This creed was used in early baptismal liturgies and was a "symbol" of the faith.
What is the Apostles Creed?
This title most clearly indicates Jesus as divine.
What is the Son of Man?
These are the Sacraments of Initiation.
What are Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Eucharist?
These are the two types of moral relativism.
What is individual and societal?
This is the people of God participating in the work of God.
What is the liturgy?
This creed was defined by a Church council in the 300's and is most often used during Mass.
What is the Nicene Creed?
Jesus is this type of person and has these two natures.
What is Divine person, and Human and Divine natures?
This/These are the ordinary minister(s) of confirmation.
What is the bishop?
This heresy claimed Jesus was adopted by God as his son at his baptism and was not his son by nature.
What is adoptionism?
These are the three degrees of Holy Orders.
What is deacon, priest, and bishop?
This is the first and most fundamental assertion of the Creed.
What is "I believe in God"?
This two word phrase indicates Jesus properly as God and man in one person.
What is the Hypostatic Union?
These are the sacraments of vocation.
What are Reconciliation and Anointing of the Sick?
This heresy claimed Jesus was only divine and not truly human.
What is Docetism?
This heresy claimed Christ was the firstborn of all creation and not eternal, but subservient to the Father.
What is Arianism?
This is what the phrase "lex orandi, lex credendi" translates to.
What is, "the Law of Prayer is the Law of Belief"?
This council declared the proper understanding of Jesus as both God and man.
What is the Council of Chalcedon?
This is the definition of a sacrament.
This heresy claimed we can reach Heaven by our own merits without supernatural grace or help.
What is Pelagianism?
This is the first gift of the Holy Spirit.
What is love?
This Greek word is one of the primary issues leading to the schism between the Orthodox and Catholic churches and which was added to one of the Creeds at the Council of Constantinople.
What is the "filioque"?
This is the who and what of a thing. (These are philosophy terms)
What is the substance and nature?
These are the two effects of baptism.
What are, "All sons are forgiven" and "Becoming a new creature/adopted son of God"?
This Latin phrase translates to "by the works worked," indicating the holiness of the priest does not affect the validly of the sacrament.
What is "ex opere operato"?
These are the three types of evil.
What are Moral, Physical, and Metaphysical/Natural evil?