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1310372026, 16:16 “The Nicene Creed) The Nicene Creed
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CHRISTIAN RESOURCES
The Nicene Creed
Published: March 24, 2019
Written by: Sophia
The Nicene Creed text is a statement of the Christian faith. Strengthening your faith in
Christ, here's an analysis of its traditional & modern wording.
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THE NICENE CREED
The Nicene Creed is the most widely accepted and used brief statements of the Christiar
Faith. In Liturgical Churches, it is said every Sunday as part of the Liturgy. Itis Common
Ground to East Orthodox, Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Lutherans, Calvinists, and many
other Christian denominations. Many Christian denomanations that do not have a
tradition of using it in their services nevertheless are committed to the doctrines it
teaches.
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Nicene Creed.)
| here present the Nicene Creed in two English translations, The first is the traditional
‘one, in use with minor variations since 1549, The second is a modern version, that of (I
think) The Interdenominational Committee on Liturgical Texts.
TRADITIONAL WORDING
| believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and of all things
visible and invisible;
And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, begotten of his Father
before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made,
being of one substance with the Father; by whom all things were made; who for us men
and for our salvation came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of
the Virgin Mary, and was made man; and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate;
he suffered and was buried; and the third day he rose again according to the Scriptures,
and ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of the Father; and he shall come
again, with glory, to judge both the quick and the dead; whose kingdom shall have no.
end.
And | believe in the Holy Ghost the Lord, and Giver of Live, who proceedeth from the
Father [and the Son]; who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and
glorified; who spake by the Prophets. And I believe one holy Catholic and Apostolic.
Church; | acknowledge one baptism for the remission of sins; and | look for the
resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come. AMEN.
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We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the only son of God, eternally begotten of the
Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, of
one being with the Father. Through him all things were made. For us and for our
salvation he came down from heaven: by the power of the Holy Spirit he became
incarnate from the Virgin Mary, and was made man. For our sake he was crucified under.
Pontius Pilate; he suffered death and was buried. On the third day he rose again in
accordance with the Scriptures; he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand
of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his
kingdom will have no end.
We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father
[and the Son]. With the Father and the Son he is worshipped and glorified. He has
spoken through the Prophets. We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic Church. We
acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins, We look for the resurrection of the
dead, and the life of the world to come. AMEN.
NOTES AND COMMENT
When the Apostles’ Creed was drawn up, the chief enemy was Gnosticism, which denied)
that Jesus was truly Man; and the emphases of the Apostles’ Creed reflect a concern
with repudiating this error.
When the Nicene Creed was drawn up, the chief enemy was Arianism, which denied that
Jesus was fully God. Arius was a presbyter (=priest = elder) in Alexandria in Egypt, in the
early 300's. He taught that the Father, in the beginning, created (or begot) the Son, and
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one or more intermediate beings between God and the world. God created A, who
created B, who created C... who created Z, who created the world. Alexander, Bishop of
Alexandria, sent for Arius and questioned him.
Arius stuck to his position, and was finally excommunicated by a council of Egyptian
bishops. He went to Nicomedia in Asia, where he wrote letters defending his position to
various bishops. Finally, the Emperor Constantine summoned a council of Bishops in
Nicea (across the straits from modern |stambul), and there in 325 the Bishops of the
Church, by a decided majority, repudiated Arius and produced the first draft of what is
now called the Nicene Creed. A chief spokesman for the full deity of Christ was
Athanasius, deacon of Alexandria, assistant (and later successor) to the aging Alexander
The Arian position has been revived in our own day by the Watchtower Society (the
JW's), who explicitly hail Arius as a great witness to the truth.
| here print the Creed (modem wording) a second time, with notes inserted.
* We believe in one God, * the Father, the Almighty, * maker of heaven and earth, * of all
that is, seen and unseen.
* We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ, * the only son of God,
Here and elswhere (such as John 1:14) where the Greek has MONOGENETOS HUIOS,
an English translation may read either “only Son” or “only begotten Son.” The Greek is.
ambiguous. The root GEN is found in words like “genital, genetics, generation,” and
suggests begetting. However, it is also found in words like “genus” and suggests family
or sort or kind. Accordingly, we may take MONOGENETOS to mean either “only
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But in fact the English word “world” used to mean something a little different. It is related
to “were” (pronounced “weer’), an old word for “man,” as in “werewolf” or “weregild.”
