The Catechism: Introduction
June 2, 2024
Grace to you and peace in Jesus’ name. Amen.
God Cares about You. How do we know that? How do we know what we know about God? The God who saved us. The God who died for us. The God who suffered for us. Where do we learn who God is?
The Bible says:
T he heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky displays what His hands have made. One day tells a story to the next. One night shares knowledge with the next without talking, without words, without their voices being heard.1
The Bible also says:
What can be known about God is clear because he has made it clear to them. From the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly observed in what He made. As a result, people have no excuse.2
Can we know about God without the Bible? The Bible says, “Yes.” There are some thing you can know about God even if you’ve never had the Bible to read. Look at all of creation. Look at the sun, moon and stars. Look at the plants and animals. Look at all of nature and see the wonder in all of it. From the tiniest microscopic particles to the largest galaxies God’s power and order are displayed. Is there a God? The Bible says:
The fool says in his heart
there is no God.3
Look to the furthest reaches our telescopes can peer into the depths of space. Look into the tiniest realms of atoms, electrons and quarks. Look at the meticulous detail and depth of awesome complexity. Nature tells us something about God. There is a natural knowledge of God. In fact God’s Law is written on our hearts.4 Not only does nature call out the truth of God’s existence but our hearts, our spirit, proclaims His truths. The Bible say:
I t is shown that some requirements found in Moses’ Teachings [God’s Law] are written on their hearts. Their consciences speak to them. Their thoughts accuse them on one occasion, and defend them on another. This happens as they face the day when God, through Christ Jesus, will judge people’s secret thoughts. He will use the Good News [the Gospel] that is being spread to make that judgment.5
Creation speaks of a creator. All that is around us, as well as we God’s most precious creation, all speak of a powerful Creator. That much can be seen by any rational, sane, reasonable, thinking person.
That however is not all there is to know about God. Nature cannot tell you how much God loves you. Nature cannot tell you God has forgiven you. Nature cannot tell you how God saved you. For that you must turn to one place, and one place only, God’s Holy Word.
In God’s Word, God tells us about: who God is, what we are worth to Him, how He has saved us, forgiven us and called us His own children whom He loves and cherishes.6 Our God, as we learned last week, is a Triune God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We don’t learn that from nature. We learn that from God’s Word. Jesus Christ, God Himself, said (as we heard two weeks ago on Ascension Sunday) in Matthew 28
All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me. So wherever you go, make disciples of all nations: Baptize them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Teach them to do everything I have commanded you. And remember that I am always with you until the end of time.7
So we learn who God is in part from God’s creation and in part from God’s Word. Through these things we know all that we can know about God. There is no other place to go.
That is our God. We can know Him. We can have head-knowledge about God. That however is not enough. That knowledge must make the long, arduous and sometimes treacherous journey of about 18 inches from your brain’s acquisition to your heart’s possession.
What is God like? Is He a nice God, an angry God, a judgmental God, a forgiving God? Listen to a few quotations from Scripture:
O Lord, you have been our refuge throughout every generation. Before the mountains were born, before you gave birth to the earth and the world, you were God. You are God from everlasting to everlasting.8
“I the Lord do not change.9”
“I am a God who is near. I am also a God who is far away,” declares the Lord. “No one can hide so that I cannot see him,” declares the Lord. “I fill heaven and earth!” declares the Lord.10
O Lord, you have examined me, and you know me. You alone know when I sit down and when I get up. You read my thoughts from far away. You watch me when I travel and when I rest. You are familiar with all my ways. Even before there is a single word on my tongue, you know all about it, Lord. You are all around me—in front of me and in back of me. You lay your hand on me. Such knowledge is beyond my grasp. It is so high I cannot reach it.11
One more…
The Lord, the Lord, a compassionate and merciful God, patient, always faithful and ready to forgive. He continues to show his love to thousands of generations, forgiving wrongdoing, disobedience, and sin. He never lets the guilty go unpunished, punishing children and grandchildren for their parents’ sins to the third and fourth generation.12
What is our God like? God has written His Law on our hearts so we can reflect the image and likeness of God.13 What is our God like? He is eternal. He has no beginning and no end. We learn He is not fickle,14 with His mind always changing so that you cannot know what He thinks or says. When God speaks that is the truth and it is the truth forever. He is consistent, stable and dependable. He is everywhere all the time. There is no place you can run no place you can hide where God is not there.15
That should bring some fear to the unfaithful and unrepentant. That we, who have God’s Law written on our hearts, would harbor hate and any kind of evil should be unthinkable. Yet for us the faithful of God, that is the greatest comfort, because we can know God will never abandon us or leave us. He cannot lose us or forget us.16 He does not leave us like a cork bobbing on the waves.17
In fact not only does He know where we are, but He knows who we are. He knows our innermost and most secret thoughts. There is nothing we can hide from Him.18 There is nothing we can conceal from Him. Again that should bring fear to the unfaithful and the unrepentant, but for us the faithful that means He knows our weaknesses. He knows our regret for past sins. He knows our struggle with unbelief and doubt. He knows, and He gives us help and aid in those things as we regularly dwell in reading and hearing His Word.19
That is why we are on this journey through the Apostles’ Creed and the Lord’s Prayer this Summer, to use the Catechism as something more than an old dusty book for kids. Rather as a tool to walk through God’s Holy Word, and learn from Him.
