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EARLY

C H R I S T I A N CREEDS
1 1

R..
Ur
J. I".D. KELLY. D.D
Printipai qf ai km>nmd fiuif,UXJGT~

DL4VID 14cKAY COMPAAT, INC.


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Semnd rd:/l:iwn PREFACE
Swmd ímpesrion

T m book represem rhe reçults of more than a decade of


research anà Iecturing in the Oxford FacuIp of Theolo.~lr,.
In publishing it I have heen prompted not only by the con-
viction that I have something to contribute, hut also by the
Sist. a 3 5 a, 6 d - ~ consciousness that a systematic treatment of the subject is
urgently required. Since the first world war the creeds have
Reg. í~374a roa& been keenly investigated and discussed in specialist urcles; yet,
Proc
- - 3, apart from the late Dr. F. J. Eadcock's Hirtoy of t h Creeh,
Data i; -.
13 2 . ,- na full-dress work devoted to them has seen the light. Such
-
J
books as are available, moreover, are mainly conccmed witIi
thc detyeloprnent of the historical texts, and hardly attempt to
meet the heightened interest in the theolqg of the crecds
which rnanifests itself toda?-. It is my hope that this serics of
studies w i I I do síirnething, however modest, to i31 both thcse
ws.
OR two rnatters an explanatíon is perhaps c d e d for. First,
since one rif my objectives has been to cater for the needs of
students, J have felt it Àesirable, for the sake of completeness,
to cover afresh çertain well-worn tracts of pound, and at thv
same time to lirnit rny treatrnent of severa1 irnpartant and
cantroversial topics more narrowly than I should have liked.
Secondly, I Iiave dclibcrately abstaincd from inçluding a proper
bibliography. hty reason is that, as the book was nearing com-
pietion, Père J. de Ghcllinck's astonishingly cemprehensive
sun-ey of literature dealinq with the Apostles' Creed (Pafri-
s t f p rf mgwn á p , I : Brussels and Paris, 1946) reached this
country. As this should bc accessible in a11 great librari=, E have
secn no priint in printing what could only have been a drastic-
~ I l ycurtaiIed version of it here. -4tthe same time, t h e exarnple
set bv Père de Ghellinck su_eqeststhat, if a bibliogaphy of the
Sicene Creed is to bc cornpiled, it shouId he on a cornparable
scale. The footnotes sshorild supply referençes to practiçalIy a11
the useful authorities.
Every writer on crceds, however eager to be original, mmt
be acutely conscious of entering into a rich inheritance. Here
I would acknowledge rny indebtedncss to such scholars as, oF
v
%i PREFACE

the older generation, C. P.Caspari, F. Kattenbusch, and A. E,


Burn, and, of more recent times, G . Moi-in, H, Lietzmann
(under whom I had the honour of working in Berlin for a
period), E. Schwartz, and B. Capelle. The reader wi]] come CONTENTS
across the names of these, as of many others, on alrnost every
PAUE
page. For more direct assistance I must express rny gratitude
to the Rev. Dr. F. L. Cross, Lady Margaret Professor in this PREFACE . V

University, who read and criticized a large portion of the book, SHORT BIBLIOGRAPRY . x
and to the Rev. E. W. Kemp, Fellow of Exeter College, who
hdped me with a difficult çhapter. Two other friends deserve ABBREVIATIONS , . Xi
rny particular thanks-Mrs. C. F. W. R. Gullick, who, though PTER
busy with many more important things, has taken the whoIe
burden of making the index upon her competent shouldecs; . CREDAL ELEMENTS IN THE NEW TESTA-
and my sometime pupiI Mr. D. L. Thawley, who, despite the MENT . I

pressure of his own studies, has read a11 the proofs with a more r . The Ancien t Legend . I
accurate eye thãn I can Iay clairn to, and at numemus points 2 . The Apostolic Tradition . . 6
has laid a warning finger on minor inconsixtencies and errors j. I;rtgmcnts of Crfleds . 13
which might orherwise have eluded me. b, The Original Paitem . - 23
EDS AND BAPTISM . - 30
i . T h Role ofDeclaratoy Creed~. 30
!. The Bajfismal lnh-wugatiom . - 40
1. Ths- Cafacheticul Setting of Creeds . 49
,. The Name " Symbolum " + 52

. THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY .


FHE S E C O K D E D I T I . % Creative Period .
r. Th Apostolic Fathers .
T is gratifying that a second edition of a book of this k
I
;. The Creeds of St Justin .
,hould be called for. In preparing it I have availled mysel .. St Irenaeus and his Rule of Faith .
the oppnrtunity to make an irnmense number of minor cor..-- , . Tertullian's Creeds . .
tions, und also incorporate referentes to new and more up-to- The Growth of Fixd Forms .
I.

date editiuns and texts. In a few pííssages I have modified pci ints . Some Conclusiom .
of view cxpressed in the earlicr edition, but I have nowEiere
felt i t necessary to alter rny rnain thesis. OLD ROMAN CREED .
r p T Y D
. 100
. The Evidencefur R . a 100
, The Tradition Defended . . 104
3. The Original Language of R. . . . TII
q. R, Tertullian and St H$polytus . . ar3
5. The Holl-Harnmk HypothesZF . . 119
Comlusion .
-S. . 126
vii
CONfENTS
CHAP~R PAQE
PAGE
1. THE TEACHING OF THE OLD ROMAK ST. LHE TE-ACHING AND HISTORY OF C 332
CREED . . r31
r . C and Apollinarianim - 332
r . The Fissi Ariiclr . - r32 I
2. Th Haly Spt'nfliin C .
3. 7-h Baplismal Use of C .
938
.
h

- 34-4
2. T ~CoreP of fhe Smnd Ariitie . . - 139
3. Ti18ChrisfologicadIwertion . 4. C in I ~ Holy
P E~~charist. - 348
- 144 j. 77te Filioqu~ . - 358
4. The Holy Sfimt . . 152
5 . TheSpiritinActiotr . . 155 XIT. THE APOSTLES' CREED .
VI. CREEDS WESTERN ,4ND EASTERN r . The Receirred Text
I . The Pauci9 of Cretds , 2. ChangesintheFirstArticfr ,

Daughter-creeds of R
2. . 3. Some Mincir 124adtfiations .
3. Easi~rnCretds . 4. Th Descent io Hell .
4. Comparison of E O S I and P ~ IVestern Cre~ds 5 . T h Third Artirle Aeinkrprtfrd nnd Kevi~eii.
j. The Desttnt of Easkrn G'reeds . . Ci. The Coommuniori of SainLs .
6. Relation af Easlem and TITesffrn Creeds XI1I. THE ORXGISS OF THE -4POSTLES' CREED
\'II. THE CREED OF SIChEA . I. Tfxts ,3ppxaxirnaling to T -
r . Creeds m Tesfsof Orihodoxq. - 2. J's Redaction .Kor R a m .
2. Jhc Prmulgation of N . 3. T s Hisprmo-Gallic Origin .
3. Cinnporison of N and CAES. . 4. Chrlmngrte and ihe Creed .
4. Thc Letter of Ew~biw . 5. The Accepiatrce of T nt Romt .
P af N
5. T ~Bmi.r
XNDEX - 435
VI1 I. THE MEANING AND USE O F T H E NlGENE I I
CREED . 231 I'
r . Tht Arian T h o l o ~ . . ngr I

2, Ths Reply of the Nitm Ci-eed . 234


3. Th Homoomion . . nqn I
4. A f h ~ ' i ~ i c a a . - 154
IX. THE .4GE OF SITODATA CREEDS . . 263
r. Tkc Dedkation Coilncil . - . 263
2 . From $&a fo Sirmium . . 274
3. T h r Triumph of Arionhi . 283
X. 'I'HE C:OXSTLhTLIYOP0TTITT4Y CREED . 296
I . TJ~PTrradition aboul C . . . 296
2. Comparison ef C with N . . gor
3. The Case Against ttie Tradition . . 305
4. Tlze T~aditionRe-catisiciered . 3x3
5. Towards a Solution . 322
S H O R T BTBLIOGRAPHY ABBREVIATIONS
d.F.0. Ed. Schwartz, Acta contilimuni oeciimicmirm, Berlin and
B. C:APELLE, Le s y n l l ( ~ l erurnuin ou w o n d kdcde (R. Bén. x n i x , r q q } . Leipzig, ~ g r qFf.
~adc~ck F. j. Badcock. T h Hiirtmy of th C m d ~2nd , td., London,
3.ÇAPELLE, L$ori,qines du ~ymbolfrnmain (&h. tiriol. anc. mid. ii,
1938-
'930). Burn A. E. Burn, AR h ~ o d u c t w nto thc Crrtd-t, London, 1%.
H. J. C A R P E N ~"SjwtboEirtn"
K, a Title of fhe Creed (J.T.S. xliii' çspari A. md C. P. Caspari, Alie d ntw QwIicn zw Gt~chKhk dts
"421. .?.:e. T q f i p b o l ~md dcr Glaubmsrcgrl, Christiana, I 879.
H. J . CARPENTER, Crerdr ond BaptixmaI Hites ui the First Fmr C'cntwies capari Qiulltn c. P. caspari, L'?tgcdmckrt, mbcarhtcic tutd ~0912b e ~ h b b
(J.T.S.xliv, 1943). Q-uc!!lm zur Gcsçhirhk du Toqf!imholrImddrr Glaubmr~rgcl,
Christiana, r866-g.
O. CULLWAN-I, 'rhc I:urlirsl Chnjiian C'onfessi~?~ (E.T. by 3. K. S. C. C.1,. Cwpm Chrrrri~nmuni.St-rirs Lofino.
Rcidi, London, I 349. Dictbmairt d'mclicólogic rliritirmc t i d t liturgit.
D.A.C.L.
;p F. T. DOLCEA, Dir Eingliedmng der Ta.fgmboLs in den T ~ f b d i l l r i r g E.J.G. E. j.G d q x e d . Dia ólttstrn : l ~ o l o ~ e i m .
(Antike und Clmrfrn!trm iv, I 934). Hahn .-i. and G. L.Hahn, Bihlioihrk d~ S~wSolcmd ClmhsregeIn
I).VAX DENEYNUE, L*s nmmes dc f'meignnnent c h r é k , Paris, r 933. drr a l t a Kirrb, 3rd cd., Breslau, i 897.
H.ER.E. &<tine E"q l e d i a of Rtt'i~ronand Eihics.
J. DE G ~ L L T N CPdfiTliqw
K, ~i mTrefo âge, Tom. I, B m e I s and Paris,
J. T.S. J m l of Tkfologiiacol Studics.
r 946 ; 2nd ed. r 949. Kaitenbwh F. Kanenbusch, Der o$etialische $doi, Leipzig, I 894.
A. HARUP~CK, Apns/olistlies .$rn bolum (Hau&s Reaien~k.I, 74 I 8.). Lightfmt J. B. Lightfmt, The Aposiolic Fafkcrs (lhe nne-voiume
A. WACK, K m l a n t i n ~ p u c h e sS d o l {Hauck's Renlni~yk.X, editioo), h n d o n , 1891.
12 ff.). Xlansi J. D. Marni, Sacronmi conrilimm nozm et ampiLrrim colicctra.
FIorence and Venice, r 759 ff.
F.J. -4. HORT,Tw+oDis~ntutiom,Cambdge, I 876. -lha.G m . Hisf. .%fm~mrentoGermmrior Hisforico.
J . KVYZ E, Das nic~ni.rch-~onns~an~in(~paIi~rmi~cke Gmbul, Leipzig, I 898. .trachriEhi. Gãt!. ,\rakrichtm m drr Ap6nigl. Ge~eII~cho) drr Wíss~~~hnJlm =a
J. LEBOS,Lcs ancinu ~ m b o i c s2 Cfralcédnine (R.H.E.&i, 1936). Giittiop.
Opitz L i [ . H.G. Opitz. Crkundm zw Grschichk drs nnunkchm Sireít--
H. LIETZ>%ANN, Symbu/$trditn (2-.iif.T.f~'. - ~1922; , 1923; fin Lõ1. 111 OS the Beriin hcadcmy's Afhnnusiirr IZ'erk
xxiv, 1925; xxvi, 1927).

i1
1934-51-
H. LETZMANN, Ctschichtc der alten Xirch, Bd. TI. Berfin, r936 P.C. j.P.Wgne's Pa!~oEo~ia, Scrier Ernrcn.
(Ch. 41. P./- J. P. Migne's PutraEagfa, $cries Lnlmn.
F. Looi-s, Simboiik, 'Ribingerr, 1902.
F. Loo~ç,Ilns .,4ricanum (Festgabcf i r A-. MirIIcr, Tiibingen, r 922).
Ev. SCHWARTZ., Das .Vicoenum und dar Comtunténopolitmum mf der
Syriode oon Chalktdon (<..N. r. M/. xxv, r 926). 14b f
i
1
j R. Bh.

Y.E.
1.L.z.
Reilrre Binidicliizc.
&(h. Ihéol. um. Reckches dc thdoologip ancimne c1 ddic'uole.
mtd.
h d'hhtoirc ccc1Csias~iqzu.
Tholagische LitProiurrsiiwig.
H.B. SWTE, T/w Apostles' Creed, London, 1894. ftir KG. ,&+schrift& Kirchcngeschichk.
I
T. W.
.L.N* ~eitscliriiftfirdie nnrtesdamenlliche Whnschnfi.
C . H. ' T u n ~ a n ,Thie fXiiriov fltlic UUreof Cyeeds and Annthemm, London,
I 906 ; 2nd cd. I g i o. Patristic r e f m n c e are aImost always to Mignc, P.G. or P.L., or to ti
BtrIin series Die g r i e ~ k b ~chrdlithn
h Schr$sfellm der erstm drei Jahrhmdo
(r ,:I and the Vienna Cmpirs scriptmurn eccl~siaslirmmlatimnorum. '

xi
CREDAL ELEME-JTS I K T H E
NEW TESTAMENT

FOR hundreds of years Christians have been ciccusromed to


understand by the word creed a fixed formula surnmarizing t11e
mentia1 articles of their religion and enjoyinq the sanction of
cdcsias~cd authority. It seems fitting tliat the opening
hapter in a study of the 0ris.n and developrnent of the chief
:hristian credal confessiom should consist of an attempt ta
artermine whether, and if so in what scncc, it can reasonably
be claimed that a creed clxisted in X e w Tcstament times. For
more than halfthe Church's history no one Iiad any doubts on
this score : it -rsraçconlidently assumed that the ttvelve .\poçtles
had themelves composed and authorized the firçt sumrnary of
belief. The title '',lpostle? Creed'" oor ~ r n b o l u mapos~o!ortrm,
which fust oçcurs in a Ietter 1 sent by the synod oF 31ilaa (3goj
to Pope Siriciiis and prohably drafted by St iimbrose (he t ~ a s
one uf its signatories), is symptornatic of an attitude which w a ~
qenera1. A gmd illustration of the picture people had of the
ieginning of creeds is pmvided by the circumstantial story told
iy Tyarinizis Rufinus, once thc friend and now the cmbittered
3eof St Jerome, in the expositian of the crccd (aIrnoss the earliest
ve possess from the IVest) which he wrotc towards 404. The
ipostles, he relates,= having bccn equipped at Pentecost with
he abiiity to spcak different lanpages, were instructed by the
Lord to journey forth and pioclaim God? word to the severa1
nations of the world : I
As they were therefore on the poitit of tnking leave oT each other,
hey first settIed an agreed norm for their future preaching, so that
hey might not frnd themselves, widely separatcd as tl-iey would he,
1 S t Ambrose, E#.42,5 (P.L. t6, r 174).
P Comm. in symb. apost. 2 (P.L. n t , 337).
E.C.C.-E I
2 CREDAL ELEMENTS IN T H E NEIt' ~ ' E s ~ A ~ ~ c s T 'THE ANCiENT LEGEND 3
giving out different doctrines to the pcople they invited to believe iti date still of St Justin, St Ignatius and the author of the
Chnst. So they met to~etherin one s p t and, beinq filled ~ i t thc h
HoIy Spirit, compiled this brief token, as I ha-r-esaid, of tlieir futurc
~idachc. '
~ufinus'shint that each of the Apostles rnade his personal
preachin~,each rnakinq the contrihution he thouetit fit; and they
decreed that it should I>e handed out as standard tcaching to be-
contributi~nto the formula is Iater elaborated with picturesque
lievers. I detag. IYe see the legend in a developed f o m in the series of
sermons De yrnboZo2 falsely attributed to St Augustine. Thus we
Rufinus did not invent the story he quotes. On the contrary, in the first of them :3
k a d

it represented in his eyes an ancient and hallowed tradition. As


a mattcr of fact, thc tradition makes its first apprarance in O n the tenth day after the Ascension, when the disciples were
another North Italian document of the same period, the ,thered together for fear of the Jews, the Lord sent thc promised
Explanatio symboli ad initiandos,' which probably consists of notes P:~racleteupon them. At His cornine;thev were infiarned like red-hot
based on an extemporary discourse by St hmbrose,%nd in the iri3n and, being filled with the knois-Iedge of a11 languages, they com-
Pwedmthe c:reed. Peter said "I beliex-e in God the Father almighty4
Apostolical Conrrituiiom,3 wbch also belongs to the latter haIf of . . . ,.,r a k ~of heaven and carth " . . . Andrew said " and in Jesus
the fourth century.;In the latter the nameless compiler depicts Chriit His Son ... .
our only Lord" . . james said "Who was
the Twe1t.e as recdling how, to meet the-menace of heresy and conceived hy the Holy Spirit . . . bom írom the Virgh 33iiary"
to strengthen the hands of the episcopate, they had conferred . ..
. . John said "suffered under Pontius Pilate . was crucified,
together and had written out "this Catholic teaching", ex- dcsad anci buried" . .
. Thomas said "u. to hell . . on
cerpts from which they then proceed to cite. When and where .
t?le third day rose again from the dead " . , James said " ascend~d-
the story assumed the shape it here exhibits, we can only guess tc1 heavet1 . ..
sits on the right hand of God the Father a i h t y "
now. Much earlier, in the second haIf of the second>en~ry,it ...
. . P,h iip said "thence He will come to judge thc living and the
was taken for granted in Catholic circles that what was coming .
ead" . . Bartholomew said " X beiieve in the Holy Spirít" ...
Iatthew said "the holv Catholic Church . . . the communion of
to be called " the rule of'faith" (an outline summary of Chriis-
tia teaching, used for catechetical instruction and other
.
lints" . . Simon said " the remission of sim" ...
Thaddaeus said
'<
the resiurrection of the flesh" . . . Slatthias said "eterna1 life". t
2 purposes)gwas ultimately traceable to the Apostles. The rule of
7h e setting, it should be noted, is deliberately borrowed from
faith must not be confused with the creed, but (as we shall later -ative of John 20, 19, according to which o d y the
tlle nari
discover) the relationship between them was close. FZThen - .

