1. I believe in God the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth
SECTION 1. I BELIEVE
The Creed is the expression of personal
belief. Whether spoken in private or in a public
assembly, it is the confession of the faith held by
each individual for himself. Each of us has a
separate life, and each of us must personally accept
God’s message and express his own belief.
Religion must influence men as units before it can
benefit them in masses. Faith that saves is a
gift of God which every one must receive for himself.
The faith of one is of no avail for another, therefore
the Creed begins with the affirmation “I
believe.” In repeating it we profess our
own faith in what God has revealed concerning Himself.
“I believe.” The
Apostles’ Creed is a declaration of things which
are most surely believed among us, and its several
parts or articles are founded upon the contents of
Scripture, which is our one rule of faith. It
does not begin with the words I think or I
know, but with the statement “I believe.”
“Belief” is used in various senses, but
here it means the assent of the mind and heart to
the doctrines expressed in the Creed. When we
repeat the form we declare that we accept and adopt
all the statements which it covers. “With
the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with
the mouth confession is made."
Faith differs from knowledge.
There are some things which we know to be true, and
there are others of which we say we believe them to
be true. There are certain truths which are termed
axiomatic. When the terms in which they are expressed
are understood, the truth they convey is at once admitted.
We know that two and two make four, we know that two
straight lines cannot enclose a space; but we do not
know in the same sense those things which the Creed
affirms. It deals with statements that, for the
most part, have never been, and cannot be, tested by
sense, and that cannot be demonstrated by such proof
as will compel us to accept them. We believe
them, not because it is impossible to withhold our
assent, nor only because nature, history, and conscience
confirm them, but on the ground of testimony.
“Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
Word of God." We believe because we are assured
on sufficient and competent authority that these things
are so. We know that we live in a material universe,
but our knowledge does not extend to the manner in
which the universe came into being. That is a
matter of belief. “Through faith” not
by ocular or logical proof, but on testimony “we
understand that the worlds were framed by the Word
of God."
Faith differs from opinion. When
a man believes his mind is made up. By whatever
process it may have been reached, the conclusion commends
itself as one that is fixed and irreversible.
Opinion, on the other hand, is held loosely.
It is based not on certainty but on probability.
The possibility of error is recognised, and the opinion
is readily surrendered when the grounds on which it
was formed are seen to be insufficient or misleading.
“A man,” says Coleridge, “having
seen a million moss roses all red, concludes from
his own experience and that of others that all moss
roses are red. That is a maxim with him the
greatest amount of his knowledge upon the subject.
But it is only true until some gardener has produced
a white moss rose, after which the maxim
is good for nothing."
The testimony on which faith rests
is human or Divine. It is human in so far as
it is based on human experience and observation.
It is Divine in so far as it rests upon the direct
revelation of God. Faith in man is continually
exercised in business and in all the departments of
life. It is necessary to the very existence of
society. Faith in God moves in another sphere.
Its objects are not seen or temporal, and they do not
rest for proof upon the testimony of man. It receives
and assents to statements which are made on the authority
of God, who knows all things, who therefore cannot
be deceived, and who is truth and therefore cannot
deceive us. On this Divine rock of faith, and
not upon her own knowledge, the Christian Church rests.
“If we receive the witness of men, the witness
of God is greater." Among Christian virtues faith
stands first. It must precede everything else.
It is the foundation on which all Christian character
and life are built. “He that cometh unto
God must believe that he is." “Without faith
it is impossible to please God."
That which Christian faith realises
and grasps is expressed in doctrine. Faith is
not a separate and self-dependent grace. Its existence
and growth arise from those things which are believed,
and therefore it is necessary to study and understand,
as far as we can, the doctrines of the Christian faith
before we can possess or manifest belief. It is
important that we should have a definite knowledge
of these doctrines; that we should study them in relation
to the Scriptures upon which they profess to be founded,
and that we should be in a position to defend them
against assailants. Thus faith will gather strength,
and believers will be “ready always to give
an answer to every man that asketh them a reason of
the hope that is in them with meekness and fear."
