¶ Intro / Opening
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¶ Welcome and The Call to Solidarity
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz, and you're listening to the Catechism in Ear podcast, where we encounter God's plan of sure goodness for us, revealed in Scripture and passed down through the tradition of the Catholic faith. The Catechism in Year is brought to you by Ascension. In three hundred and sixty-five 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 two hundred and fifty-five. We're reading paragraphs nineteen thirty-nine to nineteen forty-eight. 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 a year reading plan. By visiting Ascension Press.com slash CIY. You can click follow or subscribe in your podcast app for daily updates, daily notifications, one quick note, just a thank you. To all those who have supported the production of this podcast with prayers, financial gifts, We couldn't do this without you. We definitely could not make it to day two fifty five. And also you made it to day two fifty five. We
are in the next section. We're we're on the last day of chapter two of Pillar Three, Section One, you know what I'm saying? So today we're com we're concluding with community. We started in this pillar with human dignity. Then community. Tomorrow we're launching into salvation, which I think well, this has been fascinating, right? I think I hopefully you've been fascinated by this, but
it's really incredible that we're gonna be up be start talking about, okay, so what is the moral law, the natural moral law, especially the old law, the new law or the law of the gospel and what how does grace work in in us and justification? What is that? What's merit? What's the role of merit? All those things.
We're gonna start talking about tomorrow. Today, we're talking about human solidarity. Yesterday, you probably remember, because it was only yesterday, we talked about equality and differences between people. That we all have this equality when it comes to our dignity as being made in God's image.
And likeness and the fact that Christ has died for every every person, whether they know it or not, whether they've accepted that, the grace that He's offering them or not. And God has a destination for every one of us. And that destination is that He wants us to go to heaven. We can say yes to that, we can say no to that. Because of that, we have this new not new thing, but today we're introducing the concept of human solidarity.
And human solidarity is this principle that might be you might say use the word friendship, you might use the word social charity. But it solidarity is a direct demand of human and Christian brotherhood. It basically remember I think I've quoted Mother Teresa a thousand times and how actually it's funny. You know, the the quote is that if we have no peace it's because we've forgotten that we belong to one another.
I was thinking about where did I get that? Why is that why why is that one quote from Latesa stuck in my head all of the time and I realized that my mom my mom who just had, you know, plaques all over the place, like over every door, you know, go from Hobby Lobby or wherever they go, Michael's or maybe some other Catholic store. And there's all these quotes, right? You know, Faith, family,
fellowship or whatever. Prayers go up, blessings come down. Some of these these plaques, you know, you know you know what I'm talking about. Now my mom one of them, I just was visiting my dad and I just like, Oh my gosh, that's where it is. There's Mother Teresa's quote. If we have no peace, it's because we've forgotten we belong to each other. Mother Teresa. So
My mom put that up and now it's in my heart. It's just like so many things, so many things we get from our family, from our parents, so many things I've gotten from my mom and dad. And that's what we talked about yesterday, right? That we're not born the same. We're born equal, but we need each other.
And so human solidarity is that sense that you know something that I don't, and I might have something that you don't. And so, in order to flourish, in order to have a society that is like the society that God wants for us. We need to have this friendship. We need to have this social charity. We need to have this human solidarity. So we're talking about that today as well as
At the end of this, we got some nuggets. We got a few nuggets. And honestly, you know, how long can you go without some nuggets? I don't know if I I don't know how long I can last without nuggets. So today Here we are, get some nuggets at the end of this chapter two on community. But in order to launch into human solidarity, as well as the nuggets at the end, let's call upon our Heavenly Father.
¶ Catechism on Human Solidarity
Father in heaven, you are good. In the name of Jesus, we ask you to please receive our thanks, always receive our praise, receive the glory that is yours. Lord God, we ask that you be known. That that not only are you known in far-off places by people who have not yet heard of you, but also that you be known by us, by your children, those you have redeemed by the blood of your son and and brought to new birth through baptism and brought into your church.
Help us to know you, and in knowing you to to to glorify you, and knowing you, to love you, and in knowing you to also do your will. Father, we ask that you please in the name of Jesus send that Spirit. That Spirit helps us to know you. So that we can see you as you truly are, and that we can see each other as we truly are, both in our strengths and our weaknesses, and to be brothers and sisters. To the human race, to be neighbors to our neighbors, and to love and pray for our enemies.
In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. It's day two hundred and fifty five, we're reading paragraphs in nineteen thirty-nine to nineteen forty-eight. Human Solidarity The principle of solidarity, also articulated in terms of friendship or social charity, is a direct demand of human and Christian brotherhood.
