St. Pius Catechism
St. Pius Catechism
St. Pius Catechism
The Catechism of the Council of Trent was directed to all priests. The recently
released Catechism of the Catholic Church was directed to all bishops. The
Catechism of Pope St. Pius X is that pope's partial realization of a simple, plain,
brief, popular Catechism for uniform use throughout the whole world. In other
words it is directed to the layman. It was used in the ecclesiastical province of
Rome and for some years in other parts of Italy. It was not, however, prescribed
for use throughout the universal church.
CONTENTS
Foreword
Introduction
Preliminary Lesson
Prayer
Prayer in General
The Lord's Prayer
The Hail Mary
The Sacraments
Works of Mercy
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Foreword
After the Second Vatican Council, a number of new catechisms appeared which
did not present Catholic Doctrine as it should be presented, and these new
publications even included some very grave errors. Coupled with the new
methods, whereby children are not required to memorize, two generations of
children have grown up not knowing the Catholic Faith. For many years Rome did
nothing. Now there has been published the new Catechism of the Catholic Church.
It has been written for Bishops, who are required to adapt it to the needs of the
faithful. One may fear that some Bishops will put off this task for a very long time,
others will water-down the Doctrine even further, yet others will give only a
partial presentation of the Doctrine, leaving important points untold.
Thus the need is still great for a Catechism to be put in the hands of the student in
which he may find clear and complete answers to his questions. What better could
be given him than the Catechism of St. Pius X, the holy Pope of the modern era?
To my knowledge, the Catechism of St. Pius X has never been published in English
in its original text. There is one Catechism of Christian Doctrine, published by the
Rev. Msgr. Eugene Kevane in Virginia, USA in 1974, but in fact, it contains a much
later text which lacks much of the original text: it is the translation of
the Catechismo della Dottrina Cristiana, the standard Italian Catechism, as it was
in 1953. That Italian Catechism is in turn, a summary and reduction of the
original Catechism of St. Pius X. The American edition in 1974 has further been
"adapted according to the Second Vatican Council", thus losing much of the value
of the original text (e.g. expressions like "Soldiers of Christ" are suppressed from
the teaching on the effects of Confirmation). The only book where I was able to
find the authentic text is the excellent Compendium of Catechetical Instruction by
the Right Reverend Monsignor John Hagan, first published in Dublin in 1910, and
containing for each chapter of the Catechism the relevant part from
the Catechism of the Council of Trent, the questions and answers of the Catechism
of Saint Pius X and Father Raineri's Catechetical Instructions, which were very
popular in the nineteenth century.
We present here Msgr. Hagan's text with very slight modifications of style only.
The current discipline of the Church on matters such as fasting has been included
in smaller print to bring the text up-to-date without altering the original answers.
May this edition of Saint Pius X's Catechism help priests, teachers and parents to
impart the knowledge and love of the Doctrine of the Catholic Church to their
pupils and their children in all its entirety and beauty. It is our hope that it will also
help adult Catholics to revise and deepen their own knowledge of the Faith. It will
be very helpful to catechumens to assist them towards a complete knowledge of
the one true Faith. May the clear knowledge of the eternal truths of our Faith
build in all readers the great certitudes that are the foundations of solid virtues.
May the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary obtain all these graces for
the readers of this volume, and may they pray for me.
* * *
Previous to the invention of printing, and the consequent possibility of the spread
of books and education among the masses of the people, the widespread use of a
Catechism was plainly out of the question. Its place was supplied by brief
formulae, not infrequently set to rhyme, which were committed to memory and
handed down from generation to generation, conveying a brief statement of the
truths more necessary to salvation. The nearest approaches to the modern
Catechism would be St. Cyril's Catechesis, St. Augustine's Instruction of the
Ignorant, and, later on, certain works of Alcuin, Rabanus Maurus, and Gerson.
But, as already pointed out, the Fathers of the Council of Trent showed at a very
early date that they were satisfied with none of the existing works, and that they
were fully alive to the need and necessity of preparing an authoritative Catechism.
The realisation of their desire, however, was retarded for several years by events
over which they had little control; and when the work was finally taken in hand
another idea prevailed, resulting in the publication of a manual for the use of the
clergy, and not, as originally suggested, a Catechism for children and uninstructed
adults.
Though Bellarmine's Catechism was largely followed as a model all over the world,
yet, owing to the modifications introduced in diocesan editions, it came to pass in
the course of time that almost every diocese had its own Catechism, differing in
many respects from the Catechisms of other dioceses.
The idea, however, has never been lost sight of. During the sitting of the first
Catechetical Congress in 1880, the then Bishop of Mantua (later St. Pius X)
proposed that the Holy Father be petitioned to arrange for the compilation of a
simple, plain, brief, and popular Catechism for uniform use all over the world.
Shortly after his elevation to the Chair of Peter, Pius X at once set about realising,
within certain limits, his own proposal of 1880, by prescribing a uniform
Catechism — the Compendium of Christian Doctrine — for use in the dioceses of
the ecclesiastical province of Rome, at the same time indicating that it was his
earnest desire to have the same manual adopted all over Italy. The text selected
was, with slight modifications, that which had been adopted for some years by the
united hierarchy of Piedmont, Liguria, Lombardy, Emilia, and Tuscany.
The second part, called the "Short Catechism," is intended chiefly for primary
schools and for children preparing for the sacraments. It contains about sixty
pages devoted to a brief exposition of the doctrine of the Creed, Sacraments,
Commandments, and Prayer.
The "Larger Catechism," which forms the third part, explains these at greater
length in about 200 pages. It is succeeded by an explanation of the principal feasts
of the year, covering sixty pages, followed by forty pages of a Brief History of
Religion, and concludes with a certain number of daily prayers, and prayers for
special occasions.
Preliminary Lesson
6 Q. Are parents and guardians bound to send their children and those dependent
on them to catechism?
A. Parents and guardians are bound to see that their children And dependents
learn Christian Doctrine, and they are guilty before God if they neglect this duty.
8 Q. How are we certain that the Christian Doctrine which we receive from the
Holy Catholic Church is really true?
A. We are certain that the doctrine which we receive from the Holy Catholic
Church is true, because Jesus Christ, the divine Author of this doctrine, committed
it through His Apostles to the Church, which He founded and made the infallible
teacher of all men, promising her His divine assistance until the end of time.
10 Q. What and how many are the principal and most necessary parts of Christian
Doctrine?
A. The principal and most necessary parts of Christian Doctrine are four The
Creed, The Our Father, The Commandments, and The Sacraments.
4 Q. Recite them.
A. (1) I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth; (2) And
in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord; (3) Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost;
born of the Virgin Mary; (4) Suffered under Pontius Pilate: was crucified, dead,
and buried; (5) He descended into hell: the third day He rose again from the dead;
(6) He ascended into Heaven: sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
(7) From thence He shall come to judge the living and the dead. (8) I believe in the
Holy Ghost; (9) The Holy Catholic Church; the Communion of Saints; (10) The
forgiveness of sins; (11) The resurrection of the body; (12) Life everlasting. Amen.
5 Q. What is meant by the word: "I believe", which you say at the beginning of the
Symbol?
A. The word: I believe, means I hold everything that is contained in these twelve
articles to be perfectly true; and I believe these truths more firmly than if I saw
them with my eyes, because God, who can neither deceive nor be deceived, has
revealed them to the Holy Catholic Church and through this Church to us.
1 Q. What does the First Article of the Creed: I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
Creator of heaven and earth, teach us?
A. The First Article of the Creed teaches us that there is one God, and only one;
that He is omnipotent and has created heaven and earth and all things contained
in them, that is to say, the whole Universe.
6 Q. God can neither sin nor die, how then do we say He can do all things?
A. Though He can neither sin nor die, we say God can do all things, because to be
able to sin or die is not an effect of power, but of weakness which cannot exist in
God who is most perfect.
On the Creation
10 Q. Does God take any interest in the world and in the things created by Him?
A. Yes, God takes an interest in the world and in all things created by Him; He
preserves them, and governs them by His infinite goodness and wisdom; and
nothing happens here below that He does not either will or permit.
11 Q. Why do you say that nothing happens here below that He does not either
will or permit?
A. We say that nothing happens here below that He does not either will or permit,
because there are some things which God wills and commands, while there are
others which He simply does not prevent, such as sin.
The Angels
19 Q. What are the Angels called who were banished for ever from Paradise and
condemned to hell?
A. The Angels banished for ever from Paradise and condemned to hell are called
demons, and their chief is called Lucifer or Satan.
Man
28 Q. What is man?
A. Man is a rational creature composed of soul and body.
34 Q. Why do we say that man was created to the image and likeness of God?
A. We say that man was created to the image and likeness of God because the
human soul is spiritual and rational, free in its operations, capable of knowing and
loving God and of enjoying Him for ever — perfections which reflect a ray of the
infinite greatness of the Lord in us.
35 Q. In what state did God place our first parents, Adam and Eve?
A. God placed our first parents, Adam and Eve, in the state of innocence and
grace; but they soon fell away by sin.
36 Q. Besides innocence and sanctifying grace did God confer any other gifts on
our first parents?