SECTION 2. GOD
The existence of God is the basis
of all religious belief. If there is no God,
there is no moral obligation. If there is no Almighty
Being to whom men owe existence, and to whom they
must give account, worship is a vain show and systems
of religion are meaningless. Theologians, therefore,
from the days of the first Christian apologists to
our own time, have endeavoured to establish by proof
the doctrine of the Divine existence. To those
who accept the authority of Scripture the existence
of God is a fact which no argument can overthrow; but
as there are many who reject this authority, evidence
has been sought elsewhere than in Scripture to establish
the doctrine. The arguments for the Being of God
are mainly threefold, being drawn: (a)
from the consciousness of mankind; (b) from
the order and design that are manifest in the universe;
and (c) from the written revelation which claims
to have come to men from God Himself.
(a) (Consciousness)
There is a wonderful agreement among men as to the
existence of a great invisible Being by whom the world
was created and is governed, and who charges Himself
with the control and guidance of its inhabitants and
concerns. In a land such as our own, in which
Christianity has held place for many centuries, belief
in God, however it may fail to produce holy living,
is almost universal. This belief exercises a
strong influence, and has contributed not a little
to the formation of our national character. It
is an atmosphere always around us, sustaining and
promoting the healthy life of those even who are the
least conscious of being affected by it. The belief
is indelibly impressed upon our laws, our literature,
and even our everyday occupations. It is stamped
upon the relations men sustain to one another.
It is this which for one day weekly suspends labour
that Christians may have leisure to worship God and
to meditate upon the duties they owe to Him.
It is in recognition of this that we see tall spires
pointing heavenward, and churches opening their portals
to the inhabitants of crowded cities and to the dwellers
in scattered villages. In Christian lands the
consciousness of men bears testimony to the existence
of God, but it is not in such lands only that this
consciousness exists and confirms belief in the Divine.
In the earliest times, long before history began to
be written, such a consciousness was prevalent, leading
men to faith in and worship of a Being or Beings infinitely
greater than themselves, present with them and presiding,
though invisibly, over their destinies. The study
of Comparative Religion has shown how nearly the primeval
inhabitants of lands widely distant from each other
were at one in the views they had come to entertain.
Hymns, prayers, precepts, and traditions are found
in the sacred books of the great religions of the
East, and archaeologists have deciphered on ancient
monuments, and traced in primitive religious rites,
clear evidence of belief in the existence of the Divine.
The valleys of the Nile, of the Euphrates, and of
the Tigris have revealed facts for the theologian’s
benefit that are almost exhaustless. In the Egyptian
Book of the Dead, and in the religious hymns and the
ritual of which they formed part in the sacred literature
of Babylonia, there is proof that four thousand years
ago hymns were sung in honour of the gods, and prayers
were offered to propitiate them and secure their favour.
But belief in God had place long before these hymns
were sung or these prayers offered. This is shown
by the existence of words in the most ancient hymns,
prayers, and inscriptions which could not have been
used unless the ideas which they conveyed had already
existed in men’s minds. These words some
of which are preserved in modern tongues when
traced to their roots, help greatly to explain the
character of early religious thought, and prove the
existence of a widely diffused belief in the Divine
Being and His government. They serve as confirmation
of a belief, which is in harmony with many facts,
that God had revealed Himself to humanity before He
furnished the revelation which has come down to us.
Words are not originated by accident. They are
expressions of real existences, and before they found
place in hymns or prayers the ideas which they denoted
must have been matters of faith or knowledge to those
who used them. Before man is found professing
faith in pagan deities some idea of God must have
existed in his mind. Men did not like to retain
God in their knowledge, and so the idea of the Divine
became perverted, and in its first simplicity was
lost, and the multitude followed numberless shadows
all illusory and vain. Still, there lingered
remnants and traditions of belief in a Divine Creator
and Governor which must have originated in such a
primeval revelation as the book of Genesis records.
We find there the statement that God revealed Himself
to our first parents by direct intercourse. They
heard and saw and talked with God. They therefore
knew of the existence of God by personal perception,
and the ideas they held regarding Him were founded
on His own manifestation of Himself.
Closely connected with this consciousness
is the sense of responsibility universally prevalent.
