The Church: Christ in the World Today - SECTION 1 Parts 1 & 2 – REVIEW
Vocabulary
animate: To give life to.
Ascension: The “going up” into Heaven of the Risen Christ forty days after his Resurrection.
charism: A special gift or grace of the Holy Spirit given to an individual Christian or community, commonly for the benefit and building up of the entire Church.
charismatic: The word refers to a person gifted with the graces of the Holy Spirit such as healing, prophecy, and speaking in tongues. Because self-deception is always possible, the charisms claimed by such a person must be verified by the Church.
Communion: Refers to receiving the Body and Blood of Christ. In general, your companionship and union with Jesus and other baptized Christians in the Church. This union has its origin and high point in the celebration of the Eucharist. In this sense the deepest vocation of the Church is Communion.
community: A body of individuals that is unified.
covenant: A personal, solemn promise of faithful love that involves mutual commitments and creates a sacred relationship.
diocese: A specific community of believers under the leadership of a bishop, also known as a “particular” or “local” Church. It is usually determined on the basis of geography but may also be determined by language or culture.
disciples: Term for any student or follower of a particular teacher. In the New Testament, the disciples are understood as the seventy-two who received instruction from Jesus. In modern usage, the term is generally applied to all the baptized.
Ecclesia: from the Greek ekkalein “to call out”; CHURCH!
evangelization: The proclamation of the Good News of Jesus Christ through words and witness.
foreshadow: To represent or prefigure a person before his or her life or an event before it occurs.
Gentile: A non-Jewish person. In the Scriptures the Gentiles were the uncircumcised; those who did not honor the God of the Torah. New Testament, Saint Paul and other evangelists reached out to the Gentiles, baptizing them into the family of God.
Hellenistic: Of or relating to Greek history, culture, or art after Alexander the Great.
hierarchy: In general, the line of authority in the Church; more narrowly, the Pope and the bishops, as successors of the Apostles, in their authoritative roles as leaders of the Church.
Holy Spirit: The Third Person of the Blessed Trinity, understood as the perfect love between God the Father, and the Son, Jesus Christ, who inspires, guides, and sanctifies the life of believers.
infallibility: The gift given by the Holy Spirit to the Pope and the bishops in union with him to teach on matters of faith and morals without error.
intercession: A prayer on behalf of another person or group.
liturgy: The Church’s official, public, communal prayer. It is God’s work, in which the People of God participate. The Church’s most important liturgy is the Eucharist, or the Mass.
Magisterium: The Church’s living teaching office, which consists of all bishops, in communion with the Pope.
Pentecost: The fiftieth day following Easter, commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit on the early Apostles and disciples.
petition: A prayer form in which one asks God for help and forgiveness.
sanctify, sanctification: To make holy; sanctification is the process of becoming closer to God and growing in holiness, taking on the righteousness of Jesus Christ with the gift of sanctifying grace.
Trinitarian: Of or relating to the Trinity or the doctrine of the Trinity.
OUTLINE
The Church Course - Bible Covenants
What Is a Covenant?
•A solemn agreement between human beings or between God and a human being in which mutual commitments are made.
A Covenant with God?
•The concept of a covenant between God and his People is one of the most central themes of the Bible.
•In the biblical sense, a covenant implies much more than a contract or a simple agreement between two parties.
A Promise Is a Promise
•The word for covenant in the Old Testament gives new meaning to this idea. It comes from a Hebrew root word that means “to cut.”
•Thisexplains the strange custom of two people passing through the cut bodies of slain animals
after making an agreement. Such a ceremony always accompanied the making of a covenant in the Old Testament.
Blessings and . . .
•A covenant often promises specific benefits, rewards, or blessings for people who keep the terms of the agreement.
•But they also threaten sanctions, punishments, or curses for people who break the terms of the contract.
Conditional Covenant
•With a conditional covenant, the terms of the covenant depend on the one receiving the covenant, not on the one granting it.
•The receiver must meet certain obligations or conditions of the covenant before the giver of the covenant is obligated to fulfill what was promised.
Unconditional Covenant
•With an unconditional covenant, fulfillment for what is promised depends solely upon the authority and integrity of the one making the covenant.
•It is a promise with no “if” attached to it.
Covenants in the Bible
Five Major Covenants in the Old Testament
•The first two apply to all human beings.
•The next three apply specifically to the Jews,
the “Children of Abraham.”
Old Testament Covenants
What Are the Five Covenants in the Old Testament?
•Adam and Eve
•Noah and his family
•Abraham and his descendants
•Moses and the Israelites
•David and the Kingdom
Adam and Eve
In the Garden of Eden, although the word covenant is not used, divine promises are made.
These two covenants are unconditional:
•The Edenic Covenant (Innocence)
-Outlined man’s responsibility to creation and God’s directive regarding the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
•The Adamic Covenant (Grace)
-This included the curses pronounced against mankind for the sin of Adam and Eve, as well as God’s provision for that sin.