A. Besides innocence and sanctifying grace, God conferred on our first parents
other gifts, which, along with sanctifying . grace, they were to transmit to their
descendants; these were: (1) Integrity, that is, the perfect subjection of sense .
reason; (2) Immortality; (3) Immunity from all pain and sorrow; (4) A knowledge in
keeping with their state.
38 Q. What chastisement was meted out to the sin of Adam and Eve?
A. Adam and Eve lost the grace of God and the right they had to Heaven; they
were driven out of the earthly Paradise, subjected to many miseries of soul and
body, and condemned to death.
39 Q. If Adam and Eve had not sinned, would they have bee exempt from death?
A. If Adam and Eve had not sinned and if they had remained faithful to God, they
would, after a happy and tranquil sojourn here on earth, and without dying, have
been transferred by God into Heaven, to enjoy a life of unending glory.
1 Q. What are we taught in the Second Article: And in Jesus Christ His only Son our
Lord?
A. The Second Article of the Creed teaches us that the Son of God is the Second
Person of the Blessed Trinity; that, like the Father, He is God eternal, omnipotent,
Creator and Lord; that He became man to save us; and that the Son of God, made
man, is called Jesus Christ.
3 Q. Since we also are sons of God, why is Jesus Christ called the only Son of God
the Father?
A. Jesus Christ is called the only Son of God the Father, because He alone is His
Son by nature, whereas we are His sons by creation and adoption.
6 Q. Who gave the name of Jesus to the Son of God, made man?
A. The Eternal Father Himself, through the Archangel Gabriel, gave the name of
Jesus to the Son of God made man, at the moment when the Archangel
announced to the Blessed Virgin the mystery of the Incarnation.
7 Q. Why is the Son of God made man also called Christ?
A. The Son of God made man is also called Christ , that is to say, anointed or
consecrated, because kings, priests and prophets were anointed of old; and Jesus
is the King of kings, High Priest, and supreme Prophet.
8 Q. Was Jesus Christ really anointed and consecrated with a material anointing?
A. The anointing of Jesus Christ was not material, like that of the kings, priests and
prophets of old, but wholly spiritual and divine, because the fullness of the
Divinity dwells in Him substantially.
10 Q. How do we know that Jesus Christ is truly the Messiah and Promised
Redeemer?
A. We know that Jesus Christ is truly the Messiah and Promised Redeemer from
the fact that in Him are verified: (1) All that the prophecies foretold, (2) And all
that the figures of the Old Testament foreshadowed.
12 Q. Which are the principal figures of the Redeemer in the Old Testament?
A. The principal figures of the Redeemer in the Old Testament are: the innocent
Abel; the High Priest Melchisedech; the sacrifice of Isaac; Joseph sold by his
brethren; the prophet Jonas; the Paschal Lamb; and the Brazen Serpent set up by
Moses in the desert.
1 Q. What is taught in the Third Article: Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost,
born of the Virgin Mary?
A. The Third Article of the Creed teaches that by the operation of the Holy Ghost
the Son of God took a body and soul like ours, in the chaste womb of the Virgin
Mary, and that He was born of that Virgin.
2 Q. Did the Father and the Son also take part in forming the body and creating
the soul of Jesus Christ?
A. Yes, the whole Three divine Persons co-operated in forming the body and in
creating the soul of Jesus Christ.
10 Q. Are the Son of God and the Son of Mary one and the same Person?
A. Yes, the Son of God and the Son of Mary are one and the same Person, that is,
Jesus Christ, true God and true man.
1 Q. What are we taught in the Fourth Article: Suffered under Pontius Pilate, was
crucified, dead, and buried?
A. The Fourth Article of the Creed teaches us that to redeem the world by His
Precious Blood Jesus Christ suffered under Pontius Pilate, the Governor of Judea,
died on the tree of the Cross, and, on being taken down therefrom, was buried.
6 Q. Could not Jesus Christ have freed Himself from the hands of Pilate and the
Jews?
A. Yes, Jesus Christ could have freed Himself from the hands of Pilate and the
Jews, but knowing it was His Eternal Father's will that He should suffer and die for
our salvation, He voluntarily submitted; nay, He Himself went forth to meet His
enemies and freely permitted Himself to be taken and led to death.
9 Q. Would it not have been enough for an Angel to come and make satisfaction
for us?
A. No, it would not have been enough for an Angel to come and make satisfaction
for us, because the offence given to God by sin was, in a certain sense, infinite,
and to satisfy for it a person possessing infinite merit was required.
10 Q. To satisfy divine justice, was it necessary that Jesus Christ should be both
God and man?
A. Yes; to be able to suffer and die it was necessary that Jesus Christ should be
man; while for His sufferings to be of infinite value it was necessary that He should
be God.
11 Q. Why was it necessary that the merits of Jesus Christ should be of infinite
value?
A. It was necessary that the merits of Jesus Christ should be of infinite value,
because God's Majesty, which had been offended by sin, is infinite.
16 Q. Was the Divinity separated from the Body and Soul of Jesus Christ by His
death?
A. The Divinity was separated from neither the Body nor the Soul of Christ in
death; only the Soul was separated from the Body.
18 Q. If Jesus Christ died for the salvation of all men, why are not all men saved?
A. Jesus Christ died for all, but not all are saved, because not all will acknowledge
Him; all do not observe His Law; all do not avail themselves of the means of
salvation He has left us.
1 Q. What are we taught in the Fifth Article: He descended into hell; the third day
He rose again from the dead?
A. The Fifth Article of the Creed teaches us that the Soul of Jesus Christ, on being
separated from His Body, descended to the Limbo of the holy Fathers, and that on
the third day it became united once more to His Body, never to be parted from it
again.
3 Q. Why were not the souls of the Holy Fathers admitted into heaven before the
death of Jesus Christ?
A. The souls of the holy Fathers were not admitted into heaven before the death
of Jesus Christ, because heaven was closed by the sin of Adam, and it was but
fitting that Jesus Christ, who reopened it by His death, should be the first to enter
it.
4 Q. Why did Jesus Christ defer His own resurrection until the third day?
A. Jesus Christ deferred His own resurrection until the third day to show clearly
that He was really dead.
5 Q. Was the resurrection of Jesus Christ like the resurrection of other men who
had been raised from the dead?
A. No, the resurrection of Jesus Christ was not like the resurrection of other men
who had been raised from the dead, because He rose by His own power, while the
others were raised by the power of God.
1 Q. What are we taught in the Sixth Article: He ascended into heaven, sitteth at
the right hand of God, the Father Almighty?
A. The Sixth Article of the Creed teaches us that Jesus Christ, forty days after His
resurrection, ascended of Himself into heaven in the sight of His Apostles; and
that while as God He was equal to His Father in glory, as man He has been raised
above all the Angels and Saints, and constituted Lord of all things.
2 Q. Why did Jesus Christ remain forty days on earth after His resurrection before
ascending into heaven?
A. After His resurrection Jesus Christ remained forty days on earth before
ascending into heaven, to prove by several apparitions that He was truly risen, to
instruct the Apostles still further, and to confirm them in the truths of faith.
4 Q. Why is it said of Jesus Christ that He ascended, and of His Most Holy Mother
that she was assumed, into heaven?
A. It is said of Jesus Christ that He ascended into heaven, and of His Most Holy
Mother that she was assumed, because, Jesus Christ, being Man-God, ascended
into heaven by His own power; but His Mother, being a creature, even though the
greatest of all creatures, was taken up into heaven by the power of God.
5 Q. Explain the words: Sitteth at the right hand of Cod, the Father Almighty.
A. The word sitteth signifies the peaceful possession which Jesus Christ has of His
glory; and the words: At the right hand of God, the Father Almighty, denote that
He has a place of honour above all creatures.
1 Q. What are we taught in the Seventh Article: From thence He shall come to
judge the living and the dead?
A. The Seventh Article of the Creed teaches us that at the end of the world Jesus
Christ, in all His glory and majesty, will come from heaven to judge all men, both
good and bad, and to give to each of them the reward or the punishment he shall
have merited.
4 Q. How will the glory of Jesus Christ be manifested in the General Judgment?
A. The glory of Jesus Christ will be manifested in the General Judgment in this way,
that He who was unjustly condemned by men, shall then come before the whole
world as the Supreme Judge of all.
5 Q. How will the glory of the Saints be manifested in the General Judgment?
A. The glory of the Saints will be manifested in the General Judgment in this way,
that many of them who died despised by the wicked, shall be glorified before the
whole world.
6 Q. How great will be the confusion of the wicked in the General Judgment?
A. In the General Judgment great indeed shall be the confusion of the wicked,
especially of those who have oppressed the just and who have tried in this life to
be esteemed as men of virtue and goodness; for they shall then see even their
most hidden sins laid bare before the whole world.
1 Q. What are we taught in the Eighth Article: I believe in the Holy Ghost?
A. The Eighth Article of the Creed teaches us that there is a Holy Ghost, the Third
Person of the Blessed Trinity; and that, like the Father and the Son, He is God
eternal, infinite, omnipotent, Creator and Lord of all things.
3 Q. If the Son proceeds from the Father, and the Holy Ghost proceeds from the
Father and the Son, it would seem as if the Father and the Son are prior to the
Holy Ghost; how then can it be said that all the Three Persons are eternal?
