
CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, ASCENSION EDITION ("Catechism in a Year")
by Ascension Press
**Section one — Bookstore recommendation** Some books explain Christianity. The Catechism of the Catholic Church presents it — the full architecture of Catholic belief, sacramental life, moral teaching, and prayer gathered into a single authoritative text. First promulgated in 1992 under John Paul II, it answers a question the Second Vatican Council left pressing: what does the Church actually teach, in one place, in accessible form? The Ascension 'Catechism in a Year' edition repackages this text as a guided 365-day reading plan, drawing on the approach popularized by Father Mike Schmitz's widely followed audio series. Readers move through the four pillars — what we believe, how we worship, how we live, how we pray — at a pace designed to make the whole text completable within a single year. The intended audience is broad: inquirers, returning Catholics, lifelong faithful who have never read the Catechism cover to cover, and anyone seeking a single reference for Catholic teaching on any question from the existence of God to the ethics of economic life. It is, simply, the closest thing Catholicism has to a comprehensive one-volume answer. **Section two — Catholic anthropological reading** - **Created**: The Catechism opens with the human person as a being oriented by nature toward God — not as a theological add-on but as a structural claim about what the person is. Its early articles on the imago Dei (CCC 1700-1715) establish that human dignity is indelible, not earned, grounding every subsequent moral and legal argument in ontology rather than sentiment. This is precisely the move Vitz, Nordling, and Titus make in building the CCMMP: anthropology before psychology. - **Fallen**: The Catechism's treatment of original sin and concupiscence (CCC 397-409) is among the most precise available in a single magisterial document. It names concupiscence not as sin itself but as the disordering of desire that remains after Baptism — the chronic inclination toward lower goods that Aquinas identifies in the *Summa Theologiae* I-II as the wound in the appetitive faculty. The CCMMP's Fallen state is mapped here with doctrinal precision. - **Redeemed**: The sacramental theology sections describe grace not as an abstract divine favor but as a participation in the divine nature that transforms the faculties from within. The Anointing of the Sick, for instance, addresses the integral person: the Catechism's article 1502 treats illness as a condition that implicates the whole person — body, soul, social relationships, and eschatological hope — rather than a merely biomedical event.[^1] This directly complements CCMMP anthropology on the unity of body and soul. - **Justice (worship)**: The Catechism's second pillar on the sacraments is an extended argument that justice toward God — the virtue of religion in Aquinas's schema — is not optional piety but the ordered response of a creature who has received everything. The Anointing of the Sick passages, as clarified in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith's liturgical norms, emphasize that the Church's ministry to the sick fulfills a specific obligation of justice, not merely charity.[^2] - **Prudence (teachability)**: The Ascension edition's daily-reading structure trains the integral virtue of docility by presenting magisterial teaching incrementally, requiring the reader to hold prior articles in memory as later ones build upon them. This mirrors the goal-gradient effect in virtue formation: steady, near-term markers of progress sustain the habit of inquiry over a full year. **Section three — Conversation with the canon** The Catechism sits at the center of several documents. John Paul II's[^3] *Veritatis Splendor* draws directly on CCC 2407 to anchor its argument that justice in economic life is not separable from the broader moral order — a connection that shows the Catechism functioning less as a summary of theology than as a generative source for subsequent magisterial reflection. Benedict XVI's[^4] *Spe Salvi* likewise cites CCC 1817-1821 on hope as a theological virtue, extending the Catechism's structural account of hope into an extended meditation on what it means to live toward a future that exceeds any political or therapeutic program. The Catechism is, in this sense, not merely one book in the Bloom library but the doctrinal grammar that makes much of the rest of the corpus intelligible. ## References [^1]: Ratzinger, J. (Card.), & Bertone, T. (Abp.). (2000). *Instruction on prayers for healing*. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Citing *Catechism of the Catholic Church*, No. 1502. [^2]: Ratzinger, J. (Card.), & Bertone, T. (Abp.). (2000). *Instruction on prayers for healing*. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Citing *Catechism of the Catholic Church*, No. 1511. [^3]: John Paul II. (1993). *Veritatis splendor* [Encyclical letter]. Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Citing *Catechism of the Catholic Church*, No. 2407. [^4]: Benedict XVI. (2007). *Spe salvi* [Encyclical letter]. Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Citing *Catechism of the Catholic Church*, 1817-1821.
























