Catechism of The Eastern Orthodox Church
Catechism of The Eastern Orthodox Church
Catechism of The Eastern Orthodox Church
OF
WRITTEN BY
One such book which has been out of print and which I felt
would be ideal for our Sunday School Department was the
material from this book taken from the Catechism Book
written by the late Rev. Constas H. Demetry, D.D., father
of our own Helen Nichols who has been very helpful in serving
our community. I am very grateful to Helen Nichols and
Danny Demetry for giving me their permission to reprint this
Catechism which I feel will be valuable instructive material
in Sunday School and to non-Orthodox who wish to learn the
Orthodox Faith.
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Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever. Do
not be led away by diverse and strange teachings.
...(Book of Hebrews, Chapter 8, Verse 9)
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Catechism
of the
Eastern Orthodox Church
written by
Rev. Constas H. Demetry, D. D.
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A. God made the world and created one pair of human beings upon the earth.
Our first parents were fashioned good, but they disobeyed God, and through
the sin of disobedience their mind was darkened and they lost God. Their
heart became evil. From thence they fell into all wickedness and into
death. Their descendants suffered likewise. But God through His love to
His creatures sent His Son Jesus Christ, who became Man, taught concerning
the true God and what His will is, founded His Church, that it might
continue His work, was crucified that He might propitiate divine
righteousness, which had been insulted by the sin of our First Parents, and
reconcile men with God, and was buried. But after three days He arose;
forty days after the Resurrection He was received into Heaven and fifty days
after the Resurrection He sent the Holy Spirit that He might guide His
Church into all truth. From thenceforth all who desired to be saved from
sin and be happy both in this life and in that to come MUST believe in
Christ, receive Divine Grace through the Sacraments and conform to His
teachings, especially to that concerning love.
A. By His Church.
Page 1
A. Papal, because she acknowledges as her head the Pope; Roman, because her
seat is in Rome; and Catholic, because the Church, before it was divided,
was called Catholic, and the Roman Church continues to appropriate for
herself the title of the ancient undivided Church.
A. Because they protested against the Papal Church and separated from it during
the sixteenth (16th) century.
Q. Why is it so named?
Page 2
A. The following:
1. The four ancient Patriarchates, namely, that of Constantinople or the
Ecumenical, and those of Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem.
2. The three new Patriarchates of Russia, Serbia, and Roumania.
Q. To which of the Orthodox Churches do the Greeks of America belong and why?
A. To the autonomous Greek Orthodox Church of North and South America; which
Church is dependent upon the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the so named Great
Church of Christ, (because its throne is first among all the Orthodox
Churches) and therefore since the fourth Ecumenical Council all scattered
Churches must depend on this Patriarchate, according to its decision, which
was ratified by the successive Ecumenical Councils and was accepted by all
the Churches, even by the Roman.
Q. How many members of the Orthodox Church have we in the United States?
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A. Yes, because different sects seek to proselytize us and take us away from
Orthodoxy. Therefore we must know what each one of them believes and who
holds the right faith so as not to be mistaken in such an important matter
upon which depends the salvation of the soul. Furthermore, we must guide
the misguided back to Orthodoxy so as to assure the salvation of as many as
can be given guidance.
A. Books written by the Prophets and other holy Hebrew men, before the birth
of the Christ: and also the books which were written by the Apostles, and
disciples of Christ.
Q. What are the first Books called and what the second?
A. The first are called the Old Testament and the second the New Testament or
Gospel.
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A. Into two (2) parts. (a) Faith and (b) Good Deeds.
DIFFERENCES AS TO SOURCES
A. No.
(a) The Orthodox and the Anglican Churches accept two sources:
Holy Scripture and Holy Tradition.
A. The Orthodox and the Anglican, whereas others are in error, because no one
has the right to change the dogmas which Christ gave to us, either to add
to them or to subtract from them, or to pervert them; since, if we are
sufficient of ourselves to find out what the dogmas are, and which are
needed for our salvation, the Incarnation of Christ would have been
superfluous.
PART I.
FAITH
A. The first Ecumenical Council composed the first seven articles and the
beginning of the eighth, and the second Council completed the eighth and
composed the other four articles.
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Q. What are the twelve articles of the Creed or the Symbol of Faith?
2. And in one (1) Lord Jesus Christ, the only-be-gotten Son of God,
begotten of the Father before all Ages. Light of Light, True God of True
God, begotten not made, co-substantial with the Father, through Whom all
things were made.
3. Who for us men and for our salvation came down from heaven, and
was incarnated by the Holy Spirit and of the Virgin Mary, and became Man.
6. And ascended into heaven, and sat at the right hand of the Father;
7. And He will return in glory to judge the living and the dead;
Whose reign will have no end.
8. And I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of Life, Who
proceeds from the Father, Who together with the Father and the Son, is
worshipped and glorified; Who spoke through the Prophets.
IN EXPLANATION OF ARTICLE 1.
CONCERNING GOD AND THE WORLD
A. The Dogmas:
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Q. Who is God?
Q. What is God?
Q. Where is God?
A. God sees us and all things, and He sees everywhere at the same time. He is
All-seeing.
A. No. He is All-holy.
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A. No. He is All-just.
A. No. He is Unchangeable.
A. No. He is immortal.
A. No, excepting the Christian Scientists. The Pantheists also differ, but
they are not considered as a Christian Church.
A. The Churches, except the Christian Scientists, because the Holy Scripture
attributes to God, mind, emotion, and will, which are the three attributes
of all personality. "God knoweth all things" (I John Ch. 3, Ver. 20).
"God is love" (I John Ch. 4, Ver. 8). "I seek not mine own will, but the
will of the Father, which hath sent me" (Gospel of St. John Ch. 5, Ver. 30).
