The Baltimore Catechism
The Baltimore Catechism
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Table of Contents
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LESSON TENTH: ON THE EFFECTS OF THE REDEMPTION .................................. 30
LESSON ELEVENTH: ON THE CHURCH ....................................................................... 32
LESSON TWELFTH: ON THE ATTRIBUTES AND MARKS OF THE CHURCH..... 33
LESSON THIRTEENTH: ON THE SACRAMENTS IN GENERAL.............................. 35
LESSON FOURTEENTH: ON BAPTISM .......................................................................... 38
LESSON FIFTEENTH: ON CONFIRMATION................................................................. 40
LESSON SIXTEENTH: ON THE GIFTS AND FRUITS OF THE HOLY GHOST ...... 41
LESSON SEVENTEENTH: ON THE SACRAMENT OF PENANCE ............................ 43
LESSON EIGHTEENTH: ON CONTRITION ................................................................... 45
LESSON NINETEENTH: ON CONFESSION.................................................................... 47
LESSON TWENTIETH: ON THE MANNER OF MAKING A GOOD CONFESSION49
LESSON TWENTY-FIRST: ON INDULGENCES ............................................................ 50
LESSON TWENTY-SECOND: ON THE HOLY EUCHARIST....................................... 51
LESSON TWENTY-THIRD: ON THE ENDS FOR WHICH THE HOLY EUCHARIST
WAS INSTITUTED................................................................................................................ 53
LESSON TWENTY-FOURTH: ON THE SACRIFICE OF THE MASS......................... 55
LESSON TWENTY-FIFTH: ON EXTREME UNCTION AND HOLY ORDERS......... 57
LESSON TWENTY-SIXTH: ON MATRIMONY .............................................................. 59
LESSON TWENTY-SEVENTH: ON THE SACRAMENTALS ....................................... 60
LESSON TWENTY-EIGHTH: ON PRAYER .................................................................... 62
LESSON TWENTY-NINTH: ON THE COMMANDMENTS OF GOD.......................... 64
LESSON THIRTIETH: ON THE FIRST COMMANDMENT ......................................... 65
LESSON THIRTY-FIRST: THE FIRST COMMANDMENT--ON THE HONOR AND
INVOCATION OF SAINTS .................................................................................................. 68
LESSON THIRTY-SECOND: FROM THE SECOND TO THE FOURTH
COMMANDMENT ................................................................................................................ 70
LESSON THIRTY-THIRD: FROM THE FOURTH TO THE SEVENTH
COMMANDMENT ................................................................................................................ 72
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LESSON THIRTY-FOURTH: FROM THE SEVENTH TO THE END OF THE TENTH
COMMANDMENT ................................................................................................................ 74
LESSON THIRTY-FIFTH: ON THE FIRST AND SECOND COMMANDMENTS OF
THE CHURCH ....................................................................................................................... 76
LESSON THIRTY-SIXTH: ON THE THIRD, FOURTH, FIFTH AND SIXTH
COMMANDMENTS OF THE CHURCH ........................................................................... 78
LESSON THIRTY-SEVENTH: ON THE LAST JUDGMENT AND THE
RESURRECTION, HELL, PURGATORY, AND HEAVEN............................................. 79
CATECHISM No. 3 .................................................................................................................... 82
Prayers:.................................................................................................................................... 84
The Lord's Prayer............................................................................................................... 84
The Angelical Salutation. ................................................................................................... 84
The Apostles' Creed............................................................................................................ 84
The Confiteor. ..................................................................................................................... 85
An Act of Faith. ................................................................................................................... 85
An Act of Hope. ................................................................................................................... 85
An Act of Love..................................................................................................................... 85
An Act of Contrition. .......................................................................................................... 86
The Blessing before Meals.................................................................................................. 86
Grace after Meals................................................................................................................ 86
The Manner in which a Lay Person is to Baptize in Case of Necessity: ........................ 86
LESSON FIRST: On the End of Man................................................................................... 86
LESSON SECOND: On God and His Perfections............................................................... 92
LESSON THIRD: On the Unity and Trinity of God........................................................... 94
LESSON FOURTH: On Creation......................................................................................... 98
LESSON FIFTH: On our First Parents and the Fall ........................................................ 102
LESSON SIXTH: On Sin and Its Kinds ON SIN AND ITS KINDS. ............................. 108
LESSON SEVENTH: On the Incarnation and Redemption ............................................ 115
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LESSON EIGHTH: On Our Lord's Passion, Death, Resurrection, and Ascension ...... 123
LESSON NINTH: On the Holy Ghost and His Descent upon the Apostles .................... 131
LESSON TENTH: On the Effects of the Redemption ...................................................... 136
LESSON ELEVENTH: On the Church ............................................................................. 141
LESSON TWELFTH: On the Attributes and Marks of the Church .............................. 146
LESSON THIRTEENTH: On the Sacraments in General............................................... 157
LESSON FOURTEENTH: On Baptism............................................................................. 165
LESSON FIFTEENTH: On Confirmation......................................................................... 174
LESSON SEVENTEENTH: On the Sacrament of Penance............................................. 183
LESSON EIGHTEENTH: On Contrition.......................................................................... 189
LESSON NINETEENTH: On Confession.......................................................................... 193
LESSON TWENTIETH: On the Manner of Making a Good Confession ...................... 202
LESSON TWENTY-FIRST: On Indulgences.................................................................... 204
LESSON TWENTY-SECOND: On the Holy Eucharist ................................................... 210
LESSON TWENTY-THIRD: On the Ends for Which the Holy Eucharist Was Instituted
................................................................................................................................................. 215
LESSON TWENTY-FOURTH: On the Sacrifice of the Mass ......................................... 219
LESSON TWENTY-FIFTH: On Extreme Unction and Holy Orders............................. 227
LESSON TWENTY-SIXTH: On Matrimony .................................................................... 237
LESSON TWENTY-SEVENTH: On the Sacramentals ................................................... 246
LESSON TWENTY-EIGHTH: [Text Missing] ................................................................. 256
LESSON TWENTY-NINTH: On the Commandments of God........................................ 256
LESSON THIRTIETH: On the First Commandment ...................................................... 259
LESSON THIRTY-FIRST: The First Commandment -- On the Honor and Invocation of
the Saints................................................................................................................................ 268
LESSON THIRTY-SECOND: From the Second to the Fourth Commandment ........... 273
LESSON THIRTY-THIRD: From the Fourth to the Seventh Commandment ............. 280
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LESSON THIRTY-FOURTH: From the Seventh to the End of the Tenth
Commandment...................................................................................................................... 285
LESSON THIRTY-FIFTH: On the First and Second Commandments of the Church. 290
LESSON THIRTY-SIXTH: On the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Commandments of
the Church ............................................................................................................................. 295
LESSON THIRTY-SEVENTH: On the Last Judgment and the Resurrection, Hell,
Purgatory, and Heaven......................................................................................................... 299
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CATECHISM No. 1
LESSON FIRST: ON THE END OF MAN
2. Q. Who is God?
A. God is the Creator of heaven and earth, and of all things.
3. Q. What is man?
A. Man is a creature composed of body and soul, and made to the image and likeness of God.
11. Q. Where shall we find the chief truths which the Church teaches?
A. We shall find the chief truths which the Church teaches in the Apostles' Creed.
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12. Q. Say the Apostles' Creed.
A. I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth; and in Jesus Christ,
His only Son, our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified; died, and was buried. He descended into
hell: the third day He arose again from the dead: He ascended into heaven, and sitteth at
the right hand of God, the Father Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the
living and the dead. I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Holy Catholic Church, the
communion of Saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life
everlasting. Amen.
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19. Q. Can God do all things?
A. God can do all things, and nothing is hard or impossible to Him.
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27. Q. What is the Blessed Trinity?
A. The Blessed Trinity is one God in three Divine Persons.
29. Q. Are the three Divine Persons one and the same God?
A. The three Divine Persons are one and the same God, having one and the same Divine nature.
40. Q. Were Adam and Eve innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God?
A. Adam and Eve were innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God.
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45. Q. What evil befell us through the disobedience of our first parents?
A. Through the disobedience of our first parents we all inherit their sin and punishment, as we
should have shared in their happiness if they had remained faithful.
47. Q. What is the sin called which we inherit from our first parents?
A. The sin which we inherit from our first parents is called original sin.
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59. Q. Which are the chief sources of sin?
A. The chief sources of sin are seven: Pride, Covetousness, Lust, Anger, Gluttony, Envy, and
Sloth; and they are commonly called capital sins.
74. Q. On what day was the Son of God conceived and made man?
A. The Son of God was conceived and made man on Annunciation day-the day on which the
angel Gabriel announced to the Blessed Virgin Mary that she was to be the Mother of God.
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LESSON SEVENTH: ON OUR LORD'S PASSION,
DEATH, RESURRECTION, AND ASCENSION
91. Q. After Christ had remained forty days on earth, whither did He go?
A. After forty days Christ ascended into heaven, and the day on which He ascended into heaven
is called Ascension day.
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• Preach, declare publicly, spread by word of mouth.
97. Q. On what day did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles?
A. The Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles ten days after the Ascension of our Lord; and
the day on which He came down upon the Apostles is called Whitsunday, or Pentecost.
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CATECHISM No. 2
LESSON FIRST: ON THE END OF MAN
2. Q. Who is God?
A. God is the Creator of heaven and earth, and of all things.
3. Q. What is man?
A. Man is a creature composed of body and soul, and made to the image and likeness of God.
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8. Q. Why must we take more care of our soul than of our body?
A. We must take more care of our soul than of our body, because in losing our soul we lose God
and everlasting happiness.
11. Q. Where shall we find the chief truths which the Church teaches?
A. We shall find the chief truths which the Church teaches in the Apostles' Creed.
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14. Q. Had God a beginning
A. God had no beginning; He always was and He always will be.
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22. Q. Why can there be but one God?
A. There can be but one God, because God, being supreme and infinite, cannot have an equal.
29. Q. Are the three Divine Persons one and the same God?
A. The three Divine Persons are one and the same God, having one and the same Divine nature
and substance.
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30. Q. Can we fully understand how the three Divine Persons are one and the same God?
A. We cannot fully understand how the three Divine Persons are one and the same God, because
this is a mystery.
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37. Q. Were the angels, as God created them, good and happy?
A. The angels, as God created them, were good and happy.
40. Q. Were Adam and Eve innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God?
A. Adam and Eve were innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God.
42. Q. Which were the chief blessings intended for Adam and Eve had they remained
faithful to God?
A. The chief blessings intended for Adam and Eve, had they remained faithful to God, were a
constant state of happiness in this life and everlasting glory in the next.
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43. Q. Did Adam and Eve remain faithful to God?
A. Adam and Eve did not remain faithful to God; but broke His command by eating the
forbidden fruit.
45. Q. What evil befell us on account of the disobedience of our first parents?
A. On account of the disobedience of our first parents, we all share in their sin and punishment,
as we should have shared in their happiness if they had remained faithful.
46. Q. What other effects followed from the sin of our first parents?
A. Our nature was corrupted by the sin of our first parents, which darkened our understanding,
weakened our will, and left in us a strong inclination to evil.
47. Q. What is the sin called which we inherit from our first parents?
A. The sin which we inherit from our first parents is called original sin.
49. Q. Does this corruption of our nature remain in us after original sin is forgiven?
A. This corruption of our nature and other punishments remain in us after original sin is forgiven.
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58. Q. Which are the effects of venial sin?
A. The effects of venial sin are the lessening of the love of God in our heart, the making us less
worthy of His help, and the weakening of the power to resist mortal sin.
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64. Q. Why is Jesus Christ true man?
A. Jesus Christ is true man because He is the Son of the Blessed Virgin Mary and has a body and
soul like ours.
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72. Q. Did the Son of God become man immediately after the sin of our first parents?
A. The Son of God did not become man immediately after the sin of our first parents, but was
promised to them as a Redeemer.
73. Q. How could they be saved who lived before the Son of God became man?
A. They who lived before the Son of God became man could be saved by believing in a
Redeemer to come, and by keeping the commandments.
74. Q. On what day was the Son of God conceived and made man?
A. The Son of God was conceived and made man on Annunciation day-the day on which the
Angel Gabriel announced to the Blessed Virgin Mary that she was to be the Mother of God.
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78. Q. What did Jesus Christ suffer?
A. Jesus Christ suffered a bloody sweat, a cruel scourging, was crowned with thorns, and was
crucified.
80. Q. Why do you call that day "good" on which Christ died so sorrowful a death?
A. We call that day "good" on which Christ died because by His death He showed His great love
for man, and purchased for him every blessing.
84. Q. What lessons do we learn from the sufferings and death of Christ?
A. From the sufferings and death of Christ we learn the great evil of sin, the hatred God bears to
it, and the necessity of satisfying for it.
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86. Q. Did Christ's soul descend into the hell of the damned?
A. The hell into which Christ's soul descended was not the hell of the damned, but a place or
state of rest called Limbo, where the souls of the just were waiting for Him.
88. Q. Where was Christ's body while His soul was in Limbo?
A. While Christ's soul was in Limbo His body was in the holy sepulchre.
90. Q. How long did Christ stay on earth after His resurrection?
A. Christ stayed on earth forty days after His resurrection to show that He was truly risen from
the dead, and to instruct His Apostles.
91. Q. After Christ had remained forty days on earth whither did He go?
A. After forty days Christ ascended into heaven, and the day on which He ascended into heaven
is called Ascension day.
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93. Q. What do you mean by saying that Christ sits at the right hand Of God?
A. When I say that Christ sits at the right hand of God I mean that Christ as God is equal to His
Father in all things, and that as man He is in the highest place in heaven next to God.
96. Q. Is the Holy Ghost equal to the Father and the Son?
A. The Holy Ghost is equal to the Father and the Son, being the same Lord and God as They are.
97. Q. On what day did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles?
A. The Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles ten days after the Ascension of our Lord; and
the day on which He came down upon the Apostles is called Whitsunday, or Pentecost.
98. Q. How did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles?
A. The Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles in the form of tongues of fire.
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100. Q. Why did Christ send the Holy Ghost?
A. Christ sent the Holy Ghost to sanctify His Church, to enlighten and strengthen the Apostles,
and to enable them to preach the Gospel.
101. Q. Will the Holy Ghost abide with the Church forever?
A. The Holy Ghost will abide with the Church forever, and guide it in the way of holiness and
truth.
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106. Q. What do you call those graces or gifts of God by which we believe in Him, hope in
Him, and love Him?
A. Those graces or gifts of God by which we believe in Him, and hope in Him, and love Him,
are called the Divine virtues of Faith, Hope, and Charity.
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113. Q. What is the grace of perseverance?
A. The grace of perseverance is a particular gift of God which enables us to continue in the state
of grace till death.
114. Q. Which are the means instituted by our Lord to enable men at all times to share in
the fruits of the Redemption?
A. The means instituted by our Lord to enable men at all times to share in the fruits of His
Redemption are the Church and the Sacraments.
118. Q. Why is the Pope, the Bishop of Rome, the visible Head of the Church?
A. The Pope, the Bishop of Rome, is the visible Head of the Church because lie is the successor
of St. Peter, whom Christ made the chief of the Apostles and the visible Head of the Church.
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119. Q. Who are the successors of the other Apostles?
A. The successors of the other Apostles are the bishops of the Holy Catholic Church.
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125. Q. When does the Church teach infallibly?
A. The Church teaches infallibly when it speaks through the Pope and the bishops, united in
general council, or through the Pope alone when he proclaims to all the faithful a doctrine of
faith or morals.
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132. Q. How is the Church Apostolic?
A. The Church is Apostolic because it was founded by Christ on His Apostles, and is governed
by their lawful successors, and because it has never ceased, and never will cease, to teach their
doctrine.
134. Q. From whom does the Church derive its undying life and infallible authority?
A. The Church derives its undying life and infallible authority from the Holy Ghost, the spirit of
truth, who abides with it forever.
135. Q. By whom is the Church made and kept One, Holy, and Catholic?
A. The Church is made and kept One, Holy, and Catholic by the Holy Ghost, the spirit of love
and holiness, who unites and sanctifies its members throughout the world.
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138. Q. Whence have the Sacraments the power of giving grace?
A. The Sacraments have the power of giving grace from the merits of Jesus Christ.
141. Q. Why are Baptism and Penance called Sacraments of the dead?
A. Baptism and Penance are called Sacraments of the dead, because they take away sin, which is
the death of the soul, and give grace, which is its life.
142. Q. Which are the Sacraments that increase sanctifying grace in our soul?
A. The Sacraments that increase sanctifying grace in our soul are: Confirmation, Holy Eucharist,
Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and Matrimony; and they are called Sacraments of the living.
143. Q. Why are Confirmation, Holy Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and
Matrimony called Sacraments of the living?
A. Confirmation, Holy Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and Matrimony are called
Sacraments of the living, because those who receive them worthily are already living the life of
grace.
144. Q. What sin does he commit who receives the Sacraments of the living in mortal sin?
A. He who receives the Sacraments of the living in mortal sin commits a sacrilege, which is a
great sin, because it is an abuse of a sacred thing.
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145. Q. Besides sanctifying grace do the Sacraments give any other grace?
A. Besides sanctifying grace the Sacraments give another grace, called sacramental.
149. Q. Why can we not receive Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Orders more than once?
A. We cannot receive Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Orders more than once, because they
imprint a character in the soul.
150. Q. What is the character which these Sacraments imprint in the soul?
A. The character which these Sacraments imprint in the soul is a spiritual mark which remains
forever.
151. Q. Does this character remain in the soul even after death?
A. This character remains in the soul even after death: for the honor and glory of those who are
saved; for the shame and punishment of those who are lost.
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LESSON FOURTEENTH: ON BAPTISM
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and of the Holy Ghost.
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LESSON FIFTEENTH: ON CONFIRMATION
170. Q. What does the bishop say in anointing the person he confirms?
A. In anointing the person he confirms the bishop says: I sign thee with the sign of the cross, and
I confirm thee with the chrism of salvation, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost.
171. Q. What is meant by anointing the forehead with chrism in the form of a cross?
A. By anointing the forehead with chrism in the form of a cross is meant, that the Christian who
is confirmed must openly profess and practice his faith, never be ashamed of it, and rather die
than deny it.
172. Q. Why does the bishop give the person he confirms a slight blow on the cheek?
A. The bishop gives the person he confirms a slight blow on the cheek, to put him in mind that
he must be ready to suffer everything, even death, for the sake of Christ.
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173. Q. To receive Confirmation worthily is it necessary to be in the state of grace?
A. To receive Confirmation worthily it is necessary to be in the state of grace.
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179. Q. Why do we receive the gift of Piety?
A. We receive the gift of Piety to make us love God as a Father and obey Him because we love
Him.
• Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
• Blessed are the meek, for they shall possess the land.
• Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after justice, for they shall be filled.
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• Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.
• Blessed are the clean of heart, for they shall see God.
• Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God.
• Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice sake, for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven.
188. Q. How does the Sacrament of Penance remit sin, and restore to the soul the
friendship of God?
A. The Sacrament of Penance remits sins and restores the friendship of God to the soul by means
of the absolution of the priest.
189. Q. How do you know that the priest has the power of absolving from the sins
committed after Baptism?
A. I know that the priest has the power of absolving from the sins committed after Baptism,
because Jesus Christ granted that power to the priests of His Church when He said: "Receive ye
the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them; whose sins you shall
retain, they are retained."
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190. Q. How do the priests of the Church exercise the power of forgiving sins?
A. The priests of the Church exercise the power of forgiving sins by hearing the confession of
sins, and granting pardon for them as ministers of God and in His name.
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LESSON EIGHTEENTH: ON CONTRITION
197. Q. What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be interior?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be interior, I mean that it should come from the heart, and
not merely from the lips.
198. Q. What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be supernatural?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be supernatural, I mean that it should be prompted by the
grace of God, and excited by motives which spring from faith, and not by merely natural
motives.
199. Q. What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be universal?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be universal, I mean that we should be sorry for all our
mortal sins without exception.
200. Q. What do you mean when you say that our sorrow should be sovereign?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be sovereign, I mean that we should grieve more for
having offended God than for any other evil that can befall us.
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201. Q. Why should we be sorry for our sins?
A. We should be sorry for our sins, because sin is the greatest of evils and an offense against
God our Creator, Preserver, and Redeemer, and because it shuts us out of heaven and condemns
us to the eternal pains of hell.
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LESSON NINETEENTH: ON CONFESSION
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215. Q. Is our Confession worthy if, without our fault, we forget to confess a mortal sin?
A. If without our fault we forget to confess a mortal sin, Tour Confession is worthy, and the sin
is forgiven; but it must be told in Confession if it again comes to our mind.
217. Q. What must he do who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in Confession?
A. He who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in Confession must not only confess it, but must
also repeat all the sins he has committed since his last worthy Confession.
219. Q. Does not the Sacrament of Penance remit all punishment duo to sin?
A. The Sacrament of Penance remits the eternal punishment due to sin, but it does not always
remit the temporal punishment which God requires as satisfaction for our sins.
220. Q. Why does God require a temporal punishment as a satisfaction for sin?
A. God requires a temporal punishment as a satisfaction for sin, to teach us the great evil of sin
and to prevent us from falling again.
221. Q. Which are the chief means by which we satisfy God for the temporal punishment
due to sin?
A. The chief means by which we satisfy God for the temporal punishment due to sin are: Prayer,
Fasting, Almsgiving, all spiritual and corporal works of mercy, and the patient suffering of the
ills of life.
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222. Q. Which are the chief spiritual works of mercy?
A. The chief spiritual works of mercy are seven: To admonish the sinner, to instruct the ignorant,
to counsel the doubtful, to comfort the sorrowful, to bear wrongs patiently, to forgive all injuries,
and to pray for the living and the dead.
225. Q. Which are the first things we should tell. the priest in Confession?
A. The first things we should tell the priest in Confession are the time of our last Confession, and
whether we said the penance and went to Holy Communion.
226. Q. After telling the time of our last Confession and Communion what should we do?
A. After telling the time of our last Confession and Communion we should confess all the mortal
sins we have since committed, and all the venial sins we may wish to mention.
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228. Q. What should we do after telling our sins?
A. After telling our sins we should listen with attention to the advice which the confessor may
think proper to give.
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235. Q. What is a Partial Indulgence?
A. A Partial Indulgence is the remission of a part of the temporal punishment due to sin.
236. Q. How does the Church by means of Indulgences remit the temporal punishment due
to sin?
A. The Church by means of Indulgences remits the temporal punishment due to sin by applying
to us the merits of Jesus Christ, and the superabundant satisfactions of the Blessed Virgin Mary
and of the saints; which merits and satisfactions are its spiritual treasury.
240. Q. Who were present when our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist?
A. When our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist the twelve Apostles were present.
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241. Q. How did our Lord institute the Holy Eucharist?
A. Our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist by taking bread, blessing, breaking, and giving to His
Apostles, saying: Take ye and eat. This is My body; and then by taking the cup of wine, blessing
and giving it, saying to them: Drink ye all of this. This is My blood which shall be shed for the
remission of Sins. Do this for a commemoration of Me.
242. Q. What happened when our Lord said, This is My body; this is My blood?
A. When our Lord said, This is My body, the substance of the bread was changed into the
substance of His body; when He said, This is My blood, the substance of the wine was changed
into the substance of His blood.
243. Q. Is Jesus Christ whole and entire both under the form of bread and under the form
of wine?
A. Jesus Christ is whole and entire both under the form of bread and Under the form of wine.
244. Q. Did anything remain of the bread and wine after their substance had been changed
into the substance of the body and blood of our Lord?
A. After the substance of the bread and wine had been changed into the substance of the body
and blood of our Lord there remained only the appearances of bread and wine.
246. Q. What is this change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of our Lord
called?
A. This change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of our Lord is called
Transubstantiation.
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247. Q. How was the substance of the bread and wine changed into the substance of the
body and blood of Christ?
A. The substance of the bread and wine was changed into the substance of the body and blood of
Christ by His almighty power.
248. Q. Does this change of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ continue to
be made in the Church?
A. This change of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ continues to be made in the
Church by Jesus Christ through the ministry of His priests.
249. Q. When did Christ give His priests the power to change bread and wine into His body
and blood?
A. Christ gave His priests the power to change bread and wine into His body and blood when He
said to the Apostles, Do this in commemoration of Me.
250. Q. How do the priests exercise this power of changing broad and wine into the body
and blood of Christ?
A. The priests exercise this power of changing bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ
through the words of consecration in the Mass, which are the words of Christ: This is My body;
this is My blood.
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5. To fit our bodies for a glorious resurrection.
6. To continue the sacrifice of the Cross in His Church.
255. Q. Does he who receives Communion in mortal sin receive the body and blood of
Christ?
A. He who receives Communion in mortal sin receives the body and blood of Christ, but does
not receive His grace, and he commits a great sacrilege.
256. Q. Is it enough to be free from mortal sin to receive Plentifully the graces of Holy
Communion?
A. To receive plentifully the graces of Holy Communion it is not enough to be free from mortal
sin, but we should be free from all affection to venial sin, and should make acts of faith,
hope, and love.
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258. Q. Is any one ever allowed to receive Holy Communion when not fasting?
A. Any one in danger of death is allowed to receive Holy Communion when not fasting or when
it is necessary to save the Blessed Sacrament from insult or injury.
262. Q. When and where are the bread and wine changed into the body and blood of
Christ?
A. The bread and wine are changed into the body and blood of Christ at the Consecration in the
Mass.
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264. Q. What is a sacrifice?
A. A sacrifice is the offering of an object by a priest to God alone, and the consuming of it to
acknowledge that He is the Creator and Lord of all things.
266. Q. How is the Mass the same sacrifice as that of the Cross?
A. The Mass is the same sacrifice as that of the Cross because the offering and the priest are the
same-Christ our Blessed Lord; and the ends for which the sacrifice of the Mass is offered are the
same as those of the sacrifice of the Cross.
267. Q. What were the ends for which the sacrifice of the Cross was offered?
A. The ends for which the sacrifice of the Cross was offered were:
1. To honor and glorify God;
2. To thank Him for all the graces bestowed on the whole world;
3. To satisfy God's justice for the sins of men;
4. To obtain all graces and blessings.
268. Q. Is there any difference between the sacrifice of the Cross and the sacrifice of the
Mass?
A. Yes; the manner in which the sacrifice is offered is different. On the Cross Christ really shed
His blood and was really slain; in the Mass there is no real shedding of blood nor real death,
because Christ can die no more; but the sacrifice of the Mass, through the separate consecration
of the bread and the wine, represents His death on the Cross.
