Questions & Answers about . . .

Human Nature                   God the Father
The Old Covenant             The Ten Commandments
Sin and Redemption        God the Son
The New Covenant            The Creeds
The Holy Spirit                   The Holy Scriptures
The Church                         The Ministry
Prayer and Worship          The Sacraments
Holy Baptism                      The Holy Eucharist
Other Sacramental Rites   The Christian Hope

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An Outline of the Faith:
commonly called the Catechism

Human Nature

Q.     What are we by nature?
A.     We are part of God’s creation, made in the image of
         God.

Q.     What does it mean to be created in the image of God?
A.     It means that we are free to make choices: to love, to
         create, to reason, and to live in harmony with creation
         and with God.

Q.     Why then do we live apart from God and out of harmony                 with creation?
A.     From the beginning, human beings have misused their
         freedom and made wrong choices.

Q.     Why do we not use our freedom as we should?
A.     Because we rebel against God, and we put ourselves in
         the place of God.

Q.     What help is there for us?
A.     Our help is in God.

Q.     How did God first help us?
A.     God first helped us by revealing himself and his will,
         through nature and history, through many seers
         and saints, and especially through the prophets of Israel.

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God the Father

Q.     What do we learn about God as creator from
         the revelation to Israel?
A.     We learn that there is one God, the Father Almighty,
         creator of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and
         unseen.

Q.     What does this mean?
A.     This means that the universe is good, that it is the work of
         a single loving God who creates, sustains, and directs it.

Q.     What does this mean about our place in the universe?
A.     It means that the world belongs to its creator; and that
         we are called to enjoy it and to care for it in accordance
         with God’s purposes.

Q.     What does this mean about human life?
A.     It means that all people are worthy of respect and
         honor, because all are created in the image of God, and
         all can respond to the love of God.

Q.     How was this revelation handed down to us?
A.     This revelation was handed down to us through a
         community created by a covenant with God.

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The Old Covenant

Q.     What is meant by a covenant with God?
A.     A covenant is a relationship initiated by God, to which a
         body of people responds in faith.

Q.     What is the Old Covenant?
A.     The Old Covenant is the one given by God to the
         Hebrew people.

Q.     What did God promise them?
A.     God promised that they would be his people to bring
         all the nations of the world to him.

Q.     What response did God require from the chosen people?
A.     God required the chosen people to be faithful; to love
         justice, to do mercy, and to walk humbly with their God.

Q.     Where is this Old Covenant to be found?
A.     The covenant with the Hebrew people is to be found in
         the books which we call the Old Testament.

Q.     Where in the Old Testament is God’s will for us shown
         most clearly?
A.     God’s will for us is shown most clearly in the Ten
         Commandments.

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The Ten Commandments

Q.     What are the Ten Commandments?
A.     The Ten Commandments are the laws given to Moses
         and the people of Israel.

Q.     What do we learn from these commandments?
A.     We learn two things: our duty to God, and our duty to
         our neighbors.

Q.     What is our duty to God?
A.     Our duty is to believe and trust in God;
                 I     To love and obey God and to bring others to
                       know him;
               II     To put nothing in the place of God;
              III     To show God respect in thought, word, and
                       deed;
              IV     And to set aside regular times for worship,
                       prayer, and the study of God’s ways.
Q.     What is our duty to our neighbors?
A.     Our duty to our neighbors is to love them as ourselves,
         and to do to other people as we wish them to do to us;
               V     To love, honor, and help our parents and
                       family; to honor those in authority, and to meet
                       their just demands;
              VI     To show respect for the life God has given us; to
                       work and pray for peace; to bear no malice,
                       prejudice, or hatred in our hearts; and to be
                       kind to all the creatures of God;
            VII     To use all our bodily desires as God intended;
           VIII     To be honest and fair in our dealings; to seek
                       justice, freedom, and the necessities of life for all
                       people; and to use our talents and possessions
                       as ones who must answer for them to God;
              IX     To speak the truth, and not to mislead others by
                       our silence;
               X     To resist temptations to envy, greed, and
                       jealousy; to rejoice in other people’s gifts and
                       graces; and to do our duty for the love of God,
                       who has called us into fellowship with him.

Q.     What is the purpose of the Ten Commandments?
A.     The Ten Commandments were given to define our
         relationship with God and our neighbors.

Q.     Since we do not fully obey them, are they useful at all?
A.     Since we do not fully obey them, we see more clearly our
         sin and our need for redemption.

