The Small Catechism – part 37

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Luke 10:27

So, we see that taking the Lord’s name vainly does not only break the Second Commandment; it also breaks the First Commandment. For taking the Lord’s name in vain demonstrates a lack of fear, love, and trust in God above all things.

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The Small Catechism – part 33

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Matthew 6:9

The best way to use God’s name properly is in prayer, and the best prayer is the one Jesus taught us. In the Lord’s Prayer, we pray that the Father’s name will be hallowed, or “holied.”

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The Small Catechism – part 32

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Matthew 6:31–33

We are to use God’s name properly. Because we trust God, we may believe that he will take care of us. Therefore, we do not need to resort to deceitful practices of any sort in order to have our needs met by the Father.

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The Small Catechism – part 31

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:3

There are things that people fear, love, and trust above God. People may fear illness, suffering, and death above God. The result can be slavish devotion to fitness or to doctors and medicine.

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The Small Catechism – part 29

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:5–6

While the effects of sin may linger a while, the steadfast love of God endures forever. That is the idea in the idiom: “a thousand generations.” It is like saying, “a million years.”

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The Small Catechism – part 26

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:5–6

The Hebrew word typically translated as “jealous” in Exodus 20:5 can mean zealous, passionate, even outraged—or simply protective. Luther translated it as “zealous” (eifriger) but the major English translations all read “jealous.”

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The Small Catechism – part 22

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:3

The command to have no other gods is packed with things to consider. Having another god means to own the god, as one could an idol. But we cannot own Yahweh, in that sense, unless we try to make him into an image that we would worship instead of Yahweh himself.

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The Small Catechism – part 21

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:2

You may initially counter that God did not bring you out of Egypt. It was the Hebrew people whom God led out of slavery to pharaohs. They were enslaved for over four centuries in Egypt, waiting for God to send Moses to lead them out.

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The Small Catechism – part 20

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:2

Exodus 20:2 does not simply say, “I am the Lord God.” It reads, “I am the Lord your God.” Without God revealing himself to the people of Israel, he may have been any deity, any one of the gods of the land.

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The Small Catechism – part 20

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:2

Exodus 20:2 does not simply say, “I am the Lord God.” It reads, “I am the Lord your God.” Without God revealing himself to the people of Israel, he may have been any deity, any one of the gods of the land.

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The Small Catechism – part 18

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Exodus 20:1–6

The commandments begin with a brief foreword that is the condition for the words to follow. Why should we do and not do these certain things? What is the condition for our obedience? God said so.

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The Small Catechism – part 14

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: 1 Corinthians 11:22–26

Some people think of Holy Communion as a sort of magic act: a specific incantation recited by an approved class of people. Others think of it as a legal act, something one must do in order to be right with God.

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The Small Catechism – part 13

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Ephesians 4:11–16

It is clear Luther consider the catechism part of the wider education of children. Further, he believed the catechism could instill in them a heart to serve both church and community.

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The Small Catechism – part 11

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Deuteronomy 8:3

You will find different areas of emphasis in your ministry—whether it be a commandment, article, petition, or Sacrament that needs stressed in the lives of your flock, or in your own life.

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The Small Catechism – part 8

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Series: Lutheran Confessions
Scripture Text: Deuteronomy 11:18–19

Too often, we hear something along this line: We have decided to let our children make up their own minds. All the while, the rest of the world has free access to the minds of these same children.

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