A. It is said that all the Three Persons are eternal, because the Father has begotten
the Son from all eternity, and the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and from
the Son from all eternity.
4 Q. Why is the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity specially designated by the
name of the Holy Ghost or the Holy Spirit?
A. The Third Person of the Blessed Trinity is specially designated by the name of
the Holy Ghost or the Holy Spirit, because He proceeds from the Father and from
the Son by way of spiration and of love.
6 Q. Do the Father and the Son sanctify us equally with the Holy Ghost?
A. Yes, all the Three Divine Persons equally sanctify us.
7 Q. If this is so, why is the sanctification of souls specially attributed to the Holy
Ghost?
A. The sanctification-of souls is specially attributed to the Holy Ghost, because it is
a work of love, and the works of love are attributed to the Holy Ghost.
9 Q. Where were the Apostles during the ten days preceding Pentecost?
A. The Apostles were gathered together in the Supper Room with the Virgin Mary
and the other disciples, and were persevering in prayer in expectation of the Holy
Ghost, Whom Jesus Christ had promised to send them.
1 Q. What does the Ninth article: The Holy Catholic Church, the Communion of
Saints, teach us?
A. The Ninth Article of the Creed teaches us that Jesus Christ founded a visible
society on earth called the Catholic Church, and that all those who belong to this
Church are in communion with one another.
2 Q. Why immediately after the article that treats of the Holy Ghost is mention
made of the Catholic Church?
A. Immediately after the article that treats of the Holy Ghost mention is made of
the Catholic Church to indicate that the Church's holiness comes from the Holy
Ghost, who is the Author of all holiness.
11 Q. Why do you say that the Roman Pontiff is supreme Pastor of the Church?
A. Because Jesus Christ said to St. Peter, the first Pope: "Thou art Peter, and upon
this rock I will build My Church, and I will give to thee the keys of the Kingdom of
Heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound also in Heaven,
and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed also in Heaven." And
again: "Feed My lambs, feed My sheep."
12 Q. The many societies of persons who are baptised but who do not
acknowledge the Roman Pontiff as their Head do not, then, belong to the Church
of Jesus Christ?
A. No, those who do not acknowledge the Roman Pontiff as their Head do not
belong to the Church of Jesus Christ.
13 Q. How can the Church of Jesus Christ be distinguished from the numerous
societies or sects founded by men, and calling themselves Christian?
A. From the numerous societies or sects founded by men and calling themselves
Christian, the Church of Jesus Christ is easily distinguished by four marks: She is
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic.
16 Q. But are not the faithful of a whole Nation or Diocese also called a Church?
A. The faithful of a whole Nation or Diocese are also called a Church, but they ever
remain mere parts of the Universal Church and form but one Church with her.
27 Q. Can one be saved outside the Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church?
A. No, no one can be saved outside the Catholic, Apostolic Roman Church, just as
no one could be saved from the flood outside the Ark of Noah, which was a figure
of the Church.
28 Q. How, then, were the Patriarchs of old, the Prophets, and the other just men
of the Old Testament, saved?
A. The just of the Old Testament were saved in virtue of the faith they had in
Christ to come, by means of which they spiritually belonged to the Church.
29 Q. But if a man through no fault of his own is outside the Church, can he be
saved?
A. If he is outside the Church through no fault of his, that is, if he is in good faith,
and if he has received Baptism, or at least has the implicit desire of Baptism; and
if, moreover, he sincerely seeks the truth and does God's will as best he can such a
man is indeed separated from the body of the Church, but is united to the soul of
the Church and consequently is on the way of salvation
30 Q. Suppose that a man is a member of the Catholic Church, but does not put
her teaching into practice, will he be saved?
A. He who is a member of the Catholic Church and does not put her teaching into
practice is a dead member, and hence will not be saved; for towards the salvation
of an adult not only Baptism and faith are required, but, furthermore, works in
keeping with faith.
31 Q. Are we obliged to believe all the truths the Church teaches us?
A. Yes, we are obliged to believe all the truths the Church teaches us, and Jesus
Christ declares that he who does not believe is already condemned.
33 Q. Can the Church err in what she proposes for our belief?
A. No, the Church cannot err in what she proposes for our belief, since according
to the promise of Jesus Christ she is unfailingly assisted by the Holy Ghost.
42 Q. Are the Church Teaching and the Church Taught, then, two churches?
A. The Church Teaching and the Church Taught are two distinct parts of one and
the same Church, just as in the human body the head is distinct from the other
members, and yet forms but one body with them.
45 Q. Who, then, are they who possess the teaching power in the Church?
A. The teaching power in the Church is possessed by the Pope and the Bishops,
and, dependent on them, by the other sacred ministers.
46 Q. Are we obliged to hear the Teaching Church?
A. Yes, without doubt we are obliged under pain of eternal damnation to hear the
Teaching Church; for Jesus Christ has said to the Pastors of His Church, in the
persons of the Apostles: "He who hears you, hears Me, and he who despises you,
despises Me."
47 Q. Besides her teaching power has the Church any other power?
A. Yes, besides her teaching power the Church has in particular the power of
administering sacred things, of making laws and of exacting the observance of
them.
48 Q. Does the power possessed by the members of the Hierarchy come from the
people?
A. The power possessed by the Hierarchy does not come from the people, and it
would be heresy to say it did: it comes solely from God.
58 Q. What sin would a man commit who should refuse to accept the solemn
definitions of the Pope?
A. He who refuses to accept the solemn definitions of the Pope, or who even
doubts them, sins against faith; and should he remain obstinate in this unbelief,
he would no longer be a Catholic, but a heretic.
61 Q. In defining that the Pope is infallible, has the Church put forward a new
truth of faith?
A. No, in defining that the Pope is infallible the Church has not put forward a new
truth of faith; but to oppose new errors she has simply defined that the infallibility
of the Pope, already contained in Sacred Scripture and in Tradition, is a truth
revealed by God, and therefore to be believed as a dogma or article of faith.
63 Q. After the Pope, who are they who by Divine appointment are to be most
venerated in the Church?
A. After the Pope, those who by Divine appointment are to be most venerated in
the Church are the Bishops.
72 Q. What are the duties of the faithful towards their Parish Priest?
A. The faithful should be united with their Parish Priest, listen to him with docility,
and show him respect and submission in all that regards the care of the parish.
1 Q. What are we taught by these words of the Ninth Article: The Communion of
Saints?
A. In the words The Communion of Saints, the Ninth Article of the Creed teaches
us that the Church's spiritual goods, both internal and external, are common to all
her members because of the intimate union that exists between them.
2 Q. Which are the internal goods that are common in the Church?
A. The internal goods that are common in the Church are: the graces received
through the Sacraments; faith, hope and charity; the infinite merits of Jesus
Christ; the superabundant merits of the Blessed Virgin and of the Saints; and the
fruit of all the good works done in the same Church.
3 Q. Which are the external goods that are common in the Church?
A. The external goods that are common in the Church are: the Sacraments, the
Sacrifice of the Mass, public prayers, religious functions, and all the other outward
practices that unite the faithful.
6 Q. Do Christians then, who are in mortal sin derive no advantage from the
internal and spiritual goods of the Church?
A. Christians who are in mortal sin still continue to derive some advantage from
the internal and spiritual goods of the Church, inasmuch as they still preserve the
Christian character which is indelible, and the virtue of faith which is the basis of
justification. They are aided, too, by the prayers and good works of the faithful
towards obtaining the grace of conversion to God.
7 Q. Can those in mortal sin participate in the external goods of the Church?
A. Those in mortal sin can participate in the external goods of the Church, unless
indeed they are cut off from the Church by excommunication.
8 Q. Why are the members of this Communion, taken together, called saints?
A. The members of this Communion are called saints because all are called to
sanctity and have been sanctified by baptism, and because many of them have
really attained perfect sanctity.
1 Q. What are we taught by the Eleventh Article: The Resurrection of the body?
A. The Eleventh Article of the Creed teaches us that all men will rise again, every
soul resuming the body it had in this life.
6 Q. What are the endowments that are to adorn the bodies of the elect?
A. The endowments that shall adorn the bodies of the elect are: (1) Impassibility,
by which they can never again be subject to evil, nor to any kind of pain, nor to
need of food, of rest or the like; (2) Brightness, by which they shall shine as the
sun and as so many stars; (3) Agility, by which they shall be able to pass in a
moment and without fatigue from one place to another and from earth to
heaven; (4) Subtlety, by which without hindrance they shall be able to penetrate
any body, as did Jesus Christ when risen from the dead.
5 Q. Are the happiness of heaven and the miseries of hell for the soul alone?
A. The happiness of heaven and the miseries of hell at present affect the soul
alone, because at present the soul alone is in heaven or in hell; but after the
resurrection of the flesh, man in the fullness of his nature, that is, in body and in
soul, will be for ever happy or for ever tormented.
6 Q. Shall the bliss of paradise and the miseries of hell be the same for all men?
A. The bliss of heaven in the case of the blessed, and the miseries of hell in the
case of the damned, will be the same in substance and in eternal duration; but in
measure, or degree, they will be greater or less according to the extent of each
one's merits or demerits.