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Sin and Redemption

Q.     What is sin?
A.     Sin is the seeking of our own will instead of the will of
         God, thus distorting our relationship with God, with other
         people, and with all creation.
Q.     How does sin have power over us?
A.     Sin has power over us because we lose our liberty when
         our relationship with God is distorted.

Q.     What is redemption?
A.     Redemption is the act of God which sets us free from the
         power of evil, sin, and death.

Q.     How did God prepare us for redemption?
A.     God sent the prophets to call us back to himself, to
         show us our need for redemption, and to announce the
         coming of the Messiah.

Q.     What is meant by the Messiah?
A.     The Messiah is one sent by God to free us from the
         power of sin, so that with the help of God we may live in
         harmony with God, within ourselves, with our neighbors,
         and with all creation.

Q.     Who do we believe is the Messiah?
A.     The Messiah, or Christ, is Jesus of Nazareth, the only
         Son of God.

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God the Son

Q.     What do we mean when we say that Jesus is the only
         Son of God?
A.     We mean that Jesus is the only perfect image of the
         Father, and shows us the nature of God.

Q.     What is the nature of God revealed in Jesus?
A.     God is love.

Q.     What do we mean when we say that Jesus was
         conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and became
         incarnate from the Virgin Mary?
A.     We mean that by God’s own act, his divine Son received
         our human nature from the Virgin Mary, his mother.
Q.     Why did he take our human nature?
A.     The divine Son became human, so that in him human
         beings might be adopted as children of God, and be
         made heirs of God’s kingdom.

Q.     What is the great importance of Jesus’ suffering and
         death?
A.     By his obedience, even to suffering and death, Jesus
         made the offering which we could not make; in him we
         are freed from the power of sin and reconciled to God.

Q.     What is the significance of Jesus’ resurrection?
A.     By his resurrection, Jesus overcame death and opened
         for us the way of eternal life.

Q.     What do we mean when we say that he descended to the
         dead?
A.     We mean that he went to the departed and offered them
         also the benefits of redemption.

Q.     What do we mean when we say that he ascended into
         heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father?
A.     We mean that Jesus took our human nature into
         heaven where he now reigns with the Father and
         intercedes for us.

Q.     How can we share in his victory over sin, suffering, and death?
A.     We share in his victory when we are baptized into the
         New Covenant and become living members of Christ.

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The New Covenant

Q.     What is the New Covenant?
A.     The New Covenant is the new relationship with God
         given by Jesus Christ, the Messiah, to the apostles; and,
         through them, to all who believe in him.
Q.     What did the Messiah promise in the New Covenant?
A.     Christ promised to bring us into the kingdom of God
          and give us life in all its fullness.

Q.     What response did Christ require?
A.     Christ commanded us to believe in him and to keep his
         commandments.

Q.     What are the commandments taught by Christ?
A.     Christ taught us the Summary of the Law and gave us
         the New Commandment.

Q.     What is the Summary of the Law?
A.     You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart,
         with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the
         first and the great commandment. And the second is like
         it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.

Q.     What is the New Commandment?
A.     The New Commandment is that we love one another as
         Christ loved us.

Q.     Where may we find what Christians believe about
         Christ?
A.     What Christians believe about Christ is found in the
         Scriptures and summed up in the creeds.

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The Creeds

Pages 53, 96, 326, 327, and 864 in the Book of Common Prayer

Q.     What are the creeds?
A.     The creeds are statements of our basic beliefs about God.

Q.     How many creeds does this Church use in its worship?
A.     This Church uses two creeds: The Apostles’ Creed and the
         Nicene Creed.
Q.     What is the Apostles’ Creed?
A.     The Apostles’ Creed is the ancient creed of Baptism; it is
         used in the Church’s daily worship to recall our
         Baptismal Covenant.

Q.     What is the Nicene Creed?
A.     The Nicene Creed is the creed of the universal Church
         and is used at the Eucharist.

Q.     What, then, is the Athanasian Creed?
A.     The Athanasian Creed is an ancient document
         proclaiming the nature of the Incarnation and of God
         as Trinity.

Q.     What is the Trinity?
A.     The Trinity is one God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

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The Holy Spirit

Q.     Who is the Holy Spirit?
A.     The Holy Spirit is the Third Person of the Trinity, God at
         work in the world and in the Church even now.

