The Nicene Creed Symbol of The Catholic Faith
The Nicene Creed Symbol of The Catholic Faith
The Nicene Creed Symbol of The Catholic Faith
Christians, like Jews and Muslims, believe that only one God
exists. The creed states the assumption
of the ancient Shema:
Hear O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord. The former English translation of
the creed began with "we" believe, while the Greek, Latin, and current English translation begin with
"I" believe. The latter is more accurate, because reciting the creed is ultimately an individual
confession of belief, although the creed also expresses the collective beliefs of the Church.
Jesus frequently calls God "Father" in the Scriptures, and this usage tells us that God is a loving God
active within His creation. God the Father is the first person (Greek hypostasis, "individual reality"), or
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distinction, within the Godhead. The Father is the "origin" or "source" of the Trinity. As such, God the
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Father is often called "God Unbegotten" in early Christian thought.
Catholics believe that God created the visible world (created matter) and the invisible one (spiritual
world of angels, etc). Thus, God created everything. Some early sects, the Gnostics and Marcionites,
believed that God the Father created the spirit world, but that an "evil" god (called the demiurge)
created the similarly evil material world. The creed dispels such a notion.
Jesus Christ is the Lord of all. The title Lord means that Jesus is
master of all, and has connotations
of deity, since the
Hebrew word adonai and Greek word kyrios
(both meaning Lord) were applied to
Yahweh in the Old Testament.
However, unlike earthly rulers, Jesus is a friend to the oppressed and
a servant.
Jesus is in a unique relationship with God the Father. While Hebrew kings
were sons of God
symbolically (see Psalm 2), Jesus is the only Son of God by nature.
God the Son exists in relation to God the Father. The Son is
not the Father, but they both are God. Just as a torch is lit one
to another, the Father and Son are distinct, but both light. Some
Christians, called Sabellians or Modalists, said that the
Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit were one God who changes roles. So when God
creates, he is Father, while on earth, he is
Son, and so forth.
However, the Scriptures have all three persons, Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit, interacting at the same time,
as shown at Jesus' baptism. The language of Scripture also suggests that the Father and Son are somehow two as well as
one. In John's gospel, the Father and Son testify as two witnesses, not one (John 8:17-18). Related to this, St. Athanasius,
writing during the Nicene era, reportedly said that the Father and Son are one as "the sight of two eyes is one." Another
illustration is the musical chord. Think of a C-chord. The C, E, and G notes are all distinct notes, but joined together as one
chord, the sound is richer and more dynamic than had the notes been played individually. The chords are all equally
important in producing the full, dynamic, sound of the chord, but the sound is lacking and thin if one of the notes is left out.
Some Christians today (Jehovah's Witnesses) and in the past (Arians) have suggested that Jesus was a creation of God.
The creed tells us
that just as when a woman gives birth she does not create a child
out of nothing, being begotten of God,
the Son is not created out of nothing.
Since the Son's birth from the Father occurred before time
was created, begotten
refers to a permanent relationship as
opposed to an event within time.
God the Father and God the Son are equally divine, united in substance and will. Father and Son share the same substance
or essence of divinity. That is, the Father and Son both share the qualities and essential nature that
make one in reality God.
However, sharing the same substance does
not mean they share identity of person. While certainly an inadequate example,
think of three humans: they share a common nature, the essential qualities and essence of humanity, but are not the same
person (although unlike the persons of the Trinity, humans do not share one will).
The Bible tells us that through The Son, as Word of God, all
things have been created. As Logos, the Son is the agent and
artificer of creation.
For Us Men and for Our Salvation, He Came Down from Heaven
Jesus came from heaven, from a numinous reality other than our
own. While the creed says "down," it is important to
remember
that our language is limited by time and spatiality.
Heaven is not "up," just as God is not a biologically male father.
However, due to the limits of language, we are forced to describe
heaven symbolically and spatially.
And by the the Holy Spirit, Was Incarnate of the Virgin Mary, and Became Man
For Our Sake He Was Crucified Under Pontius Pilate; He Suffered Death, and Was Buried
And Rose Again On the Third Day in Accordance With the Scriptures
Jesus was resurrected bodily as the Scriptures say. Just as Jesus truly died, he truly rose from the dead three days later.
The bodily resurrection is
the keystone of Christian doctrine and experience. However, Jesus
was not just physically
resuscitated (as was Lazarus), but rather his body was transformed at the resurrection. Rejection of the bodily resurrection is
a rejection of the foundation of Catholic Christianity. The word "again" is used because Jesus' first "rising" was his birth. To
"rise again" is be alive again.
He Ascended Into Heaven and Is Seated at the Right Hand of the Father
In ancient science, heaven was thought to be "up" and literally situated above the sky dome (notice how on a starry night the
sky looks like a
dome that one could pierce through, if one could get that high, e.g. by building a large tower). So in the
Scriptures, Jesus is said to "ascend" to heaven. Whatever happened that day, Luke had to render the event into his own
scientific paradigm, so he said Jesus "went up" to heaven. Again,
we are limited by our language and experience of
spatiality. Jesus is at the right hand of the Father, i.e. sharing authority with the Father,
and not literally sitting next to the
Father.
Since the Holy Spirit is fully God, like the Father and the Son, He is
worthy of the same worship and adoration.
The Spirit inspired the prophets of old, and inspires the Church today.
The creed requires belief in the Catholic (universal) Church, whose origins are ancient and historical, going back to the
Apostles themselves. Thus, the Church was built upon the faith and witness of the apostles. This witness survives through
Apostolic Succession, wherein apostles appointed leaders, who themselves appointed leaders, a process continuing to this
day. This Apostolic line survives today primarily in the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. The Church is "holy" on account of
Christ's holiness and grace, and not because its members or leaders are perfect. In fact, at times throughout history, the
Church has remained holy in spite of its members.
And I Look forward the Resurrection of the Dead, and the Life of the World to Come. Amen.
Christians always hope for the end of this fractured system, when the universe is fully reconciled to God in Christ Jesus. The
Nicene Creed seems to affirm both the existence of a soul-filled heaven and the later resurrection of
the dead when soul
meets glorified body.
Concluding Remarks