(Compare with Latin VIR.) Hence a “world” was originally a span of time equal to the
normal lifespan of a man. Often in the KJV Bible, one finds “world” translating the Greek
AION (‘eon’), and a better translation today would be “age.” (Thus, for example, in
Matthew 24:3, the question is one of “the end of the age,” which makes it possible to
understand what follows as a description of the destruction of Jerusalem in the year 70,
and of the end of an era in the spiritual history of mankind. But | digress.) So here we
have “begotten of the Father before all times, before all ages.” Arius was fond of saying,
“The Logos is not eternal. God begat him, and before he was begotten, he did not exist.”
The Athanasians replied that the begetting of the Logos was not an event in time, but an
eternal relationship.
* God from God, Light from Light,
A favorite analogy of the Athanasians was the following: Light is continously streaming
forth from the sun. (In those days, it was generally assumed that light was instantaneous,
‘so that there was no delay at all between the time that a ray of light left the sun and the
time it struck the earth.) The rays of light are derived from the sun, and not vice versa.
But it is not the case that first the sun existed and afterwards the Light. It is possible to
imagine that the sun has always existed, and always emitted light. The Light, then, is
derived from the sun, but the Light and the sun exist simultaneously throughout eternity.
They are co-eternal. Just so, the Son exists because the Father exists, but there was
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* true God from true God, * begotten, not made,
This line was inserted by way of repudiating Arius’s teaching that the Son was the first
thing that the Father created, and that to say that the Father begets the Son is simply
another way of saying that the Father has created the Son.
Arius said that if the Father has begotten the Son, then the Son must be inferior to the
Father, as a prince is inferior to a king. Athanasius replied that a son is precisely the
same sort of being as his father, and that the only son of a king is destined himself to be
a king, It is true that an earthly son is younger than his father, and that there is a time
when he is not yet what he will be. But God is not in time. Time, like distance, is a relatior
between physical events, and has meaning only in the context of the physical universe.
When we say that the Son is begotten of the Father, we do not refer to an event in the
remote past, but to an eternal and timeless relation between the Persons of the
Godhead. Thus, while we say of an earthly prince that he may some day hope to become
what his father is now, we say of God the Son that He is eternally what God the Father is
eternally.
* of one being with the Father.
This line: “of one essence with the Father, of one substance with the Father,
consubstantial with the Father,” (in Greek, HOMO-OUSIOS TW PATRI) was the crucial
one, the acid test. It was the one formula that the Arians could not interpret as meaning
what they believed. Without it, they would have continued to teach that the Son is good,
and glorious, and holy, and a Mighty Power, and God's chief agent in creating the world,
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followed that there was room for their position inside the tent of Christian doctrine, as tha
tent had been defined at Nicea. Arius and his immediate followers would have denied
that they were reducing the Son to the position of a high-ranking angel. But their doctrine
left no safeguard against it, and if they had triumphed at Nicea, even in the negative
sense of having their position acknowledged as a permissible one within the limits of
Christian orthodoxy, the damage to the Christian witness to Christ as God made flesh
would have been irreparable.
Incidentally, HOMOOUSIOS is generally written without the hyphen. The OU (in Greek ac
in French) is pronounced as in “soup”, “group”, and so on, and the word has five syllables
HO-mo-OU-si-os, with accents on first and third, as shown. The Greek root HOMO,
meaning “same,” is found in English words like “homosexual” and “homogenized”, and is
not to be confused with the Latin word HOMO, meaning “man, human”.
The language finally adopted in the East was that the Trinity consists of three
HYPOSTASES (singular HYPOSTASIS) united in one OUSIA. The formula used in the
West, and going back at least to Tertullian (who wrote around 200, and whose writings
are the oldest surviving Christian treatises written in Latin), is that the Trinity consists of
three PERSONAE (singular PERSONA) united in one SUBSTANTIA. In English, we say
“Three Persons in one Substance.” Unfortunately, the Greek HYPO-STASIS and the
Latin SUB-STANTIA each consists of an element meaning “under, below” (as in
“hypodermic”, ‘hypothermia’, etc) followed by an element meaning “stand”. Thus it was
natural for a Greek-speaker, reading a Latin document that referred to One SUBSTANTIA
to substitute mentally a reference to One HYPOSTASIS, and to be very uncomfortable,
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This is a direct quote from John 1:3. Before the insertion of the HOMO-OUSIOS clause,
this line immediately followed “begotten, not made.” The two lines go naturally together.