recapitulating it, St Irenaeus, for example, expIains4 that it has


TWelve rcbceived the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. The pres-
ti.ge of the creed was thus skilfúlly enhanced by attributing
been handed down from " the Apostles and their disciples";
it: to the direct action of the Spirit using the ApostIes as
and his remark6 that if the Apostles had not bequeathed us any ...
insrruments.
writings we should have Iiad to follow "the rule of faith which
Thus diressed out the legend yon aImost universal acceptance
they delivered to the leaders of the Church" is typicd of the il1 the micIdle ages.4 This is all the more remarkable because it
period. TertuUian similarly speakss of " &e rule of truth which 73-
M-3 irri
feat to squeeze exactly twelve articles out of the
s r

descends from Christ, transmitted through His companions".


creed. St Thomas Aquinas, for example, found it a somewhat
Exactly the same assumption rnarked the thought at an earlier
Thr c\idcncc \\.as WPI! trl OUI by D, van drn Evnde in í t s nmmcr dr l'msnpr-
' P.L. 17,1ig3-6. mi chriitm. Par-, 1933. 5 1 ff.
R. H. Connollv qeatlv strrnmhmed thr rasr for an .%mbrosian authonhi~. In thr hppcndix to vol. of blipe's edirion.
\v

Cf. J.T.S. xl\.ii, 1946. 185 ff, Jrrrn. 240 i probably of thr riqhth centun-) in P.L. 39. 2 189.
a 6, 14.
Adv. hacr, I , 10, I (P.G. 7, 549 E.).
' Most writers, Iike St Mnximus of Turin (Hom. 83: P.L. 57, 433 E.),Cassiar)
(Con.Ne~est.6,3:Petsclienig I, 328),St Isidorc of Seville (Decccl. 4 c . 2 , 23: P.L. 83,
Adv. buer. 3,4, I (P.G.7, 858). 815f.), ctc., were co~itcnt to assert the apostolic authorship; a few (e.g. St
Apof. 47: cf. Dcpracisn. 21; 37 (C.C.L.I, 164; 202 f.; 217). Priminius) assignod each clausc tu a separate Apostlc.
4 CREDAL ELEMENTS M THE NEW TESTAMENT THE ANCIENT LEGEND 5
embarrassing requirement, and prefersed to distinpish severi aptolic origin of the creed was rharply- criticized by Lomizo
articles relatiug to the Godhead and seven to Christ's \-dia, the schola~ly propagator of renaisçance ideas and
humanity.' For the purposes of popular instrucíion, however, doughty h e af the tempura1 power of the Popes.1 Shortly
the Church found thc story of the creed's apostolic orien, aftenvards a less brutal and theoIogicaIIy more skilfúl attack
embellished with imaginative details, usefiil as reinforcing the s
, by Reginald Pecock, bishop oF St h a p h (rw)and
authority of what had bccornc a çacred formula. Sometimes it then of Chichester (r450). He denied the apostolic authorship
was given pictorial expressíon, as in rhe -&$fiaake$ki&k at ,f rhe cretd and rejectcd the Dcscent to Rell.2 Though sup-
Trier, where the twelve slender colurnns sirpportinq the vault- pressed for thc momcnt (Valla had io recant, and Pecock war
fing were in tbe fifteenth century adorned with representations forced to resign his see in 1458)~ and in any case thnist into the
of the Apostfes and tIic articles thcy had setferally contributed. background by thc qreater controversies of the Reformation,
It was a favourite subject for illuminations in psalteries and these ideas carne into their oxun in tlie seventecnth century
hoks of hours, and for rvindou\iç of painred glãçs, cach Apostle \chen G . J. T70ss (1G42) and Archbishop 'Cxszher (1647) in-
being depicted ç a q i n g an emblem emblazoned ~ 6 t hhis e d rnodern era of creda1 studieç. [
a ~ , ~ r a t the
particular clause of the creed. -4 set of nine hexarneters, alIeged Once the question is squarely faced, the extreme unlikdihood
to be the work of St Bernard, has alço survived%ssigning tweIve of the Apostles having dcafted an official surnrnaT of faith
of its afirmations (thc dumsy poet was obliged to omit two scarcely rnerits discussion. Since tIie Refomation the theory
beeause hc could not make them fit) to their presurned inventor. that they did has been quietly se2 aside as leg-endary by prac-
The verses evidentIy enjoyed a considerable vogue, no doubt tically a11 scholars, the conservative-minded merely reserving
because of their aptncss for impressing the teaching of the the right to point out that the teachine; of the formula known
creed ou people's rnemories. as the Apostles' Creed reproduces authentically apostolic
Tliough accepted as a piece of history ríght dmm to tlie dactrinc. I t hm become plain that what T+-ehave to deãl ~ 4 t h
fifteenùi ccntury, the story had a11 the nir of being a pious k only a particular example of the rccopized tendency of the
ficbon. t t \i.= not ro be expected that it tvould stancl up to tbe early Çhurch to ãttrjibute the whole of its doctrinal, lihirgical
reawakcning of the critical ç m e , The fim serious questicmings and hierarchical apparatus to the Tw-elve and, through them,
of the edifying tale becarne audiblc a t the council of Florence to our Lord HimseIf. So much may he freely conceded without
(1438-45)~which atrempted a reunion between thc Çhurches prejudiçe to the question uiíhether or not the spokeçmen of
of East and West. At the heçinning of thc neg~tiations,~ in 1438, second-century Catholicism were correct in their assurnption
when the fathers were stiI1 sitting at Ferrara, the 1,atin repre- that their rule of faith, as distinct from any oficial formula, was
sentatives invoked the ilpostles' Crecd. The Grccks wouId have identical with &e faith of the Apostles. During the nineteenth
nothinç of this, and their leader, Marcus Eugenicus, rnetro- centmy, however, the critica1 argument was carried severa1
politan of Ephesus, peremptorily ssclaimed, " Li'e do not pos- stages further doum the slope of sceptirisrn. Doubts rrrere eu-
sess and have never seen this creed of tlie Apostles. Ifit had ever prwed whether any creed at all, a- oryanized body of
misted, the Book ofAcis iiould hal-c spoken of ít in its descrip- doctrine, much less one compiled bv the Apostles themselves,
tion OC the first apostolic s~ziodat Jerusdem, to you c o ~ l dhave exiçted in the X e ~ vTestament pcriod. S o unarnbi-
appeal." For onç rençon ar another no further licadivay was gu01.1~ allusion to one, no plausible quotation from itç text
made in the matter at the council. A little Iater, hoivever, the seemed to be discoverable in the apostolic literature. Had the
thrnl. 11,
ÇF. SURIIR. 2 Q. r , art. 8.
For tcxi cf. Hahn 87. For thc story see D. C. Monrad, Dit crrte h"onlroucrsc Gbcr dm Ursprtm~drs
e
aCf. J. I-Iardnuiii, .+ida cnnsiliurum IX, 842E and H43A. Mansi givm tm bricf a
' 8aok ofFaith, Pt. 11, ch. V.
.
aMstafischcn I:Ií1ubcmbekenntnasscs, Gotha, i 88 I
rbumé uf Srwinni XITI and SI\.'.
6 CREDAL ELEMENTS IN THE PTEW TESTAMENT THE APOSTOLIC TRADITION 7
Church possesçed suçh a formula, some trace of it must have fes,;,n 01 faith or did it not?-there can be l i d e doubt that the
survived, for its authonty would surely have been immeme.
Tn any case, to postulate one would surely make nonstnse ofthe
ne,rrative answer returned by the older investiyators of credal
ofigins 1'"s well qounded. J\'hat is Tas certain is that the
known development of creeds in the second and third centuries. cboice of altemativcs thus offered is a fair and reasonable one.
Finally, it was pointed out, it would involve a grave ana- T~ put the matter in another wav, one wonders 1%-hetherthe
chronkrn to trace creeds and h e d formularies back to the dilemma proponnded does not obscure tlie real k u e . Neither
Church's infancv. The faith itself had not then attained the general probability nor the eridence of the documents gves any
pitch of development at which ir could be distjlIed into a coIous to the supposition that çtcreotvpcd, tperbaIiy sacrosnnct
creed, and the very notion of rtereotyped definitions had yet to crecds of the kind that were later to become current existed in
emerge. New Testament days. As a matter of façt, they did not make
~ h force
e of these and similar considerations ir at first sight rheir appearance until severa1 generations later: even the
impressive. It is therefore scarcely surprising that during the theory tl-iat they cannot be dated before the rniddIe of the
great efflorescence of credal studies between 1860 and rgrq secnnd century can be shown to be unduly optimistic. But
opinion hardened de&ively against &e tradition of a primitive qrecrnent on that point does not in the least exclude the
creed. The prevailing temper, it must be remembertd, under possjhilit~rthat creeds of a Iooser sort, Iacking the fixity and the
the iatluence of men like Hamack, was dominated by a oficial character of the later fomularies but none the less
peculiar theov of Chriçtian origins. -4sharp antirhesiç was often foreçhadorckg thern. were in use cornparativel- ear2y. Ef the
drnwn between t he Spirit-guided, spontaneou Xetv Testa- Churçh had a creed at a11 in the Sew Teststament epoch, it can
ment phaçe and the second-century epoch of incipient fomal- only have been sornethinq like t*. It Es worth examining what
ism and institutionalisrn. So long as thk was die accepted his- can be said in favour of thjs hypothesis.
tarical frarnework, there was no room fcr anything like a In discussing this therc are two considerations w-hich should
full-dress creed at the nunery-stage of Christianity. The be borne in mind. First, the early Church waç from the start a
majority of schoIan (there were, it is tme, some notable beíieving, çonfessing, preaching Church. Nothing could be
exceptions) 1 dccided that formulatcd creeds In any adrnissible more artificial or more irnprobable than the contrast so fre-
sense of the term did not come into existence un til tlie rniddle of quently drawn between the Church of thc first çentirry, with
the second century, or possibly a little earlier. Before rhen, if its pure religion of the Spirit and its alrnost complete abscnçe: of
anything approximating to a crecd was in use in the Church, it organjzation, and the nascent Catholic Church, with all its
can have been nothing more elaborate than the simple bapris- institutional appurtenances, of the late second centuv. Had the
mal confession "Jesus is h r d " or "Jesus is the Son of G d " . Christians of the apostolic are not conceityed of themselves as
The history ofcreeds was the history of the enlargernent of these possesçin,q a h d y af distinc&e, conçciously hdd beliefs, they
brief asseverations through the exigencies of controversy and tk70uld scarcely have separated themselves from Judaism and
the evolution of the rnature theolo*g..of Catholiçisrn. undertaken a n immense prçigamme of missionary expansion.
Evenrthing goes to show that the infant cornmunities looked
I.
2718 Apostolic Tradisiun upon tbernselves as the bearers of a unique story of sedemption.
If the problern is posed in the form of the question, Did the 1t was their faith in this gospel which had called them into
apostolic Church possess an official, textually determined con- being, and which they felt obliged to communicate to new-
comem. It wouId have been surprising i£ they had not given
E.g., A. Steberg, whose much neglccted Dcr Kub~hAnn~ der Urchrirfo&jt ~ i s i b l eexpression to it in their preachjng as well as in their
(hipzig, tg03) Paid thc foundations of an tntircly new and much more profitable
approaçh to the subjcct. I corporate life and organjzation. Like other rellgious groups wi th
TNE APOSTOLIC TRXDITION 9
a saving message, tlicy muqt have been driven by an inward An illrimjiiating example u l this irisistence on tradiiinnal
irnpuls& to emhody it in their Iitur,gy, their institutions and
doeeine may perl~apsbe discerned in the first of tlie Jolianiiine
their propaganda, and to seize cve. opportunity of harpinq J?pic<lcs.In his tortuously exprared, bafflin~opening rcntnirc
on it.
SecondIy, the character of tht: apostolic iirerature. as scholar-
!,, I \ tlie \\+ter uses the phrase "the I\-ord of life r& hdyov
,+r cWiC) ". T h e most common interpreration of i t has bren that
ship since the begjnning oC tl-ic twentietl-i century has come ji iefea to the Incnrnatc Logos, thus iaking up rhe theme of fhe
increasingly to acknowledge, linrmonizes with this assurnp- Fourth G o ~ p c l To . ~ another schoal of exegeterz the analogy of
tion. The day has passed when the GosprIs and EpistIes could bc c''
ph>hi[.2, r6 holding fast to the word of 1il'c"i and of drii 5, 20
treated as objective bi~~graphies and detached comrnentaries on
topical happcnings. The S e w Testarnent is a thoroughl~.
, -.al] the i<-ordrof thk life") has suq~ertcdthat the rcference
really is ito the mcssage of salvation announçed by the Church.
propagandist misccllany, written "froni Eaith to faith ". Thc
The solu tion of the difficriltylies in the recognition that ncithcr
Gospels thernselres are carefullv claborated expositions of
Iofthese aspccts of Word excludes the other. The Incarnate Lord
certain d o p a t i c beliefi ahout Jesus which they seek to ekrplain \,.as açsuredly, ín the eyes of Christians, thc m e \l'ord of God;
and justi-.. Thc other documents equdIy presuppose a hack- $\-hile the gospel v.+iich they prorlaim~dwas precisely thar
ground of faitli shared by the autlior and those for whom he is Word shown forth in His Person and His saving exzploits. What
writing. For a11 thc cliffercncesof nuance and standpoint which St John ir doing ir to recai1 his readcn, faced as they are with
they adrnittedly eshibit. they comprise a hodv of li the caricatures of ChrEstianiiy prescnted by heretics. to the
~vhichcaa~lcl only have spning fram a communi> pme and prirnitive messaFe handed doirii in the Church. that
strnngly marked outlook of its own. messarc of which He wa? the ernbodimcnt. This givrs point to
In the light of these considerations it is impossible to overlook the appca1 to them to continue steactfast in the teaching they
thc emphasis on ihe transrnission of authoritative doctrine had hcai-d from tl-ic beyinninq (r, 2 . c ~ .
~vliichis to be found even~vherein &c Se\?: Testament. In thc T L - -.
L I I S bqqe-~tion has mmctinies been made that teirts like these
later strata the referentes to an inherited corpus of teaclhiny are merely prove that the faith was tending; to assume a hard-and-
clear eno~igh.I n Jadc 3, for example, we reacl of "the faitli onçe kist outline towards the end ofthc first century. St Paul himself.
de'livered ta the saints" ; later (verse zn) the author s,peaks of Iiowevcr, is a witness to the fact that i-lie. process was a t wnrk at a
'* your most holv faith ", again using the word in the sensc of an
much carlier çtaTec-R~ernomtraiing~vitiithc Galritiam (Cal. 3, r),
accepted body of beliefi. S i d a r l y in tIie Pastoral Epistles such reminds tIiem that bcfore alieir eyes Jesus Ctirist lnad bccn
phrases as ' h o d e l of sound words" (2 71m. 1, 13). " the EicaIthy <c
openly set forth crucifrcd ". 1n 2 T?ZF.TX. 2, r 5 he cxhorts I& cor-
doctrine" (2 Tim. 4 , 3 ; Til. r , g), "the dcposit (+v n C i p a 8 4 ~ ~"v ) respondents to " hold fast to the traditions ( T ~ Ç T ~ ~ u ~ Ó ~which E I Ç )
and "the nobIe dcposit" ( I TIRI.6, 10; 2 Tzm. I , q),"thc You h n w been taught'' {the latter verb hints that he lias doctrine
faith I?in its concrete acceptation { r Tim. r, rg ; Til. r, 13). and mind \, and in Rnm. 63 r 7 hc speaki explicitly oF "&e pattern
"the splendid teachin~;"( j r Tim. 4, 6) form a conçrant rrfrain. nf doctrinc ( i i x o t . 8 ~ 6 a f i ~ ) to
" 1,-liich they have becn com-
Thc writer- af &tebr~ws,too, is frequent in his allusions to " the mitted. In I Cor. r r , 23 and r Cor. 15, 3 thc same idea of iradi-
confession ( 6 s ÓPoXoylap) '' to wliich Iie advises his readcrs to I
l i ~ npassed down (cf. thc kcy-words -apíhaFov and ~api8wua)
hold fast at irhatetrcir cosc (3, r ; 4, 14;10, 23). Xn another "nd rcceived recup, in the one case wíth refcrence to the
passtige (li, z), concerncd with catechctical ~ractice.Iie refm Eucharist and in t h r other to the narratire of t h e Rmurrection.
unmistakably to ali ~Iementarystage in Cliristian education
wl~ichincludes instruction i11doctrine as well as in etliics and the I ' Cf., c.g., J. Chainc, Lcs Qilii'trcs cafhoiiqties, Paris, 1939, T + 1 .
I%. F. LVestcott and h. E. Brmkc in their coni1ne11ta~ie.s. H. Dodd
a So c. has
sacramirnts. SuPWrkdthe samc exegfsis i n his edition in ttic b10Ilatt senes ( i946).
I *
I0 CKEDAL ELEMENTS IPI THE NEW TESThMENT THE APOSTOLIC TRADITXON II