273. Q. Should we wait until we are in extreme danger before we receive Extreme Unction?
A. We should not wait until we are in extreme danger before we receive Extreme Unction, but if
possible we should receive it whilst we have the use of our senses.
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275. Q. What do you mean by the remains of sin?
A. By the remains of sin I mean the inclination to evil and the weakness of the will which are the
result of our sins, and which remain after our sins have been forgiven.
280. Q. How should Christians look upon the priests of the Church?
A. Christians should look upon the priests of the Church as the messengers of God and the
dispensers of His mysteries.
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LESSON TWENTY-SIXTH: ON MATRIMONY
283. Q. Can a Christian man and woman be united in lawful marriage in any other way
than by the Sacrament of Matrimony?
A. A Christian man and woman cannot be united in lawful marriage in any other way than by the
Sacrament of Matrimony, because Christ raised marriage to the dignity of a Sacrament.
284. Q. Can the bond of Christian marriage be dissolved by any human power?
A. The bond of Christian marriage cannot be dissolved by any human power.
287. Q. Who has the right to make laws concerning the Sacrament of marriage?
A. The Church alone has the right to make laws concerning the Sacrament of marriage, though
the state also has the right to make laws concerning the civil effects of the marriage contract.
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288. Q. Does the Church forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a
different religion or no religion at all?
A. The Church does forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a different religion
or no religion at all.
289. Q. Why does the Church forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a
different religion or no religion at all?
A. The Church forbids the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a different religion or
no religion at all, because such marriages generally lead to indifference, loss of faith, and to the
neglect of the religious education of the children.
291. Q. How should Christians prepare for a holy and happy marriage?
A. Christians should prepare for a holy and happy marriage by receiving the Sacraments of
Penance and Holy Eucharist; by begging God to grant them a pure intention and to direct their
choice; and by seeking the advice of their parents and the blessing of their pastors.
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293. Q. What is the difference between the Sacraments and the sacramentals?
A. The difference between the Sacraments and the sacramentals is:
1. The Sacraments were instituted by Jesus Christ and the sacramentals were instituted by
the Church;
2. The Sacraments give grace of themselves when we place no obstacle in the way; the
sacramentals excite in us pious dispositions, by means of which we may obtain grace.
297. Q. How is the sign of the Cross a profession of faith in the chief mysteries of our
religion?
A. The sign of the Cross is a profession of faith in the chief mysteries of our religion because it
expresses the mysteries of the Unity and Trinity of God and of the Incarnation and death of our
Lord.
298. Q. How does the sign of the Cross express the mystery of the Unity and Trinity of
God?
A. The words, In the name, express the Unity of God; the words that follow, of the Father, and
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, express the mystery of the Trinity.
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299. Q. How does the sign of the Cross express the mystery of the Incarnation and death of
our Lord?
A. The sign of the Cross expresses the mystery of the Incarnation by reminding us that the Son
of God, having become man, suffered death on the cross.
302. Q. Are there other sacramentals besides the sign of the Cross and holy water?
A. Besides the sign of the Cross and holy water there are many other sacramentals, such as
blessed candles, ashes, palms, crucifixes, images of the Blessed Virgin and of the saints, rosaries,
and scapulars.
303. Q. Is there any other means of obtaining God's grace than the Sacraments?
A. There is another means of obtaining God's grace, and it is prayer.
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305. Q. Is prayer necessary to salvation?
A. Prayer is necessary to salvation, and without it no one having the use of reason can be saved.
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LESSON TWENTY-NINTH: ON THE
COMMANDMENTS OF GOD
311. Q. Which are the Commandments that contain the whole law of God?
A. The Commandments which contain the whole law of God are these two:
1. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart, with thy whole soul, with
thy whole strength, and with thy whole mind;
2. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.
312. Q. Why do these two Commandments of the love of God and of our neighbor contain
the whole law of God?
A. These two Commandments of the love of God and of our neighbor contain the whole law of
God because all the other Commandments are given either to help us to keep these two, or to
direct us how to shun what is opposed to them.
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6. Thou shalt not commit adultery.
7. Thou shalt not steal.
8. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.
9. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife.
10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's goods.
316. Q. How does the first Commandment help us to keep the great Commandment of the
love of God?
A. The first Commandment helps us to keep the great Commandment of the love of God because
it commands us to adore God alone.
320. Q. Are sins against faith, hope and charity also sins against the first Commandment?
A. Sins against faith, hope, and charity are also sins against the first Commandment.
323. Q. Who are they who do not believe all that God has taught?
A. They who do not believe all that God has taught are the heretics and infidels.
324. Q. Who are they who neglect to profess their belief in what-God has taught?
A. They who neglect to profess their belief in what God has taught are all those who fail to
acknowledge the true Church in which they really believe.
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325. Q. Can they who fail to profess their faith in the true Church in which they believe
expect to be saved while in that state?
A. They who fail to profess their faith in the true Church in which they believe cannot expect to
be saved while in that state, for Christ has said: " Whoever shall deny Me before men, I will also
deny him before My Father who is in heaven."
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LESSON THIRTY-FIRST: THE FIRST
COMMANDMENT--ON THE HONOR AND
INVOCATION OF SAINTS
331. Q. Does the first Commandment forbid the honoring of the saints?
A. The first Commandment does not forbid the honoring of the saints, but rather approves of it;
because by honoring the saints, who are the chosen friends of God, we honor God Himself.
336. Q. How are the saints and we members of the same Church?
A. The saints and we are members of the same Church, because the Church in heaven and the
Church on earth are one and the same Church, and all its members are in communion with one
another.
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337. Q. What is the communion of the members of the Church called?
A. The communion of the members of the Church is called the communion of saints.
342. Q. Is it right to show respect to the pictures and images of Christ and His saints?
A. It is right to show respect to the pictures and images of Christ and His saints, because they are
the representations and memorials of them.
343. Q. Is it allowed to pray to the crucifix or to the images and relics of the saints?
A. It is not allowed to pray to the crucifix or images and relics of the saints, for they have no life,
nor power to help us, nor sense to hear us.
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344. Q. Why do we pray before the crucifix and the images and relics of the saints?
A. We pray before the crucifix and images and relics of the saints because they enliven our
devotion by exciting pious affections and desires, and by reminding us of Christ and of the
saints, that we may imitate their virtues.
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350. Q. What is a vow?
A. A vow is a deliberate promise made to God to do something that is pleasing to Him.
356. Q. Are the Sabbath day and the Sunday the same?
A. The Sabbath day and the Sunday are not the same. The Sabbath is the seventh day of the
week, and is the day which was kept holy in the Old Law; the Sunday is the first day of the
week, and is tile day which is kept holy in the New Law.
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357. Q. Why does the Church command us to keep the Sunday holy instead of the
Sabbath?
A. The Church commands us to keep the Sunday holy instead of the Sabbath because on Sunday
Christ rose from the dead, and on Sunday He sent the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles.
363. Q. Are we bound to honor and obey others than our parents?
A. We are also bound to honor and obey our bishops, pastors, magistrates, teachers, and other
lawful superiors.
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364. Q. Have parents and superiors any duties towards those who are under their charge?
A. It is the duty of parents and superiors to take good care of all under their charge and give them
proper direction and example.
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371. Q. What is forbidden by the sixth Commandment?
A. The sixth commandment forbids all unchaste freedom with anothers wife or husband; also all
immodesty with ourselves or others in looks, dress, words, or actions.
372. Q. Does the sixth Commandment forbid the reading of bad and immodest books and
newspapers?
A. The sixth Commandment does forbid the reading of bad and immodest books and
newspapers.
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377. Q. Are we obliged to repair the damage we have unjustly caused?
A. We are bound to repair the damage we have unjustly caused.
381. Q. What must they do who have lied about their neighbor and seriously injured his
character?
A. They who have lied about their neighbor and seriously injured his character must repair the
injury done as far as they are able, otherwise they will not be forgiven.
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385. Q. Are impure thoughts and desires always sins?
A. Impure thoughts and desires are always sins, unless they displease us and we try to banish
them.
396. Q. Why does the Church command us to abstain from flesh-meat on Fridays?
A. The Church commands us to abstain from flesh-meat on Fridays, in honor of the day on
which our Saviour died.
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LESSON THIRTY-SIXTH: ON THE THIRD, FOURTH,
FIFTH AND SIXTH COMMANDMENTS OF THE
CHURCH
400. Q. What sin does he commit who neglects to receive Communion during the Easter
time?
A. He who neglects to receive Communion during the Easter time commits a mortal sin.
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403. Q. What is the meaning of the commandment not to marry within the third degree of
kindred?
A. The meaning of the commandment not to marry within the third degree of kindred is that no
one is allowed to marry another within the third degree of blood relationship.
405. Q. What is the meaning of the precept not to solemnize marriage at forbidden times?
A. The meaning of the precept not to solemnize marriage at forbidden times is that during Lent
and Advent the marriage ceremony should not be performed with pomp or a nuptial Mass.
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409. Q. What is the judgment called which we have to undergo immediately after death?
A. The judgment we have to undergo immediately after death is called the Particular Judgment.
410. Q. What is the judgment called which all men have to undergo on the last day?
A. The judgment which all men have to undergo on the last day is called the General Judgment.
412. Q. What are the rewards or punishments appointed for men's souls after the
Particular Judgment?
A. The rewards or punishments appointed for men's souls after the Particular Judgment are
Heaven, Purgatory, and Hell.
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416. Q. If every one is judged immediately after death, what need is there of a General
Judgment?
A. There is need of a General Judgment, though every one is judged immediately after death,
that the providence of God, which, on earth, often permits the good to suffer and the wicked to
prosper, may in the end appear just before all men.
417. Q. Will our bodies share in the reward or punishment of our souls?
A. Our bodies will share in the reward or punishment of our souls, because through the
resurrection they will again be united to them.
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CATECHISM No. 3
Prayers
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.Lesson 10 On the Effects of the Redemption
Lesson 11 On the Church
Lesson 12 On the Attributes and Marks of the Church
Lesson 13 On the Sacraments in General
Lesson 14 On Baptism
Lesson 15 On Confirmation
Lesson 16 On the Gifts and Fruits of the Holy Ghost
Lesson 17 On the Sacrament of Penance
Lesson 18 On Contrition
Lesson 19 On Confession
Lesson 20 On the Manner of Making a Good Confession
Lesson 21 On Indulgences
Lesson 22 On the Holy Eucharist
Lesson 23 On the Ends for which the Holy Eucharist was Instituted
Lesson 24 On the Sacrifice of the Mass
Lesson 25 On Extreme Unction and Holy Orders
Lesson 26 On Matrimony
Lesson 27 On the Sacramentals
Lesson 28 On Prayer
Lesson 29 On the Commandments of God
Lesson 30 On the First Commandment
Lesson 31 The First Commandment -- On the Honor and Invocation of the Saints
Lesson 32 From the Second to the Fourth Commandment
Lesson 33 From the Fourth to the Seventh Commandment
Lesson 34 From the Seventh to the Tenth Commandment
Lesson 35 On the First and Second Commandments of the Church
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Lesson 36 On the Third, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Commandments of the Church
Lesson 37 On the Last Judgment and Resurrection, Hell, Purgatory and Heaven
Prayers:
Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done on
earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread; and forgive us our trespasses as we
forgive those who trespass against us; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
Amen.
Hail Mary, full of grace! the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou amongst women, and blessed is
the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour
of our death. Amen.
I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth; and in Jesus Christ, His only
Son, our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under
Pontius Pilate, was crucified; died, and was buried. He descended into hell; the third day He
arose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven, sitteth at the right hand of God, the Father
Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the Holy
Ghost the Holy Catholic Church, the communion of Saints, the forgiveness of sins, the
resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.
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The Confiteor.
I confess to Almighty God, to blessed Mary, ever Virgin, to blessed Michael the Archangel, to
blessed John the Baptist, to the holy Apostles Peter and Paul, and to all the Saints, that I have
sinned exceedingly in thought, word and deed, through, my fault, through my fault, through my
most grievous fault. Therefore, I beseech blessed Mary, ever Virgin, blessed Michael the
Archangel, blessed John the Baptist, the holy Apostles Peter and Paul, and all the Saints, to pray
to the Lord our God for me.
May the Almighty God have mercy on me, and forgive me my sins, and bring me to everlasting
life. Amen.
May the Almighty and merciful Lord grant me pardon, absolution, and remission of all my sins.
Amen.
An Act of Faith.
0 my God! I firmly believe that Thou art one God in three Divine persons, Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost; I believe that Thy Divine Son became man, and died for our sins, and that he will come
to, judge the living and the dead. I believe these and all the truths which the Holy Catholic
Church teaches, because Thou hast revealed them, who canst neither deceive nor be deceived
An Act of Hope.
0 my God! relying on Thy infinite goodness and promises, I hope to obtain pardon of my sins,
the help of Thy grace, and life everlasting, through the merits of Jesus Christ, my Lord and
Redeemer.
An Act of Love.
0 my God! I love Thee above all things, with my whole heart and soul, because Thou art all-good
and worthy of all love. I love my neighbor as myself for the love of Thee. I forgive all who have
injured me, and ask pardon of all whom I have injured.
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An Act of Contrition.
0 my God! I am heartily sorry for having offended Thee, and I detest all my sins, because I dread
the loss of heaven and the pains of hell; but most of all because they offend Thee, my God, who
art all-good and deserving of all my love. I firmly resolve, with the help of Thy grace, to confess
my sins, to do penance, and to amend my life.
† Bless us, 0 Lord! and these Thy gifts, which we are about to receive from Thy bounty, through
Christ our Lord. Amen.
† We give Thee thanks for all Thy benefits, 0 Almighty God, who livest and reignest for ever;
and may the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.
Pour common water on the head or face of the person to be baptized say while pouring it:
"I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."
N.B. Any person of either sex who has reached the use of reason can baptize in case of necessity.
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Q. 127. How do you know that man was created for God alone?
A. I know that man was created for God alone because everything in the world was created for
something more perfect than itself: but there is nothing in the world more perfect than man;
therefore, he was created for something outside this world, and since he was not created for the
Angels, he must have been created for God.
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Q. 134. Does "man" in the Catechism mean all human beings?
A. "Man" in the Catechism means all human beings, either men or women, boys, girls, or
children.
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Q. 141. Why then do we say a soul is dead while in a state of mortal sin?
A. We say a soul is dead while in a state of mortal sin, because in that state it is as helpless as a
dead body, and can merit nothing for itself.
Q. 152. Of which must we take more care, our soul or our body?
A. We must take more care of our soul than of our body.
Q. 153. Why must we take more care of our soul than of our body?
A. We must take more care of our soul than of our body, because in losing our soul we lose God
and everlasting happiness.
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Q. 156. How shall we know the things which we are to believe?
A. We shall know the things which we are to believe from the Catholic Church, through which
God speaks to us.
Q. 157. What do we mean by the "Church, through which God speaks to us"?
A. By the "Church, through which God speaks to us," we mean the "teaching Church"; that is,
the Pope, Bishops, and priests, whose duty it is to instruct us in the truths and practices of our
religion.
Q. 158. Where shall we find the chief truths which the Church teaches?
A. We shall find the chief truths which the Church teaches in the Apostles' Creed.
Q. 159. If we shall find only the "chief truths" in the Apostles' Creed, where shall we find
the remaining truths?
A. We shall find the remaining truths of our Faith in the religious writings and preachings that
have been sanctioned by the authority of the Church.
Q. 160. Name some sacred truths not mentioned in the Apostles' Creed.
A. In the Apostles' Creed there is no mention of the Real Presence of Our Lord in the Holy
Eucharist, nor of the Infallibility of the Pope, nor of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, nor of some other truths that we are bound to believe.
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LESSON SECOND: On God and His Perfections
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Q. 169. Why do we call God a "pure spirit'?
A. We call God a pure spirit because He has no body. Our soul is a spirit, but not a "pure" spirit,
because it was created for union with our body.
Q. 170. Why can we not see God with the eyes of our body?
A. We cannot see God with the eyes of our body because they are created to see only material
things, and God is not material but spiritual.
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Q. 177. Why must God be "just" as well as "merciful"?
A. God must be just as well as merciful because He must fulfill His promise to punish those who
merit punishment, and because He cannot be infinite in one perfection without being infinite in
all.
Q. 178. Into what sins will the forgetfulness of God's justice lead us?
A. The forgetfulness of God's justice will lead us into sins of presumption.
Q 179. Into what sins will the forgetfulness of God's mercy lead us?
A. The forgetfulness of God's mercy will lead us into sins of despair.
Q. 181. Can we find an example to fully illustrate the mystery of the Blessed Trinity?
A. We cannot find an example to fully illustrate the mystery of the Blessed Trinity, because the
mysteries of our holy religion are beyond comparison.
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Q. 184. What does "supreme" mean?
A. "Supreme" means the highest in authority; also the most excellent or greatest possible in
anything. Thus in all things God is supreme, and in the Church the Pope is supreme.
Q. 191. Do "first," "second," and "third" with regard to the persons of the Blessed Trinity
mean that one person existed before the other or that one is greater than the other?
A. "First," "second," and "third" with regard to the persons of the Blessed Trinity do not mean
that one person was before the other or that one is greater than the other; for all the persons of the
Trinity are eternal and equal in every respect. These numbers are used to mark the distinction
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between the persons, and they show the order in which the one proceeded from the other.
Q. 194. Are the three Divine Persons one and the same God?
A. The three Divine Persons are one and the same God, having one and the same Divine nature
and substance.
Q. 196. Can we fully understand how the three Divine Persons are one and the same God?
A. We cannot fully understand how the three Divine Persons are one and the same God, because
this is a mystery.
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Q. 199. Should we believe truths which we cannot understand?
A. We should and often do believe truths which we cannot understand when we have proof of
their existence.
Q. 200. Give an example of truths which all believe, though many do not understand them.
A. All believe that the earth is round and moving, though many do not understand it. All believe
that a seed planted in the ground will produce a flower or tree often with more than a thousand
other seeds equal to itself, though many cannot understand how this is done.
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LESSON FOURTH: On Creation
Q. 209. From what do we learn that God created heaven and earth and all things?
A. We learn that God created heaven and earth and all things from the Bible or Holy Scripture, in
which the account of the Creation is given.
Q. 211. Did God leave all things to themselves after He had created them?
A. God did not leave all things to themselves after He had created them; He continues to
preserve and govern them.
Q. 212. What do we call the care by which God preserves and governs the world and all it
contains?
A. We call the care by which God preserves and governs the world and all it contains His
providence.
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Q. 213. How did God create heaven and earth?
A. God created heaven and earth from nothing by His word only; that is, by a single act of His
all-powerful will.
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Q. 220. Are all the Angels equal in dignity?
A. All the Angels are not equal in dignity. There are nine choirs or classes mentioned in the Holy
Scripture. The highest are called Seraphim and the lowest simply Angels. The Archangels are
one class higher than ordinary Angels.
Q. 224. How do we know that Angels offer our prayers and good works to God?
A. We know that Angels offer our prayers and good works to God because it is so stated in Holy
Scripture, and Holy Scripture is the Word of God.
Q. 225. Why did God appoint guardian Angels if He watches over us Himself?
A. God appointed guardian Angels to secure for us their help and prayers, and also to show His
great love for us in giving us these special servants and faithful friends.
Q. 226. Were the angels, as God created them, good and happy?
A. The angels, as God created them, were good and happy.
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Q. 227. Did all the angels remain good and happy?
A. All the angels did not remain good and happy; many of them sinned and were cast into hell,
and these are called devils or bad angels.
Q. 229. What was the devil's name before he fell, and why was he cast out of heaven?
A. Before he fell, Satan, or the devil, was called Lucifer, or light-bearer, a name which indicates
great beauty. He was cast out of heaven because through pride he rebelled against God.
Q. 232. Can we by our own power overcome the temptations of the devil?
A. We cannot by our own power overcome the temptations of the devil, because the devil is
wiser than we are; for, being an Angel, he is more intelligent, and he did not lose his intelligence
by falling into sin any more than we do now. Therefore, to overcome his temptations we need the
help of God.
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LESSON FIFTH: On our First Parents and the Fall
Q. 234. Are there any persons in the world who are not the descendants of Adam and Eve?
A. There are no persons in the world now, and there never have been any, who are not the
descendants of Adam and Eve, because the whole human race had but one origin.
Q. 235. Do not the differences in color, figure, etc., which we find in distinct races indicate a
difference in first parents?
A. The differences in color, figure, etc., which we find in distinct races do not indicate a
difference in first parents, for these differences have been brought about in the lapse of time by
other causes, such as climate, habits, etc.
Q. 236. Were Adam and Eve innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God?
A. Adam and Eve were innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God.
Q. 237. What do we mean by saying Adam and Eve "were innocent" when they came from
the hand of God?
A. When we say Adam and Eve "were innocent" when they came from the hand of God we mean
they were in the state of original justice; that is, they were gifted with every virtue and free from
every sin.
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Q. 239. How was Eve's body formed?
A. Eve's body was formed from a rib taken from Adam's side during a deep sleep which God
caused to come upon him.
Q. 240. Why did God make Eve from one of Adam's ribs?
A. God made Eve from one of Adam's ribs to show the close relationship existing between
husband and wife in their marriage union which God then instituted.
Q. 241. Could man's body be developed from the body of an inferior animal?
A. Man's body could be developed from the body of an inferior animal if God so willed; but
science does not prove that man's body was thus formed, while revelation teaches that it was
formed directly by God from the clay of the earth.
Q. 242. Could man's soul and intelligence be formed by the development of animal life and
instinct?
A. Man's soul could not be formed by the development of animal instinct; for, being entirely
spiritual, it must be created by God, and it is united to the body as soon as the body is prepared to
receive it.
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Q. 245. Where was the Garden of Paradise situated?
A. The exact place in which the Garden of Paradise -- called also the Garden of Eden -- was
situated is not known, for the deluge may have so changed the surface of the earth that old
landmarks were wiped out. It was probably some place in Asia, not far from the river Euphrates.
Q. 246. What was the tree bearing the forbidden fruit called?
A. The tree bearing the forbidden fruit was called "the tree of knowledge of good and evil."
Q. 248. Which were the chief blessings intended for Adam and Eve had they remained
faithful to God?
A. The chief blessings intended for Adam and Eve, had they remained faithful to God, were a
constant state of happiness in this life and everlasting glory in the next.
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Q. 252. Which were the chief causes that led Eve into sin?
A. The chief causes that led Eve into sin were:
(1) She went into the danger of sinning by admiring what was forbidden, instead of avoiding it.
(2) She did not fly from the temptation at once, but debated about yielding to it.
Similar conduct on our part will lead us also into sin.
Q. 254. What other evils befell Adam and Eve on account of their sin?
A. Many other evils befell Adam and Eve on account of their sin. They were driven out of
Paradise and condemned to toil. God also ordained that henceforth the earth should yield no
crops without cultivation, and that the beasts, man's former friends, should become his savage
enemies.
Q. 255. Were we to remain in the Garden of Paradise forever if Adam had not sinned?
A. We were not to remain in the Garden of Paradise forever even if Adam had not sinned, but
after passing through the years of our probation or trial upon earth we were to be taken, body and
soul, into heaven without suffering death.
Q. 256. What evil befell us on account of the disobedience of our first parents?
A. On account of the disobedience of our first parents, we all share in their sin and punishment,
as we should have shared in their happiness if they had remained faithful.
Q. 257. Is it not unjust to punish us for the sin of our first parents?
A. It is not unjust to punish us for the sin of our first parents, because their punishment consisted
in being deprived of a free gift of God; that is, of the gift of original justice to which they had no
strict right and which they willfully forfeited by their act of disobedience.
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Q. 258. But how did the loss of the gift of original justice leave our first parents and us in
mortal sin?
A. The loss of the gift of original justice left our first parents and us in mortal sin because it
deprived them of the Grace of God, and to be without this gift of Grace which they should have
had was to be in mortal sin. As all their children are deprived of the same gift, they, too, come
into the world in a state of mortal sin.
Q. 259. What other effects followed from the sin of our first parents?
A. Our nature was corrupted by the sin of our first parents, which darkened our understanding,
weakened our will, and left in us a strong inclination to evil.
Q. 263. In what does the strong inclination to evil that is left in us consist?
A. This strong inclination to evil that is left in us consists in the continual efforts our senses and
appetites make to lead our souls into sin. The body is inclined to rebel against the soul, and the
soul itself to rebel against God.
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Q. 264. What is this strong inclination to evil called, and why did God permit it to remain
in us?
A. This strong inclination to evil is called concupiscence, and God permits it to remain in us that
by His grace we may resist it and thus increase our merits.
Q. 265. What is the sin called which we inherit from our first parents?
A. The sin which we inherit from our first parents is called original sin.
Q. 267. Does this corruption of our nature remain in us after original sin is forgiven?
A. This corruption of our nature and other punishments remain in us after original sin is forgiven.
Q. 269. Why was the Blessed Virgin preserved from original sin?
A. The Blessed Virgin was preserved from original sin because it would not be consistent with
the dignity of the Son of God to have His Mother, even for an instant, in the power of the devil
and an enemy of God.
Q. 270. How could the Blessed Virgin be preserved from sin by her Divine Son, before her
Son was born?
A. The Blessed Virgin could be preserved from sin by her Divine Son before He was born as
man, for He always existed as God and foresaw His own future merits and the dignity of His
Mother. He therefore by His future merits provided for her privilege of exemption from original
sin.
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Q. 271. What does the "Immaculate Conception" mean?
A. The Immaculate Conception means the Blessed Virgin's own exclusive privilege of coming
into existence, through the merits of Jesus Christ, without the stain of original sin. It does not
mean, therefore, her sinless life, perpetual virginity or the miraculous conception of Our Divine
Lord by the power of the Holy Ghost.
Q. 272. What has always been the belief of the Church concerning this truth?
A. The Church has always believed in the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin and to
place this truth beyond doubt has declared it an Article of Faith.
Q. 273. To what should the thoughts of the Immaculate Conception lead us?
A. The thoughts of the Immaculate Conception should lead us to a great love of purity and to a
desire of imitating the Blessed Virgin in the practice of that holy virtue.
LESSON SIXTH: On Sin and Its Kinds ON SIN AND ITS KINDS.
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Q. 276. What is our sin called when we neglect things commanded?
