As we begin our inquiry into
the Catholic religion, it is important to
explain briefly what we are about. Our purpose
is very simple. We want to learn what the
Catholic Church teaches her members should
believe, where to obtain the help they need from
God to live as faithful Christians, how He wants
them to serve Him, and how they are to pray.
These four dimensions of the
Catholic religion are as old as Christianity.
They may be expressed in four words: faith,
sacraments, commandments, and prayer. They are,
in fact, the four pillars on which Jesus Christ
built His Church and on which she has stood firm
for two thousand years.
A word of explanation will be
useful about each of these four pillars before
we examine them in more detail.
The Catholic faith is what
those who profess to belong to the Church are to
believe: There are certain truths that the mind
is to accept on the word of God. These truths
are contained in concentrated form in the
Apostles' Creed.
The Catholic sacraments are
the means that Christ provided for His followers
in order to share in His own divine life, to
grow in His life during their stay in this world,
and, if necessary, to regain the divine life if
it has been lost through sin.
The Ten Commandments are the
main demands that God makes on our obedience to
His will. They were first given to Moses on
Mount Sinai, then confirmed and completed by
Jesus Christ in His Sermon on the Mount. They
are the conditions that God sets down for our
sometimes painful submission to Him as our
Creator, so we might return to Him as the
eternal Destiny who will satisfy all our desires.
The Lord's Prayer is at once a
summary and a guide. It summarizes all the ways
we are to approach God as our loving Father in
prayer. It also guides us in our conversation
with Him, here on earth, as a preparation for
our eternal communication with Him in heaven.
Scriptural
references are from the Latin Vulgate and The
Jerusalem Bible.
Copyright © 2002 Inter Mirifica
Pocket Catholic Catechism