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| The Heidelberg
Catechism, the second of our doctrinal standards, was written in
Heidelberg at the request of Elector Frederick III, ruler of the
most influential German province, the Palatinate, from 1559 to 1576.
This pious Christian prince commissioned Zacharius Ursinus, twenty-eight
years of age and professor of theology at the Heidelberg University,
and Caspar Olevianus, twenty-six years old and Frederick's court
preacher, to prepare a catechism for instructing the youth and for
guiding pastors and teachers. Frederick obtained the advice and
cooperation of the entire theological faculty in the preparation
of the Catechism. The Heidelberg Catechism was adopted by a Synod
in Heidelberg and published in German with a preface by Frederick
III, dated January 19, 1563. A second and third German edition,
each with some small additions, as well as a Latin translation were
published in Heidelberg in the same year. The Catechism was soon
divided into fifty-two sections, so that a section of the Catechism
could be explained to the churches each Sunday of the year.
In the Netherlands this Heidelberg Catechism became generally and
favourably known almost as soon as it came from the press, mainly
through the efforts of Petrus Dathenus, who translated it into the
Dutch language and added this translation to his Dutch rendering
of the Genevan Psalter, which was published in 1566. In the same
year Peter Gabriel set the example of explaining this catechism
to his congregation at Amsterdam in his Sunday afternoon sermons.
The National Synods of the sixteenth century adopted it as one of
the Three Forms of Unity, requiring office-bearers to subscribe
to it and ministers to explain it to the churches. These requirements
were strongly emphasized by the great Synod of Dort in 1618-19.
The Heidelberg Catechism has been translated into many languages
and is the most influential and the most generally accepted of the
several catechisms of Reformation times. |
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LORD'S DAY 1
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1. Q.
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What is
your only comfort in life and death?
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A.
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That I am
not my own,1 but belong with body and soul, both in life
and in death,2 to my faithful Saviour Jesus Christ.3 He has fully paid for all my sins with His
precious blood,4 and has set me free from all the power of the
devil.5 He also preserves me in such a way6 that without the will of my heavenly Father
not a hair can fall from my head;7
indeed, all things must work together for my salvation.8
Therefore, by His Holy Spirit He also assures me of eternal life9 and makes me heartily willing and ready from
now on to live for Him.10
1 1 Cor 6:19, 20.
2 Rom 14:7-9.
3 1 Cor 3:23;
Tit 2:14.
4 1 Pet 1:18, 19;
1 Jn 1:7;
2:2.
5 Jn 8:34-36;
Heb 2:14, 15;
1 Jn 3:8.
6 Jn 6:39, 40;
10:27-30;
2 Thess 3:3;
1 Pet 1:5.
7 Mt 10:29-31;
Lk 21:16-18.
8 Rom 8:28.
9 Rom 8:15, 16;
2 Cor 1:21, 22;
5:5;
Eph 1:13, 14.
10 Rom 8:14.
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2. Q.
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What do
you need to know in order to live and die in the joy of this comfort?
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A.
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First, how great my sins and misery
are;1 second, how I am delivered from all my sins
and misery;2 third, how I am to be thankful to God for such
deliverance.3
1 Rom 3:9, 10;
1 Jn 1:10.
2 Jn 17:3;
Acts 4:12;
10:43.
3 Mt 5:16;
Rom 6:13;
Eph 5:8-10;
1 Pet 2:9, 10.
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The First Part
OUR SIN AND MISERY
LORD'S DAY 2
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3. Q.
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From where
do you know your sins and misery?
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A.
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From the
law of God.1
1 Rom 3: 20;
7:7-25.
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4. Q.
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What does
God's law require of us?
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A.
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Christ teaches
us this in a summary in Matthew 22: You shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.1
This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it,
You shall love your neighbour as yourself. On these two commandments
depend all the law and the prophets.2
1 Deut 6:5.
2 Lev 19:18.
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5. Q.
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Can you
keep all this perfectly?
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A.
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No,1 I am inclined by nature to hate God and my neighbour.2
1 Rom 3:10, 23;
1 Jn 1:8, 10.
2 Gen 6:5;
8:21;
Jer 17:9;
Rom 7:23;
8:7;
Eph 2:3;
Tit 3:3.
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LORD'S DAY 3
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6. Q.
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Did God,
then, create man so wicked and perverse?
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A.
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No, on the
contrary, God created man good1 and in His image,2 that is, in true righteousness and holiness,3 so that he might rightly know God his Creator,4 heartily love Him, and live with Him in eternal
blessedness to praise and glorify Him.5
1 Gen 1:31.
2 Gen 1:26, 27.
3 Eph 4:24.
4 Col 3:10.
5 Ps 8.
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7. Q.
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From where,
then, did man's depraved nature come?
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A.
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From the
fall and disobedience of our first parents, Adam and Eve, in Paradise,1
for there our nature became so corrupt2
that we are all conceived and born in sin.3
1 Gen 3.
2 Rom 5:12, 18, 19.
3 Ps 51:5.
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8. Q.
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But are
we so corrupt that we are totally unable to do any good and inclined
to all evil?
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A.
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Yes,1 unless we are regenerated by the Spirit of God.2
1 Gen 6:5;
8:21;
Job 14:4;
Is 53:6.
2 Jn 3:3-5.
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LORD'S DAY 4
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9. Q.
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But does
not God do man an injustice by requiring in His law what man cannot
do?
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A.
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No, for
God so created man that he was able to do it.1 But man, at the instigation of the devil,2 in deliberate disobedience3 robbed himself and all his descendants of these
gifts.4
1 Gen 1:31.
2 Gen 3:13;
Jn 8:44;
1 Tim 2:13, 14.
3 Gen 3:6.
4 Rom 5:12, 18, 19.
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10. Q.
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Will God
allow such disobedience and apostasy to go unpunished?
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A.
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Certainly
not. He is terribly displeased with our original sin as well as
our actual sins. Therefore He will punish them by a just judgment
both now and eternally,1 as He has declared:2 Cursed be every one who does not abide by all
things written in the book of the law, and do them (Galatians
3:10).
1 Gen 2:17;
Ex 34:7;
Ps 5:4-6;
7:11;
Nahum 1:2;
Rom 1:18;
5:12;
2 Deut 27:26.
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11. Q.
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But is God
not also merciful?
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A.
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God is indeed merciful,1 but He is also just.2 His justice requires that sin committed against
the most high majesty of God also be punished with the most severe,
that is, with everlasting, punishment of body and soul.3
1 Ex 20:6;
34:6, 7;
Ps 103:8, 9.
2 Ex 20:5;
34:7;
Deut 7:9-11;
Ps 5:4-6;
Heb 10:30, 31.
3 Mt 25:45, 46.
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