Finally, although there is much more I could say, we learn God is desperate to forgive all who trust in Him.20 However, for those who defiantly refuse to repent there will be a reckoning. Sadly, people really do go to Hell everyday.21 Just as people really do go to Heaven everyday.
So God is everywhere and God made everything. How did God make all this stuff? What power did He call on? What materials did He use? Well, God used God to create all things. In the beginning there was nothing. There was no dirt, no sky, no space, no stars, moon, no sun, no time. There was nothing. Then God said, “Let there be light.22” What happened? There was light. Why? Because God said so.
That is how all of creation was created. God, by the power of God, called all things into existence. There is no one greater than He. He created everything perfect, flawless and pure.
…but He made us differently.
All of the plants, animals, dirt, water and everything else, were made by Him for us. When God made us He stooped down. He got His hands dirty. He formed us with His hands from the dust of the ground.23 We were made in the image and likeness of God.24 We are eternal beings. Although we have a beginning, we have no end. There will never be a time when you will not be. You will always be, forever into the future.
You have a free will. You can make up your own mind. You can choose to defy God. And that is what we the human race did. This God, perfect, holy, powerful and merciful, was ignored and defied. He said, “Don’t eat from that one tree.25” Adam and Eve thought they knew better. They thought they could live without reliance on God and they took a bite. It may not have seemed like much. It might not seem like much now, but in that one act all of creation was stained. In that one act we were eternally cut off from God. We were dead to Him forever.26
That should have been the end of the Bible. God said, “Don’t.” We did. We’re dead to God forever.
God, however, could not endure being separated from His children forever. So God made a promise. That promise was: One would come to make all things new.27 One would come to save us and make us alive again.28 Alive for all eternity again. So once again you will always be, forever into the future always with God. That is the promise to those who repent and place their trust in Him.
God cares for us as we live though this life in a sinful messed up world. He does not abandon us or expect us to find our own way. He leads us and guides us along that narrow road that leads through that narrow gate29 into the glory of Heaven. For that we give Him our thanks and praise.
This is the God in whom we believe and trust for our salvation. This is the God we worship. This is the God we praise. This is the God with whom we will get better acquainted over the next few weeks as we explore God’s gracious Word as taught in a simple way, though the Catechism.
Amen.
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NOTES
1Psalm 19:1-3
2Romans 1:19-20
3Psalm 14:1
4Jeremiah 31:33
5Romans 2:15-16 (Paraphrased)
61 John 3:1
7Matthew 28:18-20
8Psalm 90:1-2
9Malachi 3:26
10Jeremiah 23:23-24
11Psalm 139:1-4
12Exodus 34:6-7
13Genesis 1:26-27
14Malachi 3:6
15Psalm 139:7-12
16Romans 8:38-39
17Ephesians 4:14
18Psalm 139:1-6
19Romans 8:26
201 Timothy 2:4
21Matthew 22:11-14
22Genesis 1:3
23Genesis 2:7
24Genesis 1:27
25Genesis 2:16-17
26Genesis 3:16-17
27Genesis 3:15
28Isaiah 43:19; Revelation 21:5
29Matthew 7:14
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