship,
although to say just a place of worship
is massively an understatement.
It would be like the temple is not only
St. Peter's Basilica, right?
This heart of, if you wanna have like the symbol
of the image of where Catholics worship,
it's also like the White House.
In a sense of governance would happen from the temple
and like Wall Street in the sense that commerce would happen you regulated in
the temple and this that sense of it all being connected so your whole life as a
Jewish person would be connected in some way shape or form to the temple of
course the reason being primarily because the temple was the primary place
of worship of God in fact it was the only place of worship of God.
In fact, it was the only place
you could offer up a sacrifice to God in Jewish life.
You could pray anywhere.
You could read scripture.
You could study scripture.
You could pray in the synagogue, which is incredible.
But it was the temple.
That was where the priests were.
And as such, that's where the sacrifices were.
And as such, that is where worship was and so
Jesus comes along and he makes some comparisons between himself and the temple
Saying yeah, ultimately that just like yesterday when it comes to the law. He's the fulfillment of the law
He also is the fulfillment of the temple that in himself the temple of his body
Which would be struck down
and he'll be raised up again in three days.
But also the temple of memory is not only the place
of God's presence, the temple is also the place of worship.
And that is absolutely critical for us to understand
as we read this section about Jesus and the temple.
So to open our hearts and open our minds,
we just pray to our Father, Father in heaven.
We give you praise, we give you glory,
we thank you for this moment.
We thank you above all for your son Jesus.
And thank you for the Holy Spirit that you've poured into our hearts as baptized Christians.
We thank you for the gift of worship.
We thank you that in your son you have fulfilled all worship of old.
And you've placed in our hands in our lives
The new and eternal covenant
The new and eternal way you want us to worship you
Which we see in sign and in shadow now
But ultimately we will see and to be able to do face to face in your presence for all eternity
Or God open our minds and our hearts to understand and love your temple. Open our minds and our hearts to understand and love how the temple is fulfilled in your
Son Jesus Christ.
In Jesus' name we pray, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
As I said, it is Day 83, reading paragraphs 583 to 586.
Jesus and the Temple.
Like the prophets before Him, Jesus expressed the deepest respect for the Temple in Jerusalem.
It was in the Temple that Joseph and Mary presented Him forty days after His birth.
At the age of twelve, He decided to remain in the Temple to remind His parents that He
must be about His Father's business.
He went there each year during His hidden life, at least for Passover.
His public ministry itself was patterned by His pilgrimages to Jerusalem for the great Jewish feasts.
Jesus went up to the temple as the privileged place of encounter with God.
For him, the temple was the dwelling of his father, a house of prayer,
and he was angered that its outer court had become a place of commerce.
He drove merchants out of it because of jealous love for his father, saying,
You shall not make my father's house a house of trade.
His disciples remembered that it was written,
Zeal for your house will consume me.
After his resurrection, his apostles retained their reverence for the temple.
On the threshold of his passion, Jesus announced the coming destruction of this splendid building,
of which there would not remain one stone upon another.
By doing so, he announced a sign of the last days which were to begin with his own Passover.
But this prophecy would be distorted in its telling by false witnesses during his interrogation
at the high priest's house and would be thrown back at him as an insult when he was nailed
to the cross.
Far from having been hostile to the temple where he gave the essential part of his teaching,
Jesus was willing to pay the temple tax, associating with him Peter, whom he had just made the
foundation of his future church.
He even identified himself with the temple by presenting himself as God's definitive
dwelling place among men.
Therefore, his being put to bodily death presaged the destruction of the temple, which would
manifest the dawning of a new age in the history of salvation.
He said, The hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship
the Father.
Okay, there we have it, four relatively short paragraphs here about Jesus and the temple.
Paragraph 583 highlights the fact that the temple is critically important in Jesus'
life, right?
So the very first line, like the prophets before him,
Jesus expressed the deepest respect
for the temple in Jerusalem.
And that's gotta be so clear for us.
Remember when we read the prophets through the Bible,
roughly a year or two ago,
how often the prophets lamented
over the destruction of the temple.
Remember how often the prophets would point to worship
in the temple, this is so critically important.
And so like the prophets would point to worship in the temple. This is so critically important and so like the prophets before him
Jesus expressed the deepest respect for the temple in Jerusalem and so critical
584 Jesus went up to the temple as the privileged place of encounter with God and
It lists a couple things that what was the temple for Jesus?
Well, it says here for Jesus the temple was the dwelling of his father,
a house of prayer, and he was angered that its outer court had become a place
of commerce. We all know that we all know the story of Jesus driving out the
money changers in the temple. Why zeal for your house would consume me.
Why is that? Well, because he recognized this is the dwelling of his father,
that the presence of God would abide in the temple.
Not only that, not only is the presence of God would abide in the temple. Not only that, not only is the presence of God
important here, but it's also the place
in which prayer would happen,
also the place in which worship would happen.
And this is so remarkably important.