7 Q. What does the word Amen signify at the end of the Creed?
A. The word Amen at the end of a prayer signifies so be it; at the end of the Creed
it signifies so it is, that is to say, "I believe that all things contained in these twelve
Articles are most true, and I am more certain of them than if I had seen them with
my eyes."
Prayer
Prayer in General
2 Q. What is prayer?
A. Prayer is an elevation of the mind to God to adore Him, to thank Him, and to
ask Him for what we need.
8 Q. In whose name should we ask of God the graces we stand in need of?
A. We should ask of God the graces we stand in need of in the Name of Jesus
Christ, as He Himself has taught us and as is done by the Church, which always
ends her prayers with these words: Through our Lord Jesus Christ.
9 Q. Why should we beg graces of God in the Name of Jesus Christ?
A. We should beg graces of God in the Name of Jesus Christ because He is our
Mediator, and it is through Him alone that we can approach the throne of God.
10 Q. If prayer is so powerful how is it that many times our prayers are not heard?
A. Many times our prayers are not heard, either because we ask things not
conducive to our eternal salvation, or because we do not ask properly.
13 Q. If God knows all that is necessary for us, why should we pray?
A. Although God knows all that is necessary for us, He nevertheless wills that we
should pray to Him so as to acknowledge Him as the Giver of every good gift, to
attest our humble submission to Him, and to merit His favours for ourselves.
14 Q. What is the first and best disposition to render our prayers efficacious?
A. The first and best disposition to render our prayers efficacious is to be in the
state of grace; or if we are not in that state, to desire to put ourselves in it.
7 Q. When invoking God in the beginning of the Lord's Prayer, why do we call Him
Our Father?
A. In the beginning of the Lord's Prayer we call God Our Father, to foster
confidence in His infinite goodness by the remembrance that we are his children.
8 Q. How can we say that we are the children of God?
A. We are the children of God: first, because He has created us in His own image,
and preserves and governs us by His providence; and secondly, because by an Act
of special benevolence He has adopted us in Baptism as brothers of Jesus Christ
and co-heirs with Him to eternal glory.
11 Q. What do we ask in the First Petition when we say: Hallowed be Thy Name?
A. In the First Petition: Hallowed be Thy Name, we ask that God may be known,
loved, honoured and served by the whole world and by ourselves in particular.
12 Q. What do we intend when we ask that God may be known, loved, honoured
and served by the whole world?
A. We intend to beg that infidels may come to the knowledge of the Lord God,
that heretics may recognise their errors, that schismatics may return to the unity
of the Church, that sinners may repent, and that the just may persevere in well-
doing.
13 Q. Why do we first of all ask that the Name of God may be sanctified?
A. We first of all ask that the Name of God may be sanctified, because the glory of
God should be nearer our hearts than all other goods and interests.
16 Q. In the words: Thy Kingdom come, what do we ask with regard to grace?
A. With regard to grace we beg that God may reign in us by His sanctifying grace,
by which He deigns to dwell within us as a king in his palace; and that He may
keep us ever united to Himself by the virtues of faith, hope and charity, through
which He reigns over our intellect, our heart and our will.
17 Q. In the words: Thy Kingdom come, what do we ask regarding the Church?
A. Regarding the Church we ask that she may be spread and propagated ever
more and more throughout the world for the salvation of mankind.
23 Q. What do we ask in the Fourth Petition: Give us this day our daily bread?
A. In the Fourth Petition we beg of God all that is daily necessary for soul and
body.
27 Q. Why do we say: Give us this day our daily bread, rather than: Give us bread
this day?
A. We say: Give us this day our daily bread, rather than: Give us bread this day, to
exclude all desire of what is another's; and hence we beg the Lord to help us in
acquiring just and lawful gains, so that we may procure our maintenance by our
own toil And without theft or fraud.
33 Q. Can those who do not forgive their neighbour hope that God will pardon
them?
A. Those who do not forgive their neighbour have no reason to hope that God will
pardon them; especially since they condemn themselves when they ask God to
forgive them as they forgive their neighbour.
34 Q. What do we ask in the Sixth Petition: And lead us not into temptation?
A. In the Sixth Petition: And lead us not into temptation, we ask God to deliver us
from temptation either by not allowing us to be tempted, or by giving us grace not
to be conquered.
41 Q. Is it not lawful to beg liberation from some evil in particular, for example,
from sickness?
A. Yes, it is lawful to beg liberation from some evil in particular but always in
bowing to the will of God, who may even ordain that particular affliction for the
good of our soul.
44 Q. To obtain the graces asked in the Our Father is it enough to recite it any way
at all?
A. To obtain the graces asked in the Our Father we must recite it without haste
and with attention; and we must put our heart into it.
45 Q. When should we say the Our Father?
A. We should say the Our Father every day, because every day we have need of
God's help.
6 Q. What is our object in saluting the Blessed Virgin with the very words of the
Archangel?
A. In saluting the Blessed Virgin with the words of the Archangel we congratulate
her by recalling to mind the singular privileges and gifts which God has granted
her in preference to all other creatures.
12 Q. Why do we say the Hail Mary, rather than any other prayer, after the Our
Father?
A. Because the Blessed Virgin is our most powerful advocate with Jesus Christ, and
hence, after having said the prayer taught us by Jesus Christ, we pray the Blessed
Virgin to obtain for us the graces we have asked therein.
3 Q. Why do you call the sacraments sensible and efficacious signs of grace?
A. I call the sacraments sensible and efficacious signs of grace because all the
sacraments signify by means of sensible things, the divine grace which they
produce in our souls.
4 Q. Show by an example how the sacraments are sensible and efficacious signs of
grace.
A. In Baptism the pouring of water on the head of the person, and the words: "I
baptise thee," that is, I wash thee, "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and
of the Holy Ghost," are a sensible sign of that which Baptism accomplishes in the
soul; just as water washes the body, so in like manner does the grace given in
Baptism cleanse the soul from sin.
5 Q. How many sacraments are there, and what are they called?
A. There are seven sacraments: Baptism, Confirmation, Eucharist, Penance,
Extreme Unction, Holy Orders and Matrimony.
10 Q. What is grace?
A. Grace is an inward and supernatural gift given to us without any merit of our
own, but through the merits of Jesus Christ in order to gain eternal life.
26 Q. Which are the sacraments that increase grace in those who already possess
it?
A. The sacraments which increase grace in those who already possess it are the
other five: Confirmation, Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders and Matrimony,
all of which confer second grace.
27 Q. On this account how are they called?
A. These five sacraments — Confirmation, Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy
Orders and Matrimony — are on that account called sacraments of the living,
because those who receive them must be free from mortal sin, that is, already
alive through sanctifying grace.
28 Q. What sin does he commit who, conscious that he is not in a state of grace,
receives one of the sacraments of the living?
A. He who conscious that he is not in a state of grace, receives one of the
sacraments of the living, commits a serious sacrilege.
32 Q. Why can the three sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and Holy Orders be
received only once?
A. The three sacraments, Baptism, Confirmation and Holy Orders can be received
only once, because each of them imprints a special character on the soul.
34 Q. What is the purpose of the character that these three sacraments impress
on the soul?
A. The character that these three sacraments imprint on the soul, serves to mark
us as members of Jesus Christ at Baptism, as His soldiers at Confirmation, and as
His ministers at Holy Orders.
Baptism
Minister of Baptism
The Rite of Baptism and the Disposition of the Adult who Receives It
9 Q. If one were to pour the water and another to pronounce the words would the
person be baptised?
A. If one poured the water and another said the words the person would not be
baptised; because it is necessary that the person who pours the water should
pronounce the words.
10 Q. When in doubt whether the person is dead, is it right to omit baptising him?
A. When in doubt whether the person is dead, he should be baptised
conditionally, saying: "If thou art alive I baptise thee in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."
13 Q. Do parents sin, then, who, through negligence, allow their children to die
without Baptism, or who defer it?
A. Yes, fathers and mothers who, through negligence, allow their children to die
without Baptism sin grievously, because they deprive their children of eternal life;
and they also sin grievously by putting off Baptism for a long time, because they
expose them to danger of dying without having received it.
14 Q. When the person who is being baptised is an adult, what dispositions should
he have?
A. An adult who is being baptised, besides faith, should have at least imperfect
contrition for the mortal sins he may have committed.
15 Q. If an adult in mortal sin was baptised without such sorrow, what would he
receive?
A. If an adult was baptised in mortal sin without such sorrow he would receive the
character of Baptism, but not the remission of his sins nor sanctifying grace. And
these two effects would be suspended, until the obstacle is removed by perfect
contrition or by the sacrament of Penance.
23 Q. Are we obliged to keep the promises and renunciations made for us by our
sponsors?
A. We are certainly obliged to observe the promises and renunciations made for
us by our sponsors, because it is only on this condition that God has received us
into His grace.
Chrism or Confirmation
2 Q. In the Eucharist is there the same Jesus Christ who is in heaven, and who was
born on earth of the Blessed Virgin?
A. Yes, in the Eucharist there is truly the same Jesus Christ who is in heaven, and
who was born on earth of the Blessed Virgin.
3 Q. Why do you believe that in the Eucharist Jesus Christ is really present?
A. I believe that in the Eucharist Jesus Christ is truly present, because He Himself
has said it, and holy Church teaches it.