A. God is one only, but with three Persons unconfused, and inseparable, namely,
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
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Q. What phrase does the Church employ with reference to God?
Q. What is a mystery?
A. No, because there are many things which we do not understand, but which
exist, and which we use continually; for example, magnetism, electricity,
gravity, etc.
A. The sun, which being one, presents to us three things, light, heat, and
matter.
Q. Do all the Churches believe in the Three Persons of the Holy Trinity?
A. All except the Unitarians, who, concerning God, accept that He is one
Person only; The Jehovah Witness who accept one Person only before the
Resurrection of Christ, that is the Father, but after it they accept two,
the Father and the Son, but not the Holy Spirit, because they think it
is not a person, but only an influence of the Father; and the Christian
Scientists, who consider the Holy Trinity polytheistic.
A. The Churches who believe in the Holy Trinity, because Christ Himself gave
us the Dogmas of the Holy Trinity, saying: "Make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Spirit:" (Gospel of St. Matthew Ch. 28, Ver. 19).
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Q. What evidence have we that there is a personal God apart from the Universe?
A.
1.) The universe, (the earth and the heavenly bodies) could not come
into being of itself because it consists of matter, which is inert. (A
body is called inert, when it of itself, without external influence, cannot
change its state.)
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Q. About subtopic (b), How is it proved from the formation of the universe
that there is a wise, and omnipotent God, apart from it?
A. One of the bodies of the Universe, the earth, upon which we live, was not
always, according to science, as it is now, but was formed gradually and
moreover:
5. All the people of the earth have the idea of God innate in them,
and that of obedience to Him; also the ideas of good and evil, of
eternity, of judgement and retribution, etc. This universe does not
have these ideas either as a whole or in parts. Therefore there must
be a Personal Power, apart from the universe, which, having these
ideas, put them in man.
Q. About subtopic (c), How is it proved from the government of the universe,
that there is an All-wise and Omnipotent God, apart from it?
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A.
1. From the perfect order and unity of design, which we observe in
the universe, and which could not be, if there were many gods, beacuse it
is impossible for many to agree always and in all things. For example, the
sun and the soil are for the use of plants; plants are for animals; animals
for man, and all things for the glory of God and the happiness of men.
1.) On Creation
A. God created the world in six days, from nothing, with only the power of His
Word, that He might make other beings happy also.
A. Into the visible world, that is, what we see (the earth, stars, etc.) and
into the invisable, that is, what we do not see, (spirits).
A. No, there are good spirits, namely, the Angels, and there are evil spirits,
namely, the Demons.
Q. Were the spirits always of two kinds?
A. No. God made them all good, but a part of them afterwards rebelled and
became evil.
A. To serve God and to help men in good deeds, and to protect them as Guardian
Angels.
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A. Man.
Q. Who were the first human beings whom God created and what are they called?
A. The first human beings that God created were Adam and Eve, and they are
called our First Parents.
Q. What were the distinct component elements that God gave them and how did He
form them?
A. That which God has, namely, mind, freedom, power, and immortality, He also
gave to man when He formed our First Parents.
A. That the gifts which God gave to our First Parents were sufficient to enable
them, assisted by the Divine Grace, to become perfect and like unto God.
DIFFERENCES ON CREATION
A. No, except Christian Scientists who accept a spiritual world only, i.e. God
and a spiritual universe, which was not created, but co-exists with God as
His idea, while a material world does not exist, but is false, as testimony
of the senses of man, which senses deceive him. Secondarily, they do not
accept Angels and Devils as Spirits, but as good thoughts and evil beliefs.
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A. The Churches, because the Scripture, on which Mrs. Eddy says that she bases
her heresy, tells us clearly that:
1. Neither spirits, man nor the world was co-existent with God, but
were created.
("..in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the
heavens.")
...Genesis Chapter 2, Verse 4.
("..glorify thou me ... with the glory which I had with thee
before the world was.")
...St. John Chapter 17, Verse 5.
2. That God created the angels good spirits, and that some of them
sinned and became evil spirits, or Devils.
("..Who maketh his angels spirits..")
...Hebrews Chapter 1, Verse 7.
("For if God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them
down to hell..")
...II Peter Chapter 2, Verse 4.
A. He commanded them not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil,
that He might test their obedience. (Many people think that the fruit
which the First Parents ate in disobedience to God was the carnal
connexion. This is not true, because the lawful carnal connexion of man
and woman and procreation of children is in accordance with the will of
God, since God, as soon as He created the First Parents, blessed them and
said to them:
"Be Fruitful, and multiply, and fill the earth.."
...Genesis Chapter 1, Verse 28.
Page 15
A.
1. Their minds became darkened and they lost God.
2. Their hearts became perverted and they began to love the evil more
than the good.
A. Unfortunately the whole human race born since has also suffered. They
inherited the same evils, just as they would have inherited immortality
and happiness, if our First Parents had obeyed; because just as impure
water proceeds from an impure fountain so also sinful men are born of
sinful ancestors.
Q. Did the rest of creation suffer anything from the disobedience of our
First Parents?
A. Assuredly; and because of this, since then, "the whole creation groaneth
and travaileth in pain together until now.", as the Apostle Paul writes in
the Book of Romans, Chapter 8, Verse 22.
Q. What is that sin of disobedience, with all the evils which it brought,
called?
A. Personally none; because we did not personally commit the sin of our First
Parents; but we are charged with it by inheritance because we were in Adam
and Eve when they sinned, and for this reason the Apostle Paul writes:
A. Only Jesus Christ, because He was incarnate of the Holy Spirit, which,
being God, is without sin, and of the Virgin Mary after her cleansing of
original sin by the Holy Spirit when the Angel announced to her the
conception and birth of Christ.
