If you want to know
the basics of the
Catholic faith, look no further than the articles of Catholic
faith. This list of twelve articles mirrors the Apostles’ Creed, a prayer that
sets out Catholic tenets: Article 1: I believe in God, the
Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth. This affirms that God exists, that he’s a
Triune God (one God in three persons, known as the Holy Trinity), and that he
created the known universe. Article 2: And in Jesus Christ, his only Son,
our Lord. This attests that Jesus
is the Son of God and that he’s most certainly divine. The word Lord implies
divinity, because the Greek Kyrios and the Hebrew Adonai both
mean “lord” and are ascribed only to God. So the use of Lord with Jesus is
meant to profess his divinity. The name Jesus comes from the
Hebrew Jeshua, meaning “God saves.” So Catholics believe that
Jesus is Savior.
Article 3: Who was conceived by the
power of the Holy Spiritand born of the Virgin Mary. This affirms the human nature of Christ, meaning
he had a real, true human mother, and also affirms his divine nature, meaning
he had no human father but by the power of the Holy Spirit was conceived in the
womb of the Virgin Mary. He’s therefore considered both God and man by
Christians—fully divine and fully human.
Article 4: He suffered under Pontius
Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. The human nature of Christ could feel pain and actually die,
and he did on Good Friday. The mention of Pontius Pilate by name wasn’t meant
so much to vilify him forever in history but to place the Crucifixion within
human history.
Reference is made to an actual historical
person, the Roman governor of Judea, appointed by Caesar, to put the life and
death of Jesus within a chronological and historical context. It also reminds
the faithful that one can’t blame all Jews for the death of Jesus, as some have
erroneously done over the ages. Certain Jewish leaders conspired against Jesus,
but the actual death sentence was given by a Roman and carried out by Roman
soldiers. So both Jew and Gentile alike shared in the spilling of innocent blood.
Anti-Semitism based on the Crucifixion of Jesus is inaccurate, unjust, and
erroneous.
Article 5: He descended into hell. The
third day he arose againfrom the dead. The hell Jesus descended into wasn’t the hell of the damned,
where Jews and Christians believe the devil and his demons reside. Hell was
merely a word that Jews and early Christians used to describe the place of the
dead. This passage affirms that on the third day he rose, meaning Jesus came
back from the dead of his own divine power. He wasn’t just clinically dead for
a few minutes; he was dead dead — then he rose from the dead. More than a
resuscitated corpse, Jesus possessed a glorified and risen body.
Article 6: He ascended into heaven and is seated
at the right hand of God the Father Almighty. The Ascension reminds the faithful that after
the human and divine natures of Christ were united in the Incarnation, they
could never be separated. In other words, after the saving death and
Resurrection, Jesus didn’t dump his human body as if he didn’t need it anymore.
Catholicism teaches that his human body will exist forever. Where Jesus went,
body and soul, into heaven, the faithful hope one day to follow.
Article 7: He will come again to judge the
living and the dead.This article affirms the
Second Coming of Christ at the end of the world to be its judge. Judgment Day,
Day of Reckoning, Doomsday—they’re all metaphors for the end of time when
what’s known as the General Judgment will occur. Catholics believe that after
the death of any human person, immediate private judgment occurs and the person
goes directly to heaven, hell, or purgatory (an intermediate place in
preparation for heaven).
Article 8: I believe in the Holy Spirit, This part reminds the believer that God
exists in three persons — the Holy Trinity — God the Father, God the Son, and
God the Holy Spirit. What’s referred to as the Force in the movie Star
Wars isn’t the same as the Holy Spirit, who is a distinct person equal
to the other two — God the Father and God the Son.
Article 9: the holy catholic Church, the
Communion of Saints,Catholics believe that
the Church is more than a mere institution and certainly not a necessary evil.
It’s an essential dimension and aspect of spiritual life. Christ explicitly
uses the word church (ekklesia in Greek) in
Matthew 16 when he says, “I will build My Church.”
Article 10: the forgiveness of sins, Christ came to save the world from sin.
Belief in the forgiveness of sins is essential to Christianity. Catholicism
believes sins are forgiven in Baptism and in the Sacrament of Penance.
Article 11: the resurrection of the body, From the Catholic perspective, a human
being is a union of body and soul, so death is just the momentary separation of
body and soul until the end of the world, the Second Coming of Christ, the
General Judgment, and the resurrection of the dead. The just go, body and soul,
into heaven, and the damned go, body and soul, into hell.
Article 12: And in life
everlasting. As Christ Our Savior
died, so, too, must mere mortals. As he rose, so shall all human beings. Death
is the only way to cross from this life into the next. At the very moment of
death, private judgment occurs; Christ judges the soul:
* If it’s particularly holy and virtuous, the
soul goes directly to heaven.
* If it’s evil and wicked and dies in mortal
sin, it’s damned for eternity in hell.
* If a person lived a life not bad enough to
warrant hell but not holy enough to go right to heaven, Catholics believe the
soul goes to purgatory, which is a middle ground between heaven and earth, a
state where departed souls want to go to be cleansed of any attachments to sin
before going through the pearly gates.