Ner are these, though arnong the best knom, the only insrances Nor was it sornething vague and nebulous, without
of çuch Ianguage in St PauI. What, for example, is " the gospel n C O ~ I ~ O W :ifs main features were dearly enough
p r e c i ~ i ~of
(-r8 dayy&ov) " which he declares that he preaches among the
defined. The Epistla and Gospels are, of coune, rarelv if cver
Gentiles (Gol. 2, 21, and which he rnentions on other ocçasions ,,ncerned to set out the faith in its fdness: they rather pre-
(e.g. Rom. 2 , r6 ; 16, 25 ; I Cor. I j, I ) , unlm the saxing story of ,,ppore and h h t at it. Eren so, it is ~ s s i b l to e reconstmct, lvith
redemption? Ariother title by which he designata the same h i r degree of confidente, what must have been its chief
fai th-one which has tended to monopolize attention in recent comtituents.
years-is "the preaçhins oor " tthe preaching of Jesus Christ "
"
..+-- attention has been devoted in recent years to this sub-
ifiirh
(TOKtjpqpa: CE R m . 1 6 ~ 2 j5I Cor. r, zr]. E-et another,and more je,t. The result has been, ironicnlly enough, an alrnost general
general, descriptix-e t e m is " the faith (4.rrlrrr~s) and the"
rallying to positiom ivhich it a= fomerly fashionable to dis-
rclated verb. Thus in Gol. 2, 7 he admonishes his readers to " be m&s 3s tlie lart ditch af the ultra-consen.ative.1 A pioncer in
establishcd in the faith as you have been taught It" ;in Cal. r , ng the fiel$ has been Paul Feine, whose researchesz broke neiv
he reports the cáurches as saying that "the man who once p w n d in the most constructive way. His influente har been
persecuted us is now preaching the faith which he once extensive, although it has usuafly (like that ofA. Seeberg, whose
ravaged'" and ifi. Eph. 4, 5 hc clinches his argument about the book Fs mentioned above) remained withonit overt acknow-
unity of the body by pointing out that there is "one T,osd, une Icdgement. Feine exposes himself ta criticism, however, both
faith, one baptism". Finally, it is wjth an eye t o the Gospel as hy concentrating exciusively upon baptism and by apparently
the Church's witness that he sptaks so frequentIy (cf. r T/zt~s. insisting on fastening a creed, in the sense of an official and
r , 6; n Thcss. 3, r ; r Cor. 14, 36; Cal. 6, 6 ; Phil. r , 14, etc.) textualiy determined formula, on the apostolic age.3 Morc
oF "the word of God " or " the word of the Lord ". In con- cautious, and on the whole more reliable, conclusions have been
tradiçtion to the view that St Pad was a daring doctrinal worked out by C. H. Dodd, and have been expounded and
innovator, virtually the inventor of Catholic theology, a11 the given currency in a series oF well-hown books.4 By ranraeking
evidence goes to prove that he had a healthy regard for the the Padine epistla and the speeches ernbdied in the early
objective body OE teachjng authoritatively handed d o m in chapters of Acts (which are starnped, he thinks, with traitç
the Church.1 pointing infallibly to their primiiive character), he believes he
Nor was St Paul isolated in having this altitude. ilccording to is able to sketch t h e outline of the faith preached in the Churcli
Acis 6, 4 the ,4postles considered " the m i n i s q of the word", in the first 0~ decades after the R-rrection. Its core,
that is, the proclamation of tbe message with which they were he argues, consisted in the proclamation that Jesus of Yazareth,
entrusted, to be their overriding d u ~ The . author of r Pckr of the limeage ofDa~<d,had come as Son of God and 3leçsiah ;
recalls to his çorrespendents ( I , 2 5 ) "the word whjch was that He w~oughtmighty acts and gave a new and authoritative
preached to you", and rvhiçh presumahly fomed the basis of teaching or law; that He was crucified, died, and was buried ;
their baptismaI instrucrion. Esamples could easily be multi- that Ke rose again on the third dav-and was exalted to the right
plicd, and the conclusion is inescapable that, however ana- hand of God, Yictorious over principalities and powers; and
chronistic it may be to postulatc fixed meda1 f ~ m for s the
apostolic age, the documents themselves teste to the exjstence q p - t d a t e di-sion about thc apostolickerygmamakes little, if any, advance
on what was familiar, =.E.,ta P. Ratiffol (L'Jglisc , 2) and F. E.
mi.~ssante, ~ g q ch.
of a corpris of dishctively Christian teachuig. In this sense at Brightman (cf. % ~ t r l o r oyf thz Chiirdi atib ih anbciy, I gr 8 , 3 1 6 ff.).
a Cc~taltdc< a~Jto!ilirrhrnClairben$hskenntn~$~tses rn der <til dcs JKT.~ Leipzig,
any rate it is legitimate to speak of the creed of the primitive 1995.

I On ihis see the adrnirable study Paul md hls Prcdccts~orsby A. M.Huntcr


''Cf. Harnack's critical rcview in ni.L.l.,1925, 3 3 R. 1. Copptns ga\.e a
2
Fairer, more balanced notice in R.H.E.&i,1926, 582
(London, 1940) . ' Cf. espccially 7;iw A p a ~ t ~ lPrsachirtg
ic and iis Dcnslopmfs, London, r 936,
32 CREDAL ELEME-;TS IS T H E SXN' TESTAlrlEXT FR4GlrlENTS OF CREEDS I 3

that H e wilI come again to judge tlie living and the clead. 'Thç ;,llo~"lic C h u r c l ~since its inausuration ancl ivliich constituted
setting of a11 this was the conviction, openly announced, that ;L, distinctive message.
the -4postles and thosc in fellorvsliip with theni constituted thc
nezv Israel of God, tlie heir of the ancient promises, and werc 3. Fragrnrnis of Crftds
marked out as such by the manifest outpouriny of tlie Holy That the Churcli in the apostolic age posscssed a creed in the
Spirit. Tliose who emhraccd this gospel, repcnted and bclicvecl broad serise of a recognized body of teaçhing may be accepted as
in Clirist. would receive the forgii\~cnessof their sins and a share demonstrated fact. But it is permissible to take a further step,
in t h i life of the comine age. There is pIenty of evidence in the Sew Testament to show that
So far a-. it goes, this analysjs of the propaganda of thc the
.- -
faith UYIS alreadv heenning to harden into conventional
apostolic Church coulcl hardly be bcttercd. Such are thc SIu mmarieS. Creed:s in the rue meaning of the word were yct to
pattcrn and content of thc çredal therncs which can be over- Corne, bu t the mcivement towards formulation and fixity was
heard bv any attentive reader of thc New Testament ~ m i t i n ~ c , uinder rva.?:L Thus-.the rea der of the New Testament is con-
.- - - --
and on M-hichthc qynoptic GospeIs are maynificenùy clahorntéd rinuâlly comine; acrobs rrt-ed-like sloqans and t a ~ catchwords
,
variations. TIie onc defect from which it suffers is the canse- \\+hichat the time of w i t i n ç rrrere beinq consecrated by popular
quence of the method of approacli which has hccn adoptecl. usnge. In addition he Ligkts upon longer passages whicti, while
Rased as it is on the prrachin,~of tlic carlv Cliui-cli as reflccicd still fluid in their phrasing, betray by their context, rhythm and
in St Paul's Zctters and d r t s , it tciids to convry a sIiyhtly m e - 2;enenl plattern, as \+.e11 XY h?? their content, that they derive
sided picture of itq corpus of belicfs. Preachinq \,-ar onJv Une f rom corrirnunity tradition rather than from the rvriter's un-
of the spheres in which the faith of first-century Christians found triirrir~iciied
----^-11.
invention. TO esplain them as exccrpts from or
an outlet, and in preacliing, for obvious niissionnry rcasons, t h t C C ~ O C F of ali oficial ecclesia~tical formula, as userl to be
emphasis iended to be almost esclusivcly Christoloqical. I-et hshionahle, is unnecessary and misleading. Sincc ihe very
the Church carried over from its Jewish antcccdents a settfed esistencc of a creed in thc precire senre impIied js pure hypo-
helief in God the Fathcr, thc makcr of heaven and earth, the thcsis, 2nd iinlikeiy hypothesis a t thnt, it is more natural ro
one God of the whole world; and the teachin.g of Jeslus had treat them as independent units and examine them on their
assigned special prominence to lhe Fatherliooci or 1 F
r*
hod. T h c mrrits.
S e w Testament repeatedly undcrfinei the pIace which thiç his connection are worth noticing. First, thesc
cardinal affirmation occupied in tlic thought of first-ccntirr?- 1 stallization did not take place haphazardly.
Cliristians. But if nttention is concentrated on the kcrymrr as it re provoked by particular situations in the Church's
appears in sermons alone, i t is easy to invet-look this i&F iortant ]ire. Particular occasions lent themselves to the exposition or
item. Sirnilarly t h t profound ly Triniitariari s;train ir1 dcclaration of Christian doctrine : t hey called for sometliina
Christianity is Eiahle to be ignored in the kin.d of ap!proacn likc a sreed. l l e one w.liich has been most thoroughly investi-
.r\-hich wc ar, ning. The Trinitarianism of the Xew w e d is baptism. Somc kind of assurance of faith, and thus some
Testa plicit; but thc frequency witli which the sort of avowal of helief, was required of candidates seeking
triad i i recurs (as wc dia11 see in the followiiig section) admiaion to the Church. But it is a mistake to concentrate
suqgcscs triar rnrq
-1 - partem
.. ivaq irn~licitin Christian thcolo-y csclusirreiy on baptism, as scholaw h a w sometimes been dis-
from the start. If thesl: gaps are filled in, however, 1.c are posed to do. Thc catechetical instruction preceding baptism
entitled to assume with some confidente that what we have ~ a also s a moment syrnpathetic to the shaping of credaI
before us, a t any rate in rough outline, is the doctrinal deposit, summaries. So was preaching : the method and style of different
or tlie pattern of sound ~iords,~ r h i c hwas expounded in the Preachers doubtless varied, but the content and wording of thcir
I4 CREDAL ELEMENTS iN THE NEW T E S T A M E V FRAGSíESTS OF CREEDS 15
message inust have tended to run alonp certain accepted iines. ,*, 3''. '.No one can say Kitrios IZzous except by the Holy Spirit",
The day-to-day polemic of the Church, whether against lieretics nnd aFzin (Rom. 10, g \, '-lf with your mouth sou confess hpurios
within or pagan foes without, provided another si tuation ~ z and~ believe ~ ~in your l heart
~ that God has raised Him from
propitious to the production of creeds. Yet anothcr was thc dead, yau will be saved." He does not discIose the occasion
supplied by the 1itur.g : solemn expressions of faith, in tlie form on which tliesc utterances were made, but the context of the
of hymns, prayers and devotional cries, had a natural place fint, with its referente to the alternative of saying A n a t h m
there. interesting special case is the rite of exorcism. The I~:JOILJ (=cic~rsed beJesus"), seerns to suggest that it is an hour
exorcism of devils wa widely practised in the early Church, and \,.hen the Christian's loyalty is tated (by persecution possibly,
the codification of suitable formulae of proved potency seems to but not exclusivelyj that he has in mind.' This harmonizes rvell
have set in relatively soon. Nor should we overlook thc forma1 wjth the strcss laid by early Christians on the sinfulness of
correspondence of Church leaders with their flocks. In the denying Christ when challenged,2 as well as with what we know
ancient as in the modern world, lctters, apeciaIly oficial ones the practice of rhe civil authorities of trying to induce
(and it must be remembered that Christian letters were often Christians haled before them to curse Christ.3 The verse from
intended to be read aIoud at Church meetings), abounded in Rornuns has been generally taken as an auusion to the acknow-
stereotyped t u m of phrase, and sometimes these had somethíng ledgement of Christ's Jordship made at baptism. The repeated
of the character of brief formal confessions. description of baptism as "in the name of the Lord Jesus " (cE,
Secondly, the Sitz im 06m,if this technical description of it is e.g., Acts 8, r 6 ; rg, 5 ; I Cor. G, I r ) certaidy seems to impIy that
in place, did not only create the occasion for tentative creeds : it the formula "Jesus is Lord" had a place in the rite. The words
also to some extent determined their style, substance and occur again in Phil. 2, I I , wliere St Paul speaks of every tongue
structure. Sometimes diffuseness was appropriate, sometimes confasing that "Jesus Christ is Lord", the sctting in this case
terseness and aridity. If a dry enumeration of Christ's redemp- being liturgical. ,Aqain, that the tag \$.as handed out to con-
tive deeds was suitable in a catechetical instruction, a more vem as a canvenient epitome of their faith is suggested by such
enthusiastic, fulsome utterance might be expected in an act o€ passages as Col. 2, 6 , "You received Chrkt Jesus as the Lord",
worship. I n certain circurnstances what seemed fitting was a and by the references in Acts to " believing on the Lord Jesus
Trinitarian or a binitarian ground-plan, the former emphasiz- Christ" (e.g. r I , 1 7 ; 16, 3r) and to "preaching the Lord
ing belief in the three Divine Persons, the Jatter belief in the Jesus" (cf. I I , 20). The iifar~rdom qf St PoEycarp 4 reports
Father and the Son. More often than not, a single-clause that the imperial rnagistrate, d o i n ~his best to persuade
Christological staternent was sufficient for the purpose in hand. *e aged bishop to come to t e m , asked him, "What harm
Tliis last division, based on underlying plan, has proved so is there in saying Caesar is Lord?" The acclamation hiúrios
significant that, in proceeding to survey the evidence for quasi- frisar would seem to have been a popular one in the civic
credal material in the New Testament, we shall cataIogue it in cult of the Roman empire, and Christians were no doubt con-
accordance with the pattern it exhibits. At the same time we scious of the implicit denial of it contained in their own Kurios
shall try, though not aIways with much hope of success, to I~.YOUS.
indicate the situation in the Church's life in which the fomulae Another formula, equally concise and ancient, though
under discussion have their roots.
First, then, let us gIance at the fomulary elements which con- Cf. O. Cullmam, h pr& m n f i s s i ~d~e f i i c h r i t k ~ P
s 3~&, 1 9 4 3 , ~ ~ -
'Cf.~~~.r0,33;26,3~f.; 13.2,22;2 Em.2,IZ.
sist of simple, one-clause Christologies. The most popular, as OfS! fJolwarp g. 3, whrre St Folucarp asks " How can I curse my
Cf. i~farlyrd~m
well as the briefest, in the New Tesrament is the slogan Xi~rios 1' king?"; andPiiny., Epb. S. 96, whcrc! hc reports to Trajan how he tricd to make
IGSow ( K Ú ~ L O 'SI ? 7 ~ ~ U s = c cisJLord").
e ~ ~ ~ St Paul states ( I Cor. I
' 8. 2
cliristians CIITSF (maltdirnr) C:hrisi.
(Lighifoot. 1921.
rG G R E D : ~ ~ELEMEXTS
. rs THE TTESTAMENT
?r'~t+-

dertincd to be s u p e ~ e d e d\\.hen its oriqhaI 'rfes~ianicsignifi- hir ium had received ir, prerumably fmm the Church. The
cance was forqotten, is "Jesus is the Ghrirt". I Jn. 2, 22 testifies prapent quoted rum :
to irs use ("~'ihois the liar, except he rviio denies tiiat Jesus is the
fi, I on to you in rhc first place what I had myself rcccived,
Cfirist?"), as does .lfic. 8, 30 ('Teter said to Him, Thou art the
timt Christ died for our sins according to t h t Scriphires,
Christ "1. yct another whicii often crops up is ''Jesus is the Son
+-.-

