Confessions
[June 1996]
By Perky Daniel
Every Sunday, in many of our Presbyterian congregations, we reaffirm
our faith using all or part of one of our confessions--often the
Apostles' Creed or the Nicene Creed, or A Brief Statement of Faith.
The first part of the constitution of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
is the Book of Confessions, which contains 11 formal statements
of faith structured as creeds, confessions and catechisms. Elders
throughout the denomination, training for leadership, study each
of the confessions, its historical origins, and its theological
emphases. Our candidates for ministry must demonstrate knowledge
and understanding of the confessions on ordination exams and before
their presbyteries.
Why do we have and use such statements of faith?
We have confessions because of the Scriptural precedent
of being confessional.
Presbyterians claim Scripture as the primary rule of faith and
life, and Scripture quotes confessions from the early communities
of faith. The Hebrew Scriptures tell of the covenant people affirming
in worship the "shema" "Hear, O Israel, the Lord
our God is one" (Deuteronomy 6:4 9). The New Testament records
the earliest Christian creed: "Jesus is Lord" (Philippians
2:11).
We have confessions because we are a community of believers,
not a random collection of individuals.
The Confessions both form and reflect our sense of community by
describing our shared story and our common values.
Confessions define what we as a community believe. These statements
of faith proactively affirm our beliefs about God, Jesus Christ,
the Holy Spirit, and about humanity, the church and the world (the
context in which God, humanity, and the church interact). They also
reactively counter understandings prevalent in the surrounding culture
that do not coincide with our faith.
We have confessions because we are fallible human beings,
prone to error, and inclined to forget who and whose we are. We
need guidance and continual reminders about what we believe.
Confessions develop out of a need to clarify beliefs and to contradict
heresies. For the covenant community of Israel, the "shema,"
the affirmation of one God, stood over against the surrounding culture
that offered various gods or idols. For the earliest Christians
to say that "Jesus is Lord" was a clear renunciation of
the Romans' claim of Caesar's lordship.
The church soon found it necessary to say more than simply "Jesus
is Lord." By the fourth and fifth centuries the church had
become far removed from the direct disciples of Jesus and any eyewitnesses
to the events of the crucifixion, resurrection and Pentecost. The
Nicene and Apostles' Creeds emerged in response to concerns about
whether or not Jesus Christ could be both divine and human.
The core of the Apostles' Creed reinforces the historical life
of Jesus the Christ, underscoring the fact that he was "born
of the virgin Mary," that he suffered "under Pontius Pilate"
(a historical figure), that he "was crucified, dead, and buried."
The Nicene Creed emerged as correction to the heresy of the theologian
Arius, who declared Christ unequal to God. It reaffirms the historical
Jesus of Nazareth as the Christ and confirms the Trinitarian nature
of God.
Three of our confessions (the Scots, Second Helvetic, and Westminster
Confessions) and all three of our catechisms (the Heidelberg and
the Westminster Shorter and Larger Catechisms) developed out of
the conflicts between newly emerging Protestantism and medieval
Roman Catholicism. The Scots Confession condemned such medieval
church abuses as the selling of indulgences, in which church members
could pay sums of money to atone for sins prior to committing them.
The Scots Confession also emphasized the faithfulness of God's Word
in Scripture.
John Calvin inspired the writing of Second Helvetic Confession,
which, like the famous technical precision of Swiss watches and
clocks, describes the specifics of church work and administration.
The Second Helvetic also outlines our doctrine of salvation, contrasting
the Reformed understanding of salvation as God's gift in Jesus Christ
with medieval Roman Catholicism's stress on human merit (see specifically
5.053). The Scots, Second Helvetic and Westminster Confessions all
strongly assert the centrality of Scripture.
Nearly four centuries passed before the church formed and adopted
another confession. Within the past six decades the church has embraced
three new confessions: the Declaration of Barmen, Confession of
1967, and A Brief Statement of Faith.