Noah and His Family
This was an unconditional Covenant between God and Noah (specifically) and humanity (generally).
•God gave the rainbow as the sign of the Covenant, a promise that God would never again destroy all life on earth with a flood.
•This is a reminder that God can and will judge sin.
Abraham and His Descendants
God promised many things to Abraham:
•He promised that he would make Abraham’s name great.
•He promised that Abraham would have numerous descendants.
•He promised that Abraham would be the father of a multitude of nations.
Abraham
•God also made promises regarding a nation called Israel.
•Another promise is that the families of the world will be blessed through the line of Abraham. (This is a reference to the Messiah, who would come from this line.)
Abraham Is Foremost
•God’s Covenant with Abraham is absolutely unconditional!
•It is everlasting.
•It is one of the most profound in the Scriptures.
Moses and the Israelites
•The Mosaic Covenant was a conditional covenant.
•It brought either God’s direct blessing (if they followed his Laws) or God’s direct cursing (for disobedience).
Mosaic Law
•Part of the Covenant was the Ten Commandments, but there was also the rest of the Law, which contained more than six hundred commands—roughly three hundred positive and three hundred negative.
•The history books of the Old Testament (Joshua–Esther) detail how Israel succeeded, or failed, at obeying the Law.
Mosaic Covenant
•The Ten Commandments are a summation of the Mosaic Law.
David and the Kingdom
•The Davidic Covenant amplifies the “seed” aspect that was detailed in the Abrahamic Covenant.
•God promises that David’s physical line of descent will last forever and that his kingdom will never pass away.
David’s “House”
•God will establish forever David’s “house,” the royal dynasty through David’s descendants.
•David’s son (Solomon) will build God’s “house,” the first Temple of Jerusalem.
•The “sign” of this covenant will be the descendants of David and the Temple itself.
David’s Throne
•David’s throne has not been in place at all times.
•There would come a time, however, when someone from the line of David would again sit on the throne and rule as king.
•This Future King: Jesus
The New Covenant
•The New Testament makes clear a distinction between the Covenants of the Old Testament and the Covenant of the New Testament.
•Saint Paul speaks of these “two covenants,” one originating “from Mount Sinai” and the other from “the Jerusalem above” (Galatians 4:24–26).
New Covenant
•The death of Christ ushered in the New Covenant, under which we are justified by God’s grace and mercy. It is now possible to have the true forgiveness of sin.
•Jesus himself is the Mediator of this better Covenant between God and man.
•Jesus’ sacrificial death served as the oath, which God made to us to seal this New Covenant.
A New Agreement
•The New Covenant is the new agreement God has made with mankind, based on the death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
•The concept of the New Covenant originated with the promise of Jeremiah that God would accomplish for his People what the Old Covenants had failed to do (due to humankind’s sins and flaws).
Christ as Covenant
•At the Last Supper, Jesus spoke of the cup, saying, “This is my blood of the covenant, which will be shed on behalf of many for the forgiveness of sins” (Matthew 26:28).
New Life through Covenant
•Under this New Covenant, God would write his Law on human hearts.
A Review
•Five major Covenants of the Old Testament:
–Adam and Eve
–Noah
–Abraham
–Moses
–David
•The New Covenant
–Secured by Christ
–Removal of sin
–Cleansing of the conscience
Review Questions
Section 1, Part 1
1. What are three meanings of the word Church in Christian usage?(Article 1, pp. 10–11)
The word Church has three meanings, all involving God’s call. First, it refers to the entire community of God’s People around the world. Second, it refers to the local community of believers (such as a diocese or archdiocese). Third, it refers to the community assembled for liturgy (especially the Mass). These meanings cannot be separated.
2. What is the Church’s role in the Father’s plan to save us? (Article 1, pp. 11–12)
The Church, the gathered People of God, is central to the Father’s plan to save us. He desires that the whole human race come together as one People. His Son, Jesus Christ, established the Church when he proclaimed and ushered in the Kingdom of God.
3. Why was God’s Covenant with Israel significant for the rest of the world?(Article 2, pp. 13–14)
Calling Israel as a nation and establishing a covenant with them were all part of God’s larger plan of salvation. The community of Israel foreshadows and prepares for the Church, the gathering of all nations into one People of God.
4. How is Jesus the perfect fulfillment of the Sinai Covenant?
Jesus, who was born under Jewish Law, took the burden of our sins upon himself, thereby engraving the Law on his own heart. He is therefore God’s Servant who brings justice, as a “covenant of the people” (Isaiah 42:6). He did not abolish the Sinai Covenant but rather fulfilled it by revealing its true meaning. (Article 2, pp. 13–14)
5. How did Jesus establish the Church through his preaching?
As the Word Incarnate, Jesus established the Church by preaching about the arrival of the Kingdom of God. This preaching appealed to the people’s hope for a time when God’s will would be done on earth, as announced by the prophets. Jesus preached his message to all people, including sinners and those in need, seeking to gather all peoples to become the People of God, the Church. (Article 3, pp. 15–16)