There is a law written on the heart of every rational
human being, under the guidance of which he recognises
a distinction between good and evil, right and wrong.
He possesses a faculty to which the name of conscience
has been given, that convicts him of sin when he violates,
and approves his conduct when he conforms to, its
dictates. However much different peoples and different
ages may be at variance in their particular ideas
of what is right and what is wrong, the conception
itself has place in all of them. There are certain
fundamental notions as to what is just and what is
unjust, what is virtuous and what is vicious, that
find universal or all but universal acceptance.
This power of distinguishing between right and wrong
constitutes man a moral being, and separates him by
infinite distance from the lower animals. To
the beasts that perish there is nothing right or wrong.
They live altogether according to nature, and have
no responsibility. Man stands in a different
relation to the Lawgiver who bestowed on him the faculty
of conscience and impressed on his soul a conviction
that he will have to give account for all his actions.
The Being to whom he must give account is God.
(b) (Order) Another
ground of this belief is the order manifest in the
universe. There is a symmetry that pervades all
material things of which we have knowledge. Part
is adapted to part; objects are accurately adjusted
to each other; “wheels within wheels” move
smoothly; every portion fits into and works in harmony
with every other portion without discord or jarring.
It is unthinkable that these effects should be due
to chance or to a cause that is without intelligence.
The perfect arrangement of parts that work together
must have been planned by a living Being of infinite
wisdom, knowledge, and power. This Being, whose
creatures they are, must exist. Behind the pervading
order there must be personality, purpose, and action.
The fool may say in his heart, “There is no
God,” but, as nature bears testimony to the existence
of an omniscient and omnipotent Creator, reason calls
for another conclusion.
(c) (Scripture) There
is a limit to the knowledge of God which the consciousness
of man and the order and design in the universe impart.
These serve to establish the truth that God is, but
they do not convey the intimation that He is a moral
Governor and the rewarder of them that diligently
seek Him. They declare little of His character,
and are silent as to many of the duties which He requires.
To make God known, the teaching of conscience and
of reason must be supplemented by revelation.
It is in the Bible that the believer finds the strongest
proofs of the existence of the Divine Being, and from
the Bible he obtains also the most comprehensive and
satisfying view of the Deity and of man’s relation
to Him. He there finds that what he has to believe
concerning God is, that He is Jéhovah the
Being infinitely and eternally perfect, self-existent,
and self-sufficient; the only living and true God,
there being none beside Him. The heathen believed
in and worshipped many gods. The untutored savage
peopled the groves with them, and the pagan philosopher
built innumerable temples in their honour. The
Panthéons of Greece and Rome were crowded with
the statues of favourite deities. The doctrine
of one living and true God was prominent in the revelation
given to Israel. God’s message by Moses
had its foundation truth in the proclamation:
“Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord."
His glory and His work are shared by no other being.
He is the absolute Sovereign and Lord of all creatures.
In the Bible, too, man learns that God is his own
personal God who cares for him, and to whom he owes
love, allegiance, and obedience. All who refuse
to believe in the existence of God reject the testimony
of Scripture regarding Him, but to such as acknowledge
its claim to be the Word of God, the evidence it supplies
is convincing and all-sufficient.
Examination of ancient heathen religions
and of the views they set forth regarding God shows
clearly the distance at which they stand from the
revelation of Scripture. The gods of the heathen
were of like passions with their worshippers selfish,
cruel, vindictive, and without regard for equity or
justice in their treatment of men. The God of
the Bible, on the other hand, is a righteous God,
merciful to His creatures, and desirous of their temporal
and eternal wellbeing, and when He inflicts suffering
it is not as a passionate Judge, but as a Father who
chastens His children for their profit.
The doctrine of the Trinity of Persons
in the God-head, though not expressly stared in the
Creed, is implied in the clauses which refer to each
of the Persons who compose it. There is one God,
but in the Godhead there are three Persons, the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost, whose names indicate
the relation in which each stands to the others.
Each of the Persons is complete and
perfect God. While there are three Persons in
the Godhead, the same in substance, equal in power
and glory, these three are one. The doctrine
thus stated is termed the doctrine of the Trinity.