and that Me was buried,


of Gocl ". A striking example of iis use as a baptismal conression and that He was raised on the thitd day according to the Scrip-
is tlie story of thc baptism of tlie Ethiopian eunuch at the hands tures,
of St È'liiIip, ntiirated in ilits 8, 36-38. ~lccordingto the reãding and that He appeared to Cephas,
of t h c \i-cstern test (for our purpose it makes no d i e r e n c e then to the Tu-elve,
n-hethrr it is oricinaI or an intcrpolationi, the eunuch sealcd his then to more than tive hundred brothers ar once ...
faitli By declaring, "I bbeeve that Jesus C h i s t is the Son of theo He appeared to James,
God ". The author of I John makes much of it, arguing (4, r 5 ) then to all the apast'les. . . .
thai " IYIiosoevcr confesses that Jesus is rhe Son of God, God
abidcs in him and he in Cocl", and latcr asking (5,5), " Who is 1 'L.his is manifestly a summary drawn up for catechetical pus-
the conqueror of the world, but the man who bclieves that poses or for preaching : it gives the gkt of the Christian message
Jesus is the Son of God?" As used by him the words, while in a concentrated form. A defensive, apologetic note becornes
ernbodying a prirnitix-c Christian affrrrnation, have a certain audible in the impressive amay of u-imsses with which it
p01crnical colourinç., being dirccted a-aimt the Ducetists t\+horn terrninates. -4long with it \%-eshould probably class thc more
I1-e is attackinq. This comes OU^ in a more self-çomciously close!jr knit theologiçal statement of R m . r , 3 f :
polcmical formula (4, 2), "Jesus CIirisr has come in the flesh".
The çamc statement that Jesus is the Son of God, without any Concerning His Son,
hint of licresy-hunting, is quoted in Hrbr. 4, 14. It reappears ln a Who was bom of David's seed by natural descent,
vcry different setting in Mk. 5, 7, where the devil whom ti-ie Who was declared Son of God with power by the Spirit of
Lord is about to exorcize cries, "Jcsus, thou Son of God most holiness
when Hc was raised from the dead,
hiyh, 1 conjure thee", and in -1ik. 3, r l , where she demonç j e u s &t our Lord,
salutc Wim tvith the words, "Thou art the Son of GBd". thmu%h fr$%om\cre have received Face,
Possibly theçe phcsages give a clue to the exorcistic fomulae
currcnt in the first-ccntury Ghurch.1
Sci Or wc have becn glancing ar miniature crceds, hardIy as ~zlellas tIie bnefer extraçts in Rom. 8, 34:
I
more tlinn cabcliwords. Sidc by side with them thcre are many
Christ Jesus Who dicd, or rather
exarnplcs of fuIlcr and more dctailed confessions in the pages of has been raised from the dead,
the Xrw Testarnent. In I Cor. 15, 3 E.,St Paul rcprodirçes an Who is on the right hand of God,
eytract rrom ivhat he deçcribes in so many words as " t h s IZ?io also rnakes iintercessian for us,
gocpcl (78 ~$a;~&ArorJ which I preached to you and \t.hich yau
received": he adds that, so far from itr being hiç gsspef, he in
and 2 Tim. 2, 8 :
Thr %ameslo-n found picturial cxpresslon in the wudely popular q?nbol of
spclled out "Jesus Chriar, Son of God,
the firh: tlie lettcrs si the Creek ' I ~ b k Rernernber Jesus Chrisr,
Saviour". Cf.F. J. Drilgcr, Ichthps, I , ~ 4 8 259,
, 318 R. Cf. also thc second-century
iycriptian scratched up in San Sehasriano (Xiornc) and referrcd to in Z.N.7- raised from rhe dead,
xui, 1922,r5r. I of the secd of David (according to my gospe't),
I0 CREDAL ELEMENTS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT FRAOMENTS OF CREEDS 19
Odd sciitcnçcs scattercd throughoiit the epistles seern to rcho hymn-like scrap, setting out the eucntials of the paro do si^ in
catechetical formulae Iike ihese, e.g. Gni. I, 4 ("Jesus Chrlst, rhythmiç lines, is I T i m . 3, 16:
Who gave Hirnself for our sins") ; E Thesf. 4, 14 (" If ~ v believe
e Who was revealed in the flesh,
that Jesus died and rose again"); and x Thess. 5, g wãs justified in the Spirit,
(". .. through our Lord Jesus Christ, 1Yho died for us"). appeared to angels,
So, too, the Icnathier, more freely expressed passage in was preached among the Gentiles,
I P P ~3,. 18 E: was beliwed on throughout the world,
was t&en up in glory,
For Christ also suffered for sim,
the just for the unjust, to hring us to God, The same type of kez-ygma, much abbreviated, of course, was
slain indced in the flesh but quickened in the Spirit, .lsedat exorcrçism and for healing. Thus St Peter (Acfs 3, 6 )
in which He went and preacbed to the spirits in prison ued the Iame man at Beaatiful Gate by solernnly adjuring hím,
. . . t h r e u ~ htthe risinq agGn of JmChrist, In the name of Jesus Christ, the Nazoraean, walk." A lictle
tlrhois on the right hand of God, ter, when asked to explain the rníracle (4, ro), he elaborara
having ascended to hpaven. the formula into "In the name of Jesus Christ, the Yazoraean,
anqels, autheriria 2nd powers having bem subjected to Him, I$'hom you crucified, Whom God raised from the dead."
So much for síngle-clause, purely ChristeEogical Fomulations
reaàs Iike a part-paraphrasc and part-quotation of an instnic- of the doctrinal deposít of the ãpstolic Church. They were
tion preparato. to baptism. The imertion in t.erses zo E.of a rnanirestly not the ody * e : contemporancously wjth them
~ h o r account
t of the rneaning of the samarnent bean this out. the doctrinaI deposit was taking shape in serni-formal codes-
The plan of these CIiristological k e v p a s is sírnple :thcy are sions of a bipar6te stmcture based on the parallel ideas of Cod
built up by attaching to the name ofJesus selected incidents in LIie Eather andJesm Christ His Son. Onc of the most irnportant
the redernptive story. Xn underl?in~ contrast betívecn ffesh and inistances (~fthese is St Paul's ( I Cor. 8, 6 )
cpirit, son of David and Son of God, humiliation and exaltation, ... .
\Te, holvwer, have one God the Fathcr,
çan often be detected. The mast irnpressive example of i t is the from 'bVhom are d things, and ~ : eta Him,
well-knots-n ChristoIoqical passage Phil. r, 6-11, which ís and one Lwrd Jeus Chríst,
entirely rnodcIIed on the antithesís betr~een Ckrist's self- through lt'hom are all things, and w e throush Him.
ernptying and His elevation to gIory as Lord of çreation - So far The formulary character of this is unrnistakable, and is
from being PauEine, is is almost certaidy an ancient Christian emphasized by the catehl paralfelism and the artificial con-
-tu- _ t
hymn, probabIy oF Palestinian derivation, 1%-llichwas dircaay struction. Theological motives are ín part at work, for St Paul
arranged in rhythmic strophes by thc time it fel1 inta St PauE's is concerned to bring out the cosmic roles of Father and Son,
Iiands. SchoEars 1 liave hazarded the guess that it must be an but polemicaI ones are for the moment uppermost, St Pau1 is
exçerpt from some primitive eucharistic Iíturgy, but this is pure asserting the unity of the Ch&tians%od as contrastcd with the
conjecture : nothing in the language or in the rnovernent of ideas I<
many gods and many lords" oF paganism. A closely related
givcç the least support to it. The most thãt can be cIairnet1 is that Passage, looser in expression but built upoii the same plan, is
its setting was undoubtedly cultic, and that it is a fine exarnple 1 Tim.2, 5 f :
of the errrly crystallization of liturgical material. Another For therc is one God,
$o H.Lictzmann, Z.fi.7.W. xxit, 1923, 2G5, md E. Lqhmeyer, $rios JCJW
likewise one mediator hetwcen God and meii,
( S i k ~ n g s b ~ r i c t i&r
t c Il'cidtlberçer Akadeniie de7 Wissmchaftlm, Phil. Hist. k!.r g274), the man Christ Jesus,
65 f. Alsn tlic larter" Pki/$prr (Gottingcn, 19283,ad loc. Who gave Himself as a rnnsom for aI1. ...
20 CREDAL ELEMENTÇ IN THE NEW mTAhENT

h o t h e r familiar mo-clause confeswion, the creed-like Thesf-r. 1 0 ; Col. 2 , 12;andEph. i,zo.8orareth~confincd


character of which Ieaps at once to the eye, occurs in r Tim. to St Paul. Thc authar of I P d ~ addrersa
r his corrcspondents
6, r 3 i:
(lY
21)
I cfiarge you in the sight of You who tlirough Him 1i.e.Jesus] beIieve on
God Who gives life to a11 things, God, Who has raised
I
ãnd Christ Jesus Who witnessed the &e confession Him fram the dead
in the time of Pontius Pilate, and has given Him glory.
that you keep your comrnission spotless,
without reproach, until Jlqhateverwas the situation in which it took shape, it k clear
the rnanifetation of our Lod Jesus Çhrist. thnt 'W,Tfího haç raised the Lord Jesus from the dead" had
It hardly requires much irnagination to discern behind this become a stereotyped ta? or cliché before the third gpeneration of
loose parapllrase a formal confession of belief in God the the first century.
Father, the Creaior of all things, and ChristJesus His Son,Who These comprise the cxamples of bipartite confessíons in the
suffered (this is surely the rnie sense of papwp+cai~.ros +v Ncw Testament to which appeal is generafly made. But they
~ a h i j vOpoXoylav) undtr Pontius Pilate, and will come again in Iiy no means exhaust the list : they can be abundantly rupple-
glory.1 The sltuation to which it belong 5vouId seem to be the mented if the seasch for formulary elements is conduçted on a
dactrinal preparation for bzrptism. A frâgmentary creed of $vider basis. Praçtically e v e q onc of St Paul's Eetterç, for
similar Qpe is cited in 2 Tim.4 I asa mIernn adjui-iition: example, o p w with thc con\,entional greeting, "Grau and
peace be to sou from Gad the Father and the Lord Jesus
I charge sou, Christ",' Evidentiy it .rsras a stock fom. Nor was it an idio-
in the sight of God,
and of ChRst Jesus, Who is gaing to judge living. and dead, symrasy oF Pauline usage, Closely similar geetings Seature in
and by His coming-again and His kingdom. . . . the Pastoral Epistles ( r E m , I , z ; 2 Tim. I , 2 ; Tit. I , 4) and
2 Pe&r (cf. I , I, "in the knowledge of God and Jesus our Lord ") ;
Herc the Second Corning, usually included in the list oT saving also in 2 Jn. I , 3 ("grace, rncrcy, peace from God the Eather
e.yIaits ascribed to Christ, appears as a mordinate artiçle or and Jesus Chrkt rhe Son of the Father"). -4~;ain, the expres~ion
faith. " the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ" had also har-
-4 passage ~vitnessingto a binitarian formula of a slightIg clcned into a stlircovped formula, as its use in Rom. r,, 6; 2
diferent type is Rorn. 4, 24: Cor. I , 3 ; 1 r , 31; E$/'. I , 3; r Pd, r , 3sho1vi.s.~
Itçoriginal setting,
.
because of us . . who bel iewe if we can judçc from Rorn. I j, ~ i (" j that you may unitedly with
on Hirn Who has raised alie mouth glorify God . . .") as well as from its frequent
Jesus our Lord from the dead, n t a bIessing, was probably liturgical. Apart from
~ r n p l o ~ r n eas
Who was delivered up for our transgessions such special contexts, however, numberlesç other passages serve
and was raised for our justification, illwtrate the way in which thc mcn of the apostolic Church
wheré the creed-like note is unmistakable. Passages with acquiesced imtinctively in the coordhation of Father and Son.
exactly the samr structure and content occur with g e a t fre- I t \%'asalmost a cateqsry of their thinking. Thus Si Paul pra>T
quency, as is shown by Rom. 8, I I ; n Cor. 4, "4; Gal. r , I ; in I Thess. 3, I I , " Slay our God and Father, and our Lord
For tha interpretarion cf. C. H.Turner in J.T.S. xxviri, 1927, 270 f. Perhaps Jesus Christ, make our way straight to you"; while in 2 Thess.
M. Dibrlius (Die Pa~toralbn'$e, 3rd d.rg55,68) wss right in thinking that e'wAohay;nv
may not havc stood in the original quoted by thr wricer. For p~ciprupr~w="suffrr", ' Cf.Rom.r,~;iCo~.1,~;~Cnr.r,2;Gal.r,3;Eph,r,~(ctalsoG,r?~);
Phd. 1 ,
r,rr.
cf. I Clmirnt5, 4: 5, 7. ' 1%'.Bouqrct
2 ; 2 a s .
in Jcssi$ &r Ilrrr, Gùtiinqrn, 1916, JG ai.
22 CREDAL BLEMENTS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT THE ORIGINAL PATTERN 23
2, r6 he expresses the hape that his correspondents may be redeaed us from the curse of the Iaw . . . that you may receive
comforted and strengthened by "our Lord Jesus Christ and the promise of the Spirit through faith." An excellent instance
God our Father". St James describes himself ( r , r ) as "the it is to be found in I Pet. r , 2 , . . according to the fore-
"'.

