Wednesday, February 1, 2017

"Let Us Say What We Believe"


We hear the words regularly in worship: “Let us say what we believe, using the Affirmation of Faith printed in your bulletin.” Together we then recite words that the bulletin tells us come from the Apostles' Creed, the Nicene Creed, or the Brief Statement of Faith. What are these statements? Are they things our denomination requires us to say? Are they statements the Lectionary assigns on certain dates? 


The answer is that these are confessional statements found in our Book of Confessions. And what is the Book of Confessions? It is part of the Constitution of the Presbyterian Church, USA. It is Part I of our denominational Constitution, with Part II the Book of Order and Directory of Worship.

Our Book of Confessions contains 12 confessional or creedal statements that span the centuries. The earliest is the Apostles' Creed, which dates from the end of the second century and was modified from time to time over the next few hundred years; its present form dates from the 8th century. The Nicene Creed was adopted in the year 381 and is the most ecumenical of our creeds.

Four confessional statements grew out of the Reformation: The Scots Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism, the Second Helvetic Confession, and finally, The Westminster Confession of Faith, with its companion Shorter and Larger Catechisms. The Westminster Confession, with its catechisms, served as our denomination’s primary theological guide for the better part of 300 years.

The 20th century saw the addition of the Barmen Declaration, the Confession of 1967, and the Brief Statement of Faith. The most recent addition is the Belhar Confession, which has its roots in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, and speaks powerfully to our call to ministries of reconciliation, peace, and justice.

There is a logic to the way we use our Confessions in worship. We typically use the Apostles' Creed when we receive new members, celebrate a baptism, or ordain officers. We usually use the Nicene Creed, which we share with the Eastern Orthodox church, Roman Catholicism, and many other Protestant churches, on World Communion Sunday. We tend to use different parts of the Brief Statement, with its very specific Trinitarian focus, other times of the year.

Our Book of Order tells us that, “The Presbyterian Church states its faith and bears witness to God’s grace in Jesus Christ in the creeds and confessions in the Book of Confessions. In these statements the church declares to its members and to the world who and what it is, what is believes, and what it resolves to do.”

In other words, our confessional and creedal statements help us to articulate our faith. More important, in articulating our faith, the words of the confessions then call us to action and guide us as disciples of Jesus Christ.

Our confessions and creeds, words written decades, and even centuries ago, can still guide us to more faithful lives as we follow our Lord Jesus Christ. This we believe.

Grace & peace,
Pastor Skip