Q. Does man also carry the burden of other sins besides the original sin?
A. Assuredly; personal sins. (The personal sins are mortal and non-mortal.
Mortal are those which destroy any hope of repentance, because they bring
the death of the soul, namely, moral, eternal death. But every sin may be
forgiven by since repentance.
A. The brain is one thing and the soul another. The brain, as part of the
body, is material. The soul is immaterial, and apart from the body, but
uses the brain as its organ for its operations.
Page 17
Q. Are there reasons which demand the existence of a spiritual soul within us,
apart from the body?
2. The consciousness that we are not only body but also spirit.
4. The spiritual world which only man has within him, and which could
not originate from a material brain.
7. The fact that the spirit is young when the body is old.
8. The fact that the spirit often regularly functions in cases where
an autopsy shows afterwards that the brain was injured or wholly destroyed;
and vice versa, namely, that the spiritual energy is often not regular
where an autopsy shows afterwards that the brain was healthy.
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Q. Are there reasons which require the immortality of the soul, and if so,
what are they?
4. Elementary justice seeks that the good shall be rewarded and the
wicked punished. But this does not always happen in this world.
Therefore, the soul must be immortal that it may render account of itself
in another life.
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DIFFERENCES ON THE FALL
Q. How do the Churches differ respecting the Dogma of the fall of man?
A.
a) The Orthodox, Anglican, and Papal Churches accept that the nature
of man has suffered from sin, i.e. the image of God in him has been
corrupted and the "in His likeness" has not been attained, and all men are
responsible before God for the original sin.
b) The Protestant Churches accept that the nature of man, i.e. that
"in His image", was lost wholly, and replaced with a nature wholly corrupt
and ethically dead.
b1) But some of them, as the so-called Church of God, do not accept
that all men are responsible before God for the original sin.
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THE TRUTH AS TO THE FALL
A. The Orthodox, the Anglican, and Papal Churches, whereas others are in error
because:
1. If all men are not responsible for the original sin, why does
St. Paul write? "In whom all sinned," (Book of Romans, Chapter 5, Verse 12)
and that before we became Christians, "we were children of wrath, even as
others", (Book of Ephesians, Chapter 2, Verse 3). Therefore, how otherwise
did we sin than by heredity, by reason of the sin of our First Parents, and
how could we be under the wrath of God if the sin of our First Parents did
not rest heavily upon us?
2. If the image of God was wholly destroyed, why does the Holy
Scripture say, "Who so sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be
shed; for in the image of God I made man", (Genesis, Chapter 9, Verse 6).
And this is said concerning man not before the fall but after it.
3. The soul does not die, as is shown above; but the death to which
the Holy Scripture refers, is moral death, as appears from the words of the
Apostle Paul, "She who liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth."
(I Timothy, Chapter 5, Verse 6).
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ARTICLE 2.
A. The Dogma concerning the Divinity of Jesus Christ; that our Lord Jesus
Christ is begotten of the substances of the Father and on this account the
Symbol speaks of Him as cosubstantial with the Father; He is true God and
Creator of everything, because the world was created by the Father through
Jesus Christ.
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Q. Have we proofs that Jesus Christ is God and what are they?
2. Only God works miracles by His own power. But Jesus wrought
miracles in His own power, and said also to other men that He would give
them this power through the invocation of His name alone, and He has done
it.
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A. The Churches, while those who deny the divinity of Christ are in error for
all of the above reasons, and moreover have no right to be called
Christians, because Jesus Christ Himself declares, that He founded His
Church upon the confession of Saint Peter, that Jesus is God. (Gospel of
Matthew, Chapter 16, Verse 18). It is true that the Bible Students accept
that Christ is God today because He apparently became so after His
resurrection; but, inasmuch as they deny His perpetual divinity, they are
also heretics, because they reject an express teaching of Christ, and they
do not differ from Arius, who was condemned as a heretic for the same
misbelief, that Christ is not God without beginning as the Father is. The
same is true of the Christian Scientists. As long as the divinity which
they attribute to Christ is something which every man can acquire, the
nature of Christ is believed to be something created, and as such can
become perfect, but cannot be or become a divine substance or nature. But
Christ says: "O Father, glorify thou me with the glory which I had with thee
before the world was." (Gospel of St. John, Chapter 17, Verse 5).
ARTICLE 3.
A. That Jesus Christ, the second person of the Holy Trinity, while never
ceasing to be God, became man at an appointed time.
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A. At the time when the Virgin Mary was consecrated to the service of God,
and was in the Temple, the Archangel Gabriel came and announced to her the
unprecedent miracle which would take place within her. Then the Holy Spirit
descended and, after He had first cleansed her from the original sin, gave
her the power to conceive within her the Son of God, who after nine months
was born a man.
A. Yes; that He might save man it was necessary that as a man He should give
men the right teaching about God and all other heavenly teachings, that
He might enlighten the minds of men, and that He might satisfy the divine
Justice with the sacrifice of His sinless life and reconcile to their
Creator the creatures who were under the wrath of God.
Q. What name was Christ given with reference to His saving work?
A. Because He was anointed with the Holy Spirit, as the Kings, Prophets, and
High Priests of the Hebrews were anointed with Holy Oil.
Q. How many natures and how many wills had Christ after the incarnation; and
what is He called with reference thereto?
A. Christ had two natures and two wills, namely, the divine and the human.
For this reason He is called the God-man.
A. The human will was subjected voluntarily to the divine, as a good pupil
obeys his teacher and a good son his father, without compulsion.
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A. Whereas the Orthodox, Anglican, and Protestant Churches accept that only
Christ was conceived and born without Original sin, the Papal Church, since
1854, has dogmatically declared that the Mother of God also was conceived
and born spotless; this is called the Immaculate Conception.