servant of God and the Lord Jesus Christ ", and St Peterm(r m w l e d g e of God she Pather, by the consecration of the
Pet. 2, 5) ~ p m k sof "spiritua1 sacrifices acceptable to God spint, unta obedience to . . .Jesus Christ", and another in
through Jesus Christ". The Apocalyptist too describes himself H&. 10, 29, "OF how much worse vengeance will he be
(I, a) as having borne witness "to the word of God and the thought worthy who has spurned the Son of God . . . and has
testimony of Jesus Christ". The catalogue could be extended jnsulted the Spirit of grace? " A host o£ other passages stamped
alrnost indefinitely. The items contained in it, the reader w;th the same Iineaments might be quoted.1 In a11 of them there
scarcely needs to be rcminded, are not creeds; but they are is no trace of fmity so far as their wording is concerned, and
highly significant as instantes of the codification of fundamenta1 none of them constitutes a creed in any ordinary sense of the
theological ideas in the apostolic age, and they help to expIain tem. Nevertheless the Trinitarian ground-plan obtrudes itself
Lhe Iines aIong wliich creeds proper developed. obstinately throughout, and its presence is a11 the more striking
The binitarian schema, it is evident, wãs deeply impressed because more often than not there Is nothing in Lhe context to
upon the thougllt of primitive Christianity ;so, it would appear, necessitate it. The impression inevitably conveyed is that the
was the Trinitarian. Explicit Trinitarian confessions are few and conception of the threefold manifestation of the Godhead was
far between; where they do occur, little can be built upon them. embedded deegly in Christian thinking from the start, and
The two most commonly cited are St Paul's prayer at the end of provided a ready-to-hand rnould in whích the ideas of the
2 Corinthians ( r 3, I+), "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and apostolic writers took shape. If Trinitarian creeds are rare, the
the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit, be Trinitarian pattern which was to dominate a11 later creeds was
with you ali", and the baptismal command put by St Matthew already part and parcel of the Christian tradition of doctrine.
(28, xg) into the mouth ofthe risen Lord, " Make disciples of a11
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the 4. The Original Patt~xn
Son and of the Holy Spirit ". These are not the only exarnples, The preceding section has provided a survey, not necessarily
however, of such formulae in the New Testament, aIthough complete but sufficient for our purposes, of the credai elements
preoccupation with them has sometimes caused otbers which, embodied in the New Testament. The reader should be wary of
while pcrhaps less obvious, are in reality no less signifikant to be drawing hasty or extravagant condusions, Often the words
overlooked. Amongst these may be reckoned I Cor. 6, r r, "But "creed", "confession" and "formula" have been used to de-
you were justified in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ and in scribe the material ;but they have been used loosely, for lack of
the Splrit ofour God"; r Cor. 12,4 f., "There are varieties of more precise designations. It cannot be too often repeated that,
taIents, but the same Spirit, varieties of serviçe, but the same in the proper sense of the terms, no creed, confession or formula
Lord, and varicties of effects, but the same God Who effects offaitli can be discovered in the New Testament, with the pos-
everything in everyone " ; 2 Cor. I, 2 x f., "It is God Whci con- sible exception of such curt slogans as Kurios Iêsoxs, What is
firms us along with you in Chrkt, Who h=. anointed us and manifest on every page is a cornrnon body of doctrine, definite
sealed us and given us the earnest of the SpiritjJ;and r Thess. in outline and regarded by everyone as the possession of no
5, 18 f., "For this is the wiI1 of God in Christ Jesus for you :
CC, e.g., Lk. 24, 49; Ronz. i , I-+;-fi, 1-5; 14, 1 7 f; 16 and 30; 1 Cbr. 2,
quench not the Spirit ". The triadic schema is again clearly 1-16; 6, 13 R.; 1 2 , 3 ; 2 Cor. 3, 3 ; Ejh. r , 3; 1 , 1 1 - 1 9 ; I , 1 7 ; 2, 18-29;3,3-7;
visible in such a contcxt as Gal. 3, r I- I +, "It is obvious t11iat no 3, '4-17;4,44;4,30-32;5,1&0;Phi~.3,g;Col. r,W;n%a.a,13-15; Tit.3,
one is justified in the sight: of Gad by the law . . . Christ has 4-6; t Ai. 4, rq; Jud. 2of. Thc c o m o 3 0 h m t ~ m (1I jrn. 5, 7 f. in the A.V.) i s
Ilot admissibIe as evidente, being a 4th cent. Spanish interplation.
THE ROLE OF DECLARATORY CREEDS 3 '
l~ew,moreover, it must be admitted that there was ao extremely
cloie connection between their formulation and the admission
ofneophutc~to the Church. But the precise kind of relationship
and &e exact character of the connection need to be defined. I t
CHAPTER IÍ
i,,, e';aSgeration to say that in the paçt there have been con-
CREEDS XND BXPTISkf siderable confusion and misunderstandhg on these poincs. The
kx-estigationwhich it is proposed to carry out in tkis chapter
r. Tlze Role of Declaratory Creeds wdl of necessity be somewhat cursory. But it should assist in
throu.ing light both on the emergence of credal formulae in the
WE saw in the last chapter that a nurnber of situations in the life church and on the ways in which they have hecn employed in
of the apostolic Church lent thernselves to the produçtion of the baptismal liturgy.
semi-formal çonfessions of fait h. Brtptism, worship, preaching, Perhaps it will make a useful starting-point if we set down, in
catechetical instruction, anti-heretical and anti-pagan poIemics, aI1 its crudity, the popular theory of the relation between creeds
exorcism-all t hese provided oçcasions for givinq concrete ex- and baptism. I n thehr preçcnt form çreeds are declaratory, that
pression, aIong lines determined by the iieeds of tlic moment, to iç to say, they are short statements, çouched in the first person,
the cardinal articles of Christian belief. From any one, or ali, of a ç s e h g beltief in a sdisct grotrp of facts and doctrines regarded
these, as the liturgy settled dowm in h e d moulds, s t e r e o t ~ e d as vitallu important. Declasatory creeds of thi5 sart plav a recog-
formuIarfeç migbt be expeçred in duc course to demlop. In nEzed role in baptism as pnctised to-day. In the contemporary
point of fact they did develop from severa1 of them, as a n p n e Roman ritual, for exarnple, after the çerernonieç at the church
can discover at a glance who surreys the mass of sacramental door, the priest conducts the party to the font and, as he p,
rites and services which have been handed do^% in the Church. recites, along with the sponsors, &e Apostles' Creed and the
In this book, however, eur concern is not ~ 4 t hany and every Lord's Praycr. So in the Eastern Churches,l after the exsuíila-
type offixed formulary, but with crceds in the teclinjcal accepta- tion, or exorçism of certain parts of the candidate's body, and
tion af the word, such as the Apostlcs' Creed. Wliat we want to after his triple abjuration of Satan and triplc declacation of ad-
ascertain is the environment in wl~içhdeclãratosy statements of hesion to Christ, he is biddcn to recite the Nicene, i.e. Constan-
faith like this originated and the motives which prompted tbopolitan, Creed. Some such declaratory profession of faith, is
Christians to draw them up. And here we are confronted with is cornrnonIy assumed, must aIways have fomed an eIement in
an all but univcrsally accepted anslvec. Creeds proper, it is the service of baptism. TR fact, it was precisely the need for a
alIeged, rook their rise in connection w i t h the rite of baphm. formal afirmation of belief to be rehearsed by the catechumen
"'lt is indisputable ",remarked Hans Lietzrnann,i '"that the at baprism whrch instigated the Church to invent cseeds in the
mot of ali creeds iJ the formula oE befief pronounced by the b a p fim place. ?SShateverother uses they may have been put to in
tizand, or pronounced in his hearing and assenred to by him, course of hj~tory,the trae and original use of creeds, their
before his baptism." primar=ratjon d'Érre, was to serve as iolemn afirmaáom of faith
This is a suhject which calls for rather careful examination. ia the context of baptismal initiation.
There can bc no doubt (the argument of the present ~hapter Bmadly speaking, and subject to certain reservations which
should serve to substantiate it) that creeds have, historica~l~ wil1 be mentioned later, this account is correct cnough so far as
speaking, been intimately associated witli baptism. On any concems the use of creeds in the fourth centuiy ãnd the long
Dls A@g# dcs GIa~benskkertrztni~~~~, TUbingen, 1 9 ~ 1 225.
, This short m a y Cf., e.ga, I?. J. Goar, E4.yoA6yrov &c Rituale Frnecosum, Lutctiae Parisionim,
tormed part o1 a Fcsigabc presentcd to A. ron Harnack. 1647,338,
30
THE ROLE OF DECLARATORY CREEDS 33
.?i2 CREEDS, AND BAPTISM
perjod subsequent to it. T h e baptisma? liturgies, Easrern and Gallican was an exçeption) a specially formal reddition was
\Vestem, which have come dswn to us are jungle-Iike in their provided for on t h e day of the baptism itself.
comyifexity: their very variety, too, presents formidable ob- Some imprasian of how all this actually worked out can be
stacles to anyone who tries to hack his way throuqh them. But gained from thc picture of baptim as prartised in JenisaIcrn in
the general ground-plan 1vh3ch they mkibit is fairly clear at the rniddle of the fourth century ivhich has sunived ;R St Cyril's
lcast as regards the candidate's a b a t i o n of his faitli. T ~ v o Cntech~iicolh r u r r . s (deiivered ei ther in 348, when he was stiI1
momcnts, apparently, stand out in the ritual of baptism when he a priest, at the h t a n c e of kjs bishop, or possiblyl after his 01rm
rnight be espected to make his afimation. One ivas the very çonsecration as bishop}. Thc prcliminaq- instniction took place,
act of being baptized, at thc c1irnã.r of the 1%-hole ccrernong. -4s ris eveq~vherein those days, throughout k n t , and at a cestain

he stood in the watcr of the font, he tvas invited to assent to point in the course of it (not directlg indicated, but probably at
three successive questions whether he bdieved in t hc Father, in the end of the Hlh week} the creed was defivered to the cate-
the Son and in the Holy Splrit. As he replied "I beIievç'j to churnem.Vhe remaining; t\vo weeks before Holy Week were
each of them, he wãs plun,qed in the water, three times in all, occupied in expounding it. The baptism itselfwas adrninisrered
and his baptism was complet~.I n addition to this, however, by night, on Easter Evc, and S t Cyril describesQow thc can-
much earlier in the sei~ict:or even in the coursc of the cere- didates were conducted into the forecourt of the baptistery
monies preparatory to tlie baptism itself, there was nnother V /lamíuparoç o f ~ o v )and
(r2ç 76v V ~ O ~ Ú A C Or06 , there, turning
occasion when he was expected to afirrn his faith. This time ir westwards, in four separate acts renounced Satan, his works, his
was not a case of asscnting to intcrrogations, but of reciting a pomp and his worship. Then turning eastwards, towards the
declaratory creed. It is this rite which was technically known as region of light, they made their profession of faith, "I believe in
the. "rendering" of the creed (Lat. redcfilio .rymtioli; Gk. the Fatl~er,and in the Son, and in the Holy Spirit, and in one
d a a y y d l a +S P ~ W T E W S ) , and which marked the culmination of baptkm of repeniance Wc may confidently surmise tIiat this
"'.

the catechetical training Icading up to the sacrament.1 At a represents nn abridgement of the more detased formula whiçh
certain stage in the training (the exact date varied, but ir çis- Si Cyril had commcntçd on çlausc by dause, but which he may
nalized thrir transition to the superior grade of comprt~nk-sor Eiave felt somc cornpunction about setting dolm. Their next
& ~ * r ~ ó ~ ~ v o r ) bishop formally " deIivered " thc creed (chis
the step was to enter the baptistery proper, wAere they stripped off
was the traditio $).mbolij to thc more adx-anced czstcchumenc. Jt their clotlies, ínere anointed with exorcized o2 and descended
\\*as then thçir busincss to lcrirn and assimilrite it. se as to be able naked into the water-tank. Here thev wwe sererally asked
to reproducc it as tlieir olcn spirjtual pssession on t2ie cve of whether they belie~edin the name of the Father and ofthe Son
t heir initiation. Tlic theon- wtis t hat the creed \vas a srcrct for- and of the HoIy Spirit, and as they made their "satínq con-
niula ~rhichçoulrl not Iici ii,rittcn down but must bc rnemoritcd fession (+v (7w*7jpmv 6pmhVlav} " in reply thev were plungcd
by the faithful. In many churçIies there wouId secm to have three times in the water. St Cyrii's account is confimed and
been more than onc reddition. TIis w7asthe case I I the ~ Eastz ; suppIernented by that d the Aquitanian lady Etheria, who
and St AugustineGindicates t hat there was a preliminary reddi- ahout forty yean later visited Jenisalern and macle a tour of the
tion on the occasion of the delivery of the L o I + ~ 'Psayer,
s i.e. holy places, noting d o m liturgical and ecclesiastical practices
eight days after the delivcty of the creed. But in niost sites (she wi th devout curiosity. She reports4 that the catechumens had
For this riie in the fourtli century cf. Pcrrgria. Eiher.46 (Geyer, 97 f.) ;S i I-filary, Sa J. Madcr, Der h!. Cyri!Eus mn J~rusalcm,Einsiedeln, 1891,z f.
& i . 5, .ts! (P.G. 33, 320 E.).
Lib. dt Jyn. gr (P.L. 10, 545) ; St Augiistine, Confes~.8, 2, 5 (P.L.32, 7511.
' CF.L,Duchesne, Gh~isfianIVordzip (Eng.rrans. 1931),~332. For I his account see Cri. 1 t), 1-9 and 20, 2-4 (P.G.33, 1&8 R: and 1077 K),
which S t Cyril delivered to thr: newly baptized ir1 the following Easter wcck.
Sym. 59,. r ; 2 I 3, 8 (P.L. 38, 4riir ; r064 f.). Cf. L. Eisenhofcr, Hnndbucli de,
f i t ~ l r ~ c h Lrlurgik,
m Freiburg im Brcirgzu, I 933, 11) 249 r- ' I'irtgrin. Etkr. 46 (Geyer, 97 f.).
fG CREEDS A N D BAPTISM THE ROLE OF DECLARATORY CREEDS 37
creed from altcraiion. St Augustine, too, teus a stosy which baptized, and which clairnsl to follow Rornan models as far as
brings out the spectacular, alrnost dramatic character of' the possible, reproduces the interrogatjons in detai1. According to
"rendcring ofthe creed" at Rorne. Recalling the baptism of the jtJ the candidate entered tlie font and renounçcd, first, the devil
famous convert Victorinus, he reveais that Roman cateçhumens and his works, and then the world and its pleasures.2 Then rhe
on thc point of being baptized were expected to recite the creed, spcakci- soes on to recall :
in a set form of wards which they had memorized, From a lofty
You iwre questioned, "Dost thou believc in Crod the Fattier aI-
position (de loco minefiffore)in fuI1 view af the congregation,Qo mighty?" You said, "I klieve", and wtre irnrnersed, rliat is, were
St Leo, in a sharp Ictter to PaIestinian rnonks whosc Chrkto- buried. Again you were asked, " Dast thou believe in ous Lord Jesus
Iogical i-icwç he considered to have gone grievously astray, re- Cfirisr and His cross?" You said, " I believe ", and were immersed.
bukes thernvor forgctting "the salutary creed and confcssion Thus you were buried along ~ 4 t h Christ ;for he whe is buried along
which you pronounced in the preçence of many witnesses". with C h i s t rim again with Him. A thírd time you were asked,
'+Dostthou believe d s o in the Holy Spirit?" Irou said, "I belier-e",
None of them, unfortunateIy, lets us into the secret of the precise and a third time were immersed, so that your threefold confession
point in the liturgy at which thEs impressive scene was enacted. rciped out the rnadioId faailings of your earlier liie.S
Thc gap i$ filled, however, by the extremdy interesting dis-
cussion of the arrangements for the catechumenate penned by The closely related wosk of St hmbrrise, thc DPrnysten'i~,~ which
the Rornan deacon John about 5 0 0 . ~Here it is clearly stated s e e m to be largely dependent on the De sacramentir, gives a
that the recitation of the Apostles' Creed fell outside the açtual similar account, mentiorhp tthe renunciation of "the devi1
rite of baptism, before the anointing of the Ef~fn. and his ~%-orks, the world and its l m r y and pleanires" after the
Though it seem to hm-e Iorrmed larger at Rorne thãn else- candidate has entercd the b a p t i s t e ~ ,and brieflv recalling,"in
rvhere, this solemn selirarsal. or reddition, of the creed before language throwing the three separate answers into hip;h relief,
baptisrn was unit~rsallyobsewed in the WTest.It Tvas treated as his affi-ations of belief in the Father, the Son and the Holy
the occasion for a special semon, and a number of such &E- Spirit. It is probably this act of faith which St Leo had in mind
courses have come down to us. St Au.gustine tatifies to the im- when he remarked,' "at our regenerãtion , . ~ v renounce e .
the
portance it assurned In Mrica. Not that he suggests that it was devil and express our beliefin God", and again,g "He iç not in
&e only, or even the most prominent, affirmatíon of faith at agreement ~4th God who is out of harmony with the profession
baptkm. The declaratory recital of the ereed, as his referentes he made at his regeneration, and who, unrnindfu2 of the dil-ine
to it make plain, was the concluding stage in ine catechumenate, contract, is fowd remaining attached to what he renounced
whereas the confession at the rnornent of baptism was in the whilc departing from what Iie said he believed ".
form of answers to interrogationç. It was the same in other A pIace is given to both types of profession in the Gelasian
Western churches. For example, the fourth-century treatise De Sacramentary, which is considered to rcflect Rornan Iitrrrgical
Sacramenlis, which consists of six short addresses derivered by a practice in the skth century. Here the renunciation of Satan
bishop (almost certainly St h b r o s e kimself)4 to the newIy appears, as we might expect, ai an early point in the sepvicc,
and is carried out with the thrice-repeated cry "I renounce
ConBss. 8,n (P.L. 32, 751).
Eb. ina ad rnomçk. Pdaut. I P.L. ~ a I o67 . , El.
,
".
(abrenilniio) Then comes the creed in its decIaratory form. As
EB. ad ~ m l ~ r i u4m(P.
A',.