Pope Pius XII stated An error, today abundantly widespread, is disregard for the law of human solidarity and charity, dictated and imposed both by our common origin and by the equality and rational nature of all men, whatever nation they belong to. This law is sealed by the sacrifice of redemption offered by Jesus Christ on the altar of the cross to his heavenly Father on behalf of sinful humanity.
Solidarity is manifested in the first place by the distribution of goods and remuneration for work. It also presupposes the effort for a more just social order where tensions are better able to be reduced and conflicts more readily settled by negotiation. Socioeconomic problems can be resolved only with the help of all the forms of solidarity solidarity of the poor among themselves, between rich and poor, of workers among themselves, between employers and employees in a business.
Solidarity among nations and peoples. International solidarity is a requirement of the moral order. World peace depends in part upon this. The virtue of solidarity goes beyond material goods. In spreading the spiritual goods of the faith, the church has promoted and often opened new paths for the development of temporal goods as well. And so throughout the centuries has the Lord's saying been verified. Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things shall be yours as well.
Pope Pius XII further stated For two thousand years this sentiment has lived and endured in the soul of the church, impelling souls then and now, to the heroic charity of monastic farmers, liberators of slaves, healers of the sick, and messengers of faith, civilization, and science. To all generations and all peoples for the sake of creating the social conditions capable of offering to everyone possible a life worthy of man and of a Christian. In brief.
Society ensures social justice by providing the conditions that allow associations and individuals to obtain their due. Respect for the human person considers the other another self. It presupposes respect for the fundamental rights that flow from the dignity intrinsic of the person. The equality of men concerns their dignity as persons and the rights that flow from it.
The differences among persons belong to God's plan, who wills that we should need one another. These differences should encourage charity. The equal dignity of human persons requires the effort to reduce excessive social and economic inequalities. It gives urgency to the elimination of sinful inequalities. Solidarity is an eminently Christian virtue. It practices the sharing of spiritual goods even more than material ones.
Right, there we have it. Paragraphs nineteen thirty nine to our nuggets at the end, nineteen forty eight. You know, human solidarity. Again, we we can say this again and again because it it's needed to be said again and again.
¶ Private Property and Universal Goods
All that we're talking about here, remember, this human solidarity, the fact that for the Christian, we're gonna hear this again when it comes to uh the commandment about stealing, about private property. that private property is a good. That is one of the principles of ca Catholic social teaching. That you every person has a right to private property. At the same time, there's another Catholic social teaching called the universal destination of goods.
So uh at one and the same time the church holds on to these two things. One is you have a right to bright your own property, you have a right to your own stuff, and at the same time the universal destination of goods, which means that uh that there are enough resources in this world for all people.
And that if there if there are some people who are not receiving the resources that they need to survive, that they need to thrive, then there is an imbalance. Then there needs to be a change in things, right? So my right to private property at some place, at some level, it Ceases. when we meet the needs of those around us.
But again, it doesn't cease by force. We talked about this yesterday. There's no legislation. There's no law, right, that can change the human heart. We have these brokenness. We have prejudices. We have selfishness. We have greed in our own hearts. And no law can change that. What can change that is grace. What can change that is recognizing, okay, I belong to the Lord, and here is how good God is. God emptied himself. He poured himself out, took the form of a human being.
And in that, in that life, he he continued to pour himself out. He embraced poverty. He he gave himself to the point of death, even death on a cross. And so I need to have that same attitude. I need to have that same mindset that it belongs to Jesus Christ. So, you know, we're gonna hear this later on. But if I uh yes, you have a right to private property. I have a right to private property.
But because I've been loved in this way and because we have this human solidarity, we have friendship, we have brotherhood. If my brother, if my friend is going without, then I have I have the right and also I have the duty To use my private property for the needs of my brother, for the needs of my friend, for the needs of my neighbor. Does that make sense? So it's not enforced, right? It's not legislated. It's not from law, it's from grace.
¶ Practicing Solidarity with All
But it's rooted again in this, it's rooted in justice. It written injustice, that it belongs to the dignity of every human being and that he or she has what they need, not simply to scrape through life, but they have what they need To to thrive in this life. They have what they need to be able to say yes to the Lord. And so what I get to do, I get to when it comes to human solidarity, when it comes to
Friendship, when it comes to social charity, it's the d it's a direct demand of human and Christian brotherhood. I have to ask that question. If this was my actual brother or my actual sister, like you're the one that I I know, the one that I love, the one that that I would do anything for. If this was them, what would I do then? And this is just so important because
It all it all has to start on an individual level. Yes, it goes to social realms, it goes to associations. In fact, paragraph 1941 talks about this. It says, that those socioeconomic problems can be resolved only with the help of all the forms of solidarity. Right. So we need solid solidarity among the poor themselves, between the rich and the poor, workers among themselves, being plain employers and employees in a business.