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A. While the Orthodox, Anglican, and Papal Churches accept that the Mother of
God is ever virgin, some Protestants from the sixteenth (16th) century
onward began to teach that the Blessed Virgin Mary was the mother of other
children after the birth of Jesus. They maintain that they gather this
mistaken opinion from the Gospel, where brethren of Jesus are referred to,
(Matthew, Chapter 12, Verse 46), and where it is said concerning Joseph,
"and he knew her not till she brought forth," (Matthew, Chapter 1,
Verse 25). (They who are called brothers of Jesus were children of Joseph
by a former wife, as he was only the betrothed of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
as Jerome and others accept, or of Clopas and the sister of the Mother of
God, as Origen, Eusebius, etc., accept, namely, that they were cousins of
Jesus. In the Scripture cousins are spoken of as brethren, (Genesis,
Chapter 13, Verse 8).
Q. Which Church is right with regard to the Dogma of the perpetual virginity?
A. The Orthodox, Anglican, and Papal Churches, while the Protestants are in
error, because the so-called brethren of Jesus were not children of the
Mother of God, because if she had had other children, Jesus upon His cross
would have left His Mother to the care of some one of them, who would have
been present at His last moments, and not to the care of John, and He would
not have said to her:
"Woman, behold thy son," (St. John, Chapter 19, Verse 26),
that is, since you are losing the only one you have.
Page 27
ARTICLE 4.
A. The sacrifice of His sinless life, which He offered upon the cross, which
was necessary to offer to God, and which He did that the divine Justice,
which had been insulted by the disobedience of our First Parents, might be
propitiated.
Q. What would have occured if this sacrifice of Jesus had not been offered?
A. The body of man, after undergoing in this life all this misfortune, would
finally have died, as also now, but without any hope of a resurrection, and
the soul would have been punished eternally in the life to come far from
God; while now, because of the sacrifice of Christ, the soul is delivered
from punishment, (if man believes in Him and is perfected living after His
commandments), and the body is to be raised and united each with its soul.
A. No; neither man nor angel, because no man was without sin, and an angel
could not offer a sacrifice sufficiently to satisfy the divine
righteousness, because a creature, however much it can do, cannot do it of
itself alone, but only by the aid of Divine Grace.
A. The sacrifice of Jesus Christ has the power to forgive the sins of all men,
of every age, who believe in Jesus and repent for their sins, while still
in this life, and to make them children of God after they have been
children of wrath by reason of disobedience of Adam and Eve.
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Q. What became of the men who were living before the propitiatory sacrifice
was offered?
A. All agree, except the Unitarians, and misled Bible Students, who do not
accept the sacrifice of Christ as propitiatory, since they believe that
Christ was simply a man, and hence His sacrifice was personal, and not for
all men.
4. That it was not necessary that Christ reconcile God to man, but
man to God, and Christ accomplished it by bringing Himself at-one-ment with
God.
5. That Christ did not make His sacrifice for other men, or to
relieve them of their individual responsibility, but only to show them how
to make theirs.
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3. Because the sacrifice of Christ was sufficient for the sins of all
men "both original and personal". For this reason Saint Peter says:
"Who His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree
(cross), by whose stripes ye were healed",
...(I Peter, Chapter 2, Verse 24)
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"Not that we love God, but that He loved us and sent His Son
to be the propitiation for our sins,"
...(I John, Chapter 4, Verse 10)
And if all the above are not sufficient, we bring the words of our Lord
Himself:
ARTICLE 5.
A. That Jesus Christ, when He was crucified, died and was buried on Friday;
after three days He rose as He had foretold, during the night between the
Sabbath and the Lord's Day, wherefore we celebrate the festival of the
Resurrection under the name of Easter.
A. Certainly, because the Hebrews began the day from sunset. Consequently
from the hour of His death to the evening of Friday is one day, to the
evening of the Sabbath is another, and the Lord's Day from the setting of
the sun on the Sabbath evening to the hour of the Resurrection is a third.
1. To Mary Magdalene
2. To the same with the other woman.
3. To Peter
4. To Luke and Clopas
5. To the ten (10) disciples (Thomas being absent)
6. To the eleven (11) Disciples eight (8) days later
7. To the Disciples near the Lake Gennesaret
8. To the Disciples on the Mount in Galilee
9. To the five hundred (500) brethren
10. To Saint James
11. On the Mount of Olives, when He ascended
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Q. In what form does the body of Jesus Christ exist since the Resurrection?
A. It is incorruptible and does not possess those normal physical needs which
it had before, as all men have them, when He lived as man in this life.
Q. Where was the soul of Jesus when His body was in the sepulchre?
A. It descended to Hades bearing the joyful tidings to those who had believed
in His coming as Messiah and had died before He was born.
1. The misled Bible Students who hold that the body of Jesus did not
rise, but was perhaps changed into gases.
3. The Christian Scientists, who teach that since Christ did not die,
He did not rise either.
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A. The Churches, while the misled Bible Students, the Rationalists, and the
Christian Scientists are in error because:
2. Miracles, as acts of God, both are possible (since God both knows
how to perform such acts and is able and willing to do so) and are
historical facts; since the miracles of the Gospel and those which were
wrought and are still being wrought before thousands of men of every rank
and age, we cannot reject them without overturning and perverting history.
The Resurrection of Jesus in particular is an historical fact, since Christ
had died, as it is scientifically proved by the blood which came from His
pierced side, because it was separated into blood and water, as happens
with the dead, and after His burial He showed Himself, alive with His body,
pierced in the hands and the feet and the side; He showed Himself,
moreover, not once, but eleven (11) times, and to over five hundred (500+)
men, who were not credulous, because some of them then believed only when
they made use, not only of their sight and hearing, but even of their
touch; these men, who had been like trembling hares, became by this reason
of the Resurrection fearless heroes, having the courage to sacrifice life
itself, preaching:
"That which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes,
and our hands have handled that declare we unto you."