I.. 59, 4 0 2 ) . child baptism was by now a11 but universal, the lubriç enjoins it
Thc view rhat i t cnnsistr of notes of addresses of S t Arnbrme's taken down by
a notnriw, put forward by F. Probst (Liturgic hvierten Jahrltunde~ts, Munstcr, 1893, 3, 1" = I , 2. ' 2, 7.
232 ff.), has becn widely acceptcd. Cf. G. Morin inJahrbuch fUrLitur.~cwi~st>ts~h?~l
viii, rgzB, 8 6 1 0 6 , and Doni R. H.Connolly's privately published pamphlet, T h ç
' P.L. 16, 389-410. The Ambrosian authorship, dnpite F, LooFs (LntJadm der
~owgcschichic, 4th d.,
Halle, i g d , Q ~ O ) is
, sccurely rstablished.
de $ a c r m n t i s , a w r k n f A m b r o ~ Downside
~, Abbey, 1q42.For the text ser P.L. 16, h 2.
' S m . 63,6 (P-L. 549 3571. : ?kn. 66,3 (P.L.51, 366).
38 CREEDS h N D BhPTTSal THE ROLE OF DECLARATORY CREEDS 39
to bc said t y t11c pricst with his Iiand ori the childr-en's hcacls.1 actual service, succeeded in establishing itself securcly in the
A11 thjs happens oiitside the acnial baptistery, and ic followcd hy baptismal liturgy itself. Thus far the popular theory whose
a series of prayers and liturgical acts. Tlien ia the baptistcry tlie credentials we are exarnining may be considercd to have justi-
font is elaborately blessrd, and thc riihric continues:" fied itself.
The waming was given, however, at the beginning that its
After the lilcssi tig of t l ~ cfont you hiiptize each onc of diem i n oi-dri.
as you ask thcm tl~csequeçrions (sub h inimagniiones), "Dosi tliou vindication, even so far as concerns the period subsequent to the
helieve in God ihe Pather alrniqhty ?" Resjp. "I he1iec.c." "Dost thou fourth centurv, ~vouidh a ~ to e be subject to certain reservations.
belicve also i t i Jesus Clirist His only Son our Lord, li710 was horn The first of these is that, for the early centusies at any rate, the
and suffered? " Rt.r)I. " X helicvc." "Dost thou tielieve also in the declaratory creed was not the onlv Ror the most significant
Holv Spirit, r h holy~ Churcli, the remi~sionof sim, thc rtfsurrcçtion pmfession made at baptism. The "questions on faith (inferrog-
" I l~elicve."Then at each t m yc?u piunqe hirn
of the f l d - ~ ?" RPJ,~. aiiont~ JWe) " and the answers to t hcm, as we havc sem, çon-
three times in t h? w t e r (deirde Jdr ringu!ac rices mergis mrn tmfio In stituted another. Zndeed, formin~as they did the kernel oF the
u p aj . rite, it h- hard to escape the suspicion that the avawal oF belief
This 1135 bcen, of n e c e s s i ~ a, rapid and incomplete reliew of ivhich they ensbned wa-: regarded as the cssential one. This is
a confusinq array of cvidrncc. TEiere is no tãsk in the field of in fact borne out bv much of the Ianpage m e l by tvriters be-
Iiturgtç ir-hich dcscn~crhipher priorir- to-day than the sorting Ionging at a11 e\-entsto t h e earlier section of our period. St C)Til
out of the baptismal and assoçiated rite_.. and the elaboration of of Jerusalem, for m'rample, uses the ~ w r d s 1'"-ou confessed the
sating çonfasion fWpLOX~~uu~~ T$P m ~ f t f p c o vOpohcylav) " of the
a constmctiic thcriy of their evofution. 'Il%at has been said'
ho~i-cvcr,should bc suficient to prove that declaratory creeds declaration of belief made at briptkm, and it is the answers to
Iiad an asçured position in the baptiFmd senice (understanding the "questions ou faith" that he lias in mind. In the ApostoLical
this in the widcst sensel at any ratc from the fourth century. It C~nstitutiorrs2the designation "confmsion of baptiqrn " par exsel-
can even he clnimed tlirit thcir importance becomcs pro- Imce iç applied to thern. So, too, thc grcat wveiqht attached by St
grecsii.eiy en hanccd . T r i t lic Eastern Churchm the questions and BasiI3 and other Greek fathers to the trip3e irnrnersion and the
answers at t hc rnorncn t o f baptism erentually disappcared : ai1 triple interrogato. carifession bound up with it suggests that
that remainccl was the ttiplc sprinkling 14rh the 1%-ordç "So and for them this was the çonfersion which stood out. It was the same
so is baptizcd in t hc nnme ".ctc. The C:onstantinopolitan Creecj in the 'I\'est. St Augustine, for exarnple, inquires,4 "FIrho is
after thc abjuraiion of tlie devil is the on1:- pprofession of faitIi unaware that it is no true Christian haptisrn if the evangeIicaf
which survivcs in the sen-ice, aiid i& form js of course dccIara- words of which the symbol conslsts are missing?"; and else-
tory. IR the West t his riçvcr I~nppcnecl,thoug-h occasiona1 hints where Gpeaks of "the necessary interrogat ion frarned in a few
çrop up that itht irnportancc oi" the questions and ans~t-crs words". IR the GaElican ritual, as we have seen, this was the
climinishcd ( e . ~ .they rnight somctirncs be dispcnsed with in the only profession offaith made on the actual day of haptism.
case ora sick baptizand Gho had alrcady recited thc declarntory And this leads us to a durther point undcrlining the secon-
creed),3 and in the end tiiey werc detachccl from tlic im- dary role ofdeclaratory creeds. They were not rcaily part oSthe
mersions. Hcrc too, howevcr, thc dcclaratory creed, ihe recita-
tion of whicli hacl in olden clays often taken place niitsicle thc Cot. 20,4 (P.G.33, 1080).
Çtl. 7, 42 (Punk,448).
CriDt.Sp. ~ m ! 15, o 35 (P.G. 32, 132). AlsnSt Grw. Kae., Or.40, qr (P.C. 36,
Cf. H. A. Wilson, T h e Gelasian Snrramcnkay, Oxford, 1894,79. 71, and Sk Grrg. N~sY., Orab. in Irnpt. Chri-rti (P.C.46. 585).
Cf.op. cit. 8fi. De bopf.con. Don. 6.47 (P.L. 43, 814).
Cf. t I i e Icttrr nf Si FuIqcntiiis oi"Iiuspe (first halrofsixth çentury) to Fcrrandus L Ibid I, 13 ( P . L . 4 3 , r a r ) . C F . a l ~ r i U e / i d . r t o p . g ,rq.(P.L.qu,2n56}andEp.g8,
(E$. i n , r + : P.L. Gg, 386). 5 (P.L. 33, 361 f.).
42 CREEDS A N D BAPTlSM THE BAPTISMAL IPJTERROGATIONS 43
why delay? Get up, bc ba~tized,and wash arvay your sins, call- St Justin 1 abliout the middle o£ the second century, our doubts
ing on His name." I n Bcts, moreover, as in other books of the regarding the dedarato- form of the confession demanded are
New T ~ t a m e n t ba~tisrn
: is described as being administered "h reinforced. Kc remarks :
the name rif the Lord Jesus": açcording to J f i f t . 28, 19 and
, AI1 thosc .rs*lizi Prab-e been convinced a i d who believe that our
Bidathe 7 Ét was in the threefeld narne. It has been canjectured
instruction and our mesagc are true, and prornisc that they are able
that a declaration of belief must liave been forthcoming corre- to live accordinq to them, are ãdmonished to pray and with fasting
sponding to this f o r m u l a ~ ,and the çonjecture ís abundantly I
to beseech God for pardon for their past sins; and lve pray and fast
borne out by the Churçh's practice in regard to the formulary in with &em. T h c n they are conducted by us to a place where them is
succeeding gencrations. water, and are reborn with a form of rebirth such w tve have our-
Therc: are sug!gestions eIsewhcre in the New Testamcnt of an selves undergone. For they rcc:eivc a Iustral washing in the water
affirmat ion offai ih made at baptisrn. I Pft. 3, 2 r is olten citecl in in the name of the Fa.ther and Lord God of tlic univeise, and af
this coninection, but the true rneanir~g1 of ihe words uuirr8rjrr~wç our Saviour Jesus Chirisi, and or the Holy Spjrit. . . . Over him
dya8fjs g l r é p w v ~ ~ a4 s PFÓV may sirnply bc "a request to God for who has elected to he reborri: aild has repciiicd oC his sim tthc
a good :c". On the other hand, it is highly probable, I liame of thc Father and Lorcl God of tlie universc is namcd, thc
as was 1 officiant who leads the candiciatr to ttie rvatcr using ihis, and only
iut in the pre~louschapter, that St Paul's re-
this. dscription of God. . . . The name ror this lustra1 bath is
mark." confeçs Jwus as Lord with your rnnuth, and 1 "edightenment". the idea b-ing that t?lose tvho hteach-
belicve i ~ c a r that
t God haç raised Him from the dead", ing are enliqhtened in t h ~ i riincierçtandiiny. 1101 is i n the
should t :d to baptisrn : if so. %\*eprobably have a frag- name of jçsus Christ, \'i7ho \\-as çrucihietI under I ilate, and
- -
ment of me oaprismaI confession as wl1. The actual codession in the namc of the Holy Spirit. 'lt-hothrough the prophets announced
made s e e m to be overt3y rnenticined in r Tim. 6, 1 2 (+i?~ a ) c $ v befordiand the t h l n g relatin~to Jesus, that the man who is en-
OFrolioyr'av), as well as in H ~ b r4, . I 4 (" I,et us hold fast our con- lightened is washed.
~ m OpoXoylas ") . Anotiler interesting passage,
f e s s i o n - ~ ~ a ~ W r+js . .
sornetirn.es overicd e d , is Eph. I , 13," Jn Whom having believed ( Plainly S t Jlustin's (zhurch had orderIy arrangements for in-
I structing coinverts in Christiarn doctrine and 6or satisfying itseIf
you weri:sealcd ~ i t the h Holy Spirit ofprornise" : belief, and so,
wc are e ntiircu
r: ~ 1 1- .
LO infcr, some verbal rnnnirestation of it, precede
i
I
1
that they ha d propei-1y absor bcd it. But in spi t c oF the frequent
--- J --
baptism. attempts whicn nave. 1.ueen
' 1 7
mauc LU FZLUHbCl uct one, there is no
L- ii_iiiCi-i.-

'These and other passages (there is no need to cover the unambiguous allusion here to a declaratory baptjsrna1 creed.
familiar .vound in dctail) substantiate thc: hypothesis that a con- That oiie may have been uttercd is conceivable, but StJustin's
-
fession oif- farth ' 'Ir lally espccted at baptism at tlre time lan,gage seems rnuch more çonsistent ivith a profession of faith
.ents qucited tvcre written. 3ut they do not bv in the f o m of answ questianinaire. .A rcvealing light k
ns necesr:itate-a: nd thk is what prirnarily conccrns us- throwrn on the actud ire hy hllr casual r.emark that it wtas
rnar rne comessron r . rvas rn form dcclaratoy. The account of the the officiant who prunounced the 1 1 ~ 1 r i cu.-i.r God the Father
---e

eunuch's baptism stands aIarie in sug,ccstiny that it was: the (which prcsumably implies that he also used the tvosds "Jesus
other tests can a11 be interpreted with equd success ;is pos- Christ, FVho was crucified", etc., aud "the Holy Spirit, ltTho
tulatine a simple assent to questions acldressed to the candidate. announced", etc.). Tt is verv rinlikely that tvhat i? here referred
to is a fnrmu2a oF b aptism ( ze thcc in tlie name of",
When ,e turn to the farnous description of baptism ~ i v e nby
etc.), partly because it canna ver\ and is not at all likely
'
-- Cf.
. .G. Kittel's 73. W.Z.N.T.,s.v. i P w ~ Ú w(11,686). But seeK. Lnkt in H.E.R.E.
that such forrnulae werc in ust. a r Lhis earljr date, and inore
.-a

AI, 384b, and E. G. Scywyn. T h F i r ~EpistfeoJSt


t Pctw, 1946,ad Ioc.
Rum. to, g . \4I)inl. r . 6r (E.J.G., 70 r.). T h e book was wriiien at Rome.
4.4 CREEDS AND BAPTfSM
THE BAPTISMAL TPITERROGATTONS 45
decisively because when they did come into use they were much and his angels." The passage from the De coronn rvhich has al-
briefer than the ones suggested bere would have been. The sus- ready been referrcd to is similar in its bearing: "Then we are
picion is unavoidable that what St Justin had in mind was a three times imrnersed, making a somewhat fuller repIy thaii the
series of interrogations about belief similar to those which we Lord laid down in the gospel (amplius aliquid respondentes quum
observed to be a regular feature in later baptismal rites. Dominus in euangclio determinaoit).'Yt is just possible to extract
Tertullian is a writer from whom we should naturally expecf from this an allusion to a deciaratory creed pronounced at the
usefuI inforrnation on the subject of baptismal creeds. He wrotc rnoment of irnrnersion, but the singularity of such a profession
a full-length treatise concerned whol ly with baptism (defending at this point in the service makes the interpretation far-fetched.
it against detractors, it must be admitted, rather than delineat- The "reply" is much more naturally understood of the bap-
ing its ritual), and his works abound in illuminating glimpses of rizand's responses (probabiy, as in the later liturgies, a curt " I
baptismaI procedure. Yet here, too, popular assumptions about believe'" to the oficiant" three interrogations, each one of
the rclationship bctween declaratory creeds 2nd baptism fail to which was by nnow fuller and longer than the simple formuIae
find confinnation. Kattenbusch observedl long ago that the implied in the Lord's cornmand in Matt. 28, 19.That this was
ceremony of "sendering the creed", the chief occasion for a the procedure famiIiar to Tertullian is shown by Iiis remark
declaratory profession of faith and so conspicuous a feature in eIsewhere,l "Por we are baptized, not once but thrice, jnto the
later African and Rornan usage, had apparently no place in his three persons severally in answer to their severa1 names". The
accounts of the adrninistration of the sacrament. To judge by weight he attached to these respanses can be inferred from
the hurried recapitulation of what happened given in Da another staternentz of his to the effect that "the sou1 is bound,
, ~ liturgy passed straight from the renunciation of the nor by the washing, but by ihe candidate's answer".
~ o r o n a the
devil in the Iiiody of the church to the threefold questions and
- The only conclusion a Iair-minded critic can d r a w v s that
imrnersions in tlie baptistery. Nowhere, indeed, is a declaratory Teitullian knew nothing of a declaratory creed used in baptism.
creed unmistakably hinted at. On the other hand, whenever he No one accustomed to working through early baptismal liturgies
has occasion to refcr to the Christian's afirmation of his faith at can doubt that the sole creed he would have acknowledged was
baptism, he does so in Ifanguage ~vhichharrnonizef much more the baptizand's assenting "I be1ieve''iin answer to the questions
easily wiih the assent given to a questionnaire than with a put by the baptizer. A remarkable confirmation of chis is pro-
declaratory profmsion. Severa1 times he employs the mctaphor vided by the Apostolic Tradition, written about 2 r 7 by St Hippo-
of a soIdier of the imperial army taking his military oath.3 There lytus and probabIy reflecting Rornan liturgical praçrice at the
must have been a dose pardlelisrn between the procedures in- end oF the second and the beginning of che third century.
volved, and sincc the soldier's oath was generally rehearsed in Among the most precious features of this document is the de-
his hearing while he simply indicated his assent, the obvious tailed account it furnishes of the çatechumenated and of the
deduction is that much the same must have happened at bap- baptismal service.5 Nos only is there no mention in a11 this of the
tisrn. There is a well-known sentence in his treatise De spec- tradition orreddition of the creed, but thcre is not the slightest
tmulis4which points to the sarne çonclusion : "When we entered suggestion of a declaratory creed to be found in the genuine
the water and affimed the Chrisrjan faith in answer to the 1.
Adv. Prax. 26 (C.C.L. 11. 11~81.
words prescribed by its law (in legis suue verba prqítemur), we e IE
De r e m . rnort.'@ (c.c.~. 6sgj.
testified with our lips that we had renounced the devil, his pomp ' It was drawn hy Kattenbusch in tbe passage referred to above. The case w a ~
well re-argued by F. 3. DoIger in Antike und Christentran iv, 1933, 138ff.
11, 60-62. Ch. xvi-n in the edition of G. Dix (Landon,1937).
Ch. 3. (C.C.L. 11, 1042 f.). ti Ch. xxi. Cf., e.g., the discussion by H. Lietzrnann in Z.N.T. W . xxvi, 1927,
a Cf. Ad mart. 3 ; De cor. 1 1 (C.C.L. I, 5 ; 11, 1056). i6 K The orieinal Greek of the Trnbtwn i s l o ~ t :it suniives in Latin (only frag-
"h. 4. (C.C.L. 1, 2 3 1 ) . kentary), ~ahydic,Ethiopian and Arabic vmions.
46 CREEDS AhiD BAPTYSM THE B A PllS5fAL IVERRQGATIOSS 47
test. :I cteed which is deçlaratory in farm can be read in the hoIy Ghurch?" the qucstion the? put is a lyinq one, for thcy do not
Ethiopic and Sahidic versions, but rxperts are satisfied that it iç p s e s s the Church. . . .
a late intruder into the text.' The only profession offaith in fact
The rvozd "syrnbol" in this passage has often been taken to refer
required is apparently the one which tlie candidate rnakes as he
to a decIaratory creed. Yet "to baptize wjth the creed", in the
stands naked in the water, I t conforms to the pattern which
scnse of a dcclaratery creed, is an cxtraordinary, not to say iim-
should now be familiar to readers :
possible, manner of spcaking : at no point in the history of the
And when he who is to he baptized gom down to the water, Iet baptismal liturgl: was the declaratory cseed conceivcd of as
him who baptizes Iay hand on him saying thus, "Dost thou belicvc playin~this role. It shouM be obvíous 1 that in this context
in God the Father dmighe;?" And he who is being baptized shall '' symbol'hnd "baptismaE interrocation" cover much the same
say, "I believe". Let him forthr\ith baptize hirn once, haiing hk g o u n d , "symbol " possihIy- includ inq the irnrncrsions as ~\.ellas
hand laid upon his head, And afta this let him say, "Dost thou
ttie tripIe interr-rogationç.~In a latcr letier3 iincludcd in the
believe in Christ Jesus, the Son of God, Who was born by the I-Ioly
Spirit from the Virgin Mary, Who was cmcified under Pontius Cyprianic collection, Si: Cyprian's correspondent Fimilian
PiIate and died, and rose again on the third day living from ttie relates how st crazed wsrnan hacl the ternerity to baptize people :
dead, and ascendcd into thc heavens, and sat down on the right Among the other dcceptions bv which s l ~ etook rnultitudes in, she
-
hand of ihe Father, and wilI come to judge thelivine and the dead ? "
And when he says, " I believe", lei hirn i i a>~t ize him thc second time.
had the face to pretend that she was sanctifying; Gread by a tre-
rnendous invaca&n and was celebrating the eucharist . . . and
And a p i n let hirn say, ' D o s t thou believt: in the Holy Spirit,in the bapuzed rnany, mlnq rhc customar). and established xvords of the
holy Church, and the resurreçrion of the ff esh?"Anr1he who iis bcing interrogation [ Im'tuto e3 Ie-qitimu wrbo inferro.poiionis usri@nr), so that
baptized shaN say, "1 brlieve." And so IIet. nLm iiaptize hirn Zhe
f - i - .
v .
she miqht not appear to deliate at a11 frcim thc ruie of the Churçh.
third time. What then are w-e to sal about Iier baptizing . . .? Surely Stephen
and his supporters must approve ir, espccialy as neither the symbol
The realization that this threefold affirmation oF the bap- ot. the Triniry (gmzbohm T~initatis)nor the cstablished and churchly
tizand çonstituted, for Tertullian and St Hippolytus, the sole inten-ogation was Iacking.
baptismal confession should enable us to read certain important
third-century feuts with unclouded eyes. S t Cyprian, for ex- Here again it is inappropriate to translate "syrnbol of the
arnple, argued forcefuily in onc of his lttters%against the Nova- Triniv" as a dedarator). creed: it is more natural to take the
t i a ~ s heretics
t and their daim to posses a valid baptkm: tvords as referrins to the baptkrnal qucstions,P or perhaps to the
questions in thc setting of the triple irnrnersion.5 The passage
But ifanyone in opposition should çontend that Novatian observes brings out with extrcme clarity thc ovesriding role of "the cus-
the same law as the Catholic Church observes, baptizes with the tomary and established words of the questioning"'. Tf further
same symbol (eodem symbolu) as we, açknowledges the same God the
Father, the same Chnst Hiç Son, the same Holy Spirit, and that he
proof of this were required, one need only cite the pathetic story
has tht power to baptize bccause he does not seem to deviatie from related by Dionysius of Alexandria in a Ietter fi to Pope Xystus
us in the baptismal interrogation-xvhoevcr thinks that this con- about the man ~ v h ocarne to him in great distress: he had Em-
tention shodd bc put fonvard should realize in tlic first plaiçe that self been baptized in heretical circles, and had just witnesed a
the schismatics and w e do not have onc and the sane Iaw r,.+- +L*,,,, '. S e thc hrirf but nccliciit rrrnarks of O . Cascl in j'uhrbtrrhfür Lirinnrdkm-
symhol and onc and the same interrogation. For when they say, ? CL
~hoft ii, H. .J. Carpenrer-
1922, a33f. 3.7.S.xliii. 8942, ;r.
"Dost thou helieve in remission of sim and life eterna? through the a EP. 73, in-I r (Hartrl 1. R i jt).
4 ~ f O. . Casd. DP. cir.
' CF.R. H. Connolly in3.T.S. xxv, 1924, 132 f. L Cf. H. J. ~ a h ê n t e rop.
, çit.
C .@. fig, 7 (Harirl I , 756).

