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The Fr. Mike Schmitz Catholic Podcast

Learning Detachment from Your Stuff

The Fr. Mike Schmitz Catholic Podcast

Ascension

Religion & Spirituality, Society & Culture, Christianity

4.97.7K Ratings

🗓️ 4 February 2021

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sometimes the things that we own end up owning us. Detachment prevents this from happening.

You may have heard of the minimalist movement that focuses on only having the things you need, and letting go of the things you don’t. Most people practice this by decluttering their house or storage, like you would if you were cleaning out a closet. But it’s not so much having a lot of stuff that’s the problem: it’s being attached to those things, and letting them have a sense of control over your life.

This can happen with anything we own, from entertainment resources like books or video games, to things like photos, letters from family and friends, or even notes from your favorite theology course. For some reason, our hearts hold on to certain things, even if we haven’t looked at them in years, just in case we need them someday. Maybe it’s because of sentimental value, or because we find joy in them, but most of the time, we keep these things for a sense of security.

There’s nothing wrong with having things, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with finding joy in the things we do have. But if there are things sitting on our shelves, collecting dust because we’re keeping them “just in case,” maybe the question we need to ask ourselves is, “what does God want me to do with this?” Does he want us to keep it and use it, or give it away to someone who needs it, or just throw it away? But the important thing to remember is that everything we have should be looked at with the idea that we can do something good with it, and intend to use it for the glory of God.

If you still have use for it, then keep it. If it’s done all it can for you, and has more goodness for someone else, then give it away. And if all its goodness is used up, then toss it. But whatever we have, we need to give it to God, acknowledging that he gave it to us in the first place. Letting him decide what we do with the things we own is the perfect way to not only detach ourselves from our possessions, but to gain more freedom in our lives to bless others.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

One of the spiritual principles that spiritual writers for years have written about is detachment.

0:06.1

Is that sometimes the things that we own end up owning us.

0:09.8

Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and this is Ascension Presents.

0:21.0

A couple years ago, I watched this documentary called The Minimalists and I was captivated by it,

0:25.5

right? It's these two guys who said, you know what?

0:27.6

We living in the West with so much material abundance. We have all these things that not only

0:32.2

do we not need. I don't even know if I want these things in my life.

0:36.2

And so they went through this process of like decluttering their lives.

0:39.4

And it was great and was fascinating and I did some of that decluttering.

0:42.2

And then a couple of months ago, I came across these vlogs, all right, with the V of the

0:46.6

vlogs video. Kind of like this, but they moved around and stuff. I'm always just right here.

0:50.0

Here we are. They moved around and they were like, yeah, we declutter our home and we're

0:52.8

living in this minimalist lifestyle and we're doing this for our family or as a couple or as an individual.

0:57.2

And I thought, that is awesome. I love this. And so I went through the process, right? I was going

1:01.5

through my closets and like what are extra clothes I need going through the cupboards. Like, I don't

1:05.2

need these plates or all these mugs. People give me, you know, mugs for coffee because they know

1:08.8

I like coffee, but I'm like, I can only drink out of one mug at a time. That kind of thing went

1:12.0

through this whole process. And it was super not only easy because I just like, good, get rid of

1:16.4

these things. It was not not only fun. That's good. It's not only freeing, but also I was convicted

1:21.9

because these minimalist guys and most minimalist vlogs are kind of secular, right? They're not

1:28.2

motivated necessarily by a spiritual desire for freedom from attachment. But for myself, as a

1:34.7

priest, one of the vows I made, one of the promises I made at my ordination was a vow of simplicity.

...

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