EMMAUS CITY CULTURE Q&AS | PART 1: GOD, CREATION AND FALL, LAW CONTINUED
Each week, we are adapting Redeemer's New City Catechism with modern language, including the questions and answers, along with the commentary and prayer. Our goal is to make these easily accessible for all ages, as well as those with various levels of education in Worcester.
Since we don't want this to be just information transfer, but life transformation by God's Word and Spirit, we purposely changed the word catechism to culture as we pray for God to help us creatively display and declare the good news of Jesus in our communities.
Here are the previous weeks' Q&As:
Cheers to 2014 and many becoming more like Jesus together. For other updates, like and follow Emmaus City on Facebook.
Emmaus City Culture | Part 1, Q&A 8
Question 8
What is the law of God stated in the Ten Commandments?
Answer 8
You shall have no other gods before Me. You
shall not make for yourself an idol. You shall not misuse the
name of the LORD your God. Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Honor
your father and your mother. You shall not murder. You shall not commit
adultery. You shall not steal. You shall not give false testimony. You shall
not covet.
"You shall have no other gods before Me."
Commentary
The danger doesn’t lie in the
breaking of one or two of these ten [commandments]. It lies in the disobedience
of any one of them. As you know, a king gives ten commands, to be obeyed by his
subjects upon pain of death; now, if any man disobeys any one of these ten, he
commits treason, as if he had broke them all, and is liable to have the
sentence of the law passed on him, as if he had broken each of them. These
things are clear with the law of God: If a woman does fulfill nine of the
commandments, and yet breaks one, it will shut her out from the joys of heaven,
as if she had actually disobeyed them all. Though you should do all of these
for a long time, ten, twenty, forty, fifty, or sixty years; yet if you slip,
and break one of them before you die, you are lost. For, my friends, you must
understand, that as they that are under the promise of grace will be saved by
it, so those that are under law, they will surely be condemned by it. Again,
you must consider that this law does not only condemn words and actions, but it
has authority to condemn the most secret thoughts of your heart; so that if you
do not speak any word that is evil, like lying or saying any other word that
tends to sin, yet if there should pass but one selfish thought through your
heart, one in all your lifetime, the law takes hold of it, accuses it, and will
also condemn you for it.
Adapted from the poem “Upon the
Ten Commandments” in A Book for Boys and Girls, or,
Country Rhymes for Children (London:
Elliot Stock, 1890), 1. The quote is from “The Doctrine of the Law and Grace
Unfolded” in The Works of that Eminent
Servant of Christ Mr. John Bunyan, Volume 3 (Edinburgh: Sands, Murray
& Cochran, 1769), 245–247. John Bunyan (1628–1688). Known as the tinker of
Elstow, Bunyan underwent a dramatic conversion experience and became a leading
Puritan preacher. As his popularity grew, Bunyan increasingly became a target
for slander and libel and was eventually imprisoned. It was during his time in
prison that he commenced his best known work The
Pilgrim’s Progress, first
printed in 1678.
Prayer
My God and Lord, help me by Your grace to learn and understand Your commandments more fully every day and to live by them. ... Keep my heart so that I will never again become forgetful and ungrateful, that I won’t seek after other gods or prize anything on earth above You, but cling truly and solely to You, my only God. Amen, dear Lord God and Father.
Adapted from Luther’s Prayers, edited by Herbert F. Brokering, from the translation by Charles E. Kistler (Minneapolis: Augsburg Books, 1967), 51. Martin Luther (1483–1546). A German Protestant pastor and professor of theology, Luther was the son of a mining family, intended to become a lawyer, and at first took monastic orders. On 31 October 1517 Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the door of a church in Wittenberg, sparking the Reformation. His refusal to retract his writings at the demand of Pope Leo X and Emperor Charles V resulted in his excommunication. Luther wrote many works, including his small and large catechisms, and preached hundreds of sermons in churches and universities.
My God and Lord, help me by Your grace to learn and understand Your commandments more fully every day and to live by them. ... Keep my heart so that I will never again become forgetful and ungrateful, that I won’t seek after other gods or prize anything on earth above You, but cling truly and solely to You, my only God. Amen, dear Lord God and Father.
Adapted from Luther’s Prayers, edited by Herbert F. Brokering, from the translation by Charles E. Kistler (Minneapolis: Augsburg Books, 1967), 51. Martin Luther (1483–1546). A German Protestant pastor and professor of theology, Luther was the son of a mining family, intended to become a lawyer, and at first took monastic orders. On 31 October 1517 Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the door of a church in Wittenberg, sparking the Reformation. His refusal to retract his writings at the demand of Pope Leo X and Emperor Charles V resulted in his excommunication. Luther wrote many works, including his small and large catechisms, and preached hundreds of sermons in churches and universities.
Coming next week:
Q&A 9: What does God require in the first, second, and third commandments?
Q&A 10: What does God require in the fourth and fifth commandments?
Q&A 11: What does God require in the sixth, seventh, and eighth commandments?
Q&A 12: What does God require in the ninth and tenth commandments?
Q&A 9: What does God require in the first, second, and third commandments?
Q&A 10: What does God require in the fourth and fifth commandments?
Q&A 11: What does God require in the sixth, seventh, and eighth commandments?
Q&A 12: What does God require in the ninth and tenth commandments?
– Sully
Curiosity piqued? Something inside you being stirred? Let's connect.
Curiosity piqued? Something inside you being stirred? Let's connect.
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