i
I
i Quotcd by Euscbius, H&. cccl. 7 , g (Schwartz, 276) a
50 CREEDS AND BAPTISM THE GATECHETICAL SETTI'IG OF CRGEDS 5r
baptisrn in the formulation oP so-caIled baprisrnal creeds. The increasingly elaboratc and oficial clrarricter af the Church's
discussion aras mainly taken up with their use in the liturw of arrançfements for kstructioi~must h a ~ emadc the need a11 the
baptism, but we should now be in a more fa\-ourable position to more urqent. TWhat iç stqnificnnt is that when w e first come
tackIe the real issue before us. The s t r i h g fact has been brought across deciaratoq* creeds, their cspres purpose is to siibseme
to light that for the first few centuries at any rate the only creed, the ends of popular imtniction. TYtien the bi~lrophas " handed
if creed is the iiglit designation for it, directly connected with I out" thc creed in the later weeh of Lent, hc procceds to com-
I
baptism was the baptizand's assent to the minister's questions I ment on it clause by clause. while tlie catecl~umemare required
regarding I-iis beliefs : even when they forind their niche within I
to learn it hy heart as a convenient synopsis of what they are in
tlie liturgy, the function of declaratory creeds proper long re- duty bound to believe. Similarly they arc espcctcd to "çive it
mained secondary. back" on the eve of their baptism, their alsility to recite it being
What, then, shall we say of the origin of these brief statements a demonstration that they are now sufficiently grounded in thc
oF belief couched in the first person? I t should be obvious that a faith. This original function of creeds, as well as their later role
&der background must be sought for them than the actual cere- in the servicc of baptism itself, is well illustratcd by the words
mony of haptism itself. Their roots Iie not so much in the writh which Eusebius of Cacsarea prefaced the creed which hc
Christian's sacramental initiation into the C ã w h as in the cate- ?roduced at the rouncil oT Sicaea ~ r l t ha view to his ductrinaI
chetical training by wrhich it was preçeded. Deçlaratory creeds, I rehabi1itation:l 'cL4swrehave received from the bishops before
conceived in the setting of their orig;inal purpose, ivere com- us, both in our çatechetical training and when xi;e received the
pendious summaries of Christian dacsrine compiled for the Saptiçmai bath . . . so \\?enowrbeliet-e and bring our fâith for-
benefit of converts underg-oing instruction. The German scholar ward to you."
A. Seeberg wras w ~ i k along i ~ ~ sound lines when he stateà:i Declaratory creeds mal; therefore be regarded as a by-produçt
"The primltive Chrktian creeds are simpIy and solely the re- of the Church's fully developcd catechetical: system. At the same
çapitulation, jn a fomuIa based upon the Trinitarian g~ound- time, as Eusebius's rernark helps to remind i ~ s ,the trãditionnl
plan, of the basie catechetical verities." Our own English bridge. joining them to baptism should not bc ruthZessly de-
historian C. H. put the same point in different words :2 rnolished. I t would be false as well as rnisleadinq to minirnlze the
"The creed bcl t indeed to the administration of the rite connection between them: it was in fact cxtremely intimate.
of baptism, but LU irie preparation for it." The catechetical instruction of wkich declaratory creeds were
We saw in the first chapter that even at the New Sestament convenient summaries waç instruction with a view to baptism.
stage the Church's cenlaI message, the kernel of its doctrinal The catechumen was a11 thc time lookinq forward to the great
deposit, was beginning to harden into semi-stereo-ed pat- experiente which wouId set the crown upon a11 his intensive
terns, and that çatecheticãl instniction was one of the fieIds in preparatory effort. So rlosely did the catechetical instruction
whkh this proccss was earliest in getting under way. The pro- dcivetail into the ceremony of initiation rchiçh I\-= tta be its
çess ivas in fúll çwing in the second century, and in the next dirnax tiiat the single word baptiFq i~ an extended sense, could
chapter \\:e shall be passing in reviexv some of the forms in be used to cotTerthem both taken together, Tfzus St Lrenaeris
which the "rule of faith" or "canon of the tnith", as it carne to .
could s p e a k b f "the rule of the rruth . . ichich he received
be called, found expression in that period. It iç obvious that through baptiqrn (SL&TOG ~am&rPa-i-os) ". Furthermore, the cate-
teachem must ãlwãys have felt the need for concise summaries, chetical preparation waç dominated by those features of the
approxirnating as closcly as possible to formuIae, and that the
Cittd by St Athanasius in ihc appendir to De decrct. N i c . ~ y n .(for the text, sec
Dcr Katechimus der Urchristenhtit, Lcipzig, 1903, 271. Si 20, 1535 ff: also Opitz, Urk. r?).
%i Use of Cwch and Annlhmas in the Early Chiirch, London, 2 ed . I gr O, I 7. Adu. hacr. I , g, 4 (P.Ç.7,545).
52 CREEDS AND BAPTiSM THE NASfE c S\3lBOLV%I" 53
impending sacramat which constituted its essence, the three- oftcn quoted as supplying the first allusion to tliis desipation nf
fold interrogation with the thrcefoId =sent, and the threefold the creed. I n liis hectoring way he is chatlImging; rhe heretic
irnmersion. Consequently the instruction deiiberately aimed Marcion, tvho liad made a fortune as a sliipmaster in rhe Black
(some illurninating iIlustrations will be found in St Irenaeus's Sea, to show what right he had, in view of his rejeçtion of the
handbook, the Epidcixisl) ai elucidating and expounding the I1 Old Testamcnt and Aets, to açcept SEPaul aç an spostle. " I
three aspects of the Divine Being in Whose triune name the bap- should like you to infom us," he jeers, "ship-captain from Pon-
tism was to be accomplished, and the catechetical surnmaries , tus, with what warrant (quo symboio) you have takcn the Apoçtlt
w-hose formation it pmmpted were inettitably cast in the Trini- Paul on board your vessel?" The word ~ r n b o l u mhere means no
tarian modd. Left to thernselves or to other influentes, cate- more than tlie documcntary authority for embarking a pas-
chetical summaries might well have evolved aIong quite senger, but some have suspected that Tertullian's choice of it
diflerent lines. There were powerful tendencies in the early was suggested by its use as a title of the creed. This is most un-
Church to~vardsthe production of ssingle-clause or two-clause likely,l however, for Tertullian cannot have the creed ir~mind :
fomuIations of the faith; but the impact of the baptisrnal com- hls appeal is to the Scriptures tvhich Marcion had refuçed to
rnand, not to rnention the intrinçic genius of Chistianity, ~ v a s recognize. Apart Gom this, the earliest \Vestem instance of this
deçiçive. Finallv and most irnportant, over and above the use of symbobm is agreed to be tbe sentencc of Ep. 69 of St
Trinitarian framework, tlie verbal content of the new declara- Cyprian wkch was reproduccd in the section Sefore the last,
tory creeds was in large measure borrowed from the baptisrnal though its significance thcre may cover more than a mere pro-
interrogations. These latter thernselves had by the thfm century fession of faith. I n the East the customary description of the
become, as Tertullian had occasion to obsewe,2 sornewhat fuller creed was "the faith (4n l w ~ r") or "the teaching (70 CLá&rILa) 'I,
than the Lord's command might seem ta have warranted, and and we have to wait for a hundred vears afrer St Cvprian, unta
the additionat material had been derived from the çatechctical &e so-called çanons of the councjl of Laodicea,Vor the appear-
stock-in-trade. When declaratov creeds carne to be developed, ance of 70 dppwhov in this sense. The seventh of these (their
the influente was in thc reverse direction. New dauses might be, clalm to the title they bear is highly doubtfid) laid it down tEiat
and were, considered necessary, and other alterations rnight heretics ~ h o u l dbe seqaired "to leam the symbols of the faith
have to be introduced. But the basis on which they were con- (T& 3 s n l w ~ w p06p,doha) " , In view of this, and the fact that the
strueted normally consisted of the ancient baptisrnal questions designation did not become regular until the Wth century, it
linked together as a continuous statement and couched in the seerns reasonable to suppose thnt it oriejnated in the IVest.
first ptrson. I n rnodern times the most ~videlyacçepted interpretation of
gmbolum has been one which can be traced back to RufÍnus. In
the preface af his wposition of the creed,3 when telling the
A striking illustration of the close ties binding declaratory
familiar story of its joint composition by the Twelve, he observes
creeds, despite their catechetical proverlance, to the baptisrnal that in Greek the word symbolum can signify either '"oken
liturgy is provided by the narne which cventually carne to be (indkiurnor si-pm)" or coilatio, i.e. awhofe towards themakin~of
applied to them, h t in the ?tTestand later irz the East as weP1, rvhich severa1 people have made contributions. T h o u ~ it h made
This name was "symbol" :gmbolum in Latin and m'p@ohov in
Greek. There is a weLl-knoívn passage of Tertullian3 which k CT.J. Brinktnnr, %l. Qworfaisch~f! , H.J. Carpnitrt. 3.7-S-
cii. I ~ Z I!63:
diii, IC++Z, 3 f.
1 Cf. cspecially Ch.6,7 , ioo (in the edition ofJ. Amitage Robins~n,London, i 563 E. They probably rcprcsent a compilation madc by
e Fnr i r x t sec M ~ n s 11,
19203, where he dwells on the "thnee ~ o i n t s "or "ariiclw" o f Christianity. a private individual. Cf. ihc ariirle by A, Boudinlian in Compia rcndus dii congris
Dr ror. 3 {C.C.L,11, 1042). scient. ininnat. de$ cafhol., r88tl, 11, 420-7 (wrnmarizrd in Hefrk-Lrclercq, His!. d a
a Adc. Marc, 5 , I (6.C.L. I. 664). ~onnlts1, 992 fT. arid Dicr. dr throl. cuthnl. VIIE, 2 6 1 I R".).
"h. 2 lP.L, 2 1 , 337 r.).
54 CREEDS AND DAPTISM THE WAME " SYMBOLUM" 5 -5
a grc;it appeal to subsequent tvritcrs, the latter explanation can widest sciise, iiicIuding HoEy Scripture, tlie sacraments und
be dismisscd out-of hand : it depends on faulty phiIolo,qy (the martyrdorn. Moreover, alihouqh Rufinus" ttheory that .Vm-
Latin roilatiu =the Greek rrvp/loh$, not w',u/30)Iov), and is ob- holltm originalIy rneant s i p or token tsVastaken up by a nurnber
t.iousIy inspired by the fancirul tale of the apostolic authorship of other Fathers,t it was by no means the only or the most
of thc çrced. R u h u s drvells at length, however, on his dcriva- rvideIy favoured ereçcsis. I V e havc rilready noticcd thc popu-
tion of tlie \wrd from the idea of a tokcn. Lhe Apostlcs realized, larity of the rather \%-ir;ild guecs that it was selecred as beiny
fie says, that thcre were Jctvs goinç about pretending to be equivalent to colldio, or a joint composition. St Augustine lent
apostles of Christ, aad it was imporrant to have some tokcn by thr \veirht of his authority to another, much more plausiblc
~vhichthe preacher 1%-lie tirasa m e d with the authentic apostolic explanation. Tlie creed k callcd a synbol, he sug5ested:bon the
doctrinc rniyht he recoqized. The situation 'ir.= annIogous, he analoq of the pacts or agreernents tvhich businasmcn cnter
says. to onc which oftei ariscs in civil wars, when thc rival par- into with nnc another. $~n~bolunt,it sliould be noticed, tvas an
tisans rnisht easiày mztke tlie most disastrous mistakes of identitv ancirni Latin borroxring, and i11 secular risage had rneaningç
tvcre i t not tliat the opposjng commanders hand out distinguish- rançing from a signec-ringhr tlie impress of a seal-o a Iegal
ing emblems, or passwords (.y~nBoln distincfra), to thcir sup- bond or 1i.nrrant.5 That tthc last rnentioned tvas weil to the forc
porters : thus if therc are doubts about anyone, he is asked for in Cliristian times is provcd by its accurrence iil Tcrtu1lian.G 5t
his token (intcrrogntus gmbolerm), and at once betrays whether he Augustine's derivation of the titlp: of thc creed thus harmonizcd
is friend or foe. This is tIre rcason too, Rufinus goes on, why the with ciirrcnt linguistic usage, and it did not stand alone : it Iiacl
creed is never written down, but is committed to memory and the support of a whole school of writers both beforc and after his
is tbus maintained as the secret af'npostoliç churchrnen. ~Iay.~
Tttro impartant paçsages of TerruPEian have usuaIly been Bafficd perhaps by the variety of explanations sponsored hy
hailed' as antiçipating Rufintis's Iine of thought. In his De thc Fãt liers, rnodern students liave sometimes sought a solution
pruesrxiptionez he rnakes a point af'the bond uniting the Roman in an entirely different fielcl. It has 13een proposed8 to dcrive
and the African churches, coininq the term confcsserarc to de- the CIhrictian application of ymbalum ta the Church's çreeds
scribe it. This verb, Like the noun ~onit-sstratiowhich he impro- from f l i ~practice of tlie myster). reli+ons. Stereotyped for-
vises in his second passagt-3 (here his sheme is the uni. of the rnulac. disclosed o d y to rnembcrs of the cdt: were often em-
Catholic chir~chesgene~ally) js clerived h m Zessera- which in plçiycd Pn tiiese at the isiitiation cerernonies and as trikens by
thiç context stands for the tafly or tokea which gucst-Friends ~vhichthe devotem might identif. each othcr; and thcrc are
living far ãpart rnight rely upon as a rneans of reco>pizingeadi solid gounds9 for h o l d i n ~ttrat thcy were technically known as
sther.4 Here the token conceived of as uniti~lgthe churçhcç and
cxpressing their mutuai relationship is their common apastolic Cf.. t.e.. Çt. A w-. . Smn. 214(P.L. 38, 1072) ; St Siaámus of Turim, Hom. Rg
faith, or what hc caUs "the unique tradiüon of one and the P . L - 57,433).
Cf Sm.212 (P.L. 38. 10581 and Sm. 2 t 4 (P.L. 38. io72). In &r t a t i n !h*
samc m y s t e l (firfidm smramenti una trnditio) ". But though tiie idtits of par! and pa~swordare cornbincd. T h e passages are d i s c u d by R. R ~ L F C ~
in Ephmrrrdrs LIiwgicw 1k, r938.440 f.
ideas involved are not &?similar and tessera and symbolurn to a PIiny, Hist. mt. 33. I , 4.
certain extent overlap, TertuIlia~is not ttiinking preciseiy of a I'lauiu~,Arudolirr I. i, 53; 11, ii, 55; c1C.
Cato [ab. Fmnt., E#. ad Anioa. imp. i, 2 ) .
csecd or crecds: indced, in thc fomer passage what he has in Cri syiilrolum moriilir in Bepomit. 6 (C.C.L. I, 331).
view is the common faith and practjce of the Church in thc Gf. Niceras Rem., Explan. gmb. i 3 (P.L. 52,873) ; Si Pewr Chrys., S m , 57,58,
59 (]'.L. 52, 360 ff.); E+lm. p m b , ad inrt. 13 (Y.L. r 7, i 155) ; St Fulgentius Rusp.,
' F,.g. KatteilbuscIi 11, Rn n.; Ilurii, 49. Libri con. Fab. Ar. Frag. 36 (P.L.65, 8 2 2 ) ; C ~ C .
Ch. 36 (C.Ç.L. 1, 2 1 6 r.). Wf., E.R., F. Nitzsch's article i n ~ e i t s c l t r i f tfilr Tholo&e und Kirch iii, I 893.
Ch. 2 0 (C.C.L. I, 2 0 2 ) .
' For a Iively mamplr sre Plarltiis, Poenulus V. ii 86 f. 331-4' .
Cri R, Ditterich, Eine Milhrarlitugic, Leipzig and Berlin, 1923, 64 n.
56 CREEDS AND BAPTISM
symbols ( d p p o h a ) .Plutarch, for instante, has a sentencel refer- in Ep. 75, I 0-1 r , of the Cprianic corpus, diçcussing the baprisrn
ríng to "the rnystic symbols of the Dionysiaç orgies which we practised by a crazed xiroman, admitted thnt it lacked 'hneither
who are participants share trith one another"' St Clernent of the qmbol of the Trinity nor the established and churchly
,%lexandna,ridiculing the -4ttis cult, reproduces' some of its interro~;ation".There is general a p e m e n t nowadays that in
sacred fomulae and ç d l s them symbols. That the word was neither af these passaem can qmbol refer to a declaratory
familiar, in this sense of cult slogans, to Latin-speaking authors çreed, for ncither "to baptize with the creed " nor "creed of the
LT sbown by Fimicus Maternus'ç rernark,3 at the opening of a Trinity " are natural foms of expression, Almost certainly what
discussion of such tags : the writers had in view were the triple iiterrogations addressed
te the candidate by the rninister and his tripIe ãssenting
I should like now to give an account of the sigm, or symbols answers:i possibly they were also thinking of the trlple im-
(quibus . . . ~ i g t z i ~ueI
. quibm symbolis), by means of which the mersion or aFusion.2 Thjs interpretation admirably fits the
wresched rabble identify one another in the midst of their super-
stitious ceremonies. For they havc their special signs, their speciai expressions "'baptke with the symbol" and "symboI of the
answm, which have been imparted to them at their sacrilegious Trinity"; while TertulIinn's rernarkz that "a Iaw of baptisrn
gatherinp by the devil's h c t i o n . (lex lin,guendi) tvas laid dowm and the f o m wai prescribed : ' Go,'
1 He said, ' teach the nations. baptizinq them in the name of the
So, tm, hrnobius applies4 precisely the same term grnbola to the Father and of the Son and .af the Holy Spirit'," iIIustrates the
crude fomulae which the initiates were expected to recite in &e use of "lati of the s y b o l " . An interesting confimation is sup-
rites of EEeusis. Thcre is obviousIv a certain paralleIisrn here plied by the eighth canon of the council of Arles ( 3 1 4 1 ,uvhich
~
with Chktian creeds, and it is not surprising particuIarly when made the following mlinq :
we remember the extent to tvhich the Church"~teachers were
TI-ith regard to Africans, fortisrnuch as they practice rebaptisni
prepared to exploit the terminology of the rnystery cults, Siat according io their o w n regulations, it is decided that if anyone
some scholars should have inferred ttiat symbolurn was among the comes to the Church out of' Irercsy, they should address to hitp the
words which they appropriated. symbol quesiions (interrogc~itPum symbolum) . If ihty perceive that he
Before attempting to arbitrate between the conflicting has been bilptized in the Father and the Son and thc Holy Spirit, it
theories, it may be advisable to glance once again at those key wiil only be nccessary for a hand to be laid upon him so that he may
passages in the correspondente of St Cyprian in which the word receive the Koly Spirit, But if on heing questioned he does not
is first used in çonnection with the creed. It will be recalIed that answer with this Trinity (nonrespondcnbiaanc Trinitntem),he shouid be
in Ep. 69, 7 he was deding with the claim of the heretic baptized.
Novatian to be administerkp: a valid baptism on the pIea that
Here the phrase inttrrogeni curn gwbolum clearly seem to signify
" he baptizes with t he same v b o l as we Catholicís, recognizes
"put to him the baptisrnnl questiom". Exactly the çame usage
íbe same God the Father, &e same Christ His Son, the same
is irnpIied in the passage5of St -4upstine which has
.
Holy Spirit, and . . d m not seem to d&r from us in the
of ~ymbal~irn
already been rnentioned, where he stateç that "it is no true
haptisrnal interrogation", and in repIy repudiated the sug-
Chrktian baptism ií the evaniçelical words of which the symbol
gcstion that the schisrnãtícs could pùssibly have "the same law
çonsists are rriissing".
of the symbol and thesame interrogation". Similarly Fimilian,
See above. p. 47.
Com!, nd uxor. io (=611l3). Both Katitnhusch (TI, 189) and P. de Puniet (D.A.C.L. 11, 293) understod
L Protrept. 2, 15(StihIin, 13). Tn z2,r8 (Stihlin, 14) and 2, a2 (Stihlin, 17) the the latter passagc as referrhg slmlily to ihe immersions.
worcl stands for cult objccts. .
3 De bapt i g (C.C.L. I, 289).
De crror.prqfan. rrlrp. i 8 (ZiegIer, 43). MELIIS~11, 472.
4 A&. n d . 5.26 (Reiffcracheid, 198). 5 DCbapl. con. 130lt. 6,47 (P.L. 43, 214).
60 CREEDS AND BAPTISM