A. When we neglect things commanded our sin is called a sin of omission. Such sins as willfully
neglecting to hear Mass on Sundays, or neglecting to go to Confession at least once a year, are
sins of omission.
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Q. 283. What do we mean by "grievous matter" with regard to sin?
A. By "grievous matter" with regard to sin we mean that the thought, word or deed by which
mortal sin is committed must be either very bad in itself or severely prohibited, and therefore
sufficient to make a mortal sin if we deliberately yield to it.
Q. 284. What does "sufficient reflection and full consent of the will" mean?
A. "Sufficient reflection" means that we must know the thought, word or deed to be sinful at the
time we are guilty of it; and "full consent of the will" means that we must fully and willfully
yield to it.
Q. 286. Do past material sins become real sins as soon as we discover their sinfulness?
A. Past material sins do not become real sins as soon as we discover their sinfulness, unless we
again repeat them with full knowledge and consent.
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Q. 289. What sin does he commit who without sufficient reason believes another guilty of
sin?
A. He who without sufficient reason believes another guilty of sin commits a sin of rash
judgment.
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Q. 296. What is pride?
A. Pride is an excessive love of our own ability; so that we would rather sinfully disobey than
humble ourselves.
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Q. 304. What is gluttony?
A. Gluttony is an excessive desire for food or drink.
Q. 308. What three sins seem to cause most evil in the world?
A. Drunkenness, dishonesty and impurity seem to cause most evil in the world, and they are
therefore to be carefully avoided at all times.
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Q. 311. What is sloth?
A. Sloth is a laziness of the mind and body, through which we neglect our duties on account of
the labor they require.
Q. 313. Why are the seven sources of sin called capital sins?
A. The seven sources of sin are called capital sins because they rule over our other sins and are
the causes of them.
Q. 316. Should we give up trying to be good when we seem not to succeed in overcoming
our faults?
A. We should not give up trying to be good when we seem not to succeed in overcoming our
faults, because our efforts to be good will keep us from becoming worse than we are.
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LESSON SEVENTH: On the Incarnation and Redemption
Q. 318. What does "incarnation" mean, and what does "redemption" mean?
A. "Incarnation" means the act of clothing with flesh. Thus Our Lord clothed His divinity with a
human body. "Redemption" means to buy back again.
Q. 322. What does the name "Jesus" signify and how was this name given to Our Lord?
A. The name "Jesus" signifies Saviour or Redeemer, and this name was given to Our Lord by an
Angel who appeared to Joseph and said: "Mary shall bring forth a Son; and thou shalt call His
name Jesus."
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Q. 324. How did Christ show and prove His divine power?
A. Christ showed and proved His divine power chiefly by His miracles, which are extraordinary
works that can be performed only by power received from God, and which have, therefore, His
sanction and authority.
Q. 326. Could not men have been deceived in the miracles of Christ?
A. Men could not have been deceived in the miracles of Christ because they were performed in
the most open manner and usually in the presence of great multitudes of people, among whom
were many of Christ's enemies, ever ready to expose any deceit. And if Christ performed no real
miracles, how, then, could He have converted the world and have persuaded sinful men to give
up what they loved and do the difficult things that the Christian religion imposes?
Q. 327. Could not false accounts of these miracles have been written after the death of Our
Lord?
A. False accounts of these miracles could not have been written after the death of Our Lord; for
then neither His friends nor His enemies would have believed them without proof. Moreover, the
enemies of Christ did not deny the miracles, but tried to explain them by attributing them to the
power of the devil or other causes. Again, the Apostles and the Evangelists who wrote the
accounts suffered death to testify their belief in the words and works of Our Lord.
Q. 328. Did Jesus Christ die to redeem all men of every age and race without exception?
A. Jesus Christ died to redeem all men of every age and race without exception; and every
person born into the world should share in His merits, without which no one can be saved.
Q. 329. How are the merits of Jesus Christ applied to our souls?
A. The merits of Jesus Christ are applied to our souls through the Sacraments, and especially
through Baptism and Penance, which restore us to the friendship of God.
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Q. 330. What do you believe of Jesus Christ?
A. I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, the second Person of the Blessed Trinity, true
God and true man.
Q. 331. Cannot we also be called the Children of God, and therefore His sons and
daughters?
A. We can be called the Children of God because He has adopted us by His grace or because He
is the Father who has created us; but we are not, therefore, His real Children; whereas, Jesus
Christ, His only real and true Son, was neither adopted nor created, but was begotten of His
Father from all eternity.
Q. 334. Who was the foster father or guardian of Our Lord while on earth?
A. St. Joseph, the husband of the Blessed Virgin, was the foster-father or guardian of Our Lord
while on earth.
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Q. 337. Is Jesus Christ more than one person?
A. No. Jesus Christ is but one Divine Person.
Q. 338. From what do we learn that Jesus Christ is but one person?
A. We learn that Jesus Christ is but one person from Holy Scripture and from the constant
teaching of the Church, which has condemned all those who teach the contrary.
Q. 344. Did the Son of God become man immediately after the sin of our first parents?
A. The Son of God did not become man immediately after the sin of our first parents, but was
promised to them as a Redeemer.
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Q. 345. How many years passed from the time Adam sinned till the time the Redeemer
came?
A. About 4,000 years passed from the time Adam sinned till the time the Redeemer came.
Q. 346. What was the moral condition of the world just before the coming of Our Lord?
A. Just before the coming of Our Lord the moral condition of the world was very bad. Idolatry,
injustice, cruelty, immorality and horrid vices were common almost everywhere.
Q. 351. Have all these prophecies concerning the Redeemer been fulfilled?
A. All the prophecies concerning the Redeemer have been fulfilled in every point by the
circumstances of Christ's birth, life, death, resurrection and glory; and He is, therefore, the
Redeemer promised to mankind from the time of Adam.
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Q. 352. Where shall we find these prophecies concerning the Redeemer?
A. We shall find these prophecies concerning the Redeemer in the prophetic books of the Bible
or Holy Scripture.
Q. 353. If the Redeemer's coming was so clearly foretold, why did not all recognize Him
when He came?
A. All did not recognize the Redeemer when He came, because many knew only part of the
prophecies; and taking those concerning His glory and omitting those concerning His suffering,
they could not understand His life.
Q. 354. How could they be saved who lived before the Son of God became man?
A. They who lived before the Son of God became man could be saved by believing in a
Redeemer to come, and by keeping the Commandments.
Q. 355. On what day was the Son of God conceived and made man?
A. The Son of God was conceived and made man on Annunciation Day -- the day on which the
Angel Gabriel announced to the Blessed Virgin Mary that she was to be the Mother of God.
Q. 357. Why did the Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph go to Bethlehem just before the birth of
Our Lord?
A. The Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph went to Bethlehem in obedience to the Roman Emperor,
who ordered all his subjects to register their names in the towns or cities of their ancestors.
Bethlehem was the City of David, the royal ancestor of Mary and Joseph, hence they had to
register there. All this was done by the Will of God, that the prophecies concerning the birth of
His Divine Son might be fulfilled.
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Q. 358. Why was Christ born in a stable?
A. Christ was born in a stable because Joseph and Mary were poor and strangers in Bethlehem,
and without money they could find no other shelter. This was permitted by Our Lord that we
might learn a lesson from His great humility.
Q. 359. In giving the ancestors or forefathers of Our Lord, why do the Gospels give the
ancestors of Joseph, who was only Christ's foster-father, and not the ancestors of Mary,
who was Christ's real parent?
A. In giving the ancestors of Our Lord, the Gospels give the ancestors of Joseph:
(1) Because the ancestors of women were not usually recorded by the Jews; and
(2) Because Mary and Joseph were members of the same tribe, and had, therefore, the same
ancestors; so that, in giving the ancestors of Joseph, the Gospels give also those of Mary; and
this was understood by those for whom the Gospels were intended.
Q. 361. Who were among the first to adore the Infant Jesus?
A. The shepherds of Bethlehem, to whom His birth was announced by Angels; and the Magi or
three wise men, who were guided to His crib by a miraculous star, were among the first to adore
the Infant Jesus. We recall the adoration of the Magi on the feast of the Epiphany, which means
appearance or manifestation, namely, of Our Saviour.
Q. 363. How was the Holy Infant rescued from the power of Herod?
A. The Holy Infant was rescued from the power of Herod by the flight into Egypt, when St.
Joseph -- warned by an Angel -- fled hastily into that country with Jesus and Mary.
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Q. 364. How did Herod hope to accomplish his wicked designs?
A. Herod hoped to accomplish his wicked designs by murdering all the infants in and near
Bethlehem. The day on which we commemorate the death of these first little martyrs, who shed
their blood for Christ's sake, is called the feast of Holy Innocents.
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LESSON EIGHTH: On Our Lord's Passion, Death, Resurrection,
and Ascension
Q. 372. Who accompanied Our Lord to the Garden of Olives on the night of His Agony?
A. The Apostles Peter, James and John, the same who had witnessed His transfiguration on the
mount, accompanied Our Lord to the Garden of Olives, to watch and pray with Him on the night
of His agony.
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Q. 375. What caused Our Lord's agony in the garden?
A It is believed Our Lord's agony in the garden was caused:
(1) By his clear knowledge of all He was soon to endure;
(2) By the sight of the many offenses committed against His Father by the sins of the whole
world;
(3) By His knowledge of men's ingratitude for the blessings of redemption.
Q. 378. Could Christ, if He pleased, have escaped the tortures of His Passion?
A. Christ could, if He pleased, have escaped the tortures of His Passion, because He foresaw
them and had it in His power to overcome His enemies.
Q. 379. Was it necessary for Christ to suffer so much in order to redeem us?
A. It was not necessary for Christ to suffer so much in order to redeem us, for the least of His
sufferings was more than sufficient to atone for all the sins of mankind. By suffering so much He
showed His great love for us.
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Q. 381. How was Christ condemned to death?
A. Through the influence of those who hated Him, Christ was condemned to death, after an
unjust trial, at which false witnesses were induced to testify against Him.
Q. 383. Why do you call that day "good" on which Christ died so sorrowful a death?
A. We call that day good on which Christ died because by His death He showed His great love
for man, and purchased for him every blessing.
Q. 384. How long was Our Lord hanging on the cross before He died?
A. Our Lord was hanging on the Cross about three hours before He died. While thus suffering,
His enemies stood around blaspheming and mocking Him. By His death He proved Himself a
real mortal man, for He could not die in His divine nature.
Q. 385. What do we call the words Christ spoke while hanging on the Cross?
A. We call the words Christ spoke while hanging on the Cross "the seven last words of Jesus on
the Cross." They teach us the dispositions we should have at the hour of death.
Q. 386. Repeat the seven last words or sayings of Jesus on the Cross.
A. The seven last words or sayings of Jesus on the Cross are:
(1) "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do," in which He forgives and prays for
His enemies.
(2) "Amen, I say to thee, this day thou shalt be with Me in Paradise," in which He pardons the
penitent sinner.
(3) "Woman, behold thy Son" -- "Behold thy Mother," in which He gave up what was dearest to
Him on earth, and gave us Mary for our Mother.
(4) "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" from which we learn the suffering of His
mind.
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(5) "I thirst," from which we learn the suffering of His body.
(6) "All is consummated," by which He showed the fulfillment of all the prophecies concerning
Him and the completion of the work of our redemption.
(7) "Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit," by which He showed His perfect resignation
to the Will of His Eternal Father.
Q. 390. Why was the veil of the Temple torn asunder at the death of Christ?
A. The veil of the Temple was torn asunder at the death of Christ because at His death the Jewish
religion ceased to be the true religion, and God no longer manifested His presence in the Temple.
Q. 391. Why did the Jewish religion, which up to the death of Christ had been the true
religion, cease at that time to be the true religion?
A. The Jewish religion, which, up to the death of Christ, had been the true religion, ceased at that
time to be the true religion, because it was only a promise of the redemption and figure of the
Christian religion, and when the redemption was accomplished and the Christian religion
established by the death of Christ, the promise and the figure were no longer necessary.
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Q. 392. Were all the laws of the Jewish religion abolished by the establishment of
Christianity?
A. The moral laws of the Jewish religion were not abolished by the establishment of Christianity,
for Christ came not to destroy these laws, but to make them more perfect. Its ceremonial laws
were abolished when the Temple of Jerusalem ceased to be the House of God.
Q. 395. Where was Mount Calvary, and what does the name signify?
A. Mount Calvary was the place of execution, not far from Jerusalem; and the name signifies the
"place of skulls."
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Q. 399. How was Our Lord's body buried?
A. Our Lord's body was wrapped in a clean linen cloth and laid in a new sepulchre or tomb cut in
a rock, by Joseph of Arimathea and other pious persons who believed in Our Divine Lord.
Q. 400. What lessons do we learn from the sufferings and death of Christ?
A. From the sufferings and death of Christ we learn the great evil of sin, the hatred God bears to
it, and the necessity of satisfying for it.
Q. 402. Did Christ's soul descend into the hell of the damned?
A. The hell into which Christ's soul descended was not the hell of the dammed, but a place or
state of rest called Limbo, where the souls of the just were waiting for Him.
Q. 404. Where was Christ's body while His soul was in Limbo?
A. While Christ's soul was in Limbo His body was in the holy sepulchre.
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Q. 406. Why is the Resurrection the greatest of Christ's miracles?
A. The Resurrection is the greatest of Christ's miracles because all He taught and did is
confirmed by it and depends upon it. He promised to rise from the dead and without the
fulfillment of that promise we could not believe in Him.
Q. 407. Has any one ever tried to disprove the miracle of the resurrection?
A. Unbelievers in Christ have tried to disprove the miracle of the resurrection as they have tried
to disprove all His other miracles; but the explanations they give to prove Christ's miracles false
are far more unlikely and harder to believe than the miracles themselves.
Q. 408. What do we mean when we say Christ rose "glorious" from the dead?
A. When we say Christ rose "glorious" from the dead we mean that His body was in a glorified
state; that is, gifted with the qualities of a glorified body.
Q. 411. How long did Christ stay on earth after His resurrection?
A. Christ stayed on earth forty days after His resurrection, to show that He was truly risen from
the dead, and to instruct His apostles.
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Q. 412. Was Christ visible to all and at all times during the forty days He remained on
earth after His resurrection?
A. Christ was not visible to all nor at all times during the forty days He remained on earth after
His resurrection. We know that He appeared to His apostles and others at least nine times,
though He may have appeared oftener.
Q. 413. How did Christ show that He was truly risen from the dead?
A. Christ showed that He was truly risen from the dead by eating and conversing with His
Apostles and others to whom He appeared. He showed the wounds in His hands, feet and side,
and it was after His resurrection that He gave to His Apostles the power to forgive sins.
Q. 414. After Christ had remained forty days on earth, whither did He go?
A. After forty days Christ ascended into heaven, and the day on which be ascended into heaven
is called Ascension Day.
Q. 416. Who were present at the ascension and who ascended with Christ?
A. From various parts of Scripture we may conclude there were about 125 persons -- though
traditions tell us there was a greater number -- present at the Ascension. They were the Apostles,
the Disciples, the pious women and others who had followed Our Blessed Lord. The souls of the
just who were waiting in Limbo for the redemption ascended with Christ.
Q. 417. Why is the paschal candle which is lighted on Easter morning extinguished at the
Mass on Ascension Day?
A. The paschal candle which is lighted on Easter morning signifies Christ's visible presence on
earth, and it is extinguished on Ascension Day to show that He, having fulfilled all the
prophecies concerning Himself and having accomplished the work of redemption, has transferred
the visible care of His Church to His Apostles and returned in His body to heaven.
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Q. 418. Where is Christ in heaven?
A. In heaven Christ sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty.
Q. 419. What do you mean by saying that Christ sits at the right hand of God?
A. When I say that Christ sits at the right hand of God I mean that Christ as God is equal to His
Father in all things, and that as man He is in the highest place in heaven next to God.
LESSON NINTH: On the Holy Ghost and His Descent upon the
Apostles
Q. 424. Is the Holy Ghost equal to the Father and the Son?
A. The Holy Ghost is equal to the Father and the Son, being the same Lord and God as they are.
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Q. 425. On what day did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles?
A. The Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles ten days after the Ascension of our Lord; and
the day on which He came down upon the Apostles is called Whitsunday, or Pentecost.
Q. 426. Why is the day on which the Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles called
Whitsunday?
A. The day on which the Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles is called Whitsunday or
White Sunday, probably because the Christians who were baptized on the eve of Pentecost wore
white garments for some time afterward, as a mark of the purity bestowed upon their souls by the
Sacrament of Baptism.
Q. 428. How did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles?
A. The Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles in the form of tongues of fire.
Q. 431. Did the Apostles know that the Holy Ghost would come down upon them?
A. The Apostles knew that the Holy Ghost would come down upon them; for Christ promised
His Apostles that after His Ascension He would send the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Truth, to
teach them all truths and to abide with them forever.
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Q. 432. Has any one ever denied the existence of the Holy Ghost?
A. Some persons have denied the existence of the Holy Ghost; others have denied that He is a
real person equal to the Father and the Son; but all these assertions are shown to be false by the
words of Holy Scripture and the infallible teaching of the Church.
Q. 433. What are the sins against the Holy Ghost which Our Lord said will not be forgiven
either in this world or in the next?
A. The sins against the Holy Ghost which Our Lord said will not be forgiven either in this world
or in the next, are sins committed out of pure malice, and greatly opposed to the mercy of God,
and are, therefore, seldom forgiven.
Q. 435. How was the Church sanctified through the coming of the Holy Ghost?
A. The Church was sanctified through the coming of the Holy Ghost by receiving those graces
which Christ had merited for His ministers, the bishops and priests, and for the souls of all those
committed to their care.
Q. 436. How were the Apostles enlightened through the coming of the Holy Ghost?
A. The Apostles were enlightened through the coming of the Holy Ghost by receiving the grace
to remember and understand in its true meaning all that Christ had said and done in their
presence.
Q. 437. How were the Apostles strengthened through the coming of the Holy Ghost?
A. The Apostles were strengthened through the coming of the Holy Ghost by receiving the grace
to brave every danger, even death itself, in the performance of their sacred duties.
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Q. 438. What does "Apostle," and what does "Gospel" mean?
A. "Apostle" means a person sent, and "Gospel" means good tidings or news. Hence the name
"Gospel" is given to the inspired history of Our Lord's life and works upon earth.
Q. 443. Why did not the Apostles fully understand when Christ Himself taught them?
A. The Apostles did not fully understand when Christ Himself taught them because during His
stay with them on earth they were only preparing to become Apostles; and their minds were yet
filled with many worldly thoughts and desires that were to be removed at the coming of the Holy
Ghost.
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Q. 444. Will the Holy Ghost abide with the Church forever?
A. The Holy Ghost will abide with the Church forever, and guide it in the way of holiness and
truth.
Q. 445. What benefit do we derive from the knowledge that the Holy Ghost will abide with
the Church forever?
A. From the knowledge that the Holy Ghost will abide with the Church forever we are made
certain that the Church can never teach us falsehood, and can never be destroyed by the enemies
of Our Faith.
Q. 446. What visible power was given to the Apostles through the coming of the Holy
Ghost?
A. Through the coming of the Holy Ghost the Apostles received the "gift of tongues," by which
they could be understood in every language, though they preached in only one.
Q. 447. Why did such wonderful gifts accompany confirmation, or the coming of the Holy
Ghost, in the first ages of the Church?
A. Such wonderful gifts accompanied Confirmation in the first ages of the Church to prove the
power, truth and divine character of Christianity to those who otherwise might not believe, and
to draw the attention of all to the establishment of the Christian Church.
Q. 448. Why are these signs not continued everywhere at the present time?
A. These signs are not continued everywhere at the present time, because now that the Church is
fully established and its divine character and power proved in other ways, such signs are no
longer necessary.
Q. 449. Were such powers as the "gift of tongues" a part of the Sacrament of
Confirmation?
A. Such powers as the "gift of tongues" were not a part of the Sacrament of Confirmation, but
they were added to it by the Holy Ghost when necessary for the good of the Church.
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LESSON TENTH: On the Effects of the Redemption
Q. 452. What did Adam give away by his sin, and what did Our Lord buy back for him and
us?
A. By his sin Adam gave away all right to God's promised gifts of grace in this world and of
glory in the next, and Our Lord bought back the right that Adam threw away.
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Q. 456. What do you mean by grace?
A. By grace I mean a supernatural gift of God bestowed on us, through the merits of Jesus
Christ, for our salvation.
Q. 460. What is the difference between sanctifying grace and actual grace?
A. Sanctifying grace remains with us as long as we are not guilty of mortal sin; and hence, it is
often called habitual grace; but actual grace comes to us only when we need its help in doing or
avoiding an action, and it remains with us only while we are doing or avoiding the action.
Q. 462. What do you call those graces or gifts of God by which we believe in Him, hope in
Him, and love Him?
A. Those graces or gifts of God by which we believe in Him, and hope in Him, and love Him,
are called the Divine virtues of Faith, Hope, and Charity.
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Q. 463. What do you mean by virtue and vice?
A. Virtue is the habit of doing good, and vice is the habit of doing evil. An act, good or bad, does
not form a habit; and hence, a virtue or a vice is the result of repeated acts of the same kind.
Q. 464. Does habit excuse us from the sins committed through it?
A. Habit does not excuse us from the sins committed through it, but rather makes us more guilty
by showing how often we must have committed the sin to acquire the habit. If, however, we are
seriously trying to overcome a bad habit, and through forgetfulness yield to it, the habit may
sometimes excuse us from the sin.
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Q. 470. Why do we say the three theological virtues are infused and the four moral virtues
acquired?
A. We say the three theological virtues are infused; that is, poured into our souls, because they
are strictly gifts of God and do not depend upon our efforts to obtain them, while the four moral
virtues -- Prudence, Justice, Fortitude and Temperance -- though also gifts of God, may, as
natural virtues, be acquired by our own efforts.
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Q. 477. Can we resist the grace of God?
A. We can, and unfortunately often do, resist the grace of God.
Q. 481. Can we merit the grace of final perseverance or know when we possess it?
A. We cannot merit the grace of final perseverance, or know when we possess it, because it
depends entirely upon God's mercy and not upon our actions. To imagine we possess it would
lead us into the sin of presumption.
Q. 482. Can a person merit any supernatural reward for good deeds performed while he is
in mortal sin?
A. A person cannot merit any supernatural reward for good deeds performed while he is in
mortal sin; nevertheless, God rewards such good deeds by giving the grace of repentance; and,
therefore, all persons, even those in mortal sin, should ever strive to do good.
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LESSON ELEVENTH: On the Church
Q. 484. How was the true religion preserved from Adam till the coming of Christ?
A. The true religion was preserved from Adam till the coming of Christ by the patriarchs,
prophets and other holy men whom God appointed and inspired to teach His Will and
Revelations to the people, and to remind them of the promised Redeemer.
Q. 485. Who were the prophets, and what was their chief duty?
A. The prophets were men to whom God gave a knowledge of future events connected with
religion, that they might foretell them to His people and thus give proof that the message came
from God. Their chief duty was to foretell the time, place and circumstances of Our Saviour's
coming into the world, that men might know when and where to look for Him, and might
recognize Him when He came.
Q. 486. How could they be saved who lived before Christ became man?
A. They who lived before Christ became man could be saved by belief in the Redeemer to come
and by keeping the Commandments of God.
Q. 487. Was the true religion universal before the coming of Christ?
A. The true religion was not universal before the coming of Christ. It was confined to one people
– the descendants of Abraham. All other nations worshipped false gods.
Q. 488. Which are the means instituted by Our Lord to enable men at all times to share in
the fruits of the Redemption?
A. The means instituted by Our Lord to enable men at all times to share in the fruits of His
Redemption are the Church and the Sacraments.
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Q. 497. What does "vicar" mean?
A. Vicar is a name used in the Church to designate a person who acts in the name and authority
of another. Thus a Vicar Apostolic is one who acts in the name of the Pope, and a Vicar General
is one who acts in the name of the bishop.
Q. 499. Why is the Pope, the Bishop of Rome, the visible Head of the Church?
A. The Pope, the Bishop of Rome, is the visible Head of the Church because he is the successor
of St. Peter, whom Christ made the chief of the Apostles and the visible Head of the Church.
Q. 502. What do we call the right by which St. Peter or his successor has always been the
head of the Church and of all its bishops?
A. We call the right by which St. Peter or his successor has always been the head of the Church,
and of all its bishops, the Primacy of St. Peter or of the Pope. Primacy means holding first place.
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Q. 503. How is it shown that St. Peter or his successor has always been the head of the
Church?
A. It is shown that St. Peter or his successor has always been the head of the Church:
(1) From the words of Holy Scripture, which tell how Christ appointed Peter Chief of the
Apostles and head of the Church.
(2) From the history of the Church, which shows that Peter and his successors have always
acted and have always been recognized as the head of the Church.
Q. 504. How do we know that the rights and privileges bestowed on St. Peter were given
also to his successors -- the Popes?
A. We know that the rights and privileges bestowed on St. Peter were given also to his
successors, the Popes, because the promises made to St. Peter by Our Lord were to be fulfilled in
the Church till the end of time, and as Peter was not to live till the end of time, they are fulfilled
in his successors.
Q. 505. Did St. Peter establish any Church before he came to Rome?
A. Before he came to Rome, St. Peter established a Church at Antioch and ruled over it for
several years.
Q. 507. How do we know that the bishops of the Church are the successors of the Apostles?
A. We know that the bishops of the Church are the successors of the Apostles because they
continue the work of the Apostles and give proof of the same authority. They have always
exercised the rights and powers that belonged to the Apostles in making laws for the Church, in
consecrating bishops and ordaining priests.
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Q. 509. Are all bound to belong to the Church?
A. All are bound to belong to the Church, and he who knows the Church to be the true Church
and remains out of it cannot be saved.
Q. 510. Is it ever possible for one to be saved who does not know the Catholic Church to be
the true Church?
A. It is possible for one to be saved who does not know the Catholic Church to be the true
Church, provided that person:
(1) Has been validly baptized;
(2) Firmly believes the religion he professes and practices to be the true religion, and
(3) Dies without the guilt of mortal sin on his soul.
Q. 511. Why do we say it is only possible for a person to be saved who does not know the
Catholic Church to be the true Church?
A. We say it is only possible for a person to be saved who does not know the Catholic Church to
be the true Church, because the necessary conditions are not often found, especially that of dying
in a state of grace without making use of the Sacrament of Penance.
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Q. 514. What excuses do some give for not becoming members of the true Church?