This word is not found in Scripture, but the truth
which it expresses is set forth there, dimly in the
Old Testament, distinctly in the New. In the
first chapter of Genesis the word “God”
is in the Hebrew a plural noun, and yet it is used
with a singular verb, thus early seeming to intimate
what afterwards is clearly made known, that there is
a plurality of Persons, who yet constitute the one
living and true God. The same indication of plurality
in unity appears in the account of man’s creation:
“Let us make man." This doctrine
of the Trinity is essentially one of revelation.
Natural religion testifies to the existence, the personality,
and the unity of God, but fails to make known that
the unity of God is a unity of three Persons.
The doctrine does not contradict reason, it is above
reason.
It is sometimes said that the doctrine
of the Trinity involves a contradiction in affirming
that three Persons are one Person. This charge
misrepresents the doctrine. Trinitarians do not
say that Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are three Persons
in the sense in which three men are three individuals.
They believe that there is one God, and that Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost are yet so distinct that the Father
can address the Son, the Son can address the Father,
and the Father can address and send the Spirit.
God’s ways are not as our ways. He is not
a man that He should be limited by the conditions
of human relationships. When we say there are
three Persons in the Godhead, we use a word applicable
to men, which, though the most fitting one at our disposal,
must come far short of fully describing the relations
of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost to each other.
Possessing no celestial language, we cannot fully
describe or understand heavenly things.
SECTION 3. THE FATHER
The first Person in the Godhead is
the Father. This name may be viewed (a)
with reference to the second Person, Jesus Christ His
only Son, or (b) as descriptive of His relation
to believers in Christ Jesus, or (c) as indicating
His universal Fatherhood as the Author and the Preserver
of all intelligent creatures. The relation in
which the Father stands to the Son, that He is His
Father and has begotten Him, is one that we cannot
explain. Any attempt to do so must be arrogant
and misleading, for who “by searching can find
out God"? Secret things belong unto God, but
revealed things unto us and our children. The
term “Father” is a relative one and involves
the idea of sonship. No one who accepts the teaching
of Scripture can doubt that the Father is God.
The statements as to His attributes and universal
government are so many and so strong that, but for
other affirmations regarding Deity, we should naturally
conclude that the Father alone is God. But the
very name “Father” corrects such a view,
and when we search the Scriptures we find it untenable.
God is our Father, but He was “the Father”
before He called man into being. From all eternity
He was Father. As from everlasting to everlasting
He is God, so from everlasting to everlasting He is
Father. He did not become Father when His Son
assumed human nature, but is such in virtue of His
eternal relation to the Word as the Son of God.
It is the Son’s existence that constitutes Him
Father; and that existence was in eternity. “I
and my Father are one," is the Son’s testimony
to His eternal Sonship; and when He prays His Father
to glorify Him, He asks to be glorified with the glory
which He had with Him before the world was. There
are other senses in which the first Person of the
Godhead is termed Father. All men are declared
to be His offspring, and those who have received the
Spirit of adoption cry, “Abba, Father,”
and are taught, when they pray, to say, “Our
Father.”
In an exposition of the Creed the
Fatherhood in relation to men generally, or to believers
in particular, need not be considered. Here the
name is used to indicate the relation in which the
First Person stands to the Second, in virtue of which
alone those who are adopted into fellowship with the
Son become the children of God the children
of Christ’s Father and their Father. The
Scriptures teach that the Father is God, that the
Son is God, and that the Holy Ghost is God. At
the same time the doctrine of the Divine Unity is affirmed.
The difficulty felt in connection
with the doctrine of Trinity in Unity has led to attempts
in ancient and modern times to show that those passages
of Scripture in which it appears to be taught may be
otherwise interpreted. One explanation is, from
the name of its first exponent, termed Sabellianism,
or, the doctrine of a Modal Trinity. The view
which it presents of the Divine Being is that the
same Person manifests Himself at one time and in one
relation as Father, at another time and in another
relation as Son, and at a different time and in another
relation as Holy Ghost. It attributes divinity
to this One Divine Person in each of His manifestations,
but denies that there are three Persons in the Godhead.