The Declaration of Barmen raised its voice against Hitler's in
post-Weimar Republican Germany. It reaffirms the church's profession
of the sovereignty of God, the authority of Scripture, and the salvation
of Jesus Christ. In those affirmations we hear a resounding denial
of Hitler's hostile, Nazi claims of sovereignty, authority and salvation.
The Confession of 1967 frequently repeats the term reconciliation.
In response to civil rights struggles, American involvement in Vietnam,
and our first view of our planet from outer space, the church expressed
a renewed commitment to reconciliation: with God, with each other
(within and outside of the church), and with the planet (God's good
creation, of which we are stewards).
The Presbyterian Church's reunion of Southern and Northern branches
in 1983 prompted yet another 20th-century confession: A Brief Statement
of Faith. This newest of confessions, says the Preface, "celebrates
our rediscovery that for all our undoubted diversity, we are bound
together by a common faith and a common task."
We have confessions because we believe faith has an
intellectual component as well as an experiential one.
Christians need instruction in the faith, because faith is not
just a matter of the heart and soul; it is also a concern of the
mind. "Speaking the truth in love, we must grow up in every
way into him who is the head, into Christ" (Ephesians 4:15).
The Second Helvetic Confession states that "the pastors of
the churches act most wisely when they early and carefully catechize
the youth, laying the first grounds of faith, and faithfully teaching
the rudiments of our religion by expounding the Ten Commandments,
the Apostles' Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the doctrine of the
sacraments, with other such principles and chief heads of our religion"
(5.233) .
The catechisms in our Book of Confessions (the Heidelberg and the
Westminster Shorter and Larger Catechisms) were written specifically
as teaching tools, putting in question-and-answer form the common
elements of faith according to the Reformed tradition. Not only
the content but also the very existence of catechisms underscores
the importance of teaching believers. Many Presbyterians over age
40 spent hours in childhood memorizing the Shorter Catechism and
can still cite at least the first question: "What is the chief
end of man? Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy him forever."
Our growth in faith of course ideally extends beyond our youthful
learning of the basics and into regular, intensive study of our
Scriptures and confessions throughout our lives.
We have confessions because we are an evangelical church.
We who believe in the gospel of Jesus Christ have a mandate to
share that Good News for the sake of the world. Matthew 28:19-20
cites our mandate, in Jesus' final words to his first disciples:
"Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you."
To our own contemporary experiences of God in Christ through the
Holy Spirit at work in our lives, the confessions add continuity,
expressions of faith that reach back through the centuries to the
earliest believers. The confessions offer not only continuity, but
also the content we have to define our community.
The Book of Order states these purposes for our confessions: "These
statements identify the church as a community of people known by
its convictions as well as by its actions. They guide the church
in its study and interpretation of Scriptures; they summarize the
essence of Christian tradition; they direct the church in maintaining
sound doctrines; they equip the church for its work of proclamation"
(G-2.0100b).
Our confessional statements serve as road maps to the
Reformed faith.
At a time when there is such a diversity of religious options,
when there are so many "cities of faith" populated by
various kinds of believers, it is important to have a well-drawn
map of our faith. The confessions serve as a map that briefly describes
us as a community and sets boundaries on the territory of the Reformed
faith.
If we travel outside those boundaries, we find ourselves in another
city of faith. For example, a person who does not remember his infant
baptism might request rebaptism. But rebaptism lies outside our
boundaries, and instead we would affirm our understanding of the
once-and-for-all nature of baptism, that is, the sacrament takes
effect whether or not we remember it. "The sacrament of Baptism
is but once to be administered to any person" (Westminster
Confession of Faith, 6.160).
When we are newcomers to a city we rely on a map to help us find
our way around and avoid getting lost. As we live in that place
and frequently travel from point to point, we become more and more
familiar with its features and refer to the map less often. We know
the highways and byways, the side streets and dead ends, the safe
areas and the places of danger.
In any vital city there is growth, development and change. Certain
parts of the city of faith also change with historical circumstances,
so we create new maps (write and adopt new confessions) to help
those who travel here find their way.
Elinor Perkins (Perky) Daniel is interim co-pastor
of Decatur Presbyterian Church in Decatur, Ga.
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