A. The excuses some give for not becoming members of the true church are:
(1) They do not wish to leave the religion in which they were born.
(2) There are too many poor and ignorant people in the Catholic Church.
(3) One religion is as good as another if we try to serve God in it, and be upright and honest in
our lives.
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.
Q. 518. What is a mark?
A. A mark is a given and known sign by which a thing can be distinguished from all others of its
kind. Thus a trademark is used to distinguish the article bearing it from all imitations of the same
article.
Q. 519. How do we know that the Church must have the four marks and three attributes
usually ascribed or given to it?
A. We know that the Church must have the four marks and three attributes usually ascribed or
given to it from the words of Christ given in the Holy Scripture and in the teaching of the Church
from its beginning.
Q. 520. Can the Church have the four marks without the three attributes?
A. The Church cannot have the four marks without the three attributes, because the three
attributes necessarily come with the marks and without them the marks could not exist.
Q. 521. Why are both marks and attributes necessary in the Church?
A. Both marks and attributes are necessary in the Church, for the marks teach us its external or
visible qualities, while the attributes teach us its internal or invisible qualities. It is easier to
discover the marks than the attributes; for it is easier to see that the Church is one than that it is
infallible.
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Q. 524. From whom must all persons derive whatever lawful authority they possess?
A. All persons must derive whatever lawful authority they possess from God Himself, from
whom they receive it directly or indirectly. Therefore, to disobey our lawful superiors is to
disobey God Himself, and hence such disobedience is always sinful.
Q. 528. How do you know that the Church can not err?
A. I know that the Church can not err because Christ promised that the Holy Ghost would remain
with it forever and save it from error. If, therefore, the Church has erred, the Holy Ghost must
have abandoned it and Christ has failed to keep His promise, which is a thing impossible.
Q. 529. Since the Church can not err, could it ever be reformed in its teaching of faith or
morals?
A. Since the Church can not err, it could never be reformed in its teaching of faith or morals.
Those who say the Church needed reformation in faith or morals accuse Our Lord of falsehood
and deception.
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Q. 530. When does the Church teach infallibly?
A. The Church teaches infallibly when it speaks through the Pope and Bishops united in general
council, or through the Pope alone when he proclaims to all the faithful a doctrine of faith or
morals.
Q. 531. What is necessary that the Pope may speak infallibly or ex-cathedra?
A. That the Pope may speak infallibly, or ex-cathedra:
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Q. 535. Why is the chief Church in a diocese called a Cathedral?
A. The chief Church in a diocese is called a Cathedral because the bishop's cathedra, that is, his
seat or throne, is erected in it, and because he celebrates all important feasts and performs all his
special duties in it.
Q. 536. How many Popes have governed the Church from St. Peter to Pius XI.?
A. From St. Peter to Pius XI., 261 Popes have governed the Church; and many of them have
been remarkable for their zeal, prudence, learning and sanctity.
Q. 537. What does anti-pope mean, and who were the anti-popes?
A. Anti-pope means a pretended pope. The anti-popes were men who by the aid of faithless
Christians or others unlawfully seized and claimed the papal power while the lawful pope was in
prison or exile.
Q. 538. Why must the Pope sometimes warn us on political and other matters?
A. The Pope must sometimes warn us on political and other matters, because whatever nations or
men do is either good or bad, just or unjust, and wherever the Pope discovers falsehood,
wickedness or injustice he must speak against it and defend the truths of faith and morals. He
must protect also the temporal rights and property of the Church committed to his care.
Q. 540. How did the Pope acquire and how was he deprived of the temporal power?
A. The Pope acquired the temporal power in a just manner by the consent of those who had a
right to bestow it. He was deprived of it in an unjust manner by political changes.
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Q. 541. How was the temporal power useful to the Church?
A. The temporal power was useful to the Church:
(1) Because it gave the Pope the complete independence necessary for the government of the
Church and for the defense of truth and virtue.
(2) It enabled him to do much for the spread of the true religion by giving alms for the
establishment and support of Churches and schools in poor or pagan countries.
Q. 542. What name do we give to the offerings made yearly by the faithful for the support
of the Pope and the government of the Church?
A. We call the offerings made yearly by the faithful for the support of the Pope and government
of the Church "Peter's pence." It derives its name from the early custom of sending yearly a
penny from every house to the successor of St. Peter, as a mark of respect or as an alms for some
charity.
Q. 544. What is the difference between the infallibility and indefectibility of the Church?
A. When we say the Church is infallible we mean that it can never teach error while it lasts; but
when we say the Church is indefectible, we mean that it will last forever and be infallible
forever; that it will always remain as Our Lord founded it and never change the doctrines He
taught.
Q. 545. Did Our Lord Himself make all the laws of the Church?
A. Our Lord Himself did not make all the laws of the Church. He gave the Church also power to
make laws to suit the needs of the times, places or persons as it judged necessary.
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Q. 547. In whom are these attributes found in their fullness?
A. These attributes are found in their fullness in the Pope, the visible Head of the Church, whose
infallible authority to teach bishops, priests, and people in matters of faith or morals will last to
the end of the world.
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Q. 554. Could a person who denies only one article of our faith be a Catholic?
A. A person who denies even one article of our faith could not be a Catholic; for truth is one and
we must accept it whole and entire or not at all.
Q. 555. Are there any pious beliefs and practices in the Church that are not articles of
faith?
A. There are many pious beliefs and practices in the Church that are not articles of faith; that is,
we are not bound under pain of sin to believe in them; yet we will often find them useful aids to
holiness, and hence they are recommended by our pastors.
Q. 556. Of what sin are persons guilty who put firm belief in religious or other practices
that are either forbidden or useless?
A. Persons who put a firm belief in religious or other practices that are forbidden or useless are
guilty of the sin of superstition.
Q. 557. Where does the Church find the revealed truths it is bound to teach?
A. The Church finds the revealed truths it is bound to teach in the Holy Scripture and revealed
traditions.
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Q. 560. Where does the Church find the revealed traditions?
A. The Church finds the revealed traditions in the decrees of its councils; in its books of worship;
in its paintings and inscriptions on tombs and monuments; in the lives of its Saints; the writings
of its Fathers, and in its own history.
Q. 561. Must we ourselves seek in the Scriptures and traditions for what we are to believe?
A. We ourselves need not seek in the Scriptures and traditions for what we are to believe. God
has appointed the Church to be our guide to salvation and we must accept its teaching us our
infallible rule of faith.
Q. 562. How do we show that the Holy Scriptures alone could not be our guide to salvation
and infallible rule of faith?
A. We show that the Holy Scripture alone could not be our guide to salvation and infallible rule
of faith:
(1) Because all men cannot examine or understand the Holy Scripture; but all can listen to the
teaching of the Church;
(2) Because the New Testament or Christian part of the Scripture was not written at the
beginning of the Church's existence, and, therefore, could not have been used as the rule of faith
by the first Christians;
(3) Because there are many things in the Holy Scripture that cannot be understood without the
explanation given by tradition, and hence those who take the Scripture alone for their rule of
faith are constantly disputing about its meaning and what they are to believe.
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Q. 565. How do you show that the Catholic Church is universal in time, in place, and in
doctrine?
A.
(1) The Catholic Church is universal in time, for from the time of the Apostles to the present it
has existed, taught and labored in every age;
(2) It is universal in place, for it has taught throughout the whole world;
(3) It is universal in doctrine, for it teaches the same everywhere, and its doctrines are suited to
all classes of persons. It has converted all the pagan nations that have ever been converted.
Q. 566. Why does the Church use the Latin language instead of the national language of its
children?
A. The Church uses the Latin language instead of the national language of its children:
(1) To avoid the danger of changing any part of its teaching in using different languages;
(2) That all its rulers may be perfectly united and understood in their communications;
(3) To show that the Church is not an institute of any particular nation, but the guide of all
nations.
Q. 568. Does the Church, by defining certain truths, thereby make new doctrines?
A. The Church, by defining, that is, by proclaiming certain truths, articles of faith, does not make
new doctrines, but simply teaches more clearly and with greater effort truths that have always
been believed and held by the Church.
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Q. 569. What, then, is the use of defining or declaring a truth an article of faith if it has
always been believed?
A. The use of defining or declaring a truth an article of faith, even when it has always been
believed, is:
(1) To clearly contradict those who deny it and show their teaching false;
(2) To remove all doubt about the exact teaching of the Church, and to put an end to all
discussion about the truth defined.
Q. 571. How do you show that Protestant Churches have not the marks of the true Church?
A. Protestant Churches have not the marks of the true Church, because:
(1) They are not one either in government or faith; for they have no chief head, and they
profess different beliefs;
(2) They are not holy, because their doctrines are founded on error and lead to evil
consequences;
(3) They are not catholic or universal in time, place or doctrine. They have not existed in all
ages nor in all places, and their doctrines do not suit all classes;
(4) They are not apostolic, for they were not established for hundreds of years after the
Apostles, and they do not teach the doctrines of the Apostles.
Q. 572. From whom does the Church derive its undying life and infallible authority?
A. The Church derives its undying life and infallible authority from the Holy Ghost, the spirit of
truth, who abides with it forever.
Q. 573. By whom is the Church made and kept One, Holy, and Catholic?
A. The Church is made and kept One, Holy, and Catholic by the Holy Ghost, the spirit of love
and holiness, who unites and sanctifies its members throughout the world.
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LESSON THIRTEENTH: On the Sacraments in General
Q. 575. Are these three things, namely: An outward or visible sign, the institution of that
sign by Christ, and the giving of grace through the use of that sign, always necessary for
the existence of a Sacrament?
A. These three things, namely: An outward or visible sign, the institution of that sign by Christ,
and the giving of grace through the use of that sign, are always necessary for the existence of a
Sacrament, and if any of the three be wanting there can be no Sacrament.
Q. 576. Why does the Church use numerous ceremonies or actions in applying the outward
signs of the Sacraments?
A. The Church uses numerous ceremonies or actions in applying the outward signs of the
Sacraments to increase our reverence and devotion for the Sacraments, and to explain their
meaning and effects.
Q. 579. How do we know there are seven Sacraments and no more or less?
A. We know there are seven Sacraments and no more or less because the Church always taught
that truth. The number of the Sacraments is a matter of faith, and the Church cannot be mistaken
in matters of faith.
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Q. 580. Why have the Sacraments been instituted?
A. The Sacraments have been instituted as a special means through which we are to receive the
grace merited for us by Christ. As Christ is the giver of the grace, He has the right to determine
the manner in which it shall be given, and one who refuses to make use of the Sacraments will
not receive God's grace.
Q. 581. Do the Sacraments recall in any way the means by which Our Lord merited the
graces we receive through them?
A. The Sacraments recall in many ways the means by which Our Lord merited the graces we
receive through them. Baptism recalls His profound humility; Confirmation His ceaseless prayer;
Holy Eucharist His care of the needy; Penance His mortified life; Extreme Unction His model
death; Holy Orders His establishment of the priesthood, and Matrimony His close union with the
Church.
Q. 582. Give, for example, the outward sign in Baptism and Confirmation.
A. The outward sign in Baptism is the pouring of the water and the saying of the words of
Baptism. The outward sign in Confirmation is the anointing with oil, the saying of the words of
Confirmation and the placing of the bishop's hands over the person he confirms.
Q. 584. Does the outward sign merely indicate that grace has been given, or does the use of
the outward sign with the proper intention also give the grace of the Sacrament?
A. The outward sign is not used merely to indicate that grace has been given, for the use of the
outward sign with the proper intention also gives the grace of the Sacrament. Hence the right
application of the outward sign is always followed by the gift of internal grace if the Sacrament
be administered with the right intention and received with the right dispositions.
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Q. 585. What do we mean by the "right intention" for the administration of the
Sacraments?
A. By the right intention for the administration of the Sacraments we mean that whoever
administers a Sacrament must have the intention of doing what Christ intended when He
instituted the Sacrament and what the Church intends when it administers the Sacrament.
Q. 586. Is there any likeness between the thing used in the outward sign and the grace given
in each Sacrament?
A. There is a great likeness between the thing used in the outward sign and the grace given in
each Sacrament; thus water is used for cleansing; Baptism cleanses the soul; Oil gives strength
and light; Confirmation strengthens and enlightens the soul; Bread and wine nourish; the Holy
Eucharist nourishes the soul.
Q. 588. Do the needs of the soul resemble the needs of the body?
A. The needs of the soul do resemble the needs of the body; for the body must be born,
strengthened, nourished, healed in affliction, helped at the hour of death, guided by authority,
and given a place in which to dwell. The soul is brought into spiritual life by Baptism; it is
strengthened by Confirmation; nourished by the Holy Eucharist; healed by Penance; helped at
the hour of our death by Extreme Unction; guided by God's ministers through the Sacrament of
Holy Orders, and it is given a body in which to dwell by the Sacrament of Matrimony.
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Q. 590. Does the effect of the Sacraments depend on the worthiness or unworthiness of the
one who administers them?
A. The effect of the Sacraments does not depend on the worthiness or unworthiness of the one
who administers them, but on the merits of Jesus Christ, who instituted them, and on the worthy
dispositions of those who receive them.
Q. 592. When is a Sacrament said to give, and when is it said to increase, grace in our
souls?
A. A Sacrament is said to give grace when there is no grace whatever in the soul, or in other
words, when the soul is in mortal sin. A Sacrament is said to increase grace when there is already
grace in the soul, to which more is added by the Sacrament received.
Q. 594. Why are Baptism and Penance called Sacraments of the dead?
A. Baptism and Penance are called Sacraments of the dead because they take away sin, which is
the death of the soul, and give grace, which is its life.
Q. 595. May not the Sacrament of Penance be received by one who is in a state of grace?
A. The Sacrament of Penance may be and very often is received by one who is in a state of
grace, and when thus received it increases -- as the Sacraments of the living do -- the grace
already in the soul.
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Q. 596. Which are the Sacraments that increase sanctifying grace in our soul?
A. The Sacraments that increase sanctifying grace in our souls are: Confirmation, Holy
Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and Matrimony; and they are called Sacraments of the
living.
Q. 597. What do we mean by Sacraments of the dead and Sacraments of the living?
A. By the Sacraments of the dead we mean those Sacraments that may be lawfully received
while the soul is in a state of mortal sin. By the Sacraments of the living we mean those
Sacraments that can be lawfully received only while the soul is in a state of grace -- i.e., free
from mortal sin. Living and dead do not refer here to the persons, but to the condition of the
souls; for none of the Sacraments can be given to a dead person.
Q. 598. Why are Confirmation, Holy Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and
Matrimony called Sacraments of the living?
A. Confirmation, Holy Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and Matrimony are called
Sacraments of the living because those who receive them worthily are already living the life of
grace.
Q. 599. What sin does he commit who receives the Sacraments of the living in mortal sin?
A. He who receives the Sacraments of the living in mortal sin commits a sacrilege, which is a
great sin, because it is an abuse of a sacred thing.
Q. 600. In what other ways besides the unworthy reception of the Sacraments may persons
commit sacrilege?
A. Besides the unworthy reception of the Sacraments, persons may commit sacrilege by the
abuse of a sacred person, place or thing; for example, by willfully wounding a person
consecrated to God; by robbing or destroying a Church; by using the sacred vessels of the Altar
for unlawful purposes, etc.
Q. 601. Besides sanctifying grace do the Sacraments give any other grace?
A. Besides sanctifying grace the Sacraments give another grace, called sacramental grace.
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Q. 602. What is sacramental grace?
A. Sacramental grace is a special help which God gives, to attain the end for which He instituted
each Sacrament.
Q. 603. Is the Sacramental grace independent of the sanctifying grace given in the
Sacraments?
A. The Sacramental grace is not independent of the sanctifying grace given in the Sacraments;
for it is the sanctifying grace that gives us a certain right to special helps -- called Sacramental
grace -- in ach Sacrament, as often as we have to fulfill the end of the Sacrament or are tempted
against it.
Q. 604. Give an example of how the Sacramental grace aids us, for instance, in
Confirmation and Penance.
A. The end of Confirmation is to strengthen us in our faith. When we are tempted to deny our
religion by word or deed, the Sacramental Grace of Confirmation is given to us and helps us to
cling to our faith and firmly profess it. The end of Penance is to destroy actual sin. When we are
tempted to sin, the Sacramental Grace of Penance is given to us and helps us to overcome the
temptation and persevere in a state of grace. The sacramental grace in each of the other
Sacraments is given in the same manner, and aids us in attaining the end for which each
Sacrament was instituted and for which we receive it.
Q. 606. What do we mean by the "right dispositions" for the reception of the Sacraments?
A. By the right dispositions for the reception of the Sacraments we mean the proper motives and
the fulfillment of all the conditions required by God and the Church for the worthy reception of
the Sacraments.
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Q. 607. Give an example of the "right dispositions" for Penance and for the Holy
Eucharist.
A. The right dispositions for Penance are:
(1)To confess all our mortal sins as we know them;
(2) To be sorry for them, and
(3) To have the determination never to commit them or others again.
The right dispositions for the Holy Eucharist are:
(1) To know what the Holy Eucharist is;
(2) To be in a state of grace, and
(3) -- except in special cases of sickness -- to be fasting from midnight.
Q. 609. Why can we not receive Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Orders more than once?
A. We cannot receive Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Orders more than once, because they
imprint a character in the soul.
Q. 610. What is the character which these Sacraments imprint in the soul?
A. The character which these Sacraments imprint in the soul is a spiritual mark which remains
forever.
Q. 611. Does this character remain in the soul even after death?
A. This character remains in the soul even after death; for the honor and glory of those who are
saved; for the shame and punishment of those who are lost.
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Q. 612. Can the Sacraments be given conditionally?
A. The Sacraments can be given conditionally as often as we doubt whether they were properly
given before, or whether they can be validly given now.
Q. 616. Name some of the more common circumstances in which a priest is obliged to
administer the Sacraments conditionally.
A. Some of the more common circumstances in which a priest is obliged to administer the
Sacraments conditionally are:
(1) When he receives converts into the Church and is not certain of their previous baptism, he
must baptize them conditionally.
(2) When he is called -- as in cases of accident or sudden illness -- and doubts whether the
person be alive or dead, or whether he should be given the Sacraments, he must give absolution
and administer Extreme Unction conditionally.
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Q. 617. What is the use and effect of giving the Sacraments conditionally?
A. The use of giving the Sacraments conditionally is that there may be no irreverence to the
Sacraments in giving them to persons incapable or unworthy of receiving them; and yet that no
one who is capable or worthy may be deprived of them. The effect is to supply the Sacrament
where it is needed or can be given, and to withhold it where it is not needed or cannot be given.
Q. 618. What is the difference between the powers of a bishop and of a priest with regard to
the administration of the Sacraments?
A. The difference between the powers of a bishop and of a priest with regard to the
administration of the Sacraments is that a bishop can give all the Sacraments, while a priest
cannot give Confirmation or Holy Orders.
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Q. 622. What were persons called in the first ages of the Church who were being instructed
and prepared for baptism?
A. Persons who were being instructed and prepared for baptism, in the first ages of the Church,
were called catechumens, and they are frequently mentioned in Church history.
Q. 625. What conditions has Our Lord laid down for the gaining of this inheritance?
A. The conditions Our Lord has laid down for the gaining of this inheritance are:
(1) That we receive, when possible, the Sacraments He has instituted; and
(2) That we believe and practice all He has taught.
Q. 626. Did not St. John the Baptist institute the Sacrament of Baptism?
A. St. John the Baptist did not institute the Sacrament of Baptism, for Christ alone could institute
a Sacrament. The baptism given by St. John had the effect of a Sacramental; that is, it did not of
itself give grace, but prepared the way for it.
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Q. 628. That actual sins may be remitted by baptism, is it necessary to be sorry for them?
A. That actual sins may be remitted by baptism it is necessary to be sorry for them, just as we
must be when they are remitted by the Sacrament of Penance.
Q. 632. Where will persons go who -- such as infants -- have not committed actual sin and
who, through no fault of theirs, die without baptism?
A. Persons, such as infants, who have not committed actual sin and who, through no fault of
theirs, die without baptism, cannot enter heaven; but it is the common belief they will go to some
place similar to Limbo, where they will be free from suffering, though deprived of the happiness
of heaven.
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Q. 634. What do we mean by the "ordinary minister" of a Sacrament?
A. By the "ordinary minister" of a Sacrament we mean the one who usually does administer the
Sacrament, and who has always the right to do so.
Q. 635. Can a person who has not himself been baptized, and who does not even believe in
the Sacrament of baptism, give it validly to another in case of necessity?
A. A person who has not himself been baptized, and who does not even believe in the Sacrament
of baptism, can give it validly to another in case of necessity, provided:
(1) He has the use of reason;
(2) Knows how to give baptism, and
(3) Intends to do what the Church intends in the giving of the Sacrament. Baptism is so
necessary that God affords every opportunity for its reception.
Q. 636. Why do the consequences of original sin, such as suffering, temptation, sickness,
and death, remain after the sin has been forgiven in baptism?
A. The consequences of original sin, such as suffering, temptation, sickness and death, remain
after the sin has been forgiven in baptism:
(1) To remind us of the misery that always follows sin; and
(2) To afford us an opportunity of increasing our merit by bearing these hardships patiently.
Q. 637. Can a person ever receive any of the other Sacraments without first receiving
baptism?
A. A person can never receive any of the other Sacraments without first receiving baptism,
because baptism makes us members of Christ's Church, and unless we are members of His
Church we cannot receive His Sacraments.
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Q. 639. If water cannot be had, in case of necessity, may any other liquid be used for
baptism?
A. If water cannot be had, in case of necessity or in any case, no other liquid can be used, and the
baptism cannot be given.
Q. 640. If it is impossible, in case of necessity, to reach the head, may the water be poured
on any other part of the body?
A. If it is impossible, in case of necessity, to reach the head, the water should be poured on
whatever part of the body can be reached; but then the baptism must be given conditionally; that
is, before pronouncing the words of baptism, you must say: "If I can baptize thee in this way, I
baptize thee in the name of the Father," etc. If the head can afterward be reached, the water must
be poured on the head and the baptism repeated conditionally by saying: "If you are not already
baptized, I baptize thee in the name," etc.
Q. 641. Is the baptism valid if we say: "I baptize thee in the name of the Holy Trinity,"
without naming the Persons of the Trinity?
A. The baptism is not valid if we say: "I baptize thee in the name of the Holy Trinity," without
naming the Persons of the Trinity; for we must use the exact words instituted by Christ.
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Q. 645. What is Baptism of water?
A. Baptism of water is that which is given by pouring water on the head of the person to be
baptized, and saying at the same time, "I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost."
Q. 646. In how many ways was the baptism of water given in the first ages of the Church?
A. In the first ages of the Church, baptism of water was given in three ways, namely, by
immersion or dipping, by aspersion or sprinkling, and by infusion or pouring. Although any of
these methods would be valid, only the method of infusion or pouring is now allowed in the
Church.
Q. 647. What are the chief ceremonies used in solemn baptism, and what do they signify?
A. The chief ceremonies used in solemn baptism are:
(1) A profession of faith and renouncement of the devil to signify our worthiness;
(2) The placing of salt in the mouth to signify the wisdom imparted by faith;
(3) The holding of the priest's stole to signify our reception into the Church;
(4) The anointing to signify the strength given by the Sacrament;
(5) The giving of the white garment or cloth to signify our sinless state after baptism; and
(6) The giving of the lighted candle to signify the light of faith and fire of love that should
dwell in our souls.
Q. 648. Should one who, in case of necessity, has been baptized with private baptism, be
afterwards brought to the Church to have the ceremonies of solemn baptism completed?
A. One who, in case of necessity, has been baptized with private baptism should afterwards be
brought to the Church to have the ceremonies of solemn baptism completed, because these
ceremonies are commanded by the Church and bring down blessings upon us.
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Q. 649. Is solemn baptism given with any special kind of water?
A. Solemn baptism is given with consecrated water; that is, water mixed with holy oil and
blessed for baptism on Holy Saturday and on the Saturday before Pentecost. It is always kept in
the baptismal font in the baptistry – a place near the door of the Church set apart for baptism.
Q. 654. How do we know that the baptism of desire or of blood will save us when it is
impossible to receive the baptism of water?
A. We know that baptism of desire or of blood will save us when it is impossible to receive the
baptism of water, from Holy Scripture, which teaches that love of God and perfect contrition can
secure the remission of sins ; and also that Our Lord promises salvation to those who lay down
their life for His sake or for His teaching.
171
Q. 655. What do we promise in Baptism?
A. In Baptism we promise to renounce the devil, with all his works and pomps.
172
Q. 662. Can a person ever be sponsor when absent from the baptism?
A. A person can be sponsor even when absent from the baptism, provided he has been asked and
has consented to be sponsor, and provided also some one answers the questions and touches the
person to be baptized in his name. The absent godfather or godmother is then said to be sponsor
by proxy and becomes the real godparent of the one baptized.
Q. 663. With whom do godparents, as well as the one baptizing, contract a relationship?
A. Godparents, as well as the one baptizing, contract a spiritual relationship with the person
baptized (not with his parents), and this relationship is an impediment to marriage that must be
made known to the priest in case of their future marriage with one another. The godfather and
godmother contract no relationship with each other.
Q. 664. What questions should persons who bring a child for baptism be able to answer?
A. Persons who bring a child for baptism should be able to tell:
(1) The exact place where the child lives;
(2) The full name of its parents, and, in particular, the maiden name, or name before her
marriage, of its mother;
(3) The exact day of the month on which it was born;
(4) Whether or not it has received private baptism, and
(5) Whether its parents be Catholics.
Sponsors must know also the chief truths of our religion.
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Q. 666. Can persons who are not Catholics be sponsors for Catholic children?
A. Persons who are not Catholics cannot be sponsors for Catholic children, because they cannot
perform the duties of sponsors; for if they do not know and profess the Catholic religion
themselves, how can they teach it to their godchildren? Moreover, they must answer the
questions asked at baptism and declare that they believe in the Holy Catholic Church and in all it
teaches; which would be a falsehood on their part.
Q. 667. What should parents chiefly consider in the selection of sponsors for their children?
A. In the selection of sponsors for their children parents should chiefly consider the good
character and virtue of the sponsors, selecting model Catholics to whom they would be willing at
the hour of death to entrust the care and training of their children.
Q. 668. What dispositions must adults or grown persons, have that they may worthily
receive baptism?
A. That adults may worthily receive baptism:
(1) They must be willing to receive it;
(2) They must have faith in Christ;
(3) They must have true sorrow for their sins, and
(4) They must solemnly renounce the devil and all his works; that is, all sin.