The facts of Scripture do not accord with such a view
of the Divine Personality. We find each Person
addressing the Others and speaking of Himself and
of Them as distinct Persons. Each speaking of
Himself says “I.” The Father says
“Thou” to the Son, the Son says “Thou”
to the Father, and the Father and the Son use the pronouns
“He” and “Him” with reference
to the Spirit. The Father loves the Son, the Son
loves the Father, the Spirit testifies of the Son.
In the Athanasian Creed we find the following statement of
this doctrine:
“This is the Catholic Faith, that
we worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity in
Unity. Neither confounding the Persons nor dividing
the Substance. For the Person of the Father is
one, of the Son another, of the Holy Ghost another.
But the divinity of the Father and the Son and
of the Holy Ghost is one, the glory equal, the
majesty equal. Such as is the Father, such also
is the Son, and such the Holy Spirit. The
Father is uncreated, the Son is uncreated, the
Holy Spirit is uncreated. The Father is infinite,
the Son is infinite, the Holy Ghost is infinite.
The Father is eternal, the Son is eternal, the
Holy Ghost is eternal. And yet these are
not three eternal Beings but one eternal Being.
As also there are not three uncreated beings, nor
three infinite beings, but one uncreated and one
infinite Being.”
It is sometimes said that the doctrine
of the Trinity is of little practical importance,
but such a view of it is inconsistent with the teaching
of Scripture, and with the atoning work of Christ.
It is the Divinity of the Son that gives efficacy
to His sacrifice. As sinners we need pardon.
Pardon must be preceded by propitiation, and if Christ
is not Divine there is no propitiation. The doctrines
of Scripture are so linked together that the rejection
of one invalidates the others. If we deny the
Trinity we deny the Gospel message of salvation, and
we accordingly find that most of those who reject
the doctrine of the Trinity do not believe in the
reality and efficacy of Christ’s atonement.
SECTION 4. ALMIGHTY
The term “Almighty,” which
occurs twice in the Creed, represents two Greek words,
the one denoting absolute dominion, the other infinite
power in operation. When we say that God the Father
is Almighty, we affirm that He is possessed of entire
freedom of action, and that His power is unlimited.
He cannot, indeed, act in opposition to His own nature.
In executing His eternal decrees none can stay His
hand from working, but He can do nothing that would
derogate from His eternal power and Godhead.
Such inability has its origin not in any limitation
of power, or restriction imposed from without, but
in Himself. He knows all things and so cannot
be tempted of evil. He can do whatever He wills,
but His will cannot contradict His character.
The statement that God is Almighty
implies that all beings are governed and controlled
by Him. All things, save Himself, are His creatures
and subject to Him. Even those things that seem
to resist and defy His authority are under His government.
Rebellion serves but to make His omnipotence more
apparent, for He causeth the wrath of man to praise
Him, and the remainder of wrath He restraineth.
He so governs the universe that all things work together,
and work together for good to them that love Him.
When we say, “God the Father
Almighty,” it is not meant that the Son and
the Holy Ghost are not Almighty. The Father is
Almighty because He is God, the Son, who is one with
the Father, is God and therefore Almighty, and the
Holy Ghost is also God and therefore Almighty.
In the unity of the Godhead the same attributes mark
the three Persons.
SECTION 5. MAKER OF HEAVEN AND EARTH
Belief in the Almighty power of God
is further declared by a confession of faith in Him
as the Maker of heaven and earth, and this is but a
repetition of the statement contained in the first
chapter of Genesis the only account of
Creation which is fitted to solve all difficulties
and to meet all objections. “Maker”
in this article is used in the sense of Creator, implying
that heaven and earth were called into existence out
of nothing by the word of Divine power; and by “heaven
and earth” are meant all creatures, visible
and invisible, that have existed or do exist.
Those who object to the Scripture statements regarding
Creation have maintained views as to the origin of the material universe
differing largely from those held by persons who accept this article of the
Creed, and differing also greatly from one another. Various solutions have
been given, among which may be stated:
(a) The view of those who hold
that all phenomena and all existence originate
in Chance or a blind fortuitous concourse of atoms.
