Tag Archive for 'creeds'

Changing Church: Part 4

This is part 4 of a series yet undetermined in length.

With Protestant evangelical churches’ historical animosity toward church history, there are few resources to help those who are trying to bring older practices into today’s churches. This is particularly true in free churches (Baptist, E-Free, Pentecostal…) that do not have a set liturgy. Churches that have come out of the magisterial reformation (Anglican, Reformed and Lutheran) and kept the liturgy (although modified for each denomination) have part of the historical church passed down in their liturgy week after week. The liturgy provides a common reference point, a kind of living memory for a church from which a connection with the historical past can be emphasized and explored. In churches without a liturgy and a general a-historic view of the church it can be difficult to find a way to begin to explore the past with the church community.

The one resource that most churches, even free churches, have to use is church creeds. No matter what denomination, nearly everyone will agree with what is said in the Apostles and Nicaea Creed. There are some exceptions here, the Church of Christ (and some others smaller groups) do not use creeds, there is disagreement on Christ descending into Hell and the Filioque clause with the orthodox church, but the these two creeds come the closest to being catholic (in the universal sense) documents that the church today has.

When churches and denominations recognize the authority and truthfulness of these creeds, they are often doing so out of a sense of tradition - or only because they wish to remain within the bounds of orthodoxy and recognize somehow that is set by these creeds. Most churches and denominations within the free churches have not given much thought as to why they use, or at least recognize these creeds, which provides an amazing chance for a church to begin an investigation of the history of the church.

We have, in our churches, examples of how scripture and tradition have historically interacted with each other in the church that are waiting to be investigated and explored. Among Emerging Churches, Dan Kimball seems to take the creeds the most seriously. In his chapter in Listening To The Beliefs Of The Emerging Church he spends a lot of time discussing what their role in the church should be. He seems to understand what I have been saying here; that they are a doorway that we can use to enter into the past, but more importantly are the bounds of orthodoxy. Kimball represents the emerging church at its best on this point.

There are many resources available to churches wanting to begin an investigation of the creeds. With the internet, documents such as Philip Schaff’s Creeds of Christendom and other writings on the creeds are available to everyone. There is also a newer book by D.H. Williams entitled Evangelicals and Tradition, which, among other things, discusses the formation of the creeds and is an important book which I hope to review in full at a later date.


Archives

You are currently browsing the Zeal For Truth weblog archives for 'creeds' tag.

You are currently browsing the Zeal For Truth weblog archives for 'creeds' tag.

December 2008
M T W T F S S
« Nov    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

You are currently browsing the Zeal For Truth weblog archives for 'creeds' tag.