Friday, April 13, 2012

The Need for the Creed



For the “will to believe” it so relentless — or, if I may put it this way, soinsidious — that when it is denied or frustrated and when religious toleration, instead of being “justified by faith” (Rom 3.28), is justified by non-faith, belief will (in Dostoevsky’s phrase) go around the locked doors and sneak in through a window, substituting Wotan for the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, and replacing the Shema, andNicene Creed with the creed ofBlut und Erde.” - Jaroslav Pelikan
Why do we need to confess what the church has always confessed about the nature of God and his redemption? Because we are “prone to wander” but unlike the popular song, we do not often feel it when we do. This is around the point where some of my less “confessional” friends will tell me that we do not need a creed, because we have the bible. The problem with this, I think, is that while we are believer/priests, we are not apostles. The key word there is understanding. The early church (second century) used whatever scripture they had (many old testament documents and perhaps some new testament writings that were beginning to circulate.) yet the primary thrust of the argument is what do the biblical writers MEAN. The early church was very interested in carefully handling and passing on the understanding of scripture received from apostolic teaching.
Sometimes we get confused on the challenge. The real challenge, as Dr. Pelikan notes, is not the will to believe, but the content of that belief. We so easily are influenced by our culture and do not even see the vacuum, nor feel the air of truth replaced with a lighter, more toxic gas. He points out that in the vacuum we cause when we fail to think and teach truth is always filled with something. Often times this vacuum, though invisible, makes a sucking sound as the air escapes, often preceded by something along the lines of ”doctrine divides, can’t we just love Jesus” or, “I’m really more spiritual than religious”, or “All that head knowledge puffs up, we need more heart focus.” Yea, the heart, undirected by the knowledge of God always drifts into the stream of heterodoxy, and sometimes heresy.
When we have the teaching of the apostles, given to the men they picked to run the churches, that the central element of worship is communion, without which worship does not exist. God has designed the community of the Church to work together throughout time to keep the main thing the main thing. This is what the creed does for our beliefs. Our practice flows out from these beliefs.
We need the accountability of historical orthodoxy. Say it out loud! We believe in one God the father, the almighty, maker of heaven and earth….