to a signet-ring or a warrant. And if it was as mcaning a sign or preparation for baptism. It was fuIly established by the middle
a token that syrnbolurn was edisted as a titIe for the credal: ques- of the fourth c c n t u l , as we can infer from the allusiorrs of
tions and answers, Firmilian's rwealing phrase rnay provide a Rufinus, St Augustine and otbers to the tradition and reddition
pointer to its precise connotarion. Thc questions and answers of the creed. A11 tbis has great intrinsic impartance, but it
were a sign, an expressive and portentous symbol, of the Triune should have a specia1 interest for us, engaged as we have been in
God in Whose name the baptism was being enaçted and with I exploring the relation ofçreeds to baptism. The grand discovery
Whom the Christian catechumen was being united.1 That the to which onr lengthy discussion has led is that the classical namc
/
symbol was a symbo1 of the Trinity seems to be hinted at by the for baptismal creeds was icself in origin bound up in the most
language of the canon of Arles which has been quoted; and intimate way with the primitive structure of the baptisrnal rite.
there should be no need to ernphasize further the way in which
the questions and answers were regularly connected with the
Lord's command to baptize in the threefold Name. It is not im-
possible (though our theory by no means necessitates it) that the
fact that symbol was already the convenient term for a cult
slogan assisted, ifit did not directly provoke, its application to
the formulae which had become the distinctive tokens of
Catholic orthodoxy, However that rnay be, it must be agreed
that Rufinus may nat have been so widely astray as has some-
times been supposed in interpreting syrnboI as a distinguisliing
sign or emblem. By his time, of course, the creed which was most
prorninent was declaratory in f m , cansisting of a continuou3
statement and eniirely scparated from the triple questirins and
irnrnersions, We can readily understand how he and other
patristic writers of the same epoch and afterwards were at a loss
to fatbom the original bearing of the accepted descrlption of it
as a symbol, and felt at liberty to improvise such explanations
as occurred to them,
But whatever the uItimate reasons for the selection oF this
word, there can be no doubt that as used in the rhird century it
denored the baptismal questions and answers. Later it became
the reg~Iartitle of the declaratory creed. How this change carne
about, and at what precise date, we cannot now determine with
certainty. The transference, however, was a natural and easy
one, for the kinship between declaratory creeds and the bap-
tismal interrogations was extremely close : it probably coincided
with the introduction of declaratory creeds into the ceremonial
So j.Brinktrine (though he rhought of the baptismal formula rãther than the
questions) ín ' T h e o l o ~ c h Quar#dsthri'i
c cii, r g~I , r 66 f. O. Case1 supported the v i m
sketched above in Jahrbwh j u r Li.lturgiauissennhaft ii, I 922, I 33 f.
THE CREATIVE PERIOD 63
we &a11 be expected to tlirow liglit. They have long been uncler
discussion arnong students nf creeds, and certain canventiona1
v i e ~ shold thefield. M roo often, howevcr, they are vitiated by
being based on premisses which must to-day be considered

THE 1IOi:EhfENT TO\VA4RDS F I X I T Y i obsolete, and in consequence i t is imperative to go over the


g ~ ~ again
~ n inddetail. The Iessons learned in the previous chap-
ter, for esample, involb-e a radical change in the perspective of
credal studies. It is not unlikely that they ~iílt encourage, even
I. Tke Crealitle Period compel, a complete reorientation of outlook in certain direc-
THEobject chapter is to examine the evolution oF creeds sions.
(usinz the ~ . o r d
in the elastic, non-teçhnical sense adoopted in Is would clearly be rash, For instante, to take it for ,granted
the fiinstchapter) in the period hetween the close of the first cen- nowadays that sterwtyped offiçial fomulae emerged, even
tury and the middle of the t Iiird. TJie uutçide Limits of the survey JocalIy, at a relatively early date, JVith some cxceptions the
I
Iiave not. been chosen arbit rarily, but are dettrmiried by bis- gçneral iendençy, among the classic Iiistorians of creeds, has
torical coiisideraticins. We havc alrcady glanced at tlie Church's bcen io regard the movement towards fixiv as well under
credal activity, such as it was, in tlic apostolic age : for obvious way, in individual churches at any rritc, in the first iialf of tfie
reasons ic forrns a subject o11 its own, meriting separate dis- sccond ccntury. Thc East may havc been slower, but: Rornc,
cussion. After the middlc of thc third century, as has alresdy I according to men Iike the German Kattenbuschl and the
English Burn,2 could boast of a fismly established, dominant
bccn suggested, an entircly nçw situation arose with the intro-
duction of tiie "handing out" and "giving back" of the çrced, credal form before the epoch of the heretic Mascion, that is,
and t he disciplina orcani with whiçh they were cennected, These . ~ hypothesis Iike this
beforc thc 'forties of the second ~ e n t u r yAn
ceremonies not only brought declaratory creeds into the fore- cannot be dismissed out of hand, but f es plausibiihy largely dc-
ground, but had the effect of tending to stabiiize their wording. pended on two tacit assumptions, first, that the "mle of faith"
Ous period can therefore claim to form â natural unit. That ir is was identical with the cseed, and, secçindly, that a decIaratary
also onl: descning the claçest scrutiny must be rnanifet to any- creed at a11 periods featured in the service of baptkm. Once the
one wEio reflect': that thme half-dozen qenerations 1%-ere, institu- precariousnesç of these aumptiom is grasped, it becomes pos-
tionally, arnong the most creittive in the Church's histol. Tlie sibte to approach the evidence ~vithoutpreconceived ideas and
outline plan of CathaIiçism had already been sketched in the appraise it for what it is w-orth, without always supecting the
first cenrury, but it \\-asin the second and third that the solid lurking presence of an official formula. In itselfthe theory of t he
buildjng reared itself. This qeneralization iç as m e of çreeds and sudden codifiçation of the Church's belief, e\-en in so go-ahead
liturgim as it iF of other cxpressionç of'the Catholic spirit. a comrnunity as that of Rome, shortly after x.n. ~ o iso improb-
As we pick our way through the cenfusing territory ahead of able, especjally in vierv of the extrerne fluidity of the Forms it
us, we shalll be in danger of getting lost unltcss we have a clear assumed in the preceding deçades and the gradualness with
which other aspects of the liturgy scttled down. Indeed, if thc
idea of what we are Iooking for. TIie precise date and mannes af
the cmergence of official summaries of faith, the developrnent in
particular of baptismal professjofis and their relation to other
I histosy of the liturgy ptovides a proper pamlIe1, we should
CI:Ir, ch. 7.
credal staternents, the degree to wliich externa1 facrors such as i I P. 84 R.
V h r sort of widence addriced was 'Tcrrullian's remark (Adv. M a r c . 1, 20:
the Church's struggle with pagnnism and heresy condidoned the
content of ear1y creeds-these are some of the subjects on which
1 C.C.L. 1, 460) ihat, accurding to his supporicrs, Marciun had not so much in-
novatd on the riitc oCfaith as restor~dii w1ic.n ir liacl liecn corrupted.
62
THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS 65
64 TIIE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY
expect thãt the forrnulation of a nurnber of distinctive types of ufa5 often thought 1 to betray an anti-Marcionite bias, Marcion
confession, existina side by side in friendly cmpetition and having distinguished the God of heaven Whom Jesus revealed
without any Iiard-and-fast rigidity of wording, would be tlie from the Dcmiurge who created the material orcler. Again, the
natural çccond stage in the development of creeds. insistençe on the details OS Christ's human career has frcquently
Another lesson driven home by the results of our previoris been attributed2 to anti-Docetic poIemic : the Docetists refused
inquiry is the comparative width and richness of the iíeld which to admit the physical reality of Hfs body. One German scholar
the studcnt of creeds must explore. I t was a11very weU confining went so far as to declare that " the baptismal creed of tlie Roman
his attention to the baptisrnal 1itu.w when the creed was church was shply the precipitate of the struggle against Mar-
assumed to be a n ernbyo corning to birth within its womb and cionV.3Actually, many of the clauses polnted to as anti-here-
drawing a11 its substance from that one situation in the Church's tical were commonplaces of Christian confcssions at a time
life. M'e have sem, however, that, so far as b a p h is concerned, when the motives alleged were scarceIy likely to have been
it wilI be fruit1ea to look to i t as a sourre of dedaratory creeds in operative. Ia any case, as w e saw in the fim chapter, the
this periotl :attention should rather be devoted to the baptisrnal ev.olutionary approach ta the developrncnt of creeds k h e t
interrogations, so far as traces of them sunive. The baptismal w-ith pitfalls. we pass t h e evidence for crecds in the second
settinq, it i s clear, must be expanded so as to include the whole and thkd centuries in rm+iew,we shall try to xsesç ~vitlioutpre-
system of tmining leading up ro the sacrament. I t was the judice the infiuence exerted on their content and on tlie em-
popular theology of the catechetical schools (perhaps "schoois " phasis of their severa1 parts by polemical considerations. It musr
is too grandiose a name for the instructiond arrangernents of the be obx-ious, however, that the prirnary aim of catechetical
second century) which supplied creeds uith most of their con- instruction (to select what we hase reason to supposc \iras the
tent. S o r shouId it be forgotten that there were a11 sorts of other most fiuirful field of çredal developrnent) was a constmctive
situatians in thc Church's life which lent themselves to the pro- one: it \+-asto pass on to the inquircr or catechumen the won-
clamation of its faith. \Te are accordingly just&ed, when we derTuI story of &e sa\inq work ~vhichGod had accornpliçhed for
look for inflwençes bearing on the fomation ofcreeds, in taking man in Kis Son. S o doubt the anti-heretical note is audible
accaunt of confessions of whatever kind wherevet we come from time to time : it is shrilIy emphatic in some of the passases
acrass them. In the secsnd century, as we have &adv seen was of St I ~ a t i u which
s will shnrtly he citcri and which are sharply
the case in the first, the Eucharist, exorcism m d many other anti-~õçeticin tone. Yet ive should not rashly assurnp ihat it
formal or informa1 occasions in the experiente of Christians may represents the only or the most important fwnction of creeds,
hãve made their contribution. In this connection it wiPI be taking precedence over their orig-inal, and positive, frinction of
interesting to inquire, in the light of the eonclusions of the tirst setting forth the faith.
chapter, how far onc-clausc, mo-çlause and three-clame con-
a. Tkc Apostol fc Fathers
fessions continued to exist? side by síde and in independente of
each other, in thc second century as they did in the first. The writings of the so-caIled Apastolk Fathers forin the first
Lastly, thcre iç one more aipect of credal formulae in regard stratum of our period. So far as creeds are concerned, they
to which it will be advantageous to keep an open rnind, the reveal a situation closelg in line with the onc wc havc already
choice of material for inclusion in them. A dogrna widely en- glanced ar in the New Testament itsclf. There is no sugqestion,
couríiged in tlie past was that creeds expanded from hrief W.,c.g., J. Haussleiter, Trinilarlscltcr Glaubr und Chrislurbekanntrris in dtr aE!m
afirrnations to much Ionger, more claborate ones soleIy under Kirch, Giitersloh, r 920, 5 1 .
pressure of the desitc to rehut or exclude heresy. Thus the
' So J. Haussleiter, bc.cit.
a G.Krúger in &N.T, W.vi, 1905, 72-9. Hc was reproducing, with additional
description of God the Father as "rnaker of heaven and earth " arwments, the thesis of A. C. McGiffert's The AjslEcs' Crcrrl, i gnc.
e.c.c.-g
66 THE MOVEMENT TOWARWS FTXTTY TI1 E: APOSTQLIC FATHERS 57
much less e-plicit mention, of a formal, official crccd a n p h e r e , a hint of thc same formula ia &e solem, 03th-l&e asçurance in
and the attempts to uncarth one have come to gief in exactly eh, 58,' "For as God liveth, and the Lord Jesus Christ liveth,
the same way as the effotts to dicover a genulne ilpostles' and the Holy Spint ",especiaIlv as he immediately interjects the
Creed in the New Testament. On the other hand, there is an ct rhat this triune God is '"he faith and hope of the
abundançe of quasi-credal sçraps which show that the creed- e1 ~d as t h e general context is one admonishing his
making impulses of the Christian communities were alive and rcaoeru EU rcpose "on the most hely name of His rnajesty ", that
active. In their ground-plan and content these fragments fore- is, on the great h-arne into which they werc baptized.
shadow illurninatingly the course rvhich was to be taken by the If the background of these tsiadic çonfessions is liturpical, the
later oficia1 formularies. famaus injunction in the ShffpFicrd of Hermaç,"'FFirst of all, be-
Sometimes thtse embryonic confmsions d i b i t an explicitly lieve that God iç one, 1Vhe created and fashioned alI things, and
Trinitarian character. The Diduch~,for example, gives unmis- IT h i n g come into existente out of non-existente . . .",
takahle directions for the admiaistration of baptism :i "After esents us witli a sample of curscnt catecheticaf teach-
P
you have said alE these things, baptize in running water in the ing. rier