...(I John, Chapter 1, Verses 1-3)
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ARTICLE 6.
b) The Dogma of the session of Jesus Christ at the right hand of the
Father.
A. That after Jesus had remained on the earth after His resurrection
forty (40) days conversing with His Disciples, He was received up
before them into Heaven; this event the Church celebrates forty (40) days
after Easter under the name of the "Feast of Ascension".
b.) Concerning The Session Of Jesus Christ At The Right Hand Of The Father
Q. What is the Dogma of the session of Jesus at the right hand of the Father?
A. That our Lord after His ascension into Heaven sat down at the right hand
of the Father, being now simply God, as He was before the incarnation, but
the God-man, with His glorified body, as it is after the Resurrection.
A. That Jesus Christ as the God-man, having completed His saving work for the
whole world, continues to be equal in all things with the Father, just as
He was before His incarnation.
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Q. Do the Churches differ on the Doctrine of the Ascension and the Session
of Jesus Christ at the right hand of the Father?
A. No. Only those who do not accept the Doctrine of the Resurrection of
Jesus Christ, of course, do not accept the Doctrine of the Ascension
and the Session of Jesus Christ at the right hand of the Father. Let
us pray for those who differ that they may be loosed from the grip of
Satan, and be given Eternal Life in Christ Jesus!!!
A. It may be combined with the 11th and 12th, because all three contain Dogmas
related to each other.
A.
1. The Second Coming of Jesus Christ.
2. The Resurrection of the Dead.
3. The Future Life.
A. That the existence of man does not cease with death, but that, after death
he passes to another life.
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Q. Into how many Stages may the life of man after death be divided and what
are these Stages?
1) The time from the moment of death to the Second Coming of Christ.
2) The time during the Second Coming of Christ.
3) The time after the Second Coming of Christ.
FIRST STAGE
A. At the instant when a man dies, the body goes to the earth and is disolved
into the elements of which it is composed, and the soul undergoes a
preliminary divine judgement.
3. But if he was a believer, and did not corrupt the faith, and
having sinned, did indeed repent, but did not reach the performance of
good deeds to prove his repentance by actions, then he is led where God
assigns him, that he may be punished temporarily, as long as Divine
Righteousness considers proper.
Q. How many therefore, and what are the conditions one or another of which
each man meets immediately at the instant of death?
2. one of unhappiness, which will be made worse and eternal after the
general judgement,
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Q. Will all the saved enjoy the same happiness and all the punished suffer the
same unhappiness?
A. No, each individual will be rewarded or punished according to his faith and
his works.
Q. Is every tie between the living and the dead broken by death?
A. No, because those who are in happiness (the saints) pray to God for us; but
those who are in temporary punishment need our prayers.
A.
a) With regard to the Saints we properly:
1. Call upon them in our needs, that they may pray to God
that He may be merciful to us.
Q. Are all the dead benefited by those things which we do for them?
A. No, only those who did not attain to the doing of good works, but repented
before they died; because God, being moved by our fervent and continued
prayers, especially by masses, which are the sacrifice of His Son, may
shorten the time of their disagreeable condition, which they spend in
studying themselves, since they did what depended upon them,
i.e. repentance.
A. Surely, because the Saints pleased God, God must reward them. As a part of
their happiness they must be given the liberty to make use of their ability
as spirits to follow their loved ones here on earth and to hear and see
their needs.
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SECOND STAGE
A. At a time which only God knows, the Second Coming of Christ will occur,
i.e. our Lord Jesus Christ will come again to be with us a second time.
Then, through the power which He has as God, He will first raise the bodies
of those who died, as He raised His own body. These bodies will not have
the evils of today, which are the result of the original sin, but will be
incorruptible and each of them will be given to the soul which it had when
it lived in the world. At the same time He will also change the bodies of
those who are alive at that time and make them incorruptible. He will then
judge all of them.
A. Those who had not the opportunity to know the Christian Law, Christ will
judge on the basis of the Natural Moral Law which every man carries in him
from birth and which is manifested in the requirements of conscience. But
those who had the opportunity of knowing the Christian Faith, regardless of
whether they accepted it or not, Christ will judge on the basis of the
Christian Law. And those, who accepted the Christian Faith and kept it
incorrupt and did the good works which it requires, even if they had
sinned, but repented and corrected whatever wrongs they had done, will go
away to Paradise, and those who did not accept the Christian Faith though
they had the opportunity of knowing it, or who accepted it but afterwards
corrupted it, or did not do the good works which it requires, and did not
repent before they died, will go away into punishment.
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THIRD STAGE
A. The condition of each individual will no more be changed, but those, who
have gone into Paradise will live in Heaven eternally happy, and those who
have gone into Punishment will live in Hades eternally unhappy.
A. There is only (1) one; not many. Beware of others who tell you otherwise!
Also, watch out for "spiritualists", or "mediums", or "astrologers", or
"gurus" who would tell you that you have a spirit guide who is in control
of your spiritual destiny or growth! These are evil men who would put you
in touch with fallen angels, or demons. Do not confuse demons from hades
with the Angels and Saints from Heaven above.
ARTICLE 8.
A. That the Holy Spirit is the third person of the Holy Trinity, has the same
authority with the Father and the Son, gives life to all, proceeds from the
Father and spake through the Prophets and other Holy men before and after
Christ.
Q. When, how, and for what reason was the Holy Spirit sent to the Apostles?
A. The Holy Spirit was sent on Pentecost, the fiftieth (50th) day after the
Resurrection of Jesus, to the Apostles, who were waiting in the upper room
in Jerusalem for the fulfillment of the promise given to them that He would
enlighten them to preach the Gospel and impart to the believers the
Mysteries of Grace (the Sacraments).
