Creeds: What Are They All About?
by the Rev. Dr. Roger Pittelko
Adjunct Professor of Pastoral Ministry & Missions
Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Orthodox. The standard definition is "right teaching or right belief."
However, a closer examination of the word indicates that this is a derived
meaning. The word actually means "right splendor or right praise." While
it may appear that we have mistranslated the word or misunderstood the
word, the reality is that right praise and right teaching and belief go
together. They are joined and really cannot, or ought not be, separated.
The joining of right praise and right belief is, perhaps, best seen in
the use of the creeds of the church, specifically in the Apostles' and
Nicene Creeds.
Both of these creeds, used in the Divine Service, speak of the true
Scriptural faith that we believe and confess and the true praise of God
in which we join. What we believe and confess cannot be separated from
the true praise and thanksgiving of the Lord expressed in the Divine Service
of Word and Sacrament. They belong together and ought be inseparably joined
together.
It may seem strange to congregations of 1999 to suggest that the proper
rendering of the creeds in the service is that they be sung. Sing the creed?
The didactic text of the creeds do not seem to lend themselves to singing.
Yet, when the great composers of the church, including J. S. Bach, prepared
music for the Divine Service, they set the Kyrie ("Lord have mercy"), the
Gloria in Excelsis ("Glory to God in the highest"), the Creed, the Sanctus
("Holy, Holy, Holy"), and the Angus Dei ("Lamb of God who takes away the
sin of the world") to music. The music for the creed was invariably provided
and invariably sung.
The close connection of the creeds to singing and praise was something
that was retained at the time of the Reformation with many settings of
the creeds being composed. Dr. Martin Luther provided hymn settings for
the versified form of the Apostles' Creed, We All Believe in One, True
God. Even the 1948 The Music for the Liturgy for The Lutheran Hymnal supplied
a simple chant line and musical accompaniment for both the Apostles' and
Nicene Creeds. As late as the mid-twentieth century we still acknowledged
that in the creeds both right belief and teaching were linked to the right
praise of the Lord.
If we examine the Divine Service we discover that creed and praise of
the Lord do go together. The service is an exposition or expansion of the
creed, or put another way, the creed summarizes what we have been singing
and praying through the entire Divine Service. "In the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." With the words of the baptismal
formula we begin the service. Those baptismal words are a shorthand form
for the entire Apostles' Creed, the creed that summarizes the Christian
faith in the Rite of Holy Baptism. What is the faith, the belief, the teaching
into which the candidate is being baptized? Here it is summarized in the
Apostles' Creed. It is imposed and given in the dominical words, "In the
name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.' With those creedal
words the service begins.
The litany form of the Kyrie ("Lord have mercy") expresses several parts
of creed in the language of praise. "For the peace from above and for our
salvation, let us pray to the Lord." Those words take us to the middle
of the Nicene Creed, "Who for us men and for our salvation came down from
heaven ... " Here the work of redemption is expounded.
The litany continues, " ... for the well-being of the Church of God
... " propelling us into the third article and the work of the Holy Spirit
who fills the "one, holy, Christian and apostolic Church" with His power
and presence. That same thought is continued in the next petition which
prays for the local assembly of believer, that is, "this holy house and
all who offer here their worship and praise."
It is in the Gloria in Excelsis ("Glory to God in the Highest") that
we see the welding of creedal expressions of praise and thanksgiving. In
the Gloria the work of salvation is presented to us in the form of thanksgiving
as it reflects the creeds of the church. The work of the Father as the
Creator/King is expressed in one short phrase, "Lord God, heavenly king,
almighty God and Father." As the Nicene Creed says it, "I believe in God
the Father, almighty maker of heaven and earth." Just as the creeds move
quickly from the first article expounding the work of the Father to the
work of God the Son, so the Gloria move quickly into the praise of the
Lord for our salvation. Christ our Lord is the only Son of the Father.
It is He who takes away the sin of the world and having done so sits at
the right hand of the Father. The import of the teaching of our creeds
on salvation is expressed in this summary manner. Again, the person of
the Holy Spirit is set forth in praise as He is linked to Jesus Christ
in the glory of God the Father. The teaching of the creeds becomes confession
and praise on our lips in the words of the Gloria.
While the Proper Prefaces in the Service of Holy Communion focus on
various aspects of our Lord's saving work for us, the expressions of our
praise are in words that echo and re-echo the language of the creeds. Witness
these examples: mystery of the word made flesh; being found in fashion
as a man; on the tree of the cross you gave salvation; has taken away the
sin of the world; in their sight was taken up to heaven; poured out on
this day as He had promised the Holy Spirit. In the confession of the only
true God, we worship the Trinity in person and Unity in substance. Here
creed and praise fuse into one song of thanksgiving to the Lord.
As the Service of Holy Communion culminates in the consecration and
reception of the Lord's body and blood for the forgiveness of our sins,
careful readers of the creeds will point out that there is nothing about
the Sacrament of the Altar in our creedal formulations. How could such
an important teaching of our faith by ignored by omission? It is suggested
by some scholars of the creeds that our English translations may have led
us in a wrong direction. When we confess, "I believe in the holy Christian
Church, the communion of saints ... " we may in fact be speaking about
the sacraments. While we let the scholars argue about masculine or neuter
gender, we understand that the Words of Institution take us back to the
second article and summarize Christ's saving work for us.
The service began with the baptismal formula summary of the creeds,
"In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." The
service ends in a similar fashion. It takes us back to the Old Testament
to the very words that the Lord gave to Aaron the first high priest with
which he was to bless the people of Israel. We close with those same words
of blessing, a triple-fold use of the Lord's name. "The Lord bless ...
the Lord make ... the Lord lift up His countenance and give you peace.
Amen." Amen, so be it. At the end of the creeds we shout that same word,
Amen. So be it! So we believe. So we worship. Orthodox-right praise which
leads us to right belief and confession. |