10 Q. When does the change of the bread into the Body and of the wine into the
Blood of Jesus Christ take place?
A. The change of the bread into the Body and of the wine into the Blood of Jesus
Christ is made in the very moment in which the priest pronounces the words of
consecration during holy Mass.
12 Q. What does the Church call the miraculous change of bread and of wine into
the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ?
A. The Church calls the miraculous change which is daily wrought upon our altars
transubstantiation.
14 Q. Is there nothing left of the bread and of the wine after consecration?
A. After consecration the species of the bread and of the wine alone are left.
17 Q. Under the species of the bread is there only the Body of Jesus Christ and
under the species of the wine only His Blood?
A. Both under the species of the bread and under the species of the wine the
living Jesus Christ is all present, with His Body, His Blood, His Soul and His Divinity.
18 Q. Can you tell me why Jesus Christ is whole and entire both in the host and in
the chalice?
A. Both in the host and in the chalice Jesus Christ is whole and entire, because He
is living and immortal in the Eucharist as He is in heaven; hence where His Body is,
there also are His Blood, His Soul, and His Divinity; and where His Blood is, there
also are His Body, His Soul and His Divinity, all these being inseparable in Jesus
Christ.
21 Q. How can Jesus Christ be present in all the consecrated hosts in the world?
A. Jesus Christ is present in all the consecrated hosts in the world by the
Omnipotence of God, to whom nothing is impossible.
22 Q. When the host is broken is the Body of Jesus Christ broken also?
A. When the host is broken, the Body of Jesus Christ is not broken, but only the
species of the bread are broken.
29 Q. Why did Jesus Christ institute this sacrament under the appearances of
bread and wine?
A. Jesus Christ instituted this sacrament under the appearances of bread and
wine, because, the Eucharist being intended to be our spiritual nourishment, it
was therefore fitting that it should be given to us under the form of food and
drink.
30 Q. What are the effects which the Most Holy Eucharist produces in us?
A. The principal effects which the Most Holy Eucharist produces in those who
worthily receive it are these: (1) It preserves and increases the life of the soul,
which is grace, just as natural food sustains and increases the life of the body; (2)
It remits venial sins and preserves us from mortal sin; (3) It produces spiritual
consolation.
31 Q. Does not the Most Holy Eucharist produce other effects in us?
A. Yes; the Most Holy Eucharist produces three other effects in (1) It weakens our
passions, and in particular it allays in us the fires of concupiscence; (2) It increases
in us the fervour of charity towards God and our neighbour, and aids us to act in
conformity with the will of Jesus Christ; (3) It gives us a pledge of future glory and
of the resurrection of our body.
32 Q. Does the sacrament of the Eucharist always produce its marvellous effects in
us?
A. The sacrament of the Eucharist produces its marvellous effects in us when it is
received with the requisite dispositions
[The fast from midnight was the old Eucharistic discipline. In view of evening
Masses which became more frequent at his time, Pope Pius XII gave permission to
reduce the fast to three hours for solid food and alcoholic drink, and to one hour
for non-alcoholic drink (Christus Dominus, 6 Jan. 1953). Later, Pope Paul VI
reduced the fast to one hour for everything (see 1983 Code #919). This last
regulation practically reduces fasting to nothing! Thus the faithful are encouraged
to follow the old rules of fast for morning Masses, and Pope Pius XII's regulations
for later Masses, keeping the spirit of the Church as Pope Pius XII wrote: "We
intend by this Apostolic Letter to confirm the full force of the law and custom
concerning the Eucharistic fast; and We also wish to remind those who are able to
comply with that law, that they diligently continue to do so, so that only those
who need these concessions may make use of them, according to their need.'
(Ibid.)]
35 Q. What should one who knows that he is in mortal sin do before receiving
Communion?
A. One who knows that he is in mortal sin must make a good confession before
going to Holy Communion, for even an act of perfect contrition is not enough
without confession to enable one who is in mortal sin to receive Holy Communion
properly.
36 Q. Why does not even an act of perfect contrition suffice to enable one who
knows he is in mortal sin to go to Communion?
A. Because the Church, out of respect for this sacrament, has ordained that no
one in mortal sin should dare to go to Communion without first going to
confession.
39 Q. If one were to swallow a particle that had remained between the teeth, or a
drop of water while washing, might he still go to Communion?
A. If one were to swallow a particle that had remained between the teeth, or a
drop of water while washing, he might still go to Communion, because in both
cases these things would either not be taken as food or drink, or they would have
already lost the nature of either.
46 Q. How long does Jesus Christ abide within us after Holy Communion?
A. After Holy Communion Jesus Christ abides within us by His grace as long as we
commit no mortal sin; and He abides within us by His Real Presence until the
sacramental species are consumed.
53 Q. Do they sin who are old enough to receive Communion And do not?
A. They who are old enough to receive Communion and do not either because
they are unwilling, or because, through their own fault, they are not instructed,
undoubtedly sin. Their parents or guardians also sin if the delay of Communion is
owing to their fault, and they shall have to render a strict account to God for it.
The Essence, Institution and Ends of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass
6 Q. What difference and relation then is there between the Sacrifice of the Mass
and that of the Cross?
A. Between the Sacrifice of the Mass and that of the Cross there is this difference
and relation, that on the Cross Jesus Christ offered Himself by shedding His Blood
and meriting for us; whereas on our altars He sacrifices Himself without the
shedding of His Blood, and applies to us the fruits of His passion And death.
7 Q. What other relation has the Sacrifice of the Mass to that of the Cross?
A. Another relation of the Sacrifice of the Mass to that of the Cross is, that the
Sacrifice of the Mass represents in a sensible way the shedding of the Blood of
Jesus Christ on the Cross, because, in virtue of the words of consecration, only the
Body of our Saviour is made present under the species of the bread and only His
Blood under the species of the wine; although by natural concomitance and by
the hypostatic union, the living And real Jesus Christ is present under each of the
species.
8 Q. Is not the Sacrifice of the Cross the one only Sacrifice of the New Law?
A. The Sacrifice of the Cross is the one only Sacrifice of the New Law, inasmuch as
through it Our Lord satisfied Divine Justice, acquired all the merits necessary to
save us, and thus, on His part, fully accomplished our redemption. These merits,
however, He applies to us through the means instituted by Him in His Church,
among which is the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
9 Q. For what ends then is the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass offered?
A. The Sacrifice of the Mass is offered to God for four ends: (1) To honour Him
properly, and hence it is called Latreutical; (2) To thank Him for His favours, and
hence it is called Eucharistical; (3) To appease Him, make Him due satisfaction for
our sins, and to help the souls in Purgatory, and hence it is called Propitiatory; (4)
To obtain all the graces necessary for us, and hence it is called Impetratory.
13 Q. If the Holy Mass is offered to God alone why are so many Masses celebrated
in honour of the Blessed Virgin And the Saints?
A. Mass celebrated in honour of the Blessed Virgin and the Saints is always a
sacrifice offered to God alone; it is said to be celebrated in honour of the Blessed
Virgin and the Saints to thank God for the gifts He has given them, and through
their intercession to obtain from Him more abundantly the graces of which we
have need.
17 Q. In hearing Holy Mass which is the best way to practise true devotion?
A. In hearing Holy Mass the best way to practise true devotion is the following: (1)
From the very beginning to unite our intention with that of the priest, offering the
Holy Sacrifice to God for the ends for which it was instituted. (2) To accompany
the priest in each prayer and action of the Sacrifice. (3) To meditate on the passion
and death of Jesus Christ And to heartily detest our sins, which have been the
cause of them. (4) To go to Communion, or at least to make a spiritual
Communion while the priest communicates.
19 Q. Does the recitation of the Rosary or other prayers during Mass prevent us
from hearing it with profit?
A. The recitation of the Rosary and other prayers during Mass does not prevent us
from hearing it with profit, provided we try As far as possible to follow the parts of
the Holy Sacrifice.
Penance in General
5 Q. How did Jesus Christ give His Apostles the power of remitting sin?
A. Jesus Christ gave His Apostles the power of remitting sin thus: Breathing upon
them He said: "Receive ye the Holy Ghost; whose sins you shall forgive they are
forgiven; and whose sins you shall retain they are retained."
18 Q. Of all the parts of the sacrament of Penance which is the most necessary?
A. Of all the parts of the sacrament of Penance the most necessary is contrition,
because without it no pardon for sins is obtainable, while with it alone, perfect
pardon can be obtained, provided that along with it there is the desire, at least
implicit, of going to confession.
The Effects and the Necessity of the Sacrament of Penance and the Dispositions to
Receive It Properly
22 Q. Has the sacrament of Penance the power of remitting all sins, no matter
how numerous or how great they are?
A. The sacrament of Penance has the power of remitting all sins no matter how
numerous and great they are, provided it is received with the requisite
dispositions.
Examination of Conscience
28 Q. In our examination should we also try to discover the number of our sins?
A. In our examination we should also try to discover the number of our mortal
sins.
29 Q. What is required for a sin to be mortal? A. For a sin to be mortal three things
are required: (1) Grave matter, (2) Full advertence, (3) Perfect consent of the will.