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Q. 671. When was Confirmation instituted?
A. The exact time at which Confirmation was instituted is not known. But as this Sacrament was
administered by the Apostles and numbered with the other Sacraments instituted by Our Lord, it
is certain that He instituted this Sacrament also and instructed His Apostles in its use, at some
time before His ascension into heaven.
175
Q. 678. In Confirmation, what does the extending of the bishop's hands over us signify?
A. In Confirmation, the extending of the bishop's hands over us signifies the descent of the Holy
Ghost upon us and the special protection of God through the grace of Confirmation.
176
Q. 685. What does the bishop say in anointing the person he confirms?
A. In anointing the person he confirms the bishop says: "I sign thee with the sign of the cross,
and I confirm thee with the chrism of salvation, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Ghost."
Q. 686. What is meant by anointing the forehead with chrism in the form of a cross?
A. By anointing the forehead with chrism in the form of a cross is meant that the Christian who
is confirmed must openly profess and practice his faith, never be ashamed of it; and rather die
than deny it.
Q. 688. Why have we good reason never to be ashamed of the Catholic faith?
A. We have good reason never to be ashamed of the Catholic Faith because it is the Old Faith
established by Christ and taught by His Apostles; it is the Faith for which countless Holy Martyrs
suffered and died; it is the Faith that has brought true civilization, with all its benefits, into the
world, and it is the only Faith that can truly reform and preserve public and private morals.
Q. 689. Why does the bishop give the person he confirms a slight blow on the cheek?
A. The bishop gives the person he confirms a slight blow on the cheek, to put him in mind that
he must be ready to suffer everything, even death, for the sake of Christ.
Q. 690. Is it right to test ourselves through our imagination of what we would be willing to
suffer for the sake of Christ?
A. It is not right to test ourselves through our imagination of what we would be willing to suffer
for the sake of Christ, for such tests may lead us into sin. When a real test comes we are assured
God will give to us, as He did to the Holy Martyrs, sufficient grace to endure it.
177
Q. 691. To receive Confirmation worthily is it necessary to be in the state of grace?
A. To receive Confirmation worthily it is necessary to be in the state of grace.
Q. 693. Why should we know the chief mysteries of faith and the duties of a Christian
before receiving Confirmation?
A. We should know the Chief Mysteries of Faith and the duties of a Christian before receiving
Confirmation because as one cannot be a good soldier without knowing the rules of the army to
which he belongs and understanding the commands of his leader, so one cannot be a good
Christian without knowing the laws of the Church and understanding the commands of Christ.
178
Q. 697. Are sponsors necessary in Confirmation?
A. Sponsors are necessary in Confirmation, and they must be of the same good character as those
required at Baptism, for they take upon themselves the same duties and responsibilities. They
also contract a spiritual relationship, which, however, unlike that in Baptism, is not an
impediment to marriage.
179
Q. 704. Why do we receive the gift of Counsel?
A. We receive the gift of Counsel to warn us of the deceits of the devil, and of the dangers to
salvation.
Q. 705. How is it clear that the devil could easily deceive us if the Holy Ghost did not aid
us?
A. It is clear that the devil could easily deceive us if the Holy Ghost did not aid us, for just as our
sins do not deprive us of our knowledge, so the devil's sin did not deprive him of the great
intelligence and power which he possessed as an angel. Moreover, his experience in the world
extends over all ages and places, while ours is confined to a few years and to a limited number of
places.
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Q. 709. What are the Beatitudes and why are they so called?
A. The Beatitudes are a portion of Our Lord's Sermon on the Mount, and they are so called
because each of them holds out a promised reward to those who practice the virtues they
recommend.
Q. 712. What does the first Beatitude mean by the "poor in spirit"?
A. The first Beatitude means by the "poor in spirit" all persons, rich or poor, who would not
offend God to possess or retain anything that this world can give; and who, when necessity or
charity requires it, give willingly for the glory of God. It includes also those who humbly submit
to their condition in life when it cannot be improved by lawful means.
Q. 713. Who are the mourners who deserve the consolation promised in the third
Beatitude?
A. The mourners who deserve the consolation promised in the third Beatitude are they who, out
of love for God, bewail their own sins and those of the world; and they who patiently endure all
trials that come from God or for His sake.
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Q. 714. What lessons do the other Beatitudes convey?
A. The other Beatitudes convey these lessons: The meek suppress all feelings of anger and
humbly submit to whatever befalls them by the Will of God; and they never desire to do evil for
evil. The justice after which we should seek is every Christian virtue included under that name,
and we are told that if we earnestly desire and seek it we shall obtain it. The persecuted for
justice' sake are they who will not abandon their faith or virtue for any cause.
Q. 718. Why does Our Lord speak in particular of poverty, meekness, sorrow, desire for
virtue, mercy, purity, peace and suffering?
A. Our Lord speaks in particular of poverty, meekness, sorrow, desire for virtue, mercy, purity,
peace and suffering because these are the chief features in His own earthly life; poverty in His
birth, life and death; meekness in His teaching; sorrow at all times. He eagerly sought to do
good, showed mercy to all, recommended chastity, brought peace, and patiently endured
suffering.
182
Q. 720. Why are charity, joy, peace, etc., called fruits of the Holy Ghost?
A. Charity, joy, peace, etc., are called fruits of the Holy Ghost because they grow in our souls out
of the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost.
Q. 723. How does the institution of the Sacrament of Penance show the goodness of Our
Lord?
A. The institution of the Sacrament of Penance shows the goodness of Our Lord, because having
once saved us through Baptism, He might have left us to perish if we again committed sin.
Q. 725. How does the Sacrament of Penance remit sin, and restore to the soul the
friendship of God?
A. The Sacrament of Penance remits sin and restores the friendship of God to the soul by means
of the absolution of the priest.
183
Q. 726. What is Absolution?
A. Absolution is the form of prayer or words the priest pronounces over us with uplifted hand
when he forgives the sins we have confessed. It is given while we are saying the Act of
Contrition after receiving our Penance.
Q. 728. What should a person do when the priest has refused or postponed absolution?
A. When the priest has refused or postponed absolution, the penitent should humbly submit to
his decision, follow his instructions, and endeavor to remove whatever prevented the giving of
the absolution and return to the same confessor with the necessary dispositions and resolution of
amendment.
Q. 729. Can the priest forgive all sins in the Sacrament of Penance?
A. The priest has the power to forgive all sins in the Sacrament of Penance, but he may not have
the authority to forgive all. To forgive sins validly in the Sacrament of Penance, two things are
required:
(1) The power to forgive sins which every priest receives at his ordination, and
(2) The right to use that power which must be given by the bishop, who authorizes the priest to
hear confessions and pass judgment on the sins.
Q. 730. What are the sins called which the priest has no authority to absolve?
A. The sins which the priest has no authority to absolve are called reserved sins. Absolution from
these sins can be obtained only from the bishop, and sometimes only from the Pope, or by his
special permission. Persons having a reserved sin to confess cannot be absolved from any of their
sins till the priest receives faculties or authority to absolve the reserved sin also.
184
Q. 731. Why is the absolution from some sins reserved to the Pope or bishop?
A. The absolution from some sins is reserved to the Pope or bishop to deter or prevent, by this
special restriction, persons from committing them, either on account of the greatness of the sin
itself or on account of its evil consequences.
Q. 732. Can any priest absolve a person in danger of death from reserved sins without the
permission of the bishop?
A. Any priest can absolve a person in danger of death from reserved sins without the permission
of the bishop, because at the hour of death the Church removes these restrictions in order to save,
if possible, the soul of the dying.
Q. 733. How do you know that the priest has the power of absolving from the sins
committed after Baptism?
A. I know that the priest has the power of absolving from the sins committed after Baptism,
because Jesus Christ granted that power to the priests of His Church when He said: "Receive ye
the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them; whose sins you shall
retain, they are retained."
Q. 734. How do we know that Our Lord, while on earth, had the power to forgive sins?
A. We know that Our Lord, while on earth, had the power to forgive sins:
(1) Because He was always God, and;
(2) Because He frequently did forgive sins and proved their forgiveness by miracles.
Since He had the power Himself, He could give it to His Apostles.
Q. 735. Was the power to forgive sins given to the apostles alone?
A. The power to forgive sins was not given to the apostles alone, because it was not given for the
benefit merely of those who lived at the time of the apostles, but for all who, having grievously
sinned, after Baptism, should need forgiveness. Since, therefore, Baptism will be given till the
end of time, and since the danger of sinning after it always remains the power to absolve from
such sins must also remain in the Church till the end of time.
185
Q. 736. When was the Sacrament of Penance instituted?
A. The Sacrament of Penance was instituted after the resurrection of Our Lord, when He gave to
His apostles the power to forgive sins, which He had promised to them before His death.
Q. 737. Are the enemies of our religion right when they say man cannot forgive sins?
A. The enemies of our religion are right when they say man cannot forgive sins if they mean that
he cannot forgive them by his own power, but they are certainly wrong if they mean that he
cannot forgive them even by the power of God, for man can do anything if God gives him the
power. The priest does not forgive sins by his own power as man, but by the authority he
receives as the minister of God.
Q. 738. How do the priests of the Church exercise the power of forgiving sins?
A. The priests of the Church exercise the power of forgiving sins by hearing the confession of
sins, and granting pardon for them as ministers of God and in His name.
Q. 739. How does the power to forgive sins imply the obligation of going to confession?
A. The power to forgive sins implies the obligation of going to confession because as sins are
usually committed secretly, the priest could never know what sins to forgive and what not to
forgive, unless the sins committed were made known to him by the persons guilty of them.
Q. 740. Could God not forgive our sins if we confessed them to Himself in secret?
A. Certainly, God could forgive our sins if we confessed them to Himself in secret, but He has
not promised to do so; whereas He has promised to pardon them if we confess them to His
priests. Since He is free to pardon or not to pardon, He has the right to establish a Sacrament
through which alone He will pardon.
186
4. We must confess our sins to the priest.
5. We must accept the penance which the priest gives us.
Q. 744. What, then, is the most important part of the preparation for confession?
A. The most important part of the preparation for confession is sincere sorrow for the sins
committed and the firm determination to avoid them for the future.
Q. 745. What is the chief reason that our confessions do not always amend our way of
living?
A. The chief reason that our confessions do not always amend our way of living is our want of
real earnest preparation for them and the fact that we have not truly convinced ourselves of the
need of amendment. We often confess our sins more from habit, necessity or fear than from a
real desire of receiving grace and of being restored to the friendship of God.
187
number; multiplying the number of times a day by the number of days to get the exact number of
habitual sins;
(3) Giving a vague answer, such as "sometimes," when asked how often; waiting after each sin
to be asked for the next;
(4) Hesitating over sins through pretented modesty and thus delaying the priests and others;
telling the exact words in each when we have committed several sins of the same kind, cursing,
for example; and, lastly, leaving the confessional before the priest gives us a sign to go.
Q. 747. Is it wrong to go to confession out of your turn against the will of others waiting
with you?
A. It is wrong to go to confession out of our turn against the will of others waiting with us,
because:
(1) It causes disorder, quarreling and scandalous conduct in the Church;
(2) It is unjust, makes others angry and lessens their good dispositions for confession;
(3) It annoys and distracts the priest by the confusion and disorder it creates.
It is better to wait than go to confession in an excited and disorderly manner.
Q. 748. What should a penitent do who knows he cannot perform the penance given?
A. A penitent who knows he cannot perform the penance given should ask the priest for one that
he can perform. When we forget the penance given we must ask for it again, for we cannot fulfill
our duty by giving ourselves a penance. The penance must be performed at the time and in the
manner the confessor directs.
188
Q. 751. How can we make a good examination of conscience?
A. We can make a good examination of conscience by calling to memory the commandments of
God, the precepts of the Church, the seven capital sins, and the particular duties of our state in
life, to find out the sins we have committed.
Q. 756. What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be interior?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be interior, I mean that it should come from the heart, and
not merely from the lips.
189
Q. 757. What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be supernatural?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be supernatural, I mean that it should be prompted by the
grace of God, and excited by motives which spring from faith, and not by merely natural
motives.
Q. 758. What do we mean by "motives that spring from faith" and by "merely natural
motives" with regard to sorrow for sin?
A. By sorrow for sin from "motives that spring from faith," we mean sorrow for reasons that God
has made known to us, such as the loss of heaven, the fear of hell or purgatory, or the dread of
afflictions that come from God in punishment for sin. By "merely natural motives" we mean
sorrow for reasons made known to us by our own experience or by the experience of others, such
as loss of character, goods or health. A motive is whatever moves our will to do or avoid
anything.
Q. 759. What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be universal?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be universal, I mean that we should be sorry for all our
mortal sins without exception.
Q. 760. Why cannot some of our mortal sins be forgiven while the rest remain on our souls?
A. It is impossible for any of our mortal sins to be forgiven unless they are all forgiven, because
as light and darkness cannot be together in the same place, so sanctifying grace and mortal sin
cannot dwell together. If there be grace in the soul, there can be no mortal sin, and if there be
mortal sin, there can be no grace, for one mortal sin expels all grace.
Q. 761. What do you mean when you say that our sorrow should be sovereign?
A. When I say that our sorrow should be sovereign, I mean that we should grieve more for
having offended God than for any other evil that can befall us.
190
Q. 763. How do we show that sin is the greatest of all evils?
A. We show that sin is the greatest of evils because its effects last the longest and have the most
terrible consequences. All the misfortunes of this world can last only for a time, and we escape
them at death, whereas the evils caused by sin keep with us for all eternity and are only increased
at death.
Q. 766. When will perfect contrition obtain pardon for mortal sin without the Sacrament of
Penance?
A. Perfect contrition will obtain pardon for mortal sin without the Sacrament of Penance when
we cannot go to confession, but with the perfect contrition we must have the intention of going to
confession as soon as possible, if we again have the opportunity.
Q. 768. What other name is given to imperfect contrition and why is it called imperfect?
A. Imperfect contrition is called attrition. It is called imperfect only because it is less perfect than
the highest grade of contrition by which we are sorry for sin out of pure love of God's own
goodness and without any consideration of what befalls ourselves.
191
Q. 769. Is imperfect contrition sufficient for a worthy confession?
A. Imperfect contrition is sufficient for a worthy confession, but we should endeavor to have
perfect contrition.
Q. 773. Is a person who is determined to avoid the sin, but who is unwilling to give up its
near occasion when it is possible to do so, rightly disposed for confession?
A. A person who is determined to avoid the sin, but who is unwilling to give up its near occasion
when it is possible to do so, is not rightly disposed for confession, and he will not be absolved if
he makes known to the priest the true state of his conscience.
192
A person who lives in a near and voluntary occasion of sin need not expect forgiveness while he
continues in that state.
Q. 775. What persons, places and things are usually occasions of sin?
A.
(1) The persons who are occasions of sin are all those in whose company we sin, whether they
be bad of themselves or bad only while in our company, in which case we also become
occasions of sin for them;
(2) The places are usually liquor saloons, low theaters, indecent dances, entertainments,
amusements, exhibitions, and all immoral resorts of any kind, whether we sin in them or not;
(3) The things are all bad books, indecent pictures, songs, jokes and the like, even when they
are tolerated by public opinion and found in public places.
Q. 778. Is it ever allowed to write our sins and read them to the priest in the confessional or
give them to him to read?
A. It is allowed, when necessary, to write our sins and read them to the priest, as persons do who
have almost entirely lost their memory. It is also allowed to give the paper to the priest, as
persons do who have lost the use of their speech. In such cases the paper must, after the
confession, be carefully destroyed either by the priest or the penitent.
193
Q. 779. What is to be done when persons must make their confession and cannot find a
priest who understands their language?
A. Persons who must make their confession and who cannot find a priest who understands their
language, must confess as best they can by some signs, showing what sins they wish to confess
and how they are sorry for them.
Q. 782. What should one do who has only venial sins to confess?
A. One who has only venial sins to confess should tell also some sin already confessed in his
past life for which he knows he is truly sorry; because it is not easy to be truly sorry for slight
sins and imperfections, and yet we must be sorry for the sins confessed that our confession may
be valid -- hence we add some past sin for which we are truly sorry to those for which we may
not be sufficiently sorry.
Q. 783. Should a person stay from confession because he thinks he has no sin to confess ?
A. A person should not stay from confession because he thinks he has no sin to confess, for the
Sacrament of Penance, besides forgiving sin, gives an increase of sanctifying grace, and of this
we have always need, especially to resist temptation. The Saints, who were almost without
imperfection, went to confession frequently.
194
Q. 784. Should a person go to Communion after confession even when the confessor does
not bid him go?
A. A person should go to Communion after confession even when the confessor does not bid him
go, because the confessor so intends unless he positively forbids his penitent to receive
Communion. However, one who has not yet received his first Communion should not go to
Communion after confession, even if the confessor by mistake should bid him go.
195
Q. 791. What do we mean by "circumstances which change the nature of sins?"
A. By "circumstances which change the nature of sins" we mean anything that makes it another
kind of sin. Thus to steal is a sin, but to steal from the Church makes our theft sacrilegious.
Again, impure actions are sins, but a person must say whether they were committed alone or
with others, with relatives or strangers, with persons married or single, etc., because these
circumstances change them from one kind of impurity to another.
Q. 793. Is our Confession worthy if, without our fault, we forget to confess a mortal sin?
A. If without our fault we forget to confess a mortal sin, our Confession is worthy, and the sin is
forgiven; but it must be told in Confession if it again comes to our mind.
Q. 794. May a person who has forgotten to tell a mortal sin in confession go to Holy
Communion before going again to confession?
A. A person who has forgotten to tell a mortal sin in confession may go to communion before
again going to confession, because the forgotten sin was forgiven with those confessed, and the
confession was good and worthy.
196
Q. 797. Why is it foolish to conceal sins in confession?
A. It is foolish to conceal sins in confession:
(1) Because we thereby make our spiritual condition worse;
(2) We must tell the sin sometime if we ever hope to be saved;
(3) It will be made known on the day of judgment, before the world, whether we conceal it
now or confess it.
Q. 798. What must he do who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in Confession?
A. He who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in Confession must not only confess it, but must
also repeat all the sins he has committed since his last worthy Confession.
Q. 799. Must one who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in confession do more than
repeat the sins committed since his last worthy confession?
A. One who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in confession must, besides repeating all the
sins he has committed since his last worthy confession, tell also how often he has unworthily
received absolution and Holy Communion during the same time.
Q. 801. Why should we have to satisfy for our sins if Christ has fully satisfied for them?
A. Christ has fully satisfied for our sins and after our baptism we were free from all guilt and had
no satisfaction to make. But when we willfully sinned after baptism, it is but just that we should
be obliged to make some satisfaction.
197
Q. 802. Is the slight penance the priest gives us sufficient to satisfy for all the sins
confessed?
A. The slight penance the priest gives us is not sufficient to satisfy for all the sins confessed:
(1) Because there is no real equality between the slight penance given and the punishment
deserved for sin;
(2) Because we are all obliged to do penance for sins committed, and this would not be
necessary if the penance given in confession satisfied for all.
The penance is given and accepted in confession chiefly to show our willingness to do penance
and make amends for our sins.
Q. 803. Does not the Sacrament of Penance remit all punishment due to sin?
A. The Sacrament of Penance remits the eternal punishment due to sin, but it does not always
remit the temporal punishment which God requires as satisfaction for our sins.
Q. 804. Why does God require a temporal punishment as a satisfaction for sin?
A. God requires a temporal punishment as a satisfaction for sin to teach us the great evil of sin
and to prevent us from falling again.
Q. 805. Which are the chief means by which we satisfy God for the temporal punishment
due to sin?
A. The chief means by which we satisfy God for the temporal punishment due to sin are: Prayer,
Fasting, Almsgiving; all spiritual and corporal works of mercy, and the patient suffering of the
ills of life.
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Q. 807. What is Lent?
A. Lent is the forty days before Easter Sunday, during which we do penance, fast and pray to
prepare ourselves for the resurrection of Our Lord; and also to remind us of His own fast of forty
days before His Passion.
Q. 810. How did the Christians in the first ages of the Church do Penance?
A. The Christians in the first ages of the Church did public penance, especially for the sins of
which they were publicly known to be guilty. Penitents were excluded for a certain time from
Mass or the Sacrament, and some were obliged to stand at the door of the Church begging the
prayers of those who entered.
Q. 811. What were these severe Penances of the First Ages of the Church called?
A. These severe penances of the first ages of the Church were called canonical penances,
because their kind and duration were regulated by the Canons or laws of the Church.
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Q. 814. When are we bound to admonish the sinner?
A. We are bound to admonish the sinner when the following conditions are fulfilled:
(1) When his fault is a mortal sin;
(2) When we have authority or influence over him, and
(3) When there is reason to believe that our warning will not make him worse instead of better.
Q. 815. Who are meant by the "ignorant" we are to instruct, and the "doubtful" we are to
counsel?
A. By the ignorant we are to instruct and the doubtful we are to counsel, are meant those
particularly who are ignorant of the truths of religion and those who are in doubt about matters of
faith. We must aid such persons as far as we can to know and believe the truths necessary for
salvation.
Q. 816. Why are we advised to bear wrong patiently and to forgive all injuries?
A. We are advised to bear wrongs patiently and to forgive all injuries, because, being Christians,
we should imitate the example of Our Divine Lord, who endured wrongs patiently and who not
only pardoned but prayed for those who injured Him.
Q. 817. If, then, it be a Christian virtue to forgive all injuries, why do Christians establish
courts and prisons to punish wrongdoers?
A. Christians establish courts and prisons to punish wrongdoers, because the preservation of
lawful authority, good order in society, the protection of others, and sometimes even the good of
the guilty one himself, require that crimes be justly punished. As God Himself punishes crime
and as lawful authority comes from Him, such authority has the right to punish, though
individuals should forgive the injuries done to themselves personally.
Q. 818. Why is it a work of mercy to pray for the living and the dead?
A. It is a work of mercy to aid those who are unable to aid themselves. The living are exposed to
temptations, and while in mortal sin they are deprived of the merit of their good works and need
our prayers. The dead can in no way help themselves and depend on us for assistance.
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Q. 819. Which are the chief corporal works of mercy?
A. The chief corporal works of mercy are seven: to feed the hungry, to give drink to the thirsty,
to clothe the naked, to ransom the captive, to harbor the harborless, to visit the sick, and to bury
the dead.
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(2) Because they desire to imitate Our Lord's life on earth as perfectly as possible; and when
each community takes one of Christ's works and seeks to become perfect in it, the union of all
their works continues as perfectly as we can the works He began upon earth.
Q. 826. Which are the first things we should tell the priest in Confession?
A. The first things we should tell the priest in Confession are the time of our last Confession, and
whether we said the penance and went to Holy Communion.
Q. 827. Should we tell anything else in connection with our last confession?
A. In connection with our last confession we should tell also what restrictions -- if any -- were
placed upon us with regard to our occasions of sin, and what obligations with regard to the
payment of debts, restitution, injuries done to others and the like, we were commanded to fulfill.
Q. 828. After telling the time of our last Confession and Communion what should we do?
A. After telling the time of our last Confession and Communion we should confess all the mortal
sins we have since committed, and all the venial sins we may wish to mention.
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Q. 830. When should a General Confession be made?
A. A general confession:
(1) Is necessary when we are certain that our past confessions were bad;
(2) It is useful on special occasions in our lives when some change in our way of living is about
to take place;
(3) It is hurtful and must not be made when persons are scrupulous.
Q. 831. What are the signs of scruples and the remedy against them?
A. The signs of scruples are chiefly:
(1) To be always dissatisfied with our confessions;
(2) To be self-willed in deciding what is sinful and what is not.
The chief remedy against them is to follow exactly the advice of the confessor without
questioning the reason or utility of his advice.
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restore it to spiritual health.
Q. 836. Should we remain away from confession because we cannot go to our usual
confessor?
A. We should not remain away from confession because we cannot go to our usual confessor, for
though it is well to confess to the same priest, it is not necessary to do so. One should never
become so attached to a confessor that his absence or the great inconvenience of going to him
would become an excuse for neglecting the Sacraments.
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Q. 841. Is an Indulgence a pardon of sin, or a license to commit sin?
A. An Indulgence is not a pardon of sin, nor a license to commit sin, and one who is in a state of
mortal sin cannot gain an Indulgence.
Q. 846. Which are the most important Plenary Indulgences granted by the Church?
A. The most important Plenary Indulgences granted by the Church are:
(1) The Indulgences of a jubilee which the Pope grants every twenty-five years or on great
occasions by which he gives special faculties to confessors for the absolution of reserved sins;
(2) The Indulgence granted to the dying in their last agony.
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Q. 847. What is a Partial Indulgence?
A. A Partial Indulgence is the remission of part of the temporal punishment due to sin.
Q. 848. How long has the practice of granting Indulgences been in use in the Church, and
what was its origin?
A. The practice of granting Indulgences has been in use in the Church since the time of the
apostles. It had its origin in the earnest prayers of holy persons, and especially of the martyrs
begging the Church for their sake to shorten the severe penances of sinners, or to change them
into lighter penances. The request was frequently granted and the penance remitted, shortened or
changed, and with the penance remitted the temporal punishment corresponding to it was blotted
out.
Q. 849. How do we show that the Church has the power to grant Indulgences?
A. We show that the Church has the power to grant Indulgences, because Christ has given it
power to remit all guilt without restriction, and if the Church has power, in the Sacrament of
penance, to remit the eternal punishment -- which is the greatest -- it must have power to remit
the temporal or lesser punishment, even outside the Sacrament of Penance.
Q. 851. Have there ever existed abuses among the faithful in the manner of using
Indulgences?
A. There have existed, in past ages, some abuses among the faithful in the manner of using
Indulgences, and the Church has always labored to correct such abuses as soon as possible. In the
use of pious practices we must be always guided by our lawful superiors.
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Q. 852. How have the enemies of the Church made use of the abuse of Indulgences?
A. The enemies of the Church have made use of the abuse of Indulgences to deny the doctrine of
Indulgences, and to break down the teaching and limit the power of the Church. Not to be
deceived in matters of faith, we must always distinguish very carefully between the abuses to
which a devotion may lead and the truths upon which the devotion rests.
Q. 853. How does the Church by means of Indulgences remit the temporal punishment due
to sin?
A. The Church, by means of Indulgences, remits the temporal punishment due to sin by applying
to us the merits of Jesus Christ, and the superabundant satisfactions of the Blessed Virgin Mary
and of the saints; which merits and satisfactions are its spiritual treasury.