Between nations and peoples, in that though all those forms of solidarity where we begin to see each other as brothers and sisters. That's where it has to start. And so what it what it involves is involves putting on a new lens. Putting on a new lens and saying, Okay, this person, this stranger
Okay, uh the stranger is my friend. The stranger is my brother. The stranger is someone for whom Christ died. The stranger is someone who I mean, in some ways we do it like this, right? I' how how do you do this? I I would say oftentimes I have to remind myself of this. When I see someone who who, for lack of a better way to describe it, Someone who I'm like, are they they're are they just there to take advantage of me?
Right. Are are they in you know, say maybe someone begging, that that kind of situation. Are they just there? Are they gonna, you know, take what I'm offering them and they're gonna use it to buy drugs or buy alcohol or just waste it on themselves? One of the things I have to ask is Okay, do I remember that they have a mom? Do I remember that they have a dad? Do I remember that at some point At some point there was someone For whom this person in front of me was was everything.
And even if that individual in front of me never actually had that, to realize, oh wait, maybe this is someone right in front of me, who was never really loved by their mom, was never really loved by their father, they they were never chosen by someone else. And my heart has to go out to them. And yes, I of course it in our the answer is not just money, right? The answer is not just give this person money. Oftentimes, as we all know, one of the main reasons for people who are homeless
Yes, can be drug addiction or it can be al alcohol addiction addiction and also mental illness. And that sense of being able to say what can what can we do? Not just to throw money at a person. But to treat a person like a person. And that's why paragraph 1942 highlights this. It says the virtue of solidarity goes beyond material goods.
That that it's not just giving a person what they're asking for. It's not just giving them twenty bucks. It's not just giving them whatever the thing is. Although that's I mean sometimes it starts there, right? Obviously. But it involves seeing a person. Again, if my brother was on the street.
Would I say, here's 20 bucks, I'm praying for you. Or would there be something more? Would I say, how have you been? How's your day? And oftentimes, again, that's so small, isn't it? It's so small. Just how are you? How are you doing? But sometimes it involves just treating people like people. Now I'm using this extreme example of a homeless person, but let's make it applicable to right now, to maybe your day, and you have that coworker. And maybe that the coworker that that
you love, the co coworker you enjoy, their presence, maybe it's that coworker that is kind of tough to talk to. When they stop by your desk or stop by wherever you're working, it's kinda like, okay, the quicker I can get away from this conversation, the better. And You know, a lot of us know people like that, where we find ourselves looking for the exit the moment they show up. Maybe for that person we realize, okay, this is human solidarity.
And again, this is not necessarily the same thing as here's a homeless person who needs to be a good thing. material help. They need, you know, something from my kitchen or they need something from my wallet. But maybe it's they here's just a person who is like me or is like my sister or is like my brother. And they just need some time and attention.
Because how many of us? How many of us just that's all I need? I d I d I I don't actually need your money. I don't need your extra coat. I don't need But you know it would be really nice for someone to look me in the eye and say, How are you? And let me answer them. So again, it could be the person on the street, could be the homeless person, or it could be the person, maybe the person you sleep next to.
You know, we we know this all the time that there are a lot of married couples who they just find themselves okay, we're we become roommates. I mean not even like really fun roommates, but just kinda like roommates who tolerate each other. And w how would that change if just today? When maybe you asked your spouse, How are you? And then
W gave them a chance to respond without rushing off to the next thing. I don't know. Again, here I am. This is a big community and every one of us is coming from a different place. Every one of us has different opportunities to help others, and every one of us has different needs in our own heart.
We all have these different situations and so I'm just throwing out some of these opportunities or some of these maybe what what might be the case and this might be one of the ways that God is asking you today to exercise friendship, to exercise social charity, to exercise human solidarity. I don't know.
¶ Personal Commitment and Final Prayer
But maybe you do. Again, I don't know how God's calling you to move forward today, but maybe you do. And maybe it's gonna be really hard. Maybe it's something that you've tried before and have been shot down. In which case, let's pray for each other. is we're all in different situations, we're all in different circumstances, we all have different degrees of of courage and different degrees of patience and different degrees of a willingness to love because we all have different degrees of wounds.
Let's pray for each other. I'm telling you, I'm praying for you. I really am. Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.
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