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Creeds Divide
CREEDS: A SOURCE OF DISUNITY
In a historical trial in Waterloo, Iowa in 1951, the will
of one who had left large sums of money to Christian charities was contested.
In it, three Protestant clergymen were asked: "What is a Christian?"
They responded by defining a Christian as one who believes in the Apostles
Creed, the Holy Trinity, in God, the Divinity of Christ, and who subscribes
to a confession of faith. Notice this definition denies to those refusing
to accept the Apostles Creed and a demoninational confession the name Christian.
By it neither Peter nor Paul would qualify as a follower of Jesus, since
such creeds were unknown in the First Century.
In the decades following the death of John, the last living
apostle, the early Church faced a difficult problem. False doctrines such
as Gnosticism and Monticism plagued the body of Christ. Some even denied
the diety of Jesus. To cope with the situation a simple confession of faith
was devised to distinguish the Orthodox Christian from the heretic. It
was sometimes called the rule of faith. And many years later, after alterations,
it was known as the Apostles Creed, although it was not written by the
apostles. This first human creed subscribed to by Christians was followed
through the centuries by many other confessions of faith. The word creed
is derived from the Latin credo meaning I believe. In a sense, what one
believes is his creed. However, the term has come to designate the authoritative
statement of the teachings of a religious body. It is not merely ones personal
convictions, but represents the official position of the church to which
a member must subscribe if one is to remain in the good graces of that
body.
Most of us can agree with the truths expressed in the
Apostles Creed. Some may wonder how anyone could legitimately object to
it as a confession of the church. The problem is not that the Apostles
Creed is erroneous, but that it is a human expression placed on par with
the divine revelation of the Bible. Human writings are not wrong because
they are human, but they become wrong when they presume to speak for God.
If the teachings of the Apostles Creed are not controversial, such can
not be said for the hundreds of creeds of Christendom which have followed
it. Creeds, catechisms, and confessions to faith are usually written to
insure that future generations adhere to the religious beliefs laid down.
Unfortunately, creeds often contradict one another. When they do, some
of them at least perpetrate religious error. They also become a major source
of disunity. If two people accept contradictory confessions, there is no
way that they can get together unless one or both abandon their creed.
For example, if one,creed teaches that a man is saved by works and another
affirms that he is saved by faith, the problem can only be resolved by
forgetting about both creeds and going directly to the source of revelation,
the Bible. Even more unfortunately, the religious disunity which creeds
help to perpetuate often causes seekers of truth to abandon their quest
in utter despair.
God has revealed his will for us in his Holy Book, the
Bible. This is not man's interpretation of God's will, as is true of creeds,
but it is God's will itself. In seeking to determine what is pleasing to
our Maker, therefore, let us abandon human confessions of faith and remember
the admonition of the apostle Peter, "If any man speak let him speak
as the oracles of God". I Peter 4:11.


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