Theology Questions
Explore questions in the Theology category that you can ask Spark.E!
TRUE OR FALSE: Jesus really didn't need to be baptized by John the Baptist since he was without sin.
Which sacrament strengthens the suffering members of the Church?
TRUE OR FALSE: The Church's divine mission is to complete Christ's mission by bringing Catholics into communion with the Blessed Trinity.
TRUE OR FALSE: The sacraments are efficacious only because Christ himself is acting in and through them.
The doctrine of faith that recognizes the two natures in the one Divine Person of Jesus Christ.
TRUE OR FALSE: St. Augustine said that sacraments are "invisible signs of visible grace."
TRUE OR FALSE: There is a communion of all holy people: the Church in heaven and the Church on earth.
TRUE OR FALSE: The rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) has been continuously used to initiate people into the Church since the Church began.
TRUE OR FALSE: Human language and speech are incapable of expressing completely the mystery of the Incarnation as well as the sacraments.
TRUE OR FALSE: According to the CCC, it is Christ who acts in the sacraments.
TRUE OR FALSE: When Jesus became man, he ceased to be God.
TRUE OR FALSE: The sacramental economy - the sacraments and liturgy - are the way Christ makes himself and his saving graces present to us on earth.
TRUE OR FALSE: Although in Jesus there are two divine natures, he was human like every human.
TRUE OR FALSE: Jesus says that he, himself is the only way to the Father.
TRUE OR FALSE: The Church continues Christ's work of perfectly worshiping the Father and making redeeming grace available through the Seven Sacraments.
TRUE OR FALSE: Jesus' very humanity appeared as a sign and instrument of his divinity and of the salvation he brings.
TRUE OR FALSE: When Christ ascended to the Father, he did so with his divine nature, but not his human nature.
What does Jesus call God the Father?
when something difficult happens, it can be difficult to see the...
antonym for persecuted for righteousness' sake