Q.     How is the Holy Spirit revealed in the Old Covenant?
A.     The Holy Spirit is revealed in the Old Covenant as the
         giver of life, the One who spoke through the prophets.

Q.     How is the Holy Spirit revealed in the New Covenant?
A.     The Holy Spirit is revealed as the Lord who leads us into
         all truth and enables us to grow in the likeness of
         Christ.

Q.     How do we recognize the presence of the Holy Spirit in
         our lives?
A.     We recognize the presence of the Holy Spirit when we
         confess Jesus Christ as Lord and are brought into love
         and harmony with God, with ourselves, with our
         neighbors, and with all creation.
Q.     How do we recognize the truths taught by the Holy
         Spirit?
A.     We recognize truths to be taught by the Holy Spirit
         when they are in accord with the Scriptures.

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The Holy Scriptures

Q.     What are the Holy Scriptures?
A.     The Holy Scriptures, commonly called the Bible, are the
         books of the Old and New Testaments; other books,
         called the Apocrypha, are often included in the Bible.

Q.     What is the Old Testament?
A.     The Old Testament consists of books written by the
         people of the Old Covenant, under the inspiration of the
         Holy Spirit, to show God at work in nature and history.

Q.     What is the New Testament?
A.     The New Testament consists of books written by the
         people of the New Covenant, under the inspiration of
         the Holy Spirit, to set forth the life and teachings of
         Jesus and to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom
         for all people.

Q.     What is the Apocrypha?
A.     The Apocrypha is a collection of additional books
         written by people of the Old Covenant, and used in
         the Christian Church.

Q.     Why do we call the Holy Scriptures the Word of God?
A.     We call them the Word of God because God inspired
         their human authors and because God still speaks to us
         through the Bible.

Q.     How do we understand the meaning of the Bible?
A.     We understand the meaning of the Bible by the help of
         the Holy Spirit, who guides the Church in the true
         interpretation of the Scriptures.

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The Church

Q.     What is the Church?
A.     The Church is the community of the New Covenant.

Q.     How is the Church described in the Bible?
A.     The Church is described as the Body of which Jesus
         Christ is the Head and of which all baptized persons are
         members. It is called the People of God, the New Israel,
         a holy nation, a royal priesthood, and the pillar and
         ground of truth.

Q.     How is the Church described in the creeds?
A.     The Church is described as one, holy, catholic, and
         apostolic.

Q.     Why is the Church described as one?
A.     The Church is one, because it is one Body, under one
         Head, our Lord Jesus Christ.

Q.     Why is the Church described as holy?
A.     The Church is holy, because the Holy Spirit dwells in it,
         consecrates its members, and guides them to do God’s
         work.

Q.     Why is the Church described as catholic?
A.     The Church is catholic, because it proclaims the whole
         Faith to all people, to the end of time.

Q.     Why is the Church described as apostolic?
A.     The Church is apostolic, because it continues in the
         teaching and fellowship of the apostles and is sent
         to carry out Christ’s mission to all people.
Q.     What is the mission of the Church?
A.     The mission of the Church is to restore all people to
         unity with God and each other in Christ.

Q.     How does the Church pursue its mission?
A.     The Church pursues its mission as it prays and
         worships, proclaims the Gospel, and promotes justice,
         peace, and love.

Q.     Through whom does the Church carry out its mission?
A.     The Church carries out its mission through the ministry
         of all its members.

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The Ministry

Q.     Who are the ministers of the Church?
A.     The ministers of the Church are lay persons, bishops,
         priests, and deacons.

Q.     What is the ministry of the laity?
A.     The ministry of lay persons is to represent Christ and his
         Church; to bear witness to him wherever they may be;
         and, according to the gifts given them, to carry on
         Christ’s work of reconciliation in the world; and to take
         their place in the life, worship, and governance of the
         Church.

Q.     What is the ministry of a bishop?
A.     The ministry of a bishop is to represent Christ and his
         Church, particularly as apostle, chief priest, and pastor
         of a diocese; to guard the faith, unity, and discipline of
         the whole Church; to proclaim the Word of God; to act
         in Christ’s name for the reconciliation of the world and
         the building up of the Church; and to ordain others to
         continue Christ’s ministry.
Q.     What is the ministry of a priest or presbyter?
A.     The ministry of a priest is to represent Christ and his
         Church, particularly as pastor to the people; to share
         with the bishop in the overseeing of the Church; to
         proclaim the Gospel; to administer the sacraments;
         and to bless and declare pardon in the name of God.