Q. 854. What do we mean by the "superabundant satisfaction of the Blessed Virgin and the
Saints"?
A. By the superabundant satisfaction of the Blessed Virgin and the saints, we mean all the
satisfaction over and above what was necessary to satisfy for their own sins. As their good works
were many and their sins few – the Blessed Virgin being sinless -- the satisfaction not needed for
themselves is kept by the Church in a spiritual treasury to be used for our benefit.
Q. 855. Does the Church, by granting Indulgences, free us from doing Penance?
A. The Church, by granting Indulgences, does not free us from doing penance, but simply makes
our penance lighter that we may more easily satisfy for our sins and escape the punishments they
deserve.
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Q. 858. What must we do to gain an Indulgence?
A. To gain an Indulgence we must be in the state of grace and perform the works enjoined.
Q. 859. Besides being in a state of grace and performing the works enjoined, what else is
necessary for the gaining of an Indulgence?
A. Besides being in a state of grace and performing the works enjoined, it is necessary for the
gaining of an Indulgence to have at least the general intention of gaining it.
Q. 860. How and why should we make a general intention to gain all possible Indulgences
each day?
A. We should make a general intention at our morning prayers to gain all possible Indulgences
each day, because several of the prayers we say and good works we perform may have
Indulgences attached to them, though we are not aware of it.
Q. 861. What works are generally enjoined for the gaining of Indulgences?
A. The works generally enjoined for the gaining of Indulgences are: The saying of certain
prayers, fasting, and the use of certain articles of devotion; visits to Churches or altars, and the
giving of alms. For the gaining of Plenary Indulgences it is generally required to go to confession
and Holy Communion and pray for the intention of the Pope.
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Q. 864. Why did the Church moderate its severe penances?
A. The Church moderated its severe penances, because when Christians -- terrified by
persecution – grew weaker in their faith, there was danger of some abandoning their religion
rather than submit to the penances imposed. The Church, therefore, wishing to save as many as
possible, made the sinner's penance as light as possible.
Q. 867. Will a weekly Confession suffice to gain during the week all Indulgences to which
Confession is enjoined as one of the works?
A Weekly confession will suffice to gain during the week all Indulgences to which confession is
enjoined as one of the works, provided we continue in a state of grace, perform the other works
enjoined and have the intention of gaining these Indulgences.
Q. 868. How and when may we apply Indulgences for the benefit of the souls in Purgatory?
A. We may apply Indulgences for the benefit of the souls in Purgatory by way of intercession;
whenever this application is mentioned and permitted by the Church in granting the Indulgence;
that is, when the Church declares that the Indulgence granted is applicable to the souls of the
living or the souls in Purgatory; so that we may gain it for the benefit of either.
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LESSON TWENTY-SECOND: On the Holy Eucharist
Q. 871. What do we mean when we say the Sacrament which contains the Body and Blood?
A. When we say the Sacrament which contains the Body and Blood, we mean the Sacrament
which is the Body and Blood, for after the Consecration there is no other substance present in the
Eucharist.
Q. 874. Who were present when our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist?
A. When Our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist, the twelve Apostles were present.
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Q. 875. How did our Lord institute the Holy Eucharist?
A. Our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist by taking bread, blessing, breaking, and giving to His
Apostles, saying: "Take ye and eat. This is my body"; and then, by taking the cup of wine,
blessing and giving it, saying to them: "Drink ye all of this. This is my blood which shall be shed
for the remission of sins. Do this for a commemoration of me."
Q. 876. What happened when our Lord said, "This is my body; this is my blood"?
A. When Our Lord said, "This is my body," the substance of the bread was changed into the
substance of His body; when He said, "This is my blood," the substance of the wine was changed
into the substance of His blood.
Q. 877. How do we prove the Real Presence, that is, that Our Lord is really and truly
present in the Holy Eucharist?
A. We prove the Real Presence -- that is, that Our Lord is really and truly present in the Holy
Eucharist:
(1) By showing that it is possible to change one substance into another;
(2) By showing that Christ did change the substance of bread and wine into the substance of
His body and blood;
(3) By showing that He gave this power also to His Apostles and to the priests of His Church.
Q. 878. How do we know that it is possible to change one substance into another?
A. We know that it is possible to change one substance into another, because:
(1) God changed water into blood during the plagues of Egypt.
(2) Christ changed water into wine at the marriage of Cana.
(3) Our own food is daily changed into the substance of our flesh and blood; and what God
does gradually, He can also do instantly by an act of His will.
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Q. 879. Are these changes exactly the same as the changes that take place in the Holy
Eucharist?
A. These changes are not exactly the same as the changes that take place in the Holy Eucharist,
for in these changes the appearance also is changed, but in the Holy Eucharist only the substance
is changed while the appearance remains the same.
Q. 880. How do we show that Christ did change bread and wine into the substance of His
body and blood?
A. We show that Christ did change bread and wine into the substance of His body and blood:
(1) From the words by which He promised the Holy Eucharist;
(2) From the words by which He instituted the Holy Eucharist;
(3) From the constant use of the Holy Eucharist in the Church since the time of the Apostles;
(4) From the impossibility of denying the Real Presence in the Holy Eucharist, without
likewise denying all that Christ has taught and done; for we have stronger proofs for the Holy
Eucharist than for any other Christian truth.
Q. 881. Is Jesus Christ whole and entire both under the form of bread and under the form
of wine?
A. Jesus Christ is whole and entire both under the form of bread and under the form of wine.
Q. 882. How do we know that under the appearance of bread we receive also Christ's
blood; and under the appearance of wine we receive also Christ's body?
A. We know that under the appearance of bread we receive also Christ's blood, and under the
appearance of wine we receive also Christ's body; because in the Holy Eucharist we receive the
living body of Our Lord, and a living body cannot exist without blood, nor can living blood exist
without a body.
Q. 883. Is Jesus Christ present whole and entire in the smallest portion of the Holy
Eucharist, under the form of either bread or wine?
A. Jesus Christ is present whole and entire in the smallest portion of the Holy Eucharist under the
form of either bread or wine; for His body in the Eucharist is in a glorified state, and as it
partakes of the character of a spiritual substance, it requires no definite size or shape.
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Q. 884. Did anything remain of the bread and wine after their substance had been changed
into the substance of the body and blood of our Lord?
A. After the substance of the bread and wine had been changed into the substance of the body
and blood of Our Lord, there remained only the appearances of bread and wine.
Q. 886. What is this change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of our Lord
called?
A. This change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Our Lord is called
Transubstantiation.
Q. 888. Are there not, then, as many bodies of Christ as there are tabernacles in the world,
or as there are Masses being said at the same time?
A. There are not as many bodies of Christ as there are tabernacles in the world, or as there are
Masses being said at the same time; but only one body of Christ, which is everywhere present
whole and entire in the Holy Eucharist, as God is everywhere present, while He is but one God.
Q. 889. How was the substance of the bread and wine changed into the substance of the
body and blood of Christ?
A. The substance of the bread and wine was changed into the substance of the body and blood of
Christ by His almighty power.
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Q. 890. Does this change of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ continue to
be made in the Church?
A. This change of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ continues to be made in the
Church by Jesus Christ through the ministry of His priests.
Q. 891. When did Christ give His priests the power to change bread and wine into His body
and blood?
A. Christ gave His priests the power to change bread and wine into His body and blood when He
said to the Apostles, "Do this in commemoration of Me."
Q. 893. How do the priests exercise this power of changing bread and wine into the body
and blood of Christ?
A. The priests exercise this power of changing bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ
through the words of consecration in the Mass, which are words of Christ: "This is my body; this
is my blood."
Q. 894. At what part of the Mass does the Consecration take place?
A. The Consecration in the Mass takes place immediately before the elevation of the Host and
Chalice, which are raised above the head of the priest that the people may adore Our Lord who
has just come to the altar at the words of Consecration.
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LESSON TWENTY-THIRD: On the Ends for Which the Holy
Eucharist Was Instituted
Q. 899. Is it not beneath the dignity of Our Lord to enter our bodies under the appearance
of ordinary food?
A. It is not beneath the dignity of Our Lord to enter our bodies under the appearance of ordinary
food any more than it was beneath His dignity to enter the body of His Blessed Mother and
remain there as an ordinary child for nine months. Christ's dignity, being infinite, can never be
diminished by any act on His own or on our part.
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Q. 900. Why does not the Church give Holy Communion to the people as it does to the
priest under the appearance of wine also?
A. The Church does not give Holy Communion to the people as it does to the priest under the
appearance of wine also, to avoid the danger of spilling the Precious Blood; to prevent the
irreverence some might show if compelled to drink out of a chalice used by all, and lastly, to
refute those who denied that Our Lord's blood is present under the appearance of bread also.
Q. 902. What should a person do who, through forgetfulness or any other cause, has
broken the fast necessary for Holy Communion?
A. A person who through forgetfulness or any other cause has broken the fast necessary for Holy
Communion, should again fast and receive Holy Communion the following morning if possible,
without returning to confession. It is not a sin to break one's fast, but it would be a mortal sin to
receive Holy Communion after knowingly breaking the fast necessary for it.
Q. 903. Does he who receives Communion in mortal sin receive the body and blood of
Christ?
A. He who receives Communion in mortal sin receives the body and blood of Christ, but does
not receive His grace, and he commits a great sacrilege.
Q. 904. Is it enough to be free from mortal sin to receive plentifully the graces of Holy
Communion?
A. To receive plentifully the graces of Holy Communion it is not enough to be free from mortal
sin, but we should be free from all affection to venial sin, and should make acts of lively faith, of
firm hope, and ardent love.
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Q. 905. What is the fast necessary for Holy Communion?
A. The fast necessary for Holy Communion is the abstaining from food, alcoholic drinks and
non-alcoholic drinks for one hour before Holy Communion. Water does not break the fast.
Q. 906. Does medicine taken by necessity or food taken by accident break the fast for Holy
Communion?
A. Medicine does not break the fast; food taken by accident within one hour before Communion
breaks the fast.
Q. 907. Is any one ever allowed to receive Holy Communion when not fasting?
A. To protect the Blessed Sacrament from insult or injury, or when in danger of death, Holy
Communion may be received without fasting.
Q. 908. Is the Holy Communion called by any other name when given to one in danger of
death?
A. When the Holy Communion is given to one in danger of death, it is called Viaticum, and is
given with its own form of prayer. In giving Holy Communion the priest says: "May the body of
Our Lord Jesus Christ guard your soul to eternal life." In giving Holy Viaticum he says:
"Receive, brother (or sister), the Viaticum of the body of Our Lord Jesus Christ, which will
guard you from the wicked enemy and lead you into eternal life."
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Q. 911. How shall we know how often we should receive Holy Communion?
A. We shall know how often we shall receive Holy Communion only from the advice of our
confessor, by whom we must be guided, and whom we must strictly obey in this as well as in all
matters concerning the state of our soul.
Q. 914. What length of time should we spend in thanksgiving after Holy Communion?
A. We should spend sufficient time in Thanksgiving after Holy Communion to show due
reverence to the Blessed Sacrament; for Our Lord is personally with us as long as the appearance
of bread and wine remains.
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LESSON TWENTY-FOURTH: On the Sacrifice of the Mass
Q. 916. When and where are the bread and wine changed into the body and blood of
Christ?
A. The bread and wine are changed into the body and blood of Christ at the Consecration in the
Mass.
Q. 921. How is the Mass the same sacrifice as that of the Cross?
A. The Mass is the same sacrifice as that of the Cross because the offering and the priest are the
same – Christ our Blessed Lord; and the ends for which the sacrifice of the Mass is offered are
the same as those of the sacrifice of the Cross.
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Q. 922. What were the ends for which the sacrifice of the Cross was offered?
A. The ends for which the sacrifice of the Cross was offered were:
(1) 1st. To honor and glorify God;
(2) 2nd. To thank Him for all the graces bestowed on the whole world;
(3) 3rd. To satisfy God's justice for the sins of men;
(4) 4th. To obtain all graces and blessings.
Q. 924. Are all Masses of equal value in themselves or do they differ in worth?
A. All Masses are equal in value in themselves and do not differ in worth, but only in the
solemnity with which they are celebrated or in the end for which they are offered.
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Q. 926. For what end or intention may Mass be offered?
A. Mass may be offered for any end or intention that tends to the honor and glory of God, to the
good of the Church or the welfare of man; but never for any object that is bad in itself, or in its
aims; neither can it be offered publicly for persons who are not members of the true Church.
Q. 928. From what may we learn that we are to offer up the Holy Sacrifice with the priest?
A. We may learn that we are to offer up the Holy Sacrifice with the priest from the words used in
the Mass itself; for the priest, after offering up the bread and wine for the Sacrifice, turns to the
people and says: "Orate Fratres," etc., which means: "Pray, brethren, that my sacrifice and yours
may be acceptable to God the Father Almighty," and the server answers in our name: "May the
Lord receive the sacrifice from thy hands to the praise and glory of His own name, and to our
benefit and that of all His Holy Church."
Q. 929. From what did the custom of making an offering to the priest for saying Mass
arise?
A. The custom of making an offering to the priest for saying Mass arose from the old custom of
bringing to the priest the bread and wine necessary for the celebration of Mass.
Q. 930. Is it not simony, or the buying of a sacred thing, to offer the priest money for saying
Mass for your intention?
A. It is not simony, or the buying of a sacred thing, to offer the priest money for saying Mass for
our intention, because the priest does not take the money for the Mass itself, but for the purpose
of supplying the things necessary for Mass and for his own support.
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Q. 931. Is there any difference between the sacrifice of the Cross and the sacrifice of the
Mass?
A. Yes; the manner in which the sacrifice is offered is different. On the Cross Christ really shed
His blood and was really slain; in the Mass there is no real shedding of blood nor real death,
because Christ can die no more; but the sacrifice of the Mass, through the separate consecration
of the bread and the wine, represents His death on the Cross.
Q. 933. At what part of the Mass does the Offertory take place, and what parts of the Mass
are said before it?
A. The Offertory takes place immediately after the uncovering of the chalice. The parts of the
Mass said before it are: The Introit, Kyrie, Gloria, Prayers, Epistle, Gospel and Creed. The
Introit, Prayers, Epistle and Gospel change in each Mass to correspond with the feast celebrated.
Q. 934. What is the part of the Mass called in which the Words of Consecration are found?
A. The part of the Mass in which the words of Consecration are found is called the Canon. This
is the most solemn part of the Mass, and is rarely and but slightly changed in any Mass.
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Q. 936. What things are necessary for Mass?
A. The things necessary for Mass are:
(1) An altar with linen covers, candles, crucifix, altar stone and Mass book;
(2) A Chalice with all needed in its use, and bread of flour from wheat and wine from the
grape;
(3) Vestments for the priest, and
(4) An acolyte or server.
Q. 937. What is the altar stone, and of what does it remind us?
A. The altar stone is that part of the altar upon which the priest rests the Chalice during Mass.
This stone contains some holy relics sealed up in it by the bishop, and if the altar is of wood this
stone is inserted just in front of the Tabernacle. The altar stone reminds us of the early history of
the Church, when the martyrs' tombs were used for altars by the persecuted Christians.
Q. 938. What lesson do we learn from the practice of using martyrs' tombs for altars?
A. From the practice of using martyrs' tombs for altars we learn the inconvenience, sufferings
and dangers the early Christians willingly underwent for the sake of hearing Mass. Since the
Mass is the same now as it was then, we should suffer every inconvenience rather than be absent
from Mass on Sundays or holy days.
Q. 939. What things are used with the chalice during Mass?
A. The things used with the chalice during Mass are:
(1) The purificator or cloth for wiping the inside;
(2) The paten or small silver plate used in handling the host;
(3) The pall or white card used for covering the chalice at Mass;
(4) The corporal or linen cloth on which the chalice and host rest.
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Q. 940. What is the host?
A. The host is the name given to the thin wafer of bread used at Mass. This name is generally
applied before and after Consecration to the large particle of bread used by the priest, though the
small particles given to the people are also called by the same name.
Q. 942. What vestments does the priest use at Mass and what do they signify?
A. The vestments used by the priest at Mass are:
(1) The Amice, a white cloth around the shoulders to signify resistance to temptation;
(2) The Alb, a long white garment to signify innocence;
(3) The Cincture, a cord about the waist, to signify chastity;
(4) The Maniple or hanging vestment on the left arm, to signify penance;
(5) The Stole or long vestment about the neck, to signify immortality;
(6) The Chasuble or long vestment over all, to signify love and remind the priest, by its cross
on front and back, of the Passion of Our Lord.
Q. 943. How many colors of vestments are used, and what do the colors signify?
A. Five colors of vestments are used, namely, white, red, green, violet or purple, and black.
White signifies innocence and is used on the feasts of Our Blessed Lord, of the Blessed Virgin,
and of some saints. Red signifies love, and is used on the feasts of the Holy Ghost, and of
martyrs. Green signifies hope, and is generally used on Sundays from Epiphany to Pentecost.
Violet signifies penance, and is used in Lent and Advent. Black signifies sorrow, and is used on
Good Friday and at Masses for the dead. Gold is often used for white on great feasts.
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Blessed Sacrament while in the Tabernacle, and from which the priest gives Holy Communion to
the people.
Q. 948. What is important for the proper and respectful hearing of Mass?
A. For the proper and respectful hearing of Mass it is important to be in our place before the
priest comes to the altar and not to leave it before the priest leaves the altar. Thus we prevent the
confusion and distraction caused by late coming and too early leaving. Standing in the doorways,
blocking up passages and disputing about places should, out of respect for the Holy Sacrifice, be
most carefully avoided.
Q. 949. What is Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, and what vestments are used at it?
A. Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament is an act of divine worship in which the Blessed
Sacrament, placed in the ostensorium, is exposed for the adoration of the people and is lifted up
to bless them. The vestments used at Benediction are: A cope or large silk cloak and a humeral
or shoulder veil.
Q. 950. Why does the priest wear special vestments and use certain ceremonies while
performing his sacred duties?
A. The priest wears special vestments and uses certain ceremonies while performing his sacred
duties:
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(1) To give greater solemnity and to command more attention and respect at divine worship;
(2) To instruct the people in the things that these vestments and ceremonies signify;
(3) To remind the priest himself of the importance and sacred character of the work in which
he is the representative of Our Lord Himself.
Hence we should learn the meaning of the ceremonies of the Church.
Q. 951. How do we show that the ceremonies of the Church are reasonable and proper?
A. We show that the ceremonies of the Church are reasonable and proper from the fact that all
persons in authority, rulers, judges and masters, require certain acts of respect from their
subjects, and as we know Our Lord is present on the altar, the Church requires definite acts of
reverence and respect at the services held in His honor and in His presence.
Q. 953. How are the persons who take part in a Solemn Mass or Vespers named?
A. The persons who take part in a Solemn Mass or Vespers are named as follows: The priest who
says or celebrates the Mass is called the celebrant; those who assist him as deacon and sub-
deacon are called the ministers; those who serve are called acolytes, and the one who directs the
ceremonies is called the master of ceremonies. If the celebrant be a bishop, the Mass or Vespers
is called Pontifical Mass or Pontifical Vespers.
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Q. 955. Can one satisfy for neglecting Mass on Sunday by hearing Vespers on the same
day?
A. One cannot satisfy for neglecting Mass on Sunday by hearing Vespers on the same day,
because there is no law of the Church obliging us under pain of sin to attend Vespers, while there
is a law obliging us under pain of mortal sin to hear Mass.
Q. 958. Is this Sacrament called Extreme Unction if the person recovers after receiving it?
A. This Sacrament is always called Extreme Unction, even if it must be given several times to
the same person, for Extreme Unction is the proper name of the Sacrament, and it may be given
as often as a person recovering from one attack of sickness is in danger of death by another. In a
lingering illness it may be repeated after a month or six weeks, if the person slightly recovers and
again relapses into a dangerous condition.
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Q. 960. What are the right dispositions for Extreme Unction?
A. The right dispositions for Extreme Unction are:
(1) Resignation to the Will of God with regard to our recovery;
(2) A state of grace or at least contrition for sins committed, and
(3) A general intention or desire to receive the Sacrament.
This Sacrament is never given to heretics in danger of death, because they cannot be supposed to
have the intention necessary for receiving it, nor the desire to make use of the Sacrament of
Penance in putting themselves in a state of grace.
Q. 964. What things should be prepared in the sick-room when the priest is coming to give
the last Sacraments?
A. When the priest is coming to give the last Sacraments, the following things should be
prepared:
A table covered with a white cloth; a crucifix; two lighted candles in candlesticks; holy water
in a small vessel, with a small piece of palm for a sprinkler; a glass of clean water; a tablespoon
and a napkin or cloth, to be placed under the chin of the one receiving the Viaticum.
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Besides these, if Extreme Unction also is to be given, there should be some cotton and a small
piece of bread or lemon to purify the priest's fingers.
Q. 965. What seems most proper with regard to the things necessary for the last
Sacraments?
A. It seems most proper that the things necessary for the last Sacraments should be carefully kept
in every Catholic family, and should never, if possible, be used for any other purpose.
Q. 966. What else is to be observed about the preparation for the administration of the last
Sacraments?
A. The further preparation for the administration of the last Sacraments requires that out of
respect for the Sacraments, and in particular for the presence of Our Lord, everything about the
sick-room, the sick person and even the attendants, should be made as neat and clean as possible.
Especially should the face, hands and feet of the one to be anointed be thoroughly clean.
Q. 967. Should we wait until we are in extreme danger before we receive Extreme Unction?
A. We should not wait until we are in extreme danger before we receive Extreme Unction, but if
possible we should receive it whilst we have the use of our senses.
Q. 968. What should we do in case of serious illness if the sick person will not consent or is
afraid to receive the Sacraments, or, at least, wishes to put off their reception?
A. In case of serious illness, if the sick person will not consent, or is afraid to receive the
Sacraments, or, at least, wishes to put off their reception, we should send for the priest at once
and let him do what he thinks best in the case, and thus we will free ourselves from the
responsibility of letting a Catholic die without the last Sacraments.
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Q. 970. Will Extreme Unction take away mortal sin if the dying person is no longer able to
confess?
A. Extreme Unction will take away mortal sin if the dying person is no longer able to confess,
provided he has the sorrow for his sins that would bee necessary for the worthy reception of the
Sacrament of Penance.
Q. 971. How do we know that this Sacrament, more than any other, was instituted to
benefit the body?
A. We know that this Sacrament more than any other was instituted to benefit the body:
(1) From the words of St. James exhorting us to receive it;
(2) It is given when the soul is already purified by the graces of Penance and Holy Viaticum;
(3) One of its chief objects is to restore us to health if it be for our spiritual good, as most of the
prayers said in giving this Sacrament indicate.
Q. 972. Since Extreme Unction may restore us to health, should we not be glad to receive
it?
A. Since Extreme Unction may restore us to health we should be glad to receive it, and we
should not delay its reception till we are so near death that God could restore us only by a
miracle. Again, this Sacrament, like the others, gives sanctifying and sacramental grace, which
we should be eager to obtain as soon as our sickness is sufficient to give us the privilege of
receiving the last Sacraments.
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Q. 975. Who is the minister of the Sacrament of Extreme Unction?
A. The priest is the minister of the Sacrament of Extreme Unction.
Q. 976. What is the final preparation we should make for the reception of the last
Sacraments?
A. The final preparation we should make for the reception of the last Sacraments consists in an
earnest effort to be resigned to God's Holy Will, to excite ourselves to true sorrow for our sins, to
profit by the graces given us, to keep worldly thoughts from the mind, and to dispose ourselves
as best we can for the worthy reception of the Sacraments and the blessings of a good death.
Q. 977. At what time should persons dangerously ill attend to the final arrangement of
their temporal or worldly affairs?
A. Persons dangerously ill should attend to the final arrangement of their temporal or worldly
affairs at the very beginning of their illness, that these things may not distract them at the hour of
death, and that they may give the last hours of their life entirely to the care of their soul.
Q. 979. Besides bishops and priests, who are the other ministers of the Church?
A. Besides bishops and priests, the other ministers of the Church are deacons and subdeacons,
who, while preparing for the priesthood, have received some of the Holy Orders, but who have
not been ordained to the full powers of the priest.
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Q. 981. What are the grades by which one ascends to the priesthood?
A. The grades by which one ascends to the priesthood are:
(1) Tonsure, or the clipping of the hair by the bishop, by which the candidate for priesthood
dedicates himself to the service of the altar;
(2) The four minor orders, Porter, Reader, Exorcist, and Acolyte, by which he is permitted to
perform certain duties that laymen should not perform;
(3) Sub-deaconship, by which he takes upon himself the obligation of leading a life of
perpetual chastity and of saying daily the divine office;
(4) Deaconship, by which be receives power to preach, baptize, and give Holy Communion.
The next step, priesthood, gives him power to offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass and forgive
sins. These orders are not all given at once, but at times fixed by the laws of the Church.
Q. 984. What double power does the Church possess and confer on her pastors?
A. The Church possesses and confers on her pastor, the power of orders and the power of
jurisdiction; that is, the power to administer the Sacraments and sanctify the faithful, and the
power to teach and make laws that direct the faithful to their spiritual good. A bishop has the full
power of orders and the Pope alone has the full power of jurisdiction.
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(2) Bishops, who rule over a number of parishes or a diocese;
(3) Archbishops, who have authority over a number of dioceses or a province;
(4) Primates, who have authority over the ecclesiastical or Church provinces of a nation;
(5) Patriarchs, who have authority over a whole country;
(6) and last and highest, the Pope, who rules the Church throughout the world.
Q. 986. How do the prelates or higher officers of the Church rank in dignity?
A. The prelates or higher officers of the Church rank in dignity as they rank in authority, except
that in dignity Cardinals are next to the Pope, and Vicars Apostolic, Monsignori, and others
having titles follow bishops. Papal delegates and those specially appointed by the Pope rank
according to the powers he has given them.
Q. 987. Who are Cardinals, what are their duties and how are they divided?
A. Cardinals are the members of the Supreme Council or Senate of the Church. Their duties are
to advise and aid the Pope in the government of the Church, and to elect a new Pope when the
reigning Pope dies. They are divided into committees called sacred congregations, each having,
its special work to perform. All these congregations taken together are called the Sacred College
of Cardinals, of which the whole number is seventy.
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Q. 990. Who is an Abbot?
A. An Abbot is one who exercises over a religious community of men authority similar in many
things to that exercised by a bishop over his diocese. He has also certain privileges usually
granted to bishops.