Sorrow
56 Q. If one has only venial sins to confess, must he be sorry for all of them?
A. If one has only venial sins to confess it is enough to repent of some of them for
his confession to be valid; but to obtain pardon of all of them it is necessary to
repent of all he remembers having committed.
57 Q. If one has only venial sins to confess and if he does not repent of even one
of them, does he make a good confession?
A. If one confesses only venial sins without having sorrow for at least one of them,
his confession is in vain; moreover it would be sacrilegious if the absence of
sorrow was conscious.
58 Q. What should be done to render the confession of only venial sins more
secure?
A. To render the confession of venial sins more secure it is prudent also to confess
with true sorrow some grave sin of the past, even though it has been already
confessed.
73 Q. Which are the qualities the accusation of sins, or confession, ought to have?
A. The principal qualities which the accusation of our sins ought to have are five: It
ought to be humble, entire, sincere, prudent and brief.
81 Q. What should he do who does not remember the exact number of his sins?
A. He who does not distinctly remember the number of his sins must mention the
number as nearly as he can.
84 Q. What does he commit who, through shame or some other motive, wilfully
conceals a mortal sin in confession?
A. He who, through shame or some other motive, wilfully conceals a mortal sin in
confession, profanes the sacrament and is consequently guilty of a very great
sacrilege.
85 Q. In what way must he relieve his conscience who has wilfully concealed a
mortal sin in confession?
A. He who has wilfully concealed a mortal sin in confession, must reveal to his
confessor the sin concealed, say in how many confessions he has concealed it, and
make all these confessions over again, from the last good confession.
93 Q. Having made the sign of the Cross what should you say?
A. Having made the sign of the Cross, I say: "I confess to Almighty God, to blessed
Mary ever Virgin, to all the Saints, and to you, my spiritual Father, that I have
sinned."
95 Q. When you have finished the accusation of your sins what do you do?
A. When I have finished the accusation of my sins I say: "I accuse myself also of all
the sins of my past life, especially of those against such or such a virtue" — for
example, against purity or against the Fourth Commandment, etc.
97 Q. Having thus finished the accusation of your sins what remains to be done?
A. Having finished the accusation of my sins I should listen respectfully to what the
confessor says, accept the penance with a sincere intention of performing it; and,
from my heart, renew my act of contrition while he gives me absolution.
Absolution
101 Q. Who are those penitents who are to be accounted badly disposed and to
whom absolution must as a rule be refused or deferred?
A. Penitents who are to be accounted badly disposed are chiefly the following: (1)
Those who do not know the principal mysteries of their faith, or who neglect to
learn those other truths of Christian Doctrine which they are bound to know
According to their state; (2) Those who are gravely negligent in examining their
conscience, who show no signs of sorrow or repentance; (3) Those who are able
but not willing to restore the goods of others, or the reputations they have
injured; (4) Those who do not from their heart forgive their enemies; (5) Those
who will not practise the means necessary to correct their bad habits; (6) Those
who will not abandon the proximate occasions of sin.
102 Q. Is not a confessor too severe, who defers absolution because he does not
believe the penitent is well enough disposed?
A. A confessor who defers absolution because he does not believe the penitent
well enough disposed, is not too severe; on the contrary, he is very charitable and
acts as a good physician who tries all remedies, even those that are disagreeable
and painful, to save the life of his patient.
Satisfaction or Penance
105 Q. What is satisfaction?
A. Satisfaction, which is also called sacramental penance, is one of the acts of the
penitent by which he makes a certain reparation to the justice of God for his sins,
by performing the works the confessor imposes on him.
106 Q. Is the penitent bound to accept the penance imposed on him by the
confessor?
A. Yes, the penitent is bound to accept the penance imposed on him by the
confessor if he can perform it; and if he cannot, he should humbly say so, and ask
some other penance.
110 Q. Why has our Lord willed to remit all the punishment due to sin in the
sacrament of Baptism, and not in the sacrament of Penance?
A. Our Lord has willed to remit all the punishment due to sin in the sacrament of
Baptism, and not in the sacrament of Penance, 'because the sins after Baptism are
much more grievous, being committed with fuller knowledge and greater
ingratitude for God's benefits, and also in order that the obligation of satisfying for
them may restrain us from falling into sin again.
112 Q. Does the penance which the confessor imposes always suffice to discharge
the punishment which remains due to our sins?
A. The penance which the confessor imposes does not ordinarily suffice to
discharge the punishment remaining due to our sins; and hence we must try to
supply it by other voluntary penances.
117 Q. Which penance is the more meritorious, that which the confessor gives, or
that which we do of our own choice?
A. The penance which the confessor imposes is the most meritorious, because
being part of the sacrament it receives greater virtue from the merits of the
passion of Jesus Christ.
118 Q. Do those who die after having received absolution but before they have
fully satisfied the justice of God, go straight to Heaven?
A. No, they go to Purgatory there to satisfy the justice of God and be perfectly
purified.
120 Q. Besides his penance, what else must the penitent do after confession?
A. Besides performing his penance after confession, the penitent, if he has justly
injured another in his goods or reputation, or if he has given him scandal, must as
soon as possible, and as far as he is able, restore him his goods, repair his honour,
and remedy the scandal.
121 Q. How can the scandal given be remedied?
A. The scandal given can be remedied by removing the occasion of it and by
edifying by word and example those whom we have scandalised.
Indulgences
125 Q. From whom has the Church received the power to grant Indulgences?
A. The Church has received the power to grant Indulgences from Jesus Christ.
126 Q. In what way does the Church by means of Indulgences remit this temporal
punishment?
A. The Church by means of Indulgences remits this temporal punishment by
applying to us the superabundant merits of Jesus Christ, of the Blessed Virgin and
of the Saints, which constitute what is known as the Treasure of the Church.
4 Q. Why is it well to receive Extreme Unction when the sick person has still the
use of his senses, and has still some hope of recovery?
A. It is well to receive Extreme Unction while the sick person retains the use of his
senses, and while there remains some hope of his recovery because: (1) He thus
receives it with better dispositions, and is hence able to derive greater fruit from
it; (2) This sacrament restores health of body (should it be for the good of the
soul) by assisting the powers of nature; and hence it should not be deferred until
recovery is despaired of.
12 Q. What should be done to find out whether God calls us to the ecclesiastical
state?
A. To find out if God calls us to the ecclesiastical state we should: (1) Fervently
pray the Lord to make known His will to us; (2) Consult our Bishop or a learned
and prudent director; (3) Diligently examine whether we have the capacity
necessary for the studies, the duties, and the obligations of this state.
13 Q. If one were to enter the ecclesiastical state without a divine vocation would
he do wrong?
A. If one were to enter the ecclesiastical state without a divine vocation he would
commit a great wrong and run the risk of being lost.
14 Q. Do those parents sin who, from worldly motives, impel their sons to
embrace the ecclesiastical state without any vocation?
A. Those parents who, for worldly motives, impel their sons to embrace the
ecclesiastical state without any vocation commit a very grave sin, because by thus
acting they usurp the right God has reserved to Himself alone of choosing His own
ministers; and they expose their children to the danger of eternal damnation.
15 Q. Which are the duties of the faithful towards those who are called to Holy
Orders?
A. The faithful should: (1) Give their children and dependents full liberty to follow
the call of God; (2) Pray God to deign to grant good pastors and zealous ministers
to His Church — it is precisely for this end that the fasts of Quarter Tense have
been instituted; (3) Have special respect for all who are consecrated by Holy
Orders to God's service.
10 Q. What use, then, is the blessing which the parish priest gives to the married
couple?
A. The blessing which the parish priest gives to the married couple is not
necessary to constitute the sacrament, but it is given to sanction their union in the
name of the Church and to invoke on them more abundantly the blessing of God.
21 Q. Why has the Church alone power to place impediments and to judge of the
validity of marriage?
A. The Church alone has power to place impediments, to judge of the validity of
marriage, and to dispense from the impediments which she has placed, because
the contract, being inseparable from the sacrament in a Christian marriage, also
comes under the power of the Church, to which alone Jesus Christ gave the right
to make laws and give decisions in sacred things.
22 Q. Can the civil authority dissolve the bonds of Christian marriage by divorce?
A. No, the bond of Christian marriage cannot be dissolved by the civil authority,
because the civil authority cannot interfere with the matter of the sacrament nor
can it put asunder what God has joined together.
25 Q. In what condition would the spouses be who would live together united
only by a civil marriage?
A. Spouses who would live together united by only a civil marriage would be in an
habitual state of mortal sin, and their union would always be illegitimate in the
sight of God and of the Church.
26 Q. Should we also get the civil marriage?
A. We should perform the civil marriage, because, though it is not a sacrament, it
provides the spouses and their children with the civil effects of conjugal society;
for this reason, the ecclesiastical authority as a general rule allows the religious
marriage only after the formalities prescribed by the civil authorities have been
accomplished.
[In many countries, especially English speaking countries, the civil authority
acknowledges the religious marriage and gives it the civil effects, thus there is no
need of a separate ceremony. However the states often add certain requirements
and formalities which should be observed.]
9 Q. What is idolatry?
A. Idolatry is the giving to any creature, for example, to a statue, to an image, or to
a man, the supreme worship of adoration that belongs to God alone.