If we think about this in two ways,
that I mentioned that the temple was known
as the place of worship, it was known as the White House
of the people of Israel, right?
So a place of governance as well and Wall Street a place of
You know commerce and economics
But above all it was a place where God would abide and a place where God was worshipped
This is absolutely critical that if God were to leave the temple
Then the people would cease to exist
That the reason for being would cease to exist.
Why?
Because remember, we've talked about this so many days in these 83 days, that why did
God do any of this?
Like, why did God make this world in the first place?
Why did He make human beings?
Why did He reveal Himself at all to us?
Well, so that we could share in His own divine life, so we could have relationship with him.
And so here's the place of his dwelling,
here's the place of his presence,
and here's the place in which when we act, right,
when we worship him in the place of his presence,
we're drawn further and further into relationship,
a relationship of obedience and a relationship of love,
a relationship of trust.
And so here is why Jesus is highlighting
the reality of the importance of the temple and more.
Right? 585 and 586 highlight this, that while Jesus had a deep and profound reverence for the temple,
he also announced the coming destruction of this splendid building.
And also he announced a sign of the last days which were to begin with his own Passover
That this temple will be destroyed not one stone upon another stone
And this is remarkable for so many reasons, but here is just one simple reason I
Mentioned many times now that the temple was the place of worship that privileged place of encounter now, obviously God is everywhere
Obviously we can encounter God
anywhere
At the same time it privileged place of encounter the privileged place of worship
in fact the only place to be able to offer sacrifice as
Jesus recounts in Gospel John the hour is coming when neither on this mountain, right?
That was when he's talking to the women of Samaria,
so in Samaria, nor in Jerusalem, at the temple,
will you worship the Father.
That there is a new and eternal kind of worship
that he's going to institute.
What's remarkable is that Jesus' prophecy
about the destruction of the temple
did come to pass in the 70s. right the Romans in response to a Jewish rebellion
They encircled the city. They besieged it. They destroyed the temple. They killed every Jew in Jerusalem
Now Christians had escaped because Jesus had prophesied this he said when you see these things happening run to the hills get out of this city
What's inside I say remarkable, but don't mean like happy remarkable but in the midst of this grief in the midst of this city. What's inside? I say remarkable, but don't mean like happy remarkable,
but in the midst of this grief,
in the midst of this devastation,
here is the worship in Jerusalem that has ceased to exist.
Remember, we've been talking the last couple of days
about Jesus fulfills these things.
Jesus fulfills the law.
He also fulfills temple and he fulfills temple worship
because the night before he died, Jesus gave the new and eternal covenant the night before he died
Jesus gave us the worship that he desired when he said take this all of
you and eat of it this is my body take this all of you and drink from it this
is the chalice of my blood the blood of the new and eternal covenant do this in
remembrance of me now remarkably remarkably, remarkably Jesus had
presaged, right? That's the fancy word we heard in paragraph 586. He presaged the fact that all
worship, all sacrifice in the temple would cease to exist with the cessation of the temple,
but that the worship he asked for in the mass would go throughout the entire world.
You know there's one last note here we're going to talk about this when we get to
the teaching on the Eucharist in the next section but this reality that
Eucharist means Thanksgiving. You know in the ancient Jewish temple they had many
reasons for worship. They had worship you'd offer sacrifice for
repentance, you offer sacrifice for salvation, you offer sacrifice for repentance, you'd offer sacrifice for salvation, you'd offer
sacrifice for an offering of gratitude, you'd offer your Todah sacrifice.
You'd offer to sacrifice for so many things.
In fact, the rabbis at one point, they had said that in the age to come, right, in the
age of the Messiah, all sacrifices would cease except for one.
And that sacrifice would be
the todah, t-o-d-a-h, sacrifice, and that todah sacrifice would endure for all eternity.
Well todah in Hebrew means sacrifice of thanks, right?
Thank offering.
Eucharist means thanks or thanksgiving.
And so we recognize that those rabbis were prophetic. They announced
that yes, all sacrifices of the temple would cease except for one, and that is the sacrifice
we've been given by Jesus at the Last Supper, the Eucharist, that sacrifice of thanksgiving
that we offer every single day around the world. And we get to be part of this because Jesus is the
fulfillment of the temple. Not only the temple where part of this because Jesus is the fulfillment of the temple.
Not only the temple where God's presence would abide,
He's also the fulfillment of the sacrifice
that would happen in the temple,
which is incredible that we've been invited into this.
You've been invited into this and so have I.
So we just continue to pray and say, God, help me.
Help us all to recognize
that you're truly present in the Eucharist, that you are the
one who abides with us, right?
Emmanuel, God with us.
You have tabernacled among us.
You've made your home among us.
And right now, even even now, not only do we have your Holy Spirit, we do have your
body and your blood, soul and divinity in every Catholic church.
And we offer that sacrifice up at every Catholic mass.
We just give God thanks
and praise and I'm so grateful for you. I give God thanks and praise for you and I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.