Q. 993. What name is given to this divine call and how can we discover this call?
A. This divine call is named a vocation to the priestly or religious life. We can discover it in our
constant inclination to such a life from the pure and holy motive of serving God better in it,
together with our fitness for it, or, at least, our ability to prepare for it, also in our true piety and
mastery over our sinful passions and unlawful desires.
Q. 995. What should parents and guardians bear in mind with regard to their children's
vocations?
A. Parents and guardians should bear in mind with regard to their children's vocations:
(1)That it is their duty to aid their children to discover their vocation;
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(2) That it is sinful for them to resist the Will of God by endeavoring to turn their children from
their true vocation or to prevent them from following it by placing obstacles in their way, and,
worst of all, to urge them to enter a state of life to which they have not been divinely called;
(3) That in giving their advice they should be guided only by the future good and happiness of
their children and not by any selfish or worldly motive which may lead to the loss of souls.
Q. 996. How should Christians look upon the priests of the Church?
A. Christians should look upon the priests of the Church as the messengers of God and the
dispensers of His mysteries.
Q. 997. How do we know that the priests of the Church are the messengers of God?
A. We know that the priests of the Church are the messengers of God, because Christ said to His
apostles, and through them to their successors: "As the Father hath sent Me, I also send you";
that is to say, to preach the true religion, to administer the Sacraments, to offer Sacrifice, and to
do all manner of good for the salvation of souls.
Q. 998. When did the priests of the Church receive this threefold power to preach, to
forgive sins and to consecrate bread and wine?
A. The priests of the Church received this three-fold power to preach, to forgive sins and to
consecrate bread and wine, when Christ said to them, through the apostles: "Go teach all
nations"; "Whose sins you shall forgive they are forgiven," and "Do this for a commemoration of
Me."
Q. 999. Why should we show great respect to the priests and bishops of the Church?
A. We should show great respect to the priests and bishops of the Church:
(1) Because they are the representatives of Christ upon earth, and
(2) Because they administer the Sacraments without which we cannot be saved.
Therefore, we should be most careful in what we do, say or think concerning God's ministers. To
show our respect in proportion to their dignity, we address the priest as Reverend, the bishop as
Right Reverend, the archbishop as Most Reverend, and the Pope as Holy Father.
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Q. 1000. Should we do more than merely respect the ministers of God?
A. We should do more than merely respect the ministers of God. We should earnestly and
frequently pray for them, that they may be enabled to perform the difficult and important duties
of their holy state in a manner pleasing to God.
Q. 1003. But is there need of a special Sacrament of Holy Orders to confer these powers?
A. There is need of a special Sacrament of Holy Orders to confer these powers:
(1) Because the priesthood which is to continue the work of the apostles must be visible in the
Church, and it must therefore be conferred by some visible ceremony or outward sign;
(2) Because this outward sign called Holy Orders gives not only power but grace and was
instituted by Christ, Holy Orders must be a Sacrament.
Q. 1004. Can bishops, priests and other ministers of the Church always exercise the power
they have received in Holy Orders?
A. Bishops, priests and other ministers of the Church cannot exercise the power they have
received in Holy Orders unless authorized and sent to do so by their lawful superiors. The power
can never be taken from them, but the right to use it may be withdrawn for causes laid down in
the laws of the Church, or for reasons that seem good to those in authority over them. Any use of
sacred power without authority is sinful, and all who take part in such ceremonies are guilty of
sin.
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LESSON TWENTY-SIXTH: On Matrimony
Q. 1008. When was the contract of marriage raised to the dignity of a Sacrament?
A. The exact time at which the contract of marriages was raised to the dignity of a Sacrament is
not known, but the fact that it was thus raised is certain from passages in the New Testament and
from the constant teaching of the Church ever since the time of the apostles. Our Lord did not
merely add grace to the contract, but He made the very contract a Sacrament, so that Christians
cannot make this contract without receiving the Sacrament.
Q. 1009. What is the outward sign in the Sacrament of Matrimony, and in what does the
whole essence of the marriage contract consist?
A. The outward sign in the Sacrament of matrimony is the mutual consent of the persons,
expressed by words or signs in accordance with the laws of the Church. The whole essence of the
marriage contract consists in the surrender by the persons of their bodies to each other and in
declaring by word or sign that they make this surrender and take each other for husband and wife
now and for life.
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Q. 1010. What are the chief ends of the Sacrament of Matrimony?
A. The chief ends of the Sacrament of matrimony are:
(1) To enable the husband and wife to aid each other in securing the salvation of their
souls;
(2) To propagate or keep up the existence of the human race by bringing children into the
world to serve God;
(3) To prevent sins against the holy virtue of purity by faithfully obeying the laws of the
marriage state.
Q. 1011. Can a Christian man and woman be united in lawful marriage in any other way
than by the Sacrament of Matrimony?
A. A Christian man and woman cannot be united in lawful marriage in any other way than by the
Sacrament of Matrimony, because Christ raised marriage to the dignity of a sacrament.
Q. 1012. Were, then, all marriages before the coming of Christ unlawful and invalid?
A. All marriages before the coming of Christ were not unlawful and invalid. They were both
lawful and valid when the persons contracting them followed the dictates of their conscience and
the laws of God as they knew them; but such marriages were only contracts. Through their evil
inclinations many forgot or neglected the true character of marriage till Our Lord restored it to its
former unity and purity.
Q. 1014. Can the Church dispense from or remove these impediments to marriage?
A. The Church can dispense from or remove the impediments to marriage that arise from its own
laws; but it cannot dispense from impediments that arise from the laws of God and nature. Every
lawmaker can change or excuse from the laws made by himself or his equals, but he cannot, of
his own authority, change or excuse from laws made by a higher power.
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Q. 1015. What is required that the Church may grant, when it is able, dispensations from
the impediments to marriage or from other laws?
A. That the Church may grant dispensations from the impediments to marriage or from other
laws, there must be a good and urgent reason for granting such dispensations. The Church does
not grant dispensations without cause and merely to satisfy the wishes of those who ask for them.
Q. 1016. Why does the Church sometimes require the persons to whom dispensations are
granted to pay a tax or fee for the privilege?
A. The Church sometimes requires the persons to whom dispensations are granted to pay a tax or
fee for the privilege:
(1) That persons on account of this tax be restrained from asking for dispensations and
may comply with the general laws;
(2) That the Church may not have to bear the expense of supporting an office for granting
privileges to a few.
Q. 1017. What should persons who are about to get married do?
A. Persons who are about to get married should give their pastor timely notice of their intention,
make known to him privately whatever they suspect might be an impediment to the marriage,
and make sure of all arrangements before inviting their friends.
Q. 1018. What timely notice of marriage should be given to the priest, and why?
A. At least three weeks notice of marriage should be given to the priest, because, according to
the laws of the Church, the names of the persons about to get married must be announced and
their intended marriage published at the principal Mass in their parish for three successive
Sundays.
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Q. 1020. What things in particular should persons arranging for their marriage make
known to the priest?
A. Persons arranging for their marriage should make known to the priest whether both are
Christians and Catholics; whether either has been solemnly engaged to another person; whether
they have ever made any vow to God with regard to chastity or the like; whether they are related
and in what degree; whether either was ever married to any member of the other's family and
whether either was ever godparent in baptism for the other.
Q. 1022. What is particularly necessary that persons may do their duty in the marriage
state?
A. That persons may do their duty in the marriage state, it is particularly necessary that they
should be well instructed, before entering it, in the truths and duties of their religion for how will
they teach their children these things if they are ignorant of them themselves?
Q. 1023. Can the bond of Christian marriage be dissolved by any human power?
A. The bond of Christian marriage cannot be dissolved by any human power.
Q. 1024. Does not a divorce granted by courts of justice break the bond of marriage?
A. Divorce granted by courts of justice or by any human power does not break the bond of
marriage, and one who makes use of such a divorce to marry again while the former husband or
wife lives commits a sacrilege and lives in the sin of adultery. A civil divorce may give a
sufficient reason for the persons to live apart and it may determine their rights with regard to
support, the control of the children and other temporal things, but it has no effect whatever upon
the bond and spiritual nature of the Sacrament.
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Q. 1025. Does not the Church sometimes allow husband and wife to separate and live
apart?
A. The Church sometimes, for very good reasons, does allow husband and wife to separate and
live apart; but that is not dissolving the bond of marriage, or divorce as it is called, for though
separated they are still husband and wife, and neither can marry again till the other dies.
Q. 1026. Has not the Church sometimes allowed Catholics once married to separate and
marry again?
A. The Church has never allowed Catholics once really married to separate and marry again, but
it has sometimes declared persons apparently married free to marry again, because their first
marriage was null; that is, no marriage on account of some impediment not discovered till after
the ceremony.
Q. 1027. What evils follow divorce so commonly claimed by those outside the true Church
and granted by civil authority?
A. The evils that follow divorce so commonly claimed by those outside the true Church and
granted by civil authority are very many; but chiefly:
(1) A disregard for the sacred character of the Sacrament and for the spiritual welfare of
the children;
(2) The loss of the true idea of home and family followed by bad morals and sinful living.
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Q. 1030. How are parents specially fitted to bring up their children in the fear and love of
God?
A. Parents are specially fitted to bring up their children in the fear and love of God:
(1) By the special grace they receive to advise and direct their children and to warn them
against evil;
(2) By the experience they have acquired in passing through life from childhood to the
position of parents.
Children should, therefore, conscientiously seek and accept the direction of good parents.
Q. 1032. With what laws of the Church are we bound to comply in receiving the Sacrament
of Matrimony?
A. In receiving the Sacrament of matrimony we are bound to comply with whatever laws of the
Church concern Matrimony; such as laws forbidding solemn marriage in Lent and Advent; or
marriage with relatives or with persons of a different religion, and in general all laws that refer to
any impediment to marriage.
Q. 1034. Who has the right to make laws concerning the Sacrament of marriage?
A. The Church alone has the right to make laws concerning the Sacrament of marriage, though
the state also has the right to make laws concerning the civil effects of the marriage contract.
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Q. 1035. What do we mean by laws concerning the civil effects of the marriage contract?
A. By laws concerning the civil effects of the marriage contract we mean laws with regard to the
property or debts of the husband and wife, the inheritance of their children, or whatever pertains
to their temporal affairs. All persons are bound to obey the laws of their country when these laws
are not opposed to the laws of God.
Q. 1036. Does the Church forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a
different religion or no religion at all?
A. The Church does forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a different religion
or no religion at all.
Q. 1037. Why does the Church forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a
different religion or no religion at all?
A. The Church forbids the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a different religion, or
no religion at all, because such marriages generally lead to indifference, loss of faith, and to the
neglect of the religious education of the children.
Q. 1038. What are the marriages of Catholics with persons of a different religion called,
and when does the Church permit them by dispensation?
A. The marriages of Catholics with persons of a different religion are called mixed marriages.
The Church permits them by dispensation only under certain conditions and for urgent reasons;
chiefly to prevent a greater evil.
Q. 1039. What are the conditions upon which the Church will permit a Catholic to marry
one who is not a Catholic?
A. The conditions upon which the Church will permit a Catholic to marry one who is not a
Catholic are:
(1) That the Catholic be allowed the free exercise of his or her religion ;
(2) That the Catholic shall try by teaching and good example to lead the one who is not a
Catholic to embrace the true faith;
(3) That all the children born of the marriage shall be brought up in the Catholic religion.
The marriage ceremony must not be repeated before a heretical minister. Without these
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promises, the Church will not consent to a mixed marriage, and if the Church does not consent
the marriage is unlawful.
Q. 1040. What penalty does the Church impose on Catholics who marry before a
Protestant minister?
A. Catholics who marry before a Protestant minister incur excommunication; that is, a censure of
the Church or spiritual penalty which prevents them from receiving the Sacrament of Penance till
the priest who hears their confession gets special faculties or permission from the bishop;
because by such a marriage they make profession of a false religion in acknowledging as a priest
one who has neither sacred power nor authority.
Q. 1041. How does the Church show its displeasure at mixed marriages?
A. The Church shows its displeasure at mixed marriages by the coldness with which it sanctions
them, prohibiting all religious ceremony at them by forbidding the priest to use any sacred
vestments, holy water or blessing of the ring at such marriages; by prohibiting them also from
taking place in the Church or even in the sacristy. On the other hand, the Church shows its joy
and approval at a true Catholic marriage by the Nuptial Mass and solemn ceremonies.
Q. 1043. Does the Church seek to make converts by its laws concerning mixed marriages?
A. The Church does not seek to make converts by its laws concerning mixed marriages, but
seeks only to keep its children from losing their faith and becoming perverts by constant
company with persons not Catholics. The Church does not wish persons to become Catholics
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merely for the sake of marrying Catholics. Such conversions are, as a rule, not sincere, do no
good, but rather make such converts hypocrites and guilty of greater sins, especially sins of
sacrilege.
Q. 1047. How should Christians prepare for a holy and happy marriage?
A. Christians should prepare for a holy and happy marriage by receiving the Sacraments of
Penance and Holy Eucharist; by begging God to grant them a pure intention and to direct their
choice; and by seeking the advice of their parents and the blessing of their pastors.
Q. 1048. How may parents be guilty of great injustice to their children in case of marriage?
A. Parents may be guilty of great injustice to their children in case of marriage by seeking the
gratification of their own aims and desires, rather than the good of their children, and thus for
selfish and unreasonable motives forcing their children to marry persons they dislike or
preventing them from marrying the persons chosen by the dictates of their conscience, or
compelling them to marry when they have no vocation for such a life or no true knowledge of its
obligations.
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Q. 1049. May persons receive the Sacrament of Matrimony more than once?
A. Persons may receive the sacrament of Matrimony more than once, provided they are certain
of the death of the former husband or wife and comply with the laws of the Church.
Q. 1050. Where and at what time of the day should Catholics be married?
A. Catholics should be married before the altar in the Church. They should be married in the
morning, and with a Nuptial Mass if possible.
Q. 1051. What must never be forgotten by those who attend a marriage ceremony in the
Church?
A. They who attend a marriage ceremony in the Church must never forget the presence of the
Blessed Sacrament, and that all laughing, talking, or irreverence is forbidden then as at other
times. Women must never enter into the presence of the Blessed Sacrament with uncovered
heads, and their dress must be in keeping with the strict modesty that Our Lord's presence
demands, no matter what worldly vanity or social manners may require.
Q. 1053. How do the Sacramentals excite good thoughts and increase devotion?
A. The Sacramentals excite good thoughts by recalling to our minds some special reason for
doing good and avoiding evil; especially by reminding us of some holy person, event or thing
through which blessings have come to us. They increase devotion by fixing our minds on
particular virtues and by helping us to understand and desire them.
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Q. 1054. Do the Sacramentals of themselves remit venial sins?
A. The Sacramentals of themselves do not remit venial sins, but they move us to truer devotion,
to greater love for God and greater sorrow for our sins, and this devotion, love and sorrow bring
us grace, and the grace remits venial sins.
Q. 1056. Show by an example how Sacramentals aid the ignorant in learning the truths of
faith.
A. Sacramentals aid the ignorant in learning the truths of faith as children learn from pictures
before they are able to read. Thus one who cannot read the account of Our Lord's passion may
learn it from the Stations of the Cross, and one who kneels before a crucifix and looks on the
bleeding head, pierced hands and wounded side, is better able to understand Christ's sufferings
than one without a crucifix before him.
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Q. 1059. On what ground does the Church make use of ceremonies?
A. The Church makes use of ceremonies:
(1) After the example of the Old Law, in which God described and commanded
ceremonies;
(2) After the example of Our Lord, who rubbed clay on the eyes of the blind to whom He
wished to restore sight, though He might have performed the miracle without any
external act;
(3) On the authority of the Church itself, to whom Christ gave power to do whatever was
necessary for the instruction of all men;
(4) To add solemnity to religious acts.
Q. 1061. What is the difference between the Sacraments and the sacramentals?
A. The difference between the Sacraments and the sacramentals is:
(1) 1st. The Sacraments were instituted by Jesus Christ and the sacramentals were
instituted by the Church;
(2) 2nd. The Sacraments give grace of themselves when we place no obstacle in the way;
(3) 3rd. The sacramentals excite in us pious dispositions, by means of which we may
obtain grace.
Q. 1062. May the Church increase or diminish the number of Sacraments and
Sacramentals?
A. The Church can never increase nor diminish the number of Sacraments, for as Christ Himself
instituted them, He alone has power to change their number; but the Church may increase or
diminish the number of the Sacramentals as the devotion of its people or the circumstances of the
time and place require, for since the Church instituted them they must depend entirely upon its
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laws.
Q. 1067. How is the sign of the cross a profession of faith in the chief mysteries of our
religion?
A. The sign of the cross is a profession of faith in the chief mysteries of our religion because it
expresses the mysteries of the Unity and Trinity of God and of the Incarnation and death of our
Lord.
Q. 1068. How does the sign of the cross express the mystery of the Unity and Trinity of
God?
A. The words, "In the name," express the Unity of God; the words that follow, "of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," express the mystery of the Trinity.
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Q. 1069. How does the sign of the cross express the mystery of the Incarnation and death of
our Lord?
A. The sign of the cross expresses the mystery of the Incarnation by reminding us that the Son of
God, having become man, suffered death on the cross.
Q. 1072. How does the water blessed on Holy Saturday, or Easter Water, as it is called,
differ from the holy water blessed at other times?
A. The water blessed on Holy Saturday, or Easter Water, as it is called, differs from the holy
water blessed at other times in this, that the Easter water is blessed with greater solemnity, the
paschal candle, which represents Our Lord risen from the dead, having been dipped into it with a
special prayer.
Q. 1074. Are there other sacramentals besides the sign of the cross and holy water?
A. Beside the sign of the cross and holy water there are many other sacramentals, such as blessed
candles, ashes, palms, crucifixes, images of the Blessed Virgin and of the saints, rosaries, and
scapulars.
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Q. 1075. When are candles blessed in the Church and why are they used?
A. Candles are blessed in the Church on the feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin --
February 2nd. They are used chiefly to illuminate and ornament our altars, as a mark of
reverence for the presence of Our Lord and of joy at His coming.
Q. 1077. When are ashes blessed in the Church and why are they used?
A. Ashes are blessed in the Church on Ash Wednesday. They are used to keep us in mind of our
humble origin, and of how the body of Adam, our forefather, was formed out of the slime or clay
of the earth; also to remind us of death, when our bodies will return to dust, and of the necessity
of doing penance for our sins. These ashes are obtained by burning the blessed palms of the
previous year.
Q. 1078. When are palms blessed and of what do they remind us?
A. Palms are blessed on Palm Sunday. They remind us of Our Lord's triumphal entry into
Jerusalem, when the people, wishing to honor Him and make Him king, strewed palm branches
and even their own garments in His path, singing: Hosanna to the Son of David.
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for three days.
Q. 1087. On what days, according to the pious custom of the faithful, are the different
mysteries of the Rosary usually said?
A. According to the pious custom of the faithful, the different mysteries of the Rosary are usually
said on the following days, namely: the joyful on Mondays and Thursdays, the sorrowful on
Tuesdays and Fridays, and the glorious on Sundays, Wednesdays and Saturdays.
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[N.B. From Pope John Paul II's Apostolic Letter Rosarium Virginis Mariae: "According
to current practice, Monday and Thursday are dedicated to the “joyful mysteries”,
Tuesday and Friday to the “sorrowful mysteries”, and Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday
to the “glorious mysteries”. Where might the “mysteries of light” be inserted? If we
consider that the “glorious mysteries” are said on both Saturday and Sunday, and that
Saturday has always had a special Marian flavour, the second weekly meditation on the
“joyful mysteries”, mysteries in which Mary's presence is especially pronounced, could be
moved to Saturday. Thursday would then be free for meditating on the “mysteries of
light”."]
Q. 1089. To what may we attribute the desire of the Jews to put Christ to death?
A. We may attribute the desire of the Jews to put Christ to death to the jealously, hatred and ill-
will of their priests and the Pharisees, whose faults He rebuked and whose hypocrisy He
exposed. By their slanders and lies they induced the people to follow them in demanding Our
Lord's crucifixion.
Q. 1090. With whom did the Blessed Virgin live after the death of Our Lord?
A. After the death of Our Lord the Blessed Virgin lived for about eleven years with the Apostle
St. John the Evangelist, called also the Beloved Disciple. He wrote one of the four Gospels, three
Epistles, and the Apocalypse, or Book of Revelations -- the last book of the Bible. He lived to
the age of a hundred years or more and died last of all the apostles.
Q. 1091. What do we mean by the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, and why do we believe
in it?
A. By the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin we mean that her body was taken up into heaven
after her death. We believe in it:
(1) Because the Church cannot teach error, and yet from an early age the Church has
celebrated the Feast of the Assumption;
(2) Because no one ever claimed to have a relic of our Blessed Mother's body, and surely
the apostles, who knew and loved her, would have secured some relic had her body
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remained upon earth.
Q. 1094. How many kinds of scapulars are there in use among the faithful?
A. Among the faithful there are many kinds of scapulars in use, such as the brown scapular or
scapular of Mount Carmel worn in honor of Our Lord's passion; the white, in honor of the Holy
Trinity; the blue, in honor of the Immaculate Conception; and the black, in honor of the seven
dolors of the Blessed Virgin. When these are joined together and worn as one they are called the
five scapulars. The brown scapular is best known and entitles its wearer to the greatest privileges
and indulgences.
Q. 1096. What are the seven dolor beads, and how do we say them?
A. Seven dolor beads are beads constructed with seven medals, each bearing a representation of
one of the seven dolors, and seven beads between each medal and the next. At each medal we
meditate on the proper dolor and the say a Hail Mary on each of the bead following it.
Q. 1126. Are not the commandments of the Church also commandments of God?
A. The commandments of the Church are also commandments of God, for they are made by His
authority and under the guidance of the Holy Ghost; nevertheless, the Church can change or
abolish its own commandments, while it cannot change or abolish the commandments given
directly by God Himself.
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Q. 1127. Which are the Commandments that contain the whole law of God?
A. The Commandments which contain the whole law of God are these two:
(1) 1st. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart, with thy whole soul, with
thy whole strength, and with thy whole mind;
(2) 2nd. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.
Q. 1128. Why do these two Commandments of the love of God and of our neighbor contain
the whole law of God?
A. These two Commandments of the love of God and of our neighbor contain the whole law of
God because all the other Commandments are given either to help us to keep these two, or to
direct us how to shun what is opposed to them.
Q. 1129. Explain further how the two commandments of the love of God and of our
neighbor contain the teaching of the whole ten commandments.
A. The two commandments of the love of God and of our neighbor contain the teaching of the
whole ten commandments because the first three of the ten commandments refer to God and
oblige us to worship Him alone, respect His name and serve Him as He wills, and these things
we will do if we love Him; secondly, the last seven of the ten commandments refer to our
neighbor and forbid us to injure him in body, soul, goods or reputation, and if we love him we
will do him no injury in any of these, but, on the contrary, aid him as far as we can.
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(6) Thou shalt not commit adultery.
(7) Thou shalt not steal.
(8) Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.
(9) Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife.
(10) Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's goods.
Q. 1131. What does the first commandment mean by a "graven thing" or "the likeness of
anything" in heaven, in the earth or in the waters?
A. The first commandment means by a "graven thing" or "the likeness of anything" in heaven, in
the earth or in the waters, the statue, picture or image of any creature in heaven or of any animal
on land or in water intended for an idol and to be worshipped as a god.
Q. 1135. Was anyone obliged to keep the Commandments before they were given to Moses?
A. All persons, from the beginning of the world, were obliged to keep the Commandments, for it
was always sinful to blaspheme God, murder, steal or violate any of the Commandments, though
they were not written till the time of Moses.
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Q. 1136. How many kinds of laws had the Jews before the coming of Our Lord?
A. Before the coming of Our Lord the Jews had three kinds of laws:
(1) Civil laws, regulating the affairs of their nation;
(2) Ceremonial laws, governing their worship in the temple;
(3) Moral laws, guiding their religious belief and actions.
Q. 1138. When did the civil and ceremonial laws of the Jews cease to exist?
A. The civil laws of the Jews ceased to exist when the
Q. 1139. Why were not also the moral laws of the Jews abolished when the Christian
religion was established?
A. The moral laws of the Jews could not be abolished by the establishment of the Christian
religion because they regard truth and virtue and have been revealed by God, and whatever God
has revealed as true must be always true, and whatever He has condemned as bad in itself must
be always bad.
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Q. 1141. What does the commandment mean by "strange gods"?
A. By strange gods the commandment means idols or false gods, which the Israelites frequently
worshipped when, through their sins, they had abandoned the true God.
Q. 1143. How does the first Commandment help us to keep the great Commandment of the
love of God?
A. The first Commandment helps us to keep the great Commandment of the love of God because
it commands us to adore God alone.
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Q. 1148. How do we offer God false worship?
A. We offer God false worship by rejecting the religion He has instituted and following one
pleasing to ourselves, with a form of worship He has never authorized, approved or sanctioned.
Q. 1149. Why must we serve God in the form of religion He has instituted and in no other?
A. We must serve God in the form of religion He has instituted and in no other, because heaven
is not a right, but a promised reward, a free gift of God, which we must merit in the manner He
directs and pleases.
Q. 1151. Do those who make use of spells and charms, or who believe in dreams, in
mediums, spiritists, fortune-tellers, and the like, sin against the first Commandment?
A. Those who make use of spells and charms, or who believe in dreams, in mediums, spiritists,
fortune-tellers, and the like, sin against the first Commandment, because they attribute to
creatures perfections which belong to God alone.
Q. 1153. Are not Agnus Deis, medals, scapulars, etc., which we wear about our bodies also
charms?
A. Agnus Deis, medals, scapulars, etc., which we wear about our bodies, are not charms, for we
do not expect any help from these things themselves, but, through the blessing they have
received from the Church, we expect help from God, the Blessed Mother, or the Saint in whose
honor we wear them. On the contrary, they who wear charms expect help from the charms
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themselves, or from some evil spirit.
Q. 1154. What must we carefully guard against in all our devotions and religious practices?
A. In all our devotions and religious practices we must carefully guard against expecting God to
perform miracles when natural causes may bring about what we hope for. God will sometimes
miraculously help us, but, as a rule, only when all natural means have failed.
Q. 1157. Did not God frequently in the Old Law make use of dreams as a means of making
known His will?