To state such a doctrine is to refute it. No one
possessed of reason can believe in his heart that
Intelligence did not create and organise matter,
or that the material universe, with all its adaptation
of parts, was evolved, and is governed, by chance
or accident. This theory, if it is worthy of
the name, seems to have been devised in order to
evade the idea that man is subject to Divine government.
(b) Another view is that all
existence owes its origin to Fate or Necessity
and is now held in its resistless grasp. The
advocates of this theory are at variance among
themselves. One school maintains that all
things existed from eternity in their present
condition, and are destined to continue as they are,
controlled by relentless and undeviating necessity.
Another school the ancient Fatalists held
that at first there was a fortuitous concourse
of atoms and phenomena, until Fate or Chance decided
the present order, which became an established necessity.
A third class hold doctrines of Development. Some
of them agree with the ancient Fatalists in maintaining
that development, in a fortuitous concourse and
action of matter and force, issued in evolution
or originated a course of evolution. Others
again deny fortuitous concourse and affirm that this
process of evolution had no external beginning,
but has continued from eternity under the control
of evolutionary law. The term “law”
as used by them has no specific meaning, and is simply
an adaptation, to a theory naturally atheistic, of
a word which may serve to commend their doctrine.
The “law” of which they speak has
its origin in matter itself, and is not under the
control of a Supreme Intelligence. That this
is the fact is shown by the denial of free-will
in man and of the superintending providence of
God; of the efficacy of prayer and of the forgiveness
of sin; and by the prominence given in their writings
to the absolute control of all things by undeviating,
unchanging law.
(c) A third view affirms that
while there is a distinction between the Ego and
the non-Ego (the me and the not-me), it is impossible
to know anything about either in its essence.
That they exist and that they are different are
facts within our knowledge, but as to the absolute
nature of mind and matter we can discover and
believe nothing. The ultimate or absolute is
beyond our reach, as is the infinite and unconditioned.
We can have no knowledge of First Causes, or of
the Ultimate Cause, or of the Absolute Cause.
The infinite cannot even be apprehended, and those
who undertake to learn or to speculate regarding the
infinite engage in a task beyond their powers.
Such knowledge is not practical. The term
“God” is merely an expression for a mode
of the unknowable, conveying no meaning to those
who use it. The view thus expressed originated
in concessions unhappily made by certain writers,
as Sir William Hamilton and Dean Mansel, who, thinking
to defend revealed religion, taught that reason cannot
know the Infinite, and that therefore the Infinite
must reveal Himself. Herbert Spencer took
advantage of this concession, and carried it to
a logical conclusion, when he argued that, if reason
could not know or apprehend the Infinite by reason,
neither could it by revelation.
(d) Another class hold the view
which is termed cosmogonies than that of
Moses, whether contained in the sacred books of religions
that have long existed, or professing to be based on
modern scientific discovery, raise difficulties
that are insuperable. Whence came matter
if not from the creative word of God? To
assign eternity to it is to invest it with an attribute
that is Divine, and Pantheists carry such an explanation
to its logical conclusion when they affirm that
the universe is God. The existence of a single
atom is an unfathomable mystery. Man cannot
create or destroy even a particle of matter. How
overwhelming, then, if we reject the simple statement
of the Bible, is the mystery of the great universe,
in whose extended space suns, planets, stars,
and systems unceasingly revolve, and in which
our own world is but a little speck. All things
created point to God as their origin and source.
“The invisible things of him from the creation
of the world are clearly seen, being understood
by the things that are made, even his eternal power
and Godhead."
“I asked the earth,” wrote
Augustine in his Confessions, “and it
answered me, ‘I am not He.’ And whatsoever
things are in it confirmed the same. I asked
the sea and the deeps and the living creeping things,
and they answered, ‘We are not thy God, seek
above us.’ I asked the morning air, and
the whole air with its inhabitants answered, ‘Anaximenes
was deceived, we are not thy God.’ I asked
the heavens, sun, moon, stars, ‘Nor,’
say they, ‘are we the God whom thou seekest.’
And I replied unto all the things which encompass
the door of my flesh, ’Ye have told me of my
God that ye are not He: tell me something more
of Him.’ And they cried out with a loud
voice, ‘He made us.’"