A Faith Worth Teaching: The Heidelberg Catechisms Enduring Heritage
For 450 years, churches throughout the world have been using the Heidelberg Catechism (1563) to instruct God’s people in foundational Christian doctrine. When Elector Frederick III (1515–1576) commissioned the preparation of a manual for instructing the youth and guiding the pastors and teachers of his domain, he could not have imagined the profound effect it would have on future generations of Christians. The most widely used, most influential Reformation catechism, the “Heidelberger” shines forth the blessed truths of the gospel in 129 questions and answers, beginning with the memorable, ever-enduring subject of our “only comfort in life and in death.” In A Faith Worth Teaching, edited by Jon Payne and Sebastian Heck, an array of faithful pastor-scholars celebrate the Heidelberg Catechism on its 450th anniversary with a collection of essays on its dynamic history, rich theology, and fruit-bearing practice that will be an encouragement to pastors and laypersons alike.
Publisher: Reformation Heritage Books
Type: Hardback
ISBN: 9781601782182
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Jon D. Payne is pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Douglasville, Georgia and also serves as Visiting Lecturer in Practical Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary in Atlanta. He is Series Editor of the Lectio Continua Expository Commentary on the New Testament. Sebastian Heck is assistant pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Douglasville, Georgia and serves as church planter of the Selbständige Evangelisch-Reformierte Kirche (Free Reformed church) in Heidelberg, Germany.
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“It is no accident that John Calvin wrote biblical commentaries, catechisms, and a theology textbook. All the major Reformers were convinced of two things: first, that all the revelation of God is for all the people of God; and second, that systematic expository preaching (to which they were committed) needed to be accompanied by catechetical instruction. Only thus would Christians grasp the whole message of the Bible and have the ability to retain its truth in their minds and apply it to their lives. No sixteenth-century catechism accomplished this more powerfully than the great Heidelberg Catechism of 1563. In A Faith Worth Teaching, Jon Payne and Sebastian Heck have assembled a first-class team of scholars and pastors to introduce and encourage its use in churches today. Combining knowledgeable scholarship and spiritual sensitivity, A Faith Worth Teaching is both a crash course in Reformed theology and a stimulating guide to Christian thinking and living that encourage God-glorifying, Christ-centered, Spirit-filled, church-oriented Christian living. — Sinclair B. Ferguson