Q. Has the Holy Spirit since then deserted the Church of Christ?
A. No. He continues to abide with the Church, and to act on its behalf, to
guide it into all the truth (Gospel of John, Chapter 16, Verse 13), and
through His Divine Grace to help men in their salvation.
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ARTICLE 9.
ON THE CHURCH
A. A Divine Institution, which continues the work of Christ for the salvation
of mankind and embraces all those who believe in Him rightly and who are
under the leadership of Canonical Pastors.
Q. By whom was the Church established, when and for what purpose, and when was
it called Christian?
A. The Church was established by our Lord Jesus Christ, when He selected the
twelve (12) Apostles. It began to expand principally on the day of
Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit enlightened the Apostles and they preached
the Gospel not only in the Greek and Hebrew (or Aramaic) languages, but
also in languages which they had never learned; on that day three thousand
souls believed and were baptized. The Church was established to teach,
govern, sanctify, and save men. The followers of Christ were called
Christians for the first time in Antioch between 36 and 40 A.D.
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A. Christ is the invisible Head, but the visible heads are the Bishops as
successors of the Apostles.
Q. Into what orders are the members of the Church divided?
A. Into two (2), the Flock: (That is the Laity), and the Shepherds, that is
the Clergy: (Bishops, Presbyters, and Deacons).
Q. What characteristics are ascribed to the Church in the ninth (9th) Article?
1. One,
2. Holy,
3. Catholic, and
4. Apostolic.
Q. Why is it so called?
A.
1. One: because all Christians are one (1) body, with
one (1) Head, Christ, with one (1) Faith and
one (1) organization.
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2) IRREGULARITIES IN THE CHURCH
Q. What conditions cause a member to be cut off from the Church Militant, and
what is he called then?
A.
1. When a member falls into apostasy or leaves the Christian
religion, then he is called an apostate.
2. When a member falls into heresy, i.e. adds human Dogmas to the
Divine Dogmas or takes away from them or perverts those which Christ gave
to us for our salvation; then he is called a heretic or cacodox.
3. When a member falls into schism, namely, does not acknowledge the
canonical Ecclesiastical Authorities, or in any way strikes at their
administration; then he is called schismatic or anticanonical.
4. When a member falls into excommunication, namely, commits a mortal
sin and stubbornly clings to it, causing great scandal; then he is
excommunicated by the Ecclesiastical Authority and is called an
excommunicate.
Q. What are the Councils and how many kinds of Councils are there?
A. Councils are assemblies of the Holy Clergy to consider the affairs and
problems of the Church. There are three (3) kinds: Provincial, Local,
and Ecumenical, and lately there have been added the Permanent Synods.
A. The Ecumenical Councils, when they assemble and decide freely. They are
infallible for two (2) reasons:
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ARTICLE 10.
ON THE SACRAMENTS
Q. What is a Sacrament?
Q. How many are the Sacraments and what kind of Grace is imparted through
them?
+* 1. Baptism,
:* 2. Chrism or Confirmation,
+* 3. Penance (or Confession),
:* 4. the Divine Eucharist (or Communion),
: 5. Holy Orders,
: 6. Marriage, and
: 7. Unction.
Note: The Sacraments flagged by (*) are obligatory for the individual
Christian; and those flagged by (+) impart Grace by
Sanctification; while those flagged by (:) impart Grace
by Progress.
Q. Are the Sacraments repeated upon one and the same person?
A. Certainly, except only the Sacraments of Baptism and Holy Orders, because
these two (2) are ineffaceable in the soul; and even these are repeated
regularly whenever they are invalid, because then they are as though they
had not been given and are also repeated conditionally whenever doubt
exists. For example, when we are not sure, whether a person has been
baptized or not, we baptize him with the words:
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A. For the whole Church they are necessary; but for the individual Christian,
1. Baptism, 2. Chrism, 3. Penance, and 4. the Holy Eucharist are necessary,
and for this reason are called obligatory while the other three are spoken
of as optional.
Q. Are there other means of Grace besides the Sacraments and if so what are
they called?
A. Because the Sacraments were instituted by Jesus Christ and are necessary
for salvation, but the Means of Sanctification were established by the
Church and develop good thoughts and character in Christians and help them
in their physical and spiritual life.
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Q. What are the means of Sanctification?
A.
The sign of the cross which we make when we pray;
the lesser and the Great Holy Water;
the Flowers of the Cross (at the Feast of the Elevation, Sept. 14)
and of the Veneration of the Cross, (3rd Sunday of the
Great Lent);
and Flowers of the Holy Sepulchre (which we use on Good Friday);
the Palms;
the Prayers to the Holy Virgin and Saints;
the Prayers of birth and of the forty days (or of the churching on the
fortieth day after the birth);
the Prayers of Exorcism against the evil eye and for various needs,
which arise during the life of man;
finally, as a Means of Sanctification, the constant use of the
Holy Scriptures, daily meditation upon them, and faithful
study is of great importance.
The truths of our holy religion are all Scriptural, and the Christian, well
grounded in the teaching of the Catechism (this document), will find the
Scriptures a never-ending joy and inspiration to him and necessary for the
best results in happiness and character building. But in the study of the
Holy Scripture one should, in the event of doubt as to the meaning of any
part of the Scripture, apply to the governing Church, the divinely
appointed interpreter of the Holy Scriptures.
A. The Orthodox and Papal Churches accept seven (7) Sacraments, but the
Protestant Churches accept two (2): Baptism and the Eucharist, except a
few who accept them as simple types or remembrances without divine Grace,
and especially the so-called Church of God, which accepts: Baptism, the
Eucharist, and Foot-washing, but only as ceremonies, without Divine Grace.