6. How is Jesus’ self-giving on the cross related to his establishment of the Church?
Jesus’ sacrifice of himself was fulfilled on the cross. His institution of the Eucharist foreshadowed his self-giving. Today the Church celebrates the Eucharist to share in Jesus’ sacrifice and the grace it confers. The Eucharist also increases the unity of God’s People and allows us to share in the divine life. (Article 3, p. 17)
Section 1, Part 2
1. What does it mean to say that the works of Jesus and the Holy Spirit are inseparable?(Art. 4, p. 21)
The mission of Jesus and the Holy Spirit are inseparable because whenever God sends his Son, he also sends his Spirit. Jesus’ birth, life, death, Resurrection, and Ascension—as described in the Nicene Creed—are part of his mission of salvation shared with the Holy Spirit. They have shared this mission since the beginning of time, although the Holy Spirit was not fully revealed until Jesus poured out the Spirit on the Church at Pentecost.
2. Where does the Holy Spirit lead the Church? (Article 4, p. 23)
The power of the Holy Spirit enables the Church to carry out its mission to unite all people with the Holy Trinity and thus with one another. Through the Holy Spirit, the Church is both a sign and an instrument of eventual unity among human beings.
3. Describe the events of Pentecost.
After Jesus’ Ascension, his disciples gathered in Jerusalem during the Jewish festival called Pentecost, the Feast of Weeks, celebrated fifty days after Passover. The sound of a strong wind suddenly filled the house where the Apostles gathered. Tongues of fire rested on them, and they were filled with the Holy Spirit. They began to preach in different languages to the crowd gathered in Jerusalem. Even though the crowd came from many different lands, all understood the message in their own languages. Peter explained that these events fulfilled the prophecies of the Old Testament—the glorified Christ had poured his Holy Spirit onto the disciples and allowed them to preach to all peoples. (Article 5, pp. 23–24)
4. What did Peter say would happen to those people who repented and were baptized on the day of Pentecost?
Peter told the crowd to repent and be baptized to obtain forgiveness of their sins and likewise receive the Holy Spirit. (Art 5)
5. Why is it appropriate to say that the Church is revealed rather than born on Pentecost?
The Holy Spirit revealed the Church to the world for the first time, but she had been in God’s plan before the creation of the world and was fulfilled through Christ’s total sacrifice for our salvation. The Church was anticipated when Jesus instituted the Eucharist at the Last Supper and was fulfilled in his death on the cross. Thus the Church existed before Pentecost, but Pentecost revealed the Church. (Article 6, p. 25)
6. Why was Pentecost the Revelation of the Holy Trinity as well as the Church?
Jewish followers of Christ before Pentecost worshipped God the Father as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. As followers of Christ, they also worshipped him as the Divine Son of God. But the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost made them aware of this Third Divine Person of the Trinity for the first time. (Article 6, pp. 25–26)
7. What are three important elements of the Church’s mission?
Christ gave the Holy Spirit to animate, sanctify, and build the Church. The Holy Spirit animates the Church, giving life to her members so that they may proclaim their faith in the Risen Christ. The Holy Spirit sanctifies the Church, building up her holiness through the Sacraments, virtues, and Gifts of the Holy Spirit. Finally, the Holy Spirit builds the Church through Baptism and the mission to unite people in the Trinity. (Article 7, pp. 27–29)
8. How did the Holy Spirit transform Jesus’ disciples?
Before Pentecost, Christ’s followers were hiding behind closed doors in fear. When they received the Holy Spirit, they were transformed into courageous missionaries who set out to proclaim their faith in Christ and baptize new members, helping to build the Church. (Article 7, pp. 28–29)
9. Contrast a life lived ignoring the Holy Spirit and one lived in the Holy Spirit.
People who ignore the Holy Spirit may focus on meeting their immediate desires, living a selfish life according to the flesh, with no time to consider the needs and welfare of other people. In contrast, those who live in the Holy Spirit focus on the needs and welfare of others through the fruits of the Holy Spirit. (Article 8, pp. 30–31)
10. How does the Holy Spirit help us to pray?
The Holy Spirit, the “master of prayer,” teaches us to pray even when we don’t know what to say. The Spirit, operating through the Church’s Tradition, inspires us to pray creatively in new forms of basic prayer types: blessings, petitions, intercessions, thanksgiving, and praise. (Article 8, p. 32)
11. What is the subtle difference between a charism and a Gift of the Holy Spirit?
Charisms are special skills or graces given by the Holy Spirit to a Christian individual or community to benefit and build up the entire Church and the whole world. Saint Paul mentioned charisms such as skills in healing, mighty deeds, prophecy, discernment of spirits, the gift of tongues, and so on. In contrast, the seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit are dispositions or prevailing tendencies, not specific skills: wisdom, understanding, right judgment (counsel), courage (fortitude), knowledge, reverence (piety), and wonder and awe (fear of the Lord). (Article 9, pp. 32–33)