The Son is not a created thing. Rather, He is the agent through Whom all created things
come to be. Inserting the HOMO-OUSIOS at this point breaks up the flow, and if | had
been present at the Council of Nicea, | would have urged the bishops to insert it one line
further down instead. In the older translation, in particular, someone reading the Creed is
likely to understand it as referring to “The Father by whom all things were made.” The
newer translation, by revising the English wording, makes this misreading less likely.
* For us and for our salvation
The older translation has, “for us men.” Now, while English has in common current usage
the one word “man” to do duty both for gender-inclusive (“human”) and for gender-
specific (‘male’), Latin has “homo, homin-” for gender-inclusive and ‘vir’ for gender-
specific, while Greek has “anthropos” for gender-inclusive and “aner, andro-" for gender-
specific. (Given the demand for a similar distinction in English, | have been arguing for a
gender-inclusive use of “man”, and the revival of the older word “were” (as in “werewolf”
and “weregild”) in the gender-specific sense. But so far | have had but scant success.)
Where the older translation of the Creed is used, with its “for us men” at this point, a
feminist might consider complaining of sexist language. But the Greek and Latin wording
here are both gender-inclusive, and so a feminist, reading the Creed in either of those
languages, ought to find nothing that will upset him.
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You will note that the older translation has here simply, “He suffered and was buried”
(Latin, “passus et sepultus est”). Apparently by the time of Nicea, it was no longer
necessary to emphasize, to spell out unmistakeably, that Christ had really died at
Calvary, as it had been spelled out in the Apostles’ Creed. And indeed, | have never
heard anyone try to argue that the Creed here leaves a loophole for those who want to
believe that Jesus merely swooned on the Cross. So apparently the Nicene Fathers were
right in supposing that their language would not be misunderstood. However, the framers
of the new translation decided to make the meaning unmistakeable and to close this
particular loophole. And | for one am not sorry.
* On the third day he rose again * in accordance with the Scriptures;
The wording here is borrowed from 1 Corinthians 15:4. The older translation has
“according to the Scriptures,” which in terms of modern language is misleading. Today,
when we say, “It will rain tomorrow, according to the weatherman,” we mean, “The
weatherman says that it will rain, but whether he is right is another question.” And this is
clearly not what either St. Paul or the Nicene Fathers had in mind, The newer translation
is an improvement. | would have suggested, “in fulfilment of the Scriptures,” which is
clearly what is meant.
* he ascended into heaven * and is seated at the right hand of the Father. * He will come
again in glory to judge the living and the dead, * and his kingdom will have no end. * * We
believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, * who proceeds from the Father [and
the Son].
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pronounced with accent on the O), and the controversy about them is accordingly known
as the Filioque controversy.
If we are looking for a statement that can be taken as common ground by all Christians,
East and West alike, it clearly cannot include the FILIOQUE. On the other hand, Western
Christians will be unwilling to have it supposed that they are repudiating the statement
that the Spirit proceeds jointly from Father and Son. | accordingly suggest that we print
the Creed with the FILIOQUE either in brackets or omitted altogether, but with the
understanding that, while assenting to the resulting statement does not commit anyone tc
belief in the Dual Procession of the Spirit, neither does it commit anyone to disbelief in
the Dual Procession.
| reserve extensive comments on the Dual Procession, the history of the belief, and the
reasons for and against believing in it, for a separate essay, called CREED FILIOQUE.
* With the Father and the Son he is worshipped and glorified. * He has spoken through
the Prophets.
This line was directed against the view that the Holy Spirit did not exist, or was not active
before Pentecost.
* We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic Church.
Since many Christians from various backgrounds will want to know, “Precisely what
would I be agreeing to if I signed this?” I have commented extensively on the wording in
a separate file, called CREED CHURCH.
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Posted by: James E, Kiefer
Source: CHRISTIA File Archives.
(for more info send INDEX CHRISTIA to [email protected])
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