Q.     What is the ministry of a deacon?
A.     The ministry of a deacon is to represent Christ and his
         Church, particularly as a servant of those in need; and
         to assist bishops and priests in the proclamation of the
         Gospel and the administration of the sacraments.

Q.     What is the duty of all Christians?
A.     The duty of all Christians is to follow Christ; to come
         together week by week for corporate worship; and to
         work, pray, and give for the spread of the kingdom of God.

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Prayer and Worship

Q.     What is prayer?
A.     Prayer is responding to God, by thought and by deeds,
         with or without words.

Q.     What is Christian Prayer?
A.     Christian prayer is response to God the Father, through
         Jesus Christ, in the power of the Holy Spirit.

Q.     What prayer did Christ teach us?
A.     Our Lord gave us the example of prayer known as
         the Lord’s Prayer.  

Q.     What are the principal kinds of prayer?
A.     The principal kinds of prayer are adoration, praise,
         thanksgiving, penitence, oblation, intercession, and
         petition.
Q.     What is adoration?
A.     Adoration is the lifting up of the heart and mind to God,
         asking nothing but to enjoy God’s presence.

Q.     Why do we praise God?
A.     We praise God, not to obtain anything, but because
         God’s Being draws praise from us.

Q.     For what do we offer thanksgiving?
A.     Thanksgiving is offered to God for all the blessings of
         this life, for our redemption, and for whatever draws us
         closer to God.

Q.     What is penitence?
A.     In penitence, we confess our sins and make restitution
         where possible, with the intention to amend our lives.

Q.     What is prayer of oblation?
A.     Oblation is an offering of ourselves, our lives and
         labors, in union with Christ, for the purposes of God.

Q.     What are intercession and petition?
A.     Intercession brings before God the needs of others; in
         petition, we present our own needs, that God’s will may
         be done.

Q.     What is corporate worship?
A.     In corporate worship, we unite ourselves with others to
         acknowledge the holiness of God, to hear God’s Word,
         to offer prayer, and to celebrate the sacraments.

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The Sacraments

Q.     What are the sacraments?
A.     The sacraments are outward and visible signs of inward
         and spiritual grace, given by Christ as sure and certain
         means by which we receive that grace.
Q.     What is grace?
A.     Grace is God’s favor towards us, unearned and
         undeserved; by grace God forgives our sins, enlightens
         our minds, stirs our hearts, and strengthens our wills.

Q.     What are the two great sacraments of the Gospel?
A.     The two great sacraments given by Christ to his Church
         are Holy Baptism and the Holy Eucharist.

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Holy Baptism

Q.     What is Holy Baptism?
A.     Holy Baptism is the sacrament by which God adopts us
         as his children and makes us members of Christ’s Body,
         the Church, and inheritors of the kingdom of God.

Q.     What is the outward and visible sign in Baptism?
A.     The outward and visible sign in Baptism is water, in
         which the person is baptized in the Name of the Father,
         and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

Q.     What is the inward and spiritual grace in Baptism?
A.     The inward and spiritual grace in Baptism is union with
         Christ in his death and resurrection, birth into God’s
         family the Church, forgiveness of sins, and new life in
         the Holy Spirit.

Q.     What is required of us at Baptism?
A.     It is required that we renounce Satan, repent of our sins,
         and accept Jesus as our Lord and Savior.

Q.     Why then are infants baptized?
A.     Infants are baptized so that they can share citizenship
         in the Covenant, membership in Christ, and redemption
         by God.

Q.     How are the promises for infants made and carried out?
A.     Promises are made for them by their parents and
         sponsors, who guarantee that the infants will be
         brought up within the Church, to know Christ and be
         able to follow him.

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The Holy Eucharist

Q.     What is the Holy Eucharist?
A.     The Holy Eucharist is the sacrament commanded by
         Christ for the continual remembrance of his life, death,
         and resurrection, until his coming again.

Q.     Why is the Eucharist called a sacrifice?
A.     Because the Eucharist, the Church’s sacrifice of praise and
         thanksgiving, is the way by which the sacrifice of Christ is
         made present, and in which he unites us to his one offering
         of himself.

Q.     By what other names is this service known?
A.     The Holy Eucharist is called the Lord’s Supper, and
         Holy Communion; it is also known as the Divine
         Liturgy, the Mass, and the Great Offering.