The Anglican Church says, to be sure, that it accepts two (2) Sacraments,
when in reality she acknowledges the seven (7). The difference comes from
the meaning which the Anglican Church attaches to the word Mystery or
Sacrament, because by it she means those only which clearly appear in the
New Testament as established by the Christ, while the other five (5) she
calls Apostolical Institutions, but she holds that through them Divine
Grace is conferred, namely, she accepts them as we accept the Sacraments.
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THE TRUTH AS TO THE NUMBER OF SACRAMENTS
A. The Orthodox, Papal, and essentially, the Anglican Church, while the
Protestant Churches are in error, because, as we shall see from Holy
Scripture and Holy Tradition, it is manifest that our Lord instituted
either directly or indirectly seven (7) sacred ceremonies by means of
which Divine Grace is conferred for a definite purpose, namely, the
seven Mysteries or Sacraments.
BAPTISM
Q. What is Baptism?
A. Our Lord, in the place of Circumcision, before His ascension into Heaven,
because it is necessary to salvation.
A. Faith in Christ. Baptism is necessary for infants also, because while they
do not have personal sins, nevertheless they do have original sin of which
they need to be cleansed.
A. No; and for this reason we employ a Sponsor of adult age who confesses the
faith in behalf of the infant and assumes the responsibility to teach it
the Christian faith when it is sufficiently grown, if for any reason the
parents should not do this.
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A. If the person who is being baptized with the Baptism of Economy lives until
the Priest arrives, the Priest reads the prayers and performs the whole of
the part of the ceremony of the regular Baptism which comes after the three
immersions.
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Q. How are the apostate, the heretic, and the schismatic received into the
Church?
A. The apostate and the heretic are anointed with Holy Chrism and the
schismatic signs a written confession.
A. Yes, the Baptism of Blood, i.e. the sudden death a man may suffer for
Christ before being baptized.
CHRISM OR CONFIRMATION
A. The Holy Chrism is oil of the olive tree, and many other elements, which
are prepared at the Ecumenical Patriarchate by boiling and are consecrated
by the Ecumenical Patriarchate at Constantinople, with all Bishops who
happen to be present there, in a special ceremony which takes place on the
Holy Thursday, beginning from Good Monday. This Chrism is afterward
distributed to all the Orthodox Churches.
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A. Jesus Christ, as appears from the Epistle to the Hebrews where the
Sacrament of the Chrism is enumerated as a Dogma along with that of
Baptism and the Resurrection of the Dead,
But it was performed by the Apostles by the laying on of their hands upon
the baptized.
Q. Why was the Holy Chrism substituted for the laying on of hands?
A. Because when the Christians increased in numbers the Apostles and the
Bishops instituted by them were not sufficient to perform this Sacrament.
A. Yes, when any member of the Church comes back to the Christian Church from
another faith or heresy into which he had fallen.
PENANCE
Q. Through whom are sins forgiven? Has he the power to forgive sins? And by
whom is he thus empowered?
A. Sins are forgiven through the Confessor who has this power from our Lord
Jesus Christ, because our Lord gave it to His Apostles in the words:
and they in turn gave it to their successors, and these to the Clergymen
who were under them.
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Q. By whom and when was this Sacrament instituted, and is it necessary for our
salvation?
A. Only in the didactic part of Confession; but not in the part relative to
absolution, because he who is not a Cleric does not have the power from
Christ to forgive.
A. It can. But it is neither wise nor safe, because the sinner by himself
neither is able always to see his sins as the experienced eye of the
Confessor sees them, nor can he obtain the necessary guidance, or pass
judgement upon himself with full justice. Why therefore should the sinner
not apply to the Spiritual Father, since Jesus Himself saw it to be right,
and appointed him to be His representative with the power to bind and
loose? It is as if we sought for justice directly from the President of
the United States, while there are courts established for this purpose.
Otherwise, if it were something better for us to confess directly to God,
the Lord would have declared His law to that effect more simply and would
not have placed the Apostles and their successors, the Bishops and the
Clergymen between God and the repenting sinner.
A. Confession is consumated:
1. If the sinner feels his sins and sorrows because he had displeased
God, who is his Father.
Q. Has the one who has made the Confession the right to censure the Confessor
for the penance which he has imposed?
A. The penitent is free to accept or reject the imposed penance but he has
no right to criticize the Confessor, because Confession is not compulsory.
One is not permitted to injure the reputation of a Confessor by whom many
others may be benefited, if he himself does not so desire, to benefit by
him because in this manner he injures many men in their greatest interest
when such confession would be for their advantage, their moral improvement,
and the salvation of their souls.
A. Penances. Penances are restitutions for wrongs done, e.g. the surrender of
things stolen or destroyed, righting of a reputation damaged, etc., or are
theraputical measures against sin, as deprivation of Holy Communion for a
certain time, imposition of fastings, prayers, reading useful books,
performance of holy ceremonies and good deeds of a spiritual or corporeal
nature. And the chief spiritual works are the following seven (7):
Q. How can one come to the knowledge of his sins and be prepared for
Confession?
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Q. How can one who has confessed be helped in his or her decision not to fall
again into the same sins?
A.
1. By his own strength in resisting temptation.
2. By Divine strength, by praying and seeking Divine help, by all the
means of sanctification which the Church gives for the avoiding of
temptations, surrendering wholly his free will to God, that He may
direct it to his own advantage.
A. Yes, because:
A.
1. We make the sign of the cross or kneel and kiss the Holy Picture
of Christ.
4. On going out, we kiss again the picture of Christ, thank God that
He has counted us worthy to be cleansed again by the bath of
repentance, and we beseech Him that He may preserve us from sudden
death which does not afford us an opportunity for a last
confession and the Holy Communion.