A. God did frequently in the Old Law make use of dreams as a means of making known His
Will; but on such occasions He always gave proof that what He made known was not a mere
dream, but rather a revelation or inspiration. He no longer makes use of such means, for He now
makes known His will through the inspiration of His Church.
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Q. 1159. What other practice is very dangerous to faith and morals?
A. Another practice very dangerous to faith and morals is the use of mesmerism or hypnotism,
because it is liable to sinful abuses, for it deprives a person for a time of the control of his reason
and will and places his body and mind entirely in the power of another.
Q. 1161. How do we, by believing in spells, charms, mediums, spiritists and fortune tellers,
attribute to creatures the perfections of God?
A. By believing in spells, charms, mediums, spiritists and fortune tellers we attribute to creatures
the perfections of God because we expect these creatures to perform miracles, reveal the hidden
judgments of God, and make known His designs for the future with regard to His creatures,
things that only God Himself may do.
Q. 1162. Is it sinful to consult mediums, spiritists, fortune tellers and the like when we do
not believe in them, but through mere curiosity to hear what they may say?
A. It is sinful to consult mediums, spiritists, fortune tellers and the like even when we do not
believe in them, but through mere curiosity, to hear what they may say:
(1) Because it is wrong to expose ourselves to the danger of sinning even though we do
not sin;
(2) Because we may give scandal to others who are not certain that we go through mere
curiosity;
(3) Because by our pretended belief we encourage these impostors to continue their
wicked practices.
Q. 1163. Are sins against faith, hope, and charity also sins against the first Commandment?
A. Sins against faith, hope and charity are also sins against the first Commandment.
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Q. 1164. How does a person sin against faith?
A. A person sins against faith:
(1) 1st. By not trying to know what God has taught;
(2) 2nd. By refusing to believe all that God has taught;
(3) 3rd. By neglecting to profess his belief in what God has taught.
Q. 1167. Should we learn the Christian doctrine merely for our own sake?
A. We should learn the Christian doctrine not merely for our own sake, but for the sake also of
others who may sincerely wish to learn from us the truths of our holy faith.
Q. 1168. How should such instruction be given to those who ask it of us?
A. Such instruction should be given to those who ask it of us in a kind and Christian spirit,
without dispute or bitterness. We should never attempt to explain the truths of our religion unless
we are certain of what we say. When we are unable to answer what is asked we should send
those who inquire to the priest or to others better instructed than ourselves.
Q. 1169. Who are they who do not believe all that God has taught?
A. They who do not believe all that God has taught are the heretics and infidels.
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Q. 1170. Name the different classes of unbelievers and tell what they are.
A. The different classes of unbelievers are:
(1) Atheists, who deny there is a God;
(2) Deists, who admit there is a God, but deny that He revealed a religion;
(3) Agnostics, who will neither admit nor deny the existence of God;
(4) Infidels, who have never been baptized, and who, through want of faith, refuse to be
baptized;
(5) Heretics, who have been baptized Christians, but do not believe all the articles of
faith;
(6) Schismatics, who have been baptized and believe all the articles of faith, but do not
submit to the authority of the Pope;
(7) Apostates, who have rejected the true religion, in which they formerly believed, to
join a false religion;
(8) Rationalists and Materialists, who believe only in material things.
Q. 1171. Will the denial of only one article of faith make a person a heretic?
A. The denial of only one article of faith will make a person a heretic and guilty of mortal sin,
because the Holy Scripture says: "Whosoever shall keep the whole law but offend in one point is
become guilty of all."
Q. 1173. Who are they who neglect to profess their belief in what God has taught?
A. They who neglect to profess their belief in what God has taught are all those who fail to
acknowledge the true Church in which they really believe.
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Q. 1174. How do persons who are members of the Church neglect to profess their belief?
A. Persons who are members of the Church neglect to profess their belief by living contrary to
the teachings of the Church: that is, by neglecting Mass or the Sacraments, doing injury to their
neighbor, and disgracing their religion by sinful and scandalous lives.
Q. 1175. What chiefly prevents persons who believe in the Church from becoming
members of it?
A. A want of Christian courage chiefly prevents persons who believe in the Church from
becoming members of it. They fear too much the opinion or displeasure of others, the loss of
position or wealth, and, in general, the trials they may have to suffer for the sake of the true faith.
Q. 1176. What does Our Lord say of those who neglect the true religion for the sake of
relatives or friends, or from fear of suffering?
A. Our Lord says of those who neglect the true religion for the sake of relatives or friends, or
from fear of suffering: "He that loveth father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of Me; and
he that loveth son or daughter more than Me, is not worthy of Me"; also: "And whosoever does
not carry his cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple."
Q. 1177. What excuse do some give for neglecting to seek and embrace the true religion?
A. Some give as an excuse for neglecting to seek and embrace the true religion that we should
live in the religion in which we were born, and that one religion is as good as another if we
believe we are serving God.
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Q. 1179. Can they who fail to profess their faith in the true Church in which they believe
expect to be saved while in that state?
A. They who fail to profess their faith in the true Church in which they believe cannot expect to
be saved while in that state, for Christ has said: "Whosoever shall deny me before men, I will
also deny him before my Father who is in heaven."
Q. 1181. When does God's honor, our neighbor's spiritual good, or our own good require
us to make an open profession of our faith ?
A. God's honor, our neighbor's spiritual good, or our own good requires us to make an open
profession of our faith as often as we cannot conceal our religion without violating some law of
God or of His Church, or without giving scandal to others or exposing ourselves to the danger of
sinning. Pious practices not commanded may often be omitted without any denial of faith.
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(4) By thinking we can avoid sin without avoiding its near occasion;
(5) By relying too much on ourselves and neglecting to follow the advice of our
confessor in regard to the sins we confess.
Q. 1189. Does the first Commandment forbid the honoring of the saints?
A. The first Commandment does not forbid the honoring of the saints, but rather approves of it;
because by honoring the saints, who are the chosen friends of God, we honor God Himself.
Q. 1192. Give another reason why we honor God by honoring the Saints.
A. Another reason why we honor God by honoring the Saints is this: As we honor our country by
honoring its heroes, so do we honor our religion by honoring its Saints. By honoring our religion
we honor God, who taught it. Therefore, by honoring the Saints we honor God, for love of whom
they became religious heroes in their faith.
Q. 1194. Why does the first commandment not forbid us to pray to the Saints?
A. The first commandment does not forbid us to pray to the Saints, because if we are allowed to
ask the prayers of our fellow-creatures upon earth we should be allowed also to ask the prayers
of our fellow-creatures in heaven. Moreover, the Saints must have an interest in our welfare,
because whatever tends to make us good, tends also to the glory of God.
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Q. 1197. How do we know that the saints hear us?
A. We know that the saints hear us, because they are with God, who makes our prayers known to
them.
Q. 1199. How are the saints and we members of the same Church?
A. The saints and we are members of the same Church, because the Church in heaven and the
Church on earth are one and the same Church, and all its members are in communion with one
another.
Q. 1203. How can we best honor the Saints, and where shall we learn their virtues?
A. We can best honor the saints by imitating their virtues, and we shall learn their virtues from
the written accounts of their lives. Among the Saints we shall find models for every age,
condition or state of life.
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Q. 1204. Does the first Commandment forbid us to honor relics?
A. The first Commandment does not forbid us to honor relics, because relics are the bodies of the
saints or objects directly connected with them or with our Lord.
Q. 1206. What is there special about a relic of the true cross on which Our Lord Died, and
also about the instruments of His Passion?
A. The relics of the true Cross and relics of the thorns, nails, etc., used in the Passion are entitled
to a very special veneration, and they have certain privileges with regard to their use and the
manner of keeping them that other relics have not. A relic of the true Cross is never kept or
carried with other relics.
Q. 1208. What care does the Church take in the examination and distribution of relics?
A. The Church takes the greatest care in the examination and distribution of relics.
(1) The canonization or beatification of the person whose relic we receive must be
certain.
(2) The relics are sent in sealed packets, that must be opened only by the bishop of the
diocese to which the relics are sent, and each relic or packet must be accompanied by a
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document or written paper proving its genuineness.
(3) The relics cannot be exposed for public veneration until the bishop examines them
and pronounces them authentic; that is, that they are what they are claimed to be.
Q. 1209. What should we be certain of before using any relic or giving it to another?
A. Before using any relic or giving it to another we should be certain that all the requirements of
the Church concerning it have been fulfilled, and that the relic really is, as far as it is possible for
any one to know, what we believe it to be.
Q. 1212 How do we show that it is only the worship and not the making of images that is
forbidden by the first commandment?
A. We show that it is only the worship and not the making of images that is forbidden by the first
commandment:
(1) Because no one thinks it sinful to carve statues or make photographs or paintings of
relatives or friends;
(2) Because God Himself commanded the making of images for the temple after He had
given the first commandment, and God never contradicts Himself.
Q. 1213. Is it right to show respect to the pictures and images of Christ and His saints?
A. It is right to show respect to the pictures and images of Christ and His saints, because they are
the representations and memorials of them.
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Q. 1214. Have we in this country any civil custom similar to that of honoring the pictures
and images of saints?
A. We have, in this country, a civil custom similar to that of honoring pictures and images of
saints, for, on Decoration or Memorial Day, patriotic citizens place flowers, flags, or emblems
about the statues of our deceased civil heroes, to honor the persons these statues represent; for
just as we can dishonor a man by abusing his image, so we can honor him by treating it with
respect and reverence.
Q. 1215. Is it allowed to pray to the crucifix or to the images and relics of the saints?
A. It is not allowed to pray to the crucifix or images and relics of the saints, for they have no life,
nor power to help us, nor sense to hear us.
Q. 1216. Why do we pray before the crucifix and the images and relics of the saints?
A. We pray before the crucifix and the images and relics of the saints because they enliven our
devotion by exciting pious affections and desires, and by reminding us of Christ and of the
saints, that we may imitate their virtues.
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Q. 1219. What are we commanded by the second Commandment?
A. We are commanded by the second Commandment to speak with reverence of God and of the
saints, and of all holy things, and to keep our lawful oaths and vows.
Q. 1220. Is it sinful to use the words of Holy Scripture in a bad or worldly sense?
A. It is sinful to use the words of Holy Scripture in a bad or worldly sense, to joke in them or
ridicule their sacred meaning, or in general to give them any meaning but the one we believe
God has intended them to convey.
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Q. 1226. When may an oath be required for God's honor or for our own or our neighbor's
good?
A. An oath may be required for God's honor or for our own or our neighbor's good when we are
called upon to defend our religion against false charges; or to protect our own or our neighbor's
property or good name; or when we are required to give testimony that will enable the lawful
authorities to discover the guilt or innocence of a person accused.
Q. 1227. Is it ever allowed to promise under oath, in secret societies or elsewhere, to obey
another in whatever good or evil he commands?
A. It is never allowed to promise under oath, in secret societies or elsewhere, to obey another in
whatever good or evil he commands, for by such an oath we would declare ourselves ready and
willing to commit sin, if ordered to do so, while God commands us to avoid even the danger of
sinning. Hence the Church forbids us to join any society in which such oaths are taken by its
members.
275
Q. 1230. Is it lawful to vow or promise strict obedience to a religious superior?
A. It is lawful to vow or promise strict obedience to a religious superior, because such superior
can exact obedience only in things that have the sanction of God or of His Church.
Q. 1235. Has it always been a custom with pious Christians to make vows and promises to
God?
A. It has always been a custom with pious Christians to make vows and promises to God; to beg
His help for some special end, or to thank Him for some benefit received. They have promised
pilgrimages, good works or alms and they have vowed to erect churches, convents, hospitals or
schools.
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Q. 1236. What is a pilgrimage?
A. A pilgrimage is a journey to a holy place made in a religious manner and for a religious
purpose.
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Q. 1243. What are we commanded by the third Commandment?
A. By the third Commandment we are commanded to keep holy the Lord's day and the holydays
of obligation, on which we are to give our time to the service and worship of God.
Q. 1248. Are the Sabbath day and the Sunday the same?
A. The Sabbath day and the Sunday are not the same. The Sabbath is the seventh day of the
week, and is the day which was kept holy in the old law; the Sunday is the first day of the week,
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and is the day which is kept holy in the new law.
Q. 1250. Why does the Church command us to keep the Sunday holy instead of the
Sabbath?
A. The Church commands us to keep the Sunday holy instead of the Sabbath because on Sunday
Christ rose from the dead, and on Sunday He sent the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles.
Q. 1251. Do we keep Sunday instead of Saturday holy for any other reason?
A. We keep Sunday instead of Saturday holy also to teach that the Old Law is not now binding
upon us, but that we must keep the New Law, which takes its place.
Q. 1260. Why should we refuse to obey parents or superiors who command us to sin?
A. We should refuse to obey parents or superiors who command us to sin because they are not
then acting with God's authority, but contrary to it and in violation of His laws.
Q. 1261. Are we bound to honor and obey others than our parents?
A. We are also bound to honor and obey our bishops, pastors, magistrates, teachers, and other
lawful superiors.
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Q. 1262. Who are meant by magistrates?
A. By magistrates are meant all officials of whatever rank who have a lawful right to rule over us
and our temporal possessions or affairs.
Q. 1265. Have parents and superiors any duties toward those who are under their charge?
A. It is the duty of parents and superiors to take good care of all under their charge and give them
proper direction and example.
Q. 1266. If parents or superiors neglect their duty or abuse their authority in any
particular, should we follow their direction and example in that particular?
A. If parents or superiors neglect their duty or abuse their authority in any particular we should
not follow their direction or example in that particular, but follow the dictates of our conscience
in the performance of our duty.
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Q. 1268. What is forbidden by the fourth Commandment?
A. The fourth Commandment forbids all disobedience, contempt, and stubbornness towards our
parents or lawful superiors.
Q. 1272. How do we know that this commandment forbids the killing only of human
beings?
A. We know that this commandment forbids the killing only of human beings because, after
giving this commandment, God commanded that animals be killed for sacrifice in the temple of
Jerusalem, and God never contradicts Himself.
Q. 1274. What sin is it to destroy one's own life, or commit suicide, as this act is called?
A. It is a mortal sin to destroy one's own life or commit suicide, as this act is called, and persons
who willfully and knowingly commit such an act die in a state of mortal sin and are deprived of
Christian burial. It is also wrong to expose one's self unnecessarily to the danger of death by rash
or foolhardy feats of daring.
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Q. 1275. Is it ever lawful for any cause to deliberately and intentionally take away the life
of an innocent person?
A. It is never lawful for any cause to deliberately and intentionally take away the life of an
innocent person. Such deeds are always murder, and can never be excused for any reason,
however important or necessary.
Q. 1278. Can the fifth commandment be broken by giving scandal or bad example and by
inducing others to sin?
A. The fifth commandment can be broken by giving scandal or bad example and inducing others
to sin, because such acts may destroy the life of the soul by leading it into mortal sin.
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Q. 1280. Why are fighting, anger, hatred and revenge forbidden by the fifth
commandment?
A. Fighting, anger, hatred and revenge are forbidden by the fifth commandment because they are
sinful in themselves and may lead to murder. The commandments forbid not only whatever
violates them, but also whatever may lead to their violation.
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Q. 1286. Does the sixth Commandment forbid the reading of bad and immodest books and
newspapers?
A. The sixth Commandment does forbid the reading of bad and immodest books and
newspapers.
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Q. 1292. Is stealing ever a sacrilege?
A. Stealing is a sacrilege when the thing stolen belongs to the Church and when the stealing
takes place in the Church.
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Q. 1299. What must we do with things found?
A. We must return things found to their lawful owners as soon as possible, and we must also use
reasonable means to find the owners if they are unknown to us.
Q. 1302. What must we do if we cannot restore all we owe, or if the person to whom we
should restore be dead?
A. If we cannot restore all we owe, we must restore as much as we can, and if the person to
whom we should restore be dead we must restore to his children or heirs, and if these cannot be
found we may give alms to the poor.
Q. 1303. What must one do who cannot pay his debts and yet wishes to receive the
Sacraments?
A. One who cannot pay his debts and yet wishes to receive the Sacraments must sincerely
promise and intend to pay them as soon as possible, and must without delay make every effort to
do so.
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Q. 1306. What are we commanded by the eighth Commandment?
A. We are commanded by the eighth Commandment to speak the truth in all things, and to be
careful of the honor and reputation of every one.
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Q. 1313. What is tale-bearing, and why is it wrong?
A. Tale-bearing is the act of telling persons what others have said about them, especially if the
things said be evil. It is wrong, because it gives rise to anger, hatred and ill-will, and is often the
cause of greater sins.
Q. 1314. What must they do who have lied about their neighbor and seriously injured his
character?
A. They who have lied about their neighbor and seriously injured his character must repair the
injury done as far as they are able, otherwise they will not be forgiven.
Q. 1322. Should we not, then, try to improve our position in the world?
A. We should try to improve our position in the world, provided we can do so honestly and
without exposing ourselves to greater temptation or sin.
Q. 1324. In what does the sixth commandment differ from the ninth, and the seventh differ
from the tenth?
A. The sixth commandment differs from the ninth in this, that the sixth refers chiefly to external
acts of impurity, while the ninth refers more to sins of thought against purity. The seventh
commandment refers chiefly to external acts of dishonesty, while the tenth refers more to
thoughts against honesty.
Q. 1325. Are not the commandments of the Church also commandments of God?
A. The commandments of the Church are also commandments of God, because they are made by
His authority, and we are bound under pain of sin to observe them.
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Q. 1326. What is the difference between the commandments of God and the
Commandments of the Church?
A. The commandments of God were given by God Himself to Moses on Mount Sinai; the
commandments of the Church were given on different occasions by the lawful authorities of the
Church. The Commandments given by God Himself cannot be changed by the Church; but the
commandments made by the Church itself may be changed by its authority as necessity requires.
Q. 1330. What is a "serious reason" excusing one from the obligation of hearing Mass?
A A "serious reason" excusing one from the obligation of hearing Mass is any reason that makes
it impossible or very difficult to attend Mass, such as severe illness, great distance from the
Church, or the need of certain works that cannot be neglected or postponed.
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Q. 1331. Are children obliged, under pain of mortal sin, the same as grown persons, to hear
Mass on Sundays and holydays of obligation?
A. Children who have reached the use of reason are obliged under pain of mortal sin, the same as
grown persons, to hear Mass on Sundays and holydays of obligation; but if they are prevented
from so doing by parents, or others, then the sin falls on those who prevent them.
§1: Sunday is the day on which the paschal mystery is celebrated in light of the apostolic
tradition and is to be observed as the foremost holy day of obligation in the universal
Church. Also to be observed are the day of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the
Epiphany, the Ascension and the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, Holy Mary Mother
of God and her Immaculate Conception and Assumption, Saint Joseph, the Apostles Saints
Peter and Paul, and finally, All Saints.
§2: However, the conference of bishops can abolish certain holy days of obligation or
transfer them to a Sunday with prior approval of the Apostolic See.
Complementary Norm: In accord with canon 1246, the National Conference of Catholic
Bishops decrees that the holy days of obligation to be observed in the United States are the
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Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God; the Solemnity of the Ascension; the Solemnity of the
Assumption; the Solemnity of All Saints; the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception; the
Solemnity of Christmas. The Solemnity of the Epiphany shall be transferred to the first
Sunday following January 1; the Solemnity of Corpus Christi shall be observed on the
second Sunday following Pentecost.
Q. 1338. Is it permitted on fast days to take any food besides the one full meal?
A. It is permitted on fast days, besides the one full meal, to take two other meatless meals, to
maintain strength, according to each one's needs. But together these two meatless meals should
not equal another full meal.
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Q. 1340. Does the Church excuse any classes of persons from the obligation of fasting?
A. The Church does excuse certain classes of persons from the obligation of fasting on account
of their age, the condition of their health, the nature of their work, or the circumstances in which
they live. These things are explained in the Regulations for Lent, read publicly in the Churches
each year.
Q. 1341. What should one do who doubts whether or not he is obliged to fast?
A. In doubt concerning fast, a parish priest or confessor should be consulted.
Q. 1343. What do you mean by Lent, Advent, Ember days and the vigils of great feasts?
A. Lent is the seven weeks of penance preceding Easter. Advent is the four weeks of preparation
preceding Christmas. Ember days are three days set apart in each of the four seasons of the year
as special days of prayer and thanksgiving. Vigils are the days immediately preceding great
feasts and spent in spiritual preparation for them.
Q. 1345. Are children and persons unable to fast bound to abstain on days of abstinence?
A. Children, from the age of seven years, and persons who are unable to fast are bound to abstain
on days of abstinence, unless they are excused for sufficient reason.
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Q. 1346. Why does the Church command us to fast and abstain?
A. The Church commands us to fast and abstain, in order that we may mortify our passions and
satisfy for our sins.
Q. 1348. Why does the Church command us to abstain from flesh-meat on Fridays?
A. The Church commands us to abstain from flesh-meat on Fridays in honor of the day on which
our Saviour died.
Q. 1351. Should we go to confession at our usual time even if we think we have not
committed sin since our last confession?
A. We should go to confession at our usual time even if we think we have not committed sin
since our last confession, because the Sacrament of Penance has for its object not only to forgive
sins, but also to bestow grace and strengthen the soul against temptation.
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Q. 1352. Should children go to confession?
A. Children should go to confession when they are old enough to commit sin, which is
commonly about the age of seven years.
Q. 1353. What sin does he commit who neglects to receive Communion during the Easter
time?
A. He who neglects to receive Communion during the Easter time commits a mortal sin.
Q. 1357. Where did the duty of contributing to the support of the Church and clergy
originate?
A. The duty of contributing to the support of the Church and clergy originated in the Old Law,
when God commanded all the people to contribute to the support of the temple and of its priests.
Q. 1358. What does the obligation of supporting the Church and school imply?
A. The obligation of supporting the Church and school implies the duty of making use of the
Church and school by attending religious worship in the one and by giving Catholic education in
the other; because if the Church and school were not necessary for our spiritual welfare we
would not be commanded to support them.
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Q. 1359. Does the fifth commandment of the Church include the support only of our
pastors and the Church and school?
A. The fifth commandment of the Church includes the support also of our holy father, the Pope,
bishops, priests, missions, religious institutions and religion in general.
Q. 1360. What is the meaning of the commandment not to marry within the third degree of
kindred?
A. The meaning of the commandment not to marry within the third degree of kindred is that no
one is allowed to marry another within the third degree of blood relationship.
Q. 1362. Are there other relationships besides blood relationship that render marriage
unlawful without a dispensation?
A. There are other relationships besides blood relationship that render marriage unlawful without
a dispensation, namely, the relationships contracted by marriage, which are called degrees of
affinity, and the relationship contracted by being sponsors at Baptism, which is called spiritual
affinity.
Q. 1363. What should persons about to marry do, if they suspect they are related to each
other?
A. Persons about to marry, if they suspect they are related to each other, should make known the
facts to the priest, that he may examine the degree of relationship and procure a dispensation if
necessary.
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Q. 1365. What sin is it for Catholics to be married before the minister of another religion?
A. It is a mortal sin for Catholics to be married before the minister of another religion, and they
who attempt to do so incur excommunication, and absolution from their sin is reserved to the
bishop.
Q. 1366. What is the meaning of the precept not to solemnize marriage at forbidden times?
A. The meaning of the precept not to solemnize marriage at forbidden times is that during Lent
and Advent the marriage ceremony should not be performed with pomp or a nuptial Mass.
Q. 1369. What restrictions does the Church place on the ceremonies of marriage when one
of the persons is not a Catholic?
A. The Church places several restrictions on the ceremonies of marriage when one of the persons
is not a Catholic. The marriage cannot take place in the church; the priest cannot wear his sacred
vestments nor use holy water nor bless the ring nor the marriage itself. The Church places these
restrictions to show her dislike for such marriages, commonly called mixed marriages.
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LESSON THIRTY-SEVENTH: On the Last Judgment and
the Resurrection, Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven
Q. 1372. What is the judgment called which we have to undergo immediately after death?
A. The judgment we have to undergo immediately after death is called the Particular Judgment.
Q. 1374. What is the judgment called which all men have to undergo on the last day?
A. The judgment which all men have to undergo on the last day is called the General Judgment.
Q. 1375. Will the sentence given at the particular judgment be changed at the general
judgment?
A. The sentence given at the particular judgment will not be changed at the general judgment,
but it will be repeated and made public to all.
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Q. 1378. What are the rewards or punishments appointed for men's souls after the
Particular Judgment?
A. The rewards or punishments appointed for men's souls after the Particular Judgment are
Heaven, Purgatory, and Hell.
Q. 1384. Do we know what souls are in Purgatory, and how long they have to remain there?
A. We do not know what souls are in Purgatory nor how long they have to remain there; hence
we continue to pray for all persons who have died apparently in the true faith and free from
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mortal sin. They are called the faithful departed.
Q. 1386. Since God loves the souls in Purgatory, why does He punish them?
A. Though God loves the souls in Purgatory, He punishes them because His holiness requires
that nothing defiled may enter heaven and His justice requires that everyone be punished or
rewarded according to what he deserves.
Q. 1387. If every one is judged immediately after death, what need is there of a general
judgment?
A. There is need of a general judgment, though every one is judged immediately after death, that
the providence of God, which, on earth, often permits the good to suffer and the wicked to
prosper, may in the end appear just before all men.
Q. 1390. Will our bodies share in the reward or punishment of our souls?
A. Our bodies will share in the reward or punishment of our souls, because through the
resurrection they will again be united to them.
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Q. 1391. When will the general resurrection or rising of all the dead take place?
A. The general resurrection or rising of all the dead will take place at the general judgment, when
the same bodies in which we lived on earth will come forth from the grave and be united to our
souls and remain united with them forever either in heaven or in hell.
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Q. 1398. Are the rewards in heaven and the punishments in hell the same for all who enter
into either of these states?
A. The rewards of heaven and the punishments in hell are not the same for all who enter into
either of these states, because each one's reward or punishment is in proportion to the amount of
good or evil he has done in this world. But as heaven and hell are everlasting, each one will
enjoy his reward or suffer his punishment forever.
Q. 1400. Name some of the more essential religious truths we must know and believe.
A. Some of the more essential religious truths we must know and believe are:
(1) That there is but one God, and He will reward the good and punish the wicked.
(2) That in God there are three Divine Persons: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost,
and these Divine Persons are called the Blessed Trinity.
(3) That Jesus Christ, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, became man and died for
our redemption.
(4) That the grace of God is necessary for our salvation.
(5) That the human soul is immortal.
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