Q.     What is the outward and visible sign in the Eucharist?
A.     The outward and visible sign in the Eucharist is bread
         and wine, given and received according to Christ’s command.

Q.     What is the inward and spiritual grace given in the Eucharist?
A.     The inward and spiritual grace in the Holy Communion
         is the Body and Blood of Christ given to his people, and
         received by faith.

Q.     What are the benefits which we receive in the Lord’s Supper?
A.     The benefits we receive are the forgiveness of our sins,
         the strengthening of our union with Christ and one
         another, and the foretaste of the heavenly banquet which
         is our nourishment in eternal life.

Q.     What is required of us when we come to the Eucharist?
A.     It is required that we should examine our lives, repent
         of our sins, and be in love and charity with all people.

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Other Sacramental Rites

Q.     What other sacramental rites evolved in the Church
         under the guidance of the Holy Spirit?
A.     Other sacramental rites which evolved in the Church
         include confirmation, ordination, holy matrimony,
         reconciliation of a penitent, and unction.

Q.     How do they differ from the two sacraments of the
         Gospel?
A.     Although they are means of grace, they are not
         necessary for all persons in the same way that Baptism and
         the Eucharist are.

Q.     What is Confirmation?
A.     Confirmation is the rite in which we express a mature
         commitment to Christ, and receive strength from the
         Holy Spirit through prayer and the laying on of hands
         by a bishop.

Q.     What is required of those to be confirmed?
A.     It is required of those to be confirmed that they have
         been baptized, are sufficiently instructed in the Christian
         Faith, are penitent for their sins, and are ready to affirm
         their confession of Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord.

Q.     What is Ordination?
A.     Ordination is the rite in which God gives authority
         and the grace of the Holy Spirit to those being made bishops,
         priests, and deacons, through prayer and the laying on
         of hands by bishops.

Q.     What is Holy Matrimony?
A.     Holy Matrimony is Christian marriage, in which the
         woman and man enter into a life‑long union, make their
         vows before God and the Church, and receive the grace
         and blessing of God to help them fulfill their vows.

Q.     What is Reconciliation of a Penitent?
A.     Reconciliation of a Penitent, or Penance, is the rite in
         which those who repent of their sins may confess them
         to God in the presence of a priest, and receive the
         assurance of pardon and the grace of absolution.

Q.     What is Unction of the Sick?
A.     Unction is the rite of anointing the sick with oil, or the
         laying on of hands, by which God’s grace is given for the
         healing of spirit, mind, and body.

Q.     Is God’s activity limited to these rites?
A.     God does not limit himself to these rites; they are
         patterns of countless ways by which God uses material
         things to reach out to us.

Q.     How are the sacraments related to our Christian hope?
A.     Sacraments sustain our present hope and anticipate its
         future fulfillment.

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The Christian Hope

Q.     What is the Christian hope?
A.     The Christian hope is to live with confidence in newness
         and fullness of life, and to await the coming of Christ in
         glory, and the completion of God’s purpose for the
         world.
Q.     What do we mean by the coming of Christ in glory?
A.     By the coming of Christ in glory, we mean that Christ
         will come, not in weakness but in power, and will make
         all things new.

Q.     What do we mean by heaven and hell?
A.     By heaven, we mean eternal life in our enjoyment of God;
         by hell, we mean eternal death in our rejection of God.

Q.     Why do we pray for the dead?
A.     We pray for them, because we still hold them in our
         love, and because we trust that in God’s presence those
         who have chosen to serve him will grow in his love, until
         they see him as he is.

Q.     What do we mean by the last judgment?
A.     We believe that Christ will come in glory and judge
         the living and the dead.

Q.     What do we mean by the resurrection of the body?
A.     We mean that God will raise us from death in the
         fullness of our being, that we may live with Christ in the
         communion of the saints.

Q.     What is the communion of saints?
A.     The communion of saints is the whole family of God,
         the living and the dead, those whom we love and those
         whom we hurt, bound together in Christ by sacrament,
         prayer, and praise.

Q.     What do we mean by everlasting life?

A.     By everlasting life, we mean a new existence, in which we
         are united with all the people of God, in the joy of fully
         knowing and loving God and each other.

Q.     What, then, is our assurance as Christians?
A.     Our assurance as Christians is that nothing, not even
         death, shall separate us from the love of God which is in
         Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.

           

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