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ON THE SACRAMENT OF THE DIVINE EUCHARIST
A. Our Lord Jesus Christ in the Mystic (or last) Supper, when He ate with
His Apostles on Holy Thursday at evening; namely the day before He was
crucified. Then He took bread, blessed it, broke it, and said:
A. That the sacrifice of Jesus might be repeated in the Church and that
through the communion of the body and blood of Christ believers might
receive the following benefits:
1. That they might be united with Jesus, and by this union their past
may be cleansed perfectly, their tendancy towards evil be
weakened, and their tendency towards good be strengthened for the
developing of a more perfect Christian life, and the eternal life
which by sin was cut be regained.
Q. What is the name of the change which took place at the Mystic Supper, does
it take place now, and by what power?
A. Transubstantiation, and it takes place now also by the power of the Holy
Spirit through the Bishops and Priests.
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"And make this bread the precious body of Thy Christ: and the wine
in this cup the precious blood of Thy Christ, changing (them) by
Thy Holy Spirit." (See Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom).
"Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, ye
have no life in you." (Gospel of St. John, Chapter 6, Verse 53).
For this reason it is proper that we make our communion at least four times
(4x) in the year, and also when we are sick or near death.
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A. No, because:
A. What is better than that we should receive unto us as often as possible the
Lord of life and all grace and blessing: provided only that we prepare
ourselves fittingly because:
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A.
1. No one is exempted from confession.
2. However, the Clerics, the sick, and travelers are exempt from
fasting:
A. From the Holy Bread which is consecrated on Holy Thursday, and is kept
through the whole year in an appropriate place called the Holy Bread Box.
Q. Is it proper that the Holy Bread should be adored even after the Divine
Liturgy?
A. Yes, because once it has become changed, it cannot cease to be the body and
blood of the Lord.
Q. What facts worthy of notice are to be pointed out in the Divine Eucharist?
A.
1. That after the change, while we see and taste bread and wine,
these two elements are substantially the body and blood of Christ.
2. That while each Christian receives a part only of the body and
blood he receives all of Christ.
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the sacrifice on Golgotha was offered once and with blood, that the
Divine Justice might be satisfied for the original sin,
while
Q. Is it permitted that more than one Liturgy (Holy Mass) be performed on the
same day by one Priest and on one and the same Altar?
A. No; a different Priest and a different Altar must be used for each Liturgy.
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HOLY ORDERS
Q. Who instituted the Sacrament of Holy Orders and when, and how has it been
transmitted to us?
A. Our Lord Jesus Christ, after His resurrection, when He said to His
Apostles:
"As the Father hath sent me, even so send I you ... Receive ye the
Holy Spirit; whosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them;
whosesoever sins ye retain they are retained."
...(Gospel of St. John, Chapter 20, Verses 21-23)
It was transmitted by the Apostles to men whom they had prepared and
ordained by a special ceremony, and they established them as Bishops,
Presbyters, and Deacons to perform the functions of the Priesthood,
giving only to the Bishops alone the power and authority to continue
the work of conferring Holy Orders according to the needs of the Church.
Q. What are the degrees of the Priesthood and what are they all called in
common?
1. Bishop or Archpriest,
2. Presbyter or Priest, and
3. Deacon.
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Those of a Presbyter are all that the Bishop has with his permission,
except that of ordination and the consecration of the Holy Chrism and
of the Churches and the higher Ecclesiastical Discipline.
The Deacon cannot do anything of himself, he only helps the Bishop or the
Presbyter.
Q. How many and what Bishops are needed for canonical ordination and
consecration?
A. For the consecration of a Bishop, three (3), and in the absence of three,
at least two (2). For the ordination of a Presbyter or Deacon, one (1)
suffices. But the ordaining Bishops must be able to trace their Episcopal
consecration unbroken from the Apostles and have the license to ordain
from their immediate Superior Ecclesiastical Authority.
A. No, only in his own Diocese. He may officiate in the Diocese of another
only with the special permission of the local Bishop.
A. For higher orders only. For example, a Deacon is ordained Priest, but
cannot be again ordained Deacon, even though he has been deposed, and on
repentance, restored, But the Orthodox Church can receive by economy
Clerics of heretical Churches who acknowledge Baptism and Holy Orders
as Sacraments and have the uninterrupted Apostolical succession, without
ordaining them anew, e.g. the Clergymen of the Papal, Anglican, Bulgarian,
etc. Churches. But the Clerics of those Churches which do not acknowledge
Holy Orders as a Sacrament or have not the uninterrupted succession, and
those Clerics who were ordained by a deposed Orthodox Bishop she ordains
when they come into the Orthodox Church, because they are wholly without
ordination.
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MARRIAGE
to love and cherish his wife and children, correcting their faults
and guiding the family to happiness,
A. The following:
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A. In the countries where the Church is separated from the State, in addition
to the Religious Marriage, there is also a Legal Act which is called Civil
Marriage.
A. Yes:
1. If and as long as the Clergyman who performs the marriage is in
good standing with his Church.
3. If the Clergyman who performs the marriage fills out the license
and returns it to the City Hall after the performance of the
Sacrament.
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A. The following:
a) Before Marriage:
b) At the Marriage:
c) After Marriage:
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1. Difference in religion.
a.) by blood,
b.) by marriage,
c.) Spiritual through baptism, and
d.) legal by adoption.
HOLY UNCTION
A. A ceremony in which the Priest consecrates oil and anoints the sick that
he may be healed of the sickness of body and soul, and that his sins may
be forgiven.
A. Our Lord Jesus Christ, as appears from the command of the Apostle James:
"Is there any sick among you? Let him call for the elders of the
Church and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil, and
the prayer of faith shall save the sick and the Lord will raise
him up, and if he has committed sins, they shall be forgiven him."
...(James, Chapter 5, Verses 14-15)
The End
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