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title: "A Note on Sources"
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# A Note on Sources

<a id="a-note-on-sources"></a>

You will not find a large footnote apparatus in this catechism. That choice is deliberate. The lessons are meant to read as clear Christian teaching for ordinary people, not as a research report.

A separate research trail still matters. Each major answer is tested first by Scripture, with Hebrew, Aramaic, or Greek work where wording matters. It is read with the earliest Christian witness first, especially apostolic and ante-Nicene sources, with later fathers clearly marked as support.

The teaching form is source-shaped too. The Didache joins concise instruction to a practiced way of life, worship, discipline, and communal testing. Irenaeus's Demonstration of the Apostolic Preaching gives ordinary believers a rule-of-faith movement through creation, covenant, Christ, and resurrection. Clement of Alexandria's Paedagogus treats Christ as educator of embodied life. Later catechetical witnesses such as Cyril of Jerusalem and Augustine's On Instructing Beginners show staged teaching, learner-sensitive explanation, memory, and movement toward worship. This book does not copy any one historical catechism. It receives their shared conviction that Christian truth is handed on through confession, Scripture, prayer, embodied practice, and the Church.

The memory rhythm also uses ordinary findings from learning research: recall strengthens later access to learned material, and spaced return is more durable than one concentrated exposure. Those findings govern these empirical claims and should correct the delivery method when better evidence requires it. They do not by themselves settle the doctrine or replace the Spirit, Scripture, worship, and love. [^a-note-on-sources-1]

The positive result for catechesis is formation of access. A teaching that is retrieved, corrected, and revisited across time becomes more available for later use, including when fear, grief, conflict, or fatigue makes language scarce. Distributed-cognition work adds a second practical insight: usable memory can be carried across people, artifacts, and repeated procedures, not only inside unaided recall. [^a-note-on-sources-2] Catechesis should therefore place memory across several supports: the learner's own recall, another person's voice, a card or page, the congregation's calendar, worship, and an embodied practice. Ask before rereading, correct without shame, return after time has passed, and connect the answer to one prayer or action. The practice does not create the truth; it changes the learner's real capacity to receive and use it.

The delivery guardrails for scrupulosity and anomalous experiences use current clinical guidance only within its proper field: NICE guidance on OCD and exposure with response prevention (https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg31/chapter/Recommendations) and on comprehensive assessment of psychosis (https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg178/chapter/recommendations). The DSM-5-TR Cultural Formulation Interview supplies a practical model for asking how people name distress and help in their own terms (https://www.psychiatry.org/psychiatrists/practice/dsm/educational-resources/assessment-measures). Han, Colarelli, and Weed's review of cross-cultural assessment supplies the measurement-invariance boundary for comparing group outcomes (https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0000731). These sources govern the clinical, referral, and cross-cultural claims for which they are cited. They do not by themselves settle doctrine, but their findings can require correction of a teaching practice or an application that rests on a false clinical premise.

Divine Design Framework (DDF) governs the whole process as the controlling Systems Theology guide and scope check. No major answer belongs in this catechism unless our internal notes can point to DDF coverage. If DDF has not covered a topic, the topic waits for DDF research before it becomes catechism material.

Those notes stay outside the main book so the main lessons can remain readable and memorable. Systems Theology plans to publish them through the research hub: https://systemstheology.com/research.

[^a-note-on-sources-1]: Henry L. Roediger III and Jeffrey D. Karpicke, Test-Enhanced Learning: Taking Memory Tests Improves Long-Term Retention, Psychological Science 17, no. 3 (2006): 249--255, DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01693.x; Nicholas J. Cepeda et al., Spacing Effects in Learning: A Temporal Ridgeline of Optimal Retention, Psychological Science 19, no. 11 (2008): 1095--1102, DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02209.x.
[^a-note-on-sources-2]: Edwin Hutchins, Cognition in the Wild (MIT Press, 1995), https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262581462/cognition-in-the-wild/.