12 Q. What is superstition?
A. Superstition is any devotion that is contrary to the teaching and practice of the
Church; as also the ascribing to any action or any thing whatever a supernatural
virtue which it does not possess.
13 Q. What is a sacrilege?
A. A sacrilege is the profanation of a place, of a person, or of a thing consecrated
to God and set apart for his worship.
14 Q. What is heresy?
A. Heresy is a culpable error of the intellect by which some truth of faith is
obstinately denied.
16 Q. If one were to have recourse to and invoke the devil, would he commit a
grave sin?
A. If one were to have recourse to and invoke the devil, he would commit an
enormous sin, because the devil is the most wicked enemy both of God and of
man.
19 Q. Since Jesus Christ is our only mediator with God, why have recourse also to
the intercession of the Blessed Virgin and the Saints?
A. Jesus Christ is our Mediator with God, because being true God and true man He
alone in virtue of His own merits has reconciled us to God and obtains us all
graces. But in virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ, and through the charity which
unites them to God and us, the Blessed Virgin and the Saints help us by their
intercession to obtain the graces we ask. And this is one of the great benefits of
the Communion of Saints.
20 Q. May we also honour the sacred images of Jesus Christ and of the Saints?
A. Yes, because the honour we give the sacred images of Jesus Christ and of the
Saints is referred to their very persons.
22 Q. What is the difference between the honour we give to God and the honour
we give to the Saints?
A. Between the honour we give to God and the honour we give to the Saints there
is this difference, that we adore God because of his infinite excellence, whereas
we do not adore the Saints, but honour and venerate them as God's friends and
our intercessors with Him. The honour we give to God is called Latria, that is, the
worship of adoration; the honour we give to the Saints is called Dulia, that is, the
veneration of the servants of God; while the special honour we give to the Blessed
Virgin is called Hyperdulia, that is, a special veneration of the Mother of God.
3 Q. What is blasphemy?
A. Blasphemy is a horrible sin which consists in words or acts of contempt or
malediction against God, the Blessed Virgin, the Saints, or sacred things.
5 Q. What is an oath?
A. An oath is the calling on God to witness the truth of what one says or promises.
13 Q. What is a vow?
A. A vow is a promise made to God regarding something which is good, within our
power, and better than its opposite, and to the keeping of which we bind
ourselves just as if it had been commanded us.
1 Q. What does the Third Commandment: Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath
day, command us to do?
A. The Third Commandment: Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day,
commands us to honour God by acts of worship on festivals.
5 Q. With what other good works does a good Christian sanctify festivals?
A. A good Christian sanctifies festivals: (1) By attending Christian Doctrine,
sermons, and the Divine Office; (2) By frequently and devoutly receiving the
sacraments of Penance and the Blessed Eucharist; (3) By the practice of prayer
and works of Christian charity.
1 Q. What does the Fourth Commandment: Honour thy father and thy mother,
command?
A. The Fourth Commandment: Honour thy father and thy mother, commands us
to respect our parents, obey them in all that is not sinful, and assist them in their
temporal and spiritual needs.
3 Q. What other persons does this Commandment include under the names of
father and mother?
A. Under the names of father and mother this Commandment also includes all our
superiors, both ecclesiastical and lay, whom we must consequently obey and
respect.
4 Q. Whence are derived the authority of parents to command their children and
the duty of children to obey their parents?
A. The authority possessed by parents to command their children and the
obligation children are under to obey their parents, are derived from God who
constituted and established family life in order that in it man might have the first
helps that are necessary towards his spiritual and temporal well-being.
7 Q. If families were to live alone, cut off one from the other, could they provide
for all their material and moral needs?
A. If families lived alone, cut off one from the other, they could not provide for
their individual needs, and hence it is necessary that they be united in civil society
so as mutually to aid one another for the common good and happiness.
10 Q. Are we under any obligation to obey the authority that governs Civil
Society?
A. Yes; all who form part of Civil Society are bound to respect and obey authority
because that authority comes from God and because the common good so
demands.
12 Q. Have those who form part of Civil Society any other duties besides respect
and obedience to the laws imposed by authority?
A. Besides the obligation of respect and obedience to the laws, all those who form
part of Civil Society are bound to live in peace, and to endeavour, each according
to his means and ability, to render that society virtuous, peaceful, orderly and
prosperous.
The Fifth Commandment
1 Q. What does the Fifth Commandment: Thou shalt not kill, forbid?
A. The Fifth Commandment, Thou shalt not kill, forbids us to kill, strike, wound or
do any other bodily harm to our neighbour, either of ourselves or by the agency of
others; as also to wish him evil, or to offend him by injurious language. In this
Commandment God also forbids the taking of one's own life, or suicide.
5 Q. What is scandal?
A. Scandal is any word, act, or omission which is the occasion of another's
committing sin.
7 Q. Why does God, in the Fifth Commandment, forbid the taking of one's own life
or suicide?
A. In the Fifth Commandment God forbids suicide, because man is not the master
of his own life no more than of the life of another. Hence the Church punishes
suicide by deprivation of Christian burial.
12 Q. What should he do who has injured another in the life of either body or
soul?
A. He who has injured another must not only confess his sin, but must also repair
the harm by compensating his neighbour for the loss he has sustained, by
retracting the errors taught, and by giving good example.
1 Q. What does the Sixth Commandment, Thou shalt not commit adultery, forbid?
A. The Sixth Commandment, Thou shalt not commit adultery, forbids every act,
every look and every word contrary to chastity; it also forbids infidelity in
marriage.
4 Q. Is every thought that comes into the mind against purity a sin?
A. The thoughts that come into the mind against purity are not of themselves sins,
but rather temptations and incentives to sin.
1 Q. What does the Seventh Commandment, Thou shalt not steal, forbid?
A. The Seventh Commandment, Thou shalt not steal, forbids all unjust taking and
all unjust keeping of what belongs to another, and also every other way of
wronging our neighbour in his property.
2 Q. What is meant by stealing?
A. It means taking another's goods unjustly and against the owner's will, that is to
say, when he has every reason and right to be unwilling to be deprived of them.
9 Q. Is it only by theft and robbery that another can be injured in his property?
A. He can also be injured by fraud, usury, and any other act of injustice directed
against his goods.
16 Q. Is it enough for one who has sinned against the Seventh Commandment to
confess his sin?
A. It is not enough for one who has sinned against the Seventh Commandment to
confess his sin; he must also do his best to restore what belongs to others, and to
repair the loss he has caused.
1 Q. What does the Eighth Commandment, Thou shalt not bear false witness,
forbid?
A. The Eighth Commandment, Thou shalt not bear false witness, forbids false
testimony in a court of justice, and it also forbids backbiting, detraction, calumny,
adulation, rash judgement and rash suspicion and every sort of lying.
3 Q. What is calumny?
A. Calumny is a sin which consists in maliciously attributing to another faults and
defects which he did not possess.
4 Q. What is adulation?
A. Adulation is a sin which consists in deceiving another by falsely praising him or
others for the purpose of profiting thereby.
6 Q. What is a lie?
A. A lie is a sin which consists in asserting as true or false by word or act that
which one does not believe to be really the case.
14 Q. Is it enough for him who has sinned against the Eighth Commandment to
confess the sin?
A. It is not enough for him who has sinned against the Eighth Commandment to
confess the sin; he is also obliged to retract whatever he said when calumniating
another, and to repair as far as he can the harm he has done.
1 Q. What does the Tenth Commandment, Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's
goods, forbid?
A. The Tenth Commandment, Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's goods, forbids
the wish to deprive another of his goods and the wish to acquire goods by unjust
means.
2 Q. Why does God forbid even the desire of another's goods?
A. God forbids the unregulated desire of another's goods, because He wishes us to
be just even in thought and will, and to hold ourselves completely aloof from
unjust acts.
3 Q. When does the obligation to observe the Precepts of the Church begin to
bind?
A. As a rule the obligation to observe the Precepts of the Church begins to bind us
as soon as we come to the age of reason.
7 Q. What does the First Precept of the Church: To hear Mass on all Sundays and
on Holydays of obligation, order us to do?
A. The First Precept of the Church: To hear Mass on all Sundays and on Holydays of
obligations, orders us to assist devoutly at Mass on all Sundays and on Holydays of
obligation.
9 Q. Why does the Church recommend the faithful to assist at the Parochial Mass?
A. The Church recommends the faithful to assist at the Parochial Mass: (1) In order
that all the parishioners of the same parish may unite in prayer together with their
Pastor, who is their head; (2) In order that the parishioners may participate more
abundantly in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, which is applied principally for them;
(3) In order that they may hear the truths of the Gospel, which Pastors are bound
to explain during Mass; (4) In order that they may learn the regulations and
notices which are published at that Mass.
14 Q. And why have Festivals of the Blessed Virgin and of the Saints been
instituted?
A. Festivals of the Blessed Virgin and of the Saints have been instituted: (1) In
memory of the graces which God has given them, and to thank His divine
goodness; (2) In order that we may honour them, imitate their example, and be
aided by their prayers.
[The universal law of the Church reckons ten Holydays of obligation: the feasts of
Christmas, the Circumcision, the Epiphany, the Ascension, Corpus Christi, the
Immaculate Conception, the Assumption, St. Joseph, Sts. Peter and Paul, and All
Saints (CIC 1917: Can.1247; CIC 1983, Can. 1246). In many countries, by local
concessions, they are reduced.]
20 Q. Are those who are not bound to fast, exempt from all mortification?
A. Those who are not bound by the obligation of fasting are not exempt from all
mortification, because all are bound to do penance.
[From the Code of Canon Law of 1917, with the modifications approved in 1949,
(complete) abstinence only is to be observed on all the Fridays throughout the
year. Fast and (complete) abstinence is to be observed on Ash Wednesday, the
Fridays of Lent, Ember Fridays, the Vigils of the Assumption and Christmas, and
Holy Saturday. Fast only (and partial abstinence) is to be observed on: all
weekdays of Lent, Ember Wednesdays and Saturdays, and the Vigils of Pentecost
and All Saints.
On the days of fast, only one full meal is allowed. Two other meatless snacks,
sufficient to maintain strength may be taken according to each one's needs, but
together they should not equal another full meal. Meat may be taken at the
principal meal on a day of fast except on the days of complete abstinence. Eating
between meals is forbidden, but liquids including milk and fruit juices are allowed.
The laws of abstinence binds all who have completed their seventh year of age;
the law of fasting binds all persons from the completion of their twenty first year
until the beginning of their sixtieth. (The completion of the seventh year means
the day after the seventh birthday).
According to the 1983 Code of Canon Law, "All Fridays through the year and the
time of Lent are penitential days and times throughout the universal Church.
Abstinence from eating meat . . . is to be observed on Fridays throughout the year
unless they are solemnities; abstinence and fast are to be observed on Ash
Wednesday and (Good) Friday. All adults who have completed their fourteenth
year are bound by the law of abstinence; all adults (from age 18) are bound by the
law of fast up to the beginning of their sixtieth year." The Episcopal Conference
can modify these general rules.
In the United States, "Catholics are obliged to abstain from the eating of meat on
Ash Wednesday and all Fridays during the season of Lent. They are also obliged to
fast on Ash Wednesday and on Good Friday. Self-imposed observances of fasting
on all weekdays of Lent is strongly recommended. Abstinence from flesh meat on
all Fridays of the year is especially recommended to individuals and to the Catholic
community as a whole."
Since a clarity and precision in a law helps for its fulfilment, the faithful are
strongly recommended to follow the traditional rules, though only the recent
regulations oblige under pain of mortal sin.]
27 Q. What does the Church command us in the words of the Third Precept: To go
to Confession at least once a year?
A. By the words of the Third Precept: To go to Confession a least once a year, the
Church obliges all Christians, who have come to the use of reason, to approach
the sacrament of Penance at least once a year.
29 Q. Why does the Church say that we are to confess at least once a year?
A. The Church uses the words at least to let us see her desire that we should
approach the sacraments more frequently.
31 Q. What does the Church command us to do by the other words of the Third
Precept: To receive Holy Communion at Easter, each one in his own parish?
A. By the words of the Third Precept: To receive Holy Communion at Easter, each
one in his own parish, the Church obliges all Christians who have come to the age
of discretion to receive the Blessed Eucharist every year at Paschal time in their
own parish.
37 Q. What does the Church forbid in the Fifth Precept: Not to solemnise marriage
at forbidden times?
A. In the Fifth Precept the Church does not forbid the celebration of the
sacrament of marriage; but only the nuptial solemnities, from the first Sunday of
Advent until the Epiphany, and from the first day of Lent until Low Sunday.
38 Q. What are the nuptial solemnities which are forbidden?
A. The nuptial solemnities forbidden by this Precept are the celebration of the
nuptial Mass, the nuptial benediction, and marriage festivities on a large scale.
39 Q. Why are marriage festivities on a large scale out of place in Advent and
Lent?
A. Pompous displays are out of place in Advent and Lent because these seasons
are specially consecrated to penance and prayer.
Theological Virtues
5 Q. How can the theological virtues have God for their immediate object?
A. The theological virtues have God for their immediate object, in this way that by
Faith we believe in God, and believe all He has revealed; by Hope, we hope to
possess God; and by Charity, we love God and in Him we love ourselves and our
neighbour.
6 Q. When does God infuse the theological virtues into the soul?
A. God in His goodness infuses the theological virtues into the soul when adorning
us with His sanctifying grace; and hence when receiving Baptism we were
enriched with these virtues and, along with them, with the gifts of the Holy Ghost.
On Faith
9 Q. What is Faith?
A. Faith is a supernatural virtue, which God infuses into our souls, and by which,
relying on the authority of God Himself, we believe everything which He has
revealed and which through His Church He proposes for our belief.
On Holy Scripture
30 Q. Why may we only read translations of the Bible approved by the Church?
A. We may only read translations of the Bible approved by the Church because she
alone is the lawful guardian of the Bible.
31 Q. Through which means can we know the true meaning of the Holy Scripture?
A. We can only know the true meaning of Holy Scripture through the Church's
interpretation, because she alone is secure against error in that interpretation.
32 Q. What should a Christian do who has been given a Bible by a Protestant or by
an agent of the Protestants?
A. A Christian to whom a Bible has been offered by a Protestant or an agent of the
Protestants should reject it with disgust, because it is forbidden by the Church. If it
was accepted by inadvertence, it must be burnt as soon as possible or handed in
to the Parish Priest.
On Tradition.
On Hope
37 Q. What is Hope?
A. Hope is a supernatural virtue, infused by God into the soul, by which we desire
and expect that eternal life that God has promised to His servants, as well as the
means necessary to attain it.
38 Q. What grounds have we to hope that God will give us Heaven and the means
necessary to secure it?
A. We hope that God will give us Heaven and the necessary means to attain it,
because the all-merciful God, through the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ, has
promised it to those who faithfully serve Him; and, being both faithful and
omnipotent, He never fails in His promises.
On Charity
42 Q. What is Charity?
A. Charity is a supernatural virtue, infused into our soul by God, by which we love
God above all for His own sake, and our neighbour as ourselves for the love of
God.
58 Q. What is Prudence?
A. Prudence is the virtue that directs each action towards its lawful end and
consequently seeks the proper means in order that the action be well
accomplished in all points of view and thereby pleasing to Our Lord.
59 Q. What is Justice?
A. Justice is the virtue which disposes us to give everyone what belongs to him.
60 Q. What is Fortitude?
A. Fortitude is the virtue which renders us courageous to the point of not fearing
danger, not even death, for the service of God.
61 Q. What is temperance?
A. Temperance disposes us to control the inordinate desires that please the senses
and makes us use temporal goods with moderation.
4 Q. What is Understanding?
A. Understanding is a gift which facilitates, as far as this is possible to mortal man,
the understanding of the truths of faith and of the mysteries of God, which we are
unable to know by the natural light of the intellect.
5 Q. What is Counsel?
A. Counsel is a gift by which, amidst the doubts and uncertainties of human life,
we are enabled to recognise those things that redound more to God's glory, to our
own salvation, and to that of our neighbour.
6 Q. What is Fortitude?
A. Fortitude is a gift which inspires us with valour and courage to observe
faithfully the holy law of God and of the Church, by conquering all obstacles and
all the assaults of our enemies.
7 Q. What is Knowledge?
A. Knowledge is a gift enabling us to estimate created things at their proper worth,
and to learn how to use them rightly and to direct them to our last end, which is
God.
8 Q. What is Piety?
A. Piety is a gift enabling us to venerate and love God and His Saints, and to
preserve a pious and benevolent mind towards our neighbour for the love of God.
The Beatitudes
4 Q. Who are the poor in spirit whom Jesus Christ calls blessed?
A. The poor in spirit are, according to the gospel, those whose hearts are
detached from riches; who make good use of riches should they have any; who do
not seek them too eagerly, if they have none; and who suffer the loss of such
things with resignation when deprived of them.
14 Q. Do those who follow the path of the Beatitutdes receive any reward in this
life?
A. Yes, certainly; those who follow the path of the Beatitudes do receive a reward
even in this life, inasmuch as they enjoy interior peace and contentment, which is
the beginning, even though an imperfect one, of the happiness of heaven.
15 Q. Can those who follow the maxims of the world be called truly happy?
A. No, because they have no true peace of soul, and are in danger of being lost
eternally.
3 Q. What evil effects has the sin of Adam brought upon us?
A. The evil effects of the sin of Adam are: The privation of grace, the loss of
Paradise, together with ignorance, inclination to evil, death, and all our other
miseries.
1 Q. What is a vice?
A. A vice is an evil disposition of the mind to shirk good and do evil, arising from
the frequent repetition of evil acts.
7 Q. Why are these sins specially said to be against the Holy Ghost?
A. These sins are specially said to be against the Holy Ghost, because they are
committed through pure malice, which is contrary to goodness, the special
attribute of the Holy Ghost.
8 Q. Which are the sins that are said to cry to God for vengeance?
A. The sins that are said to cry to God for vengeance are these four: (1) Willful
murder; (2) The sin of sodomy; (3) Oppression of the poor; (4) Defrauding
labourers of their wages.
Works of Mercy
3. To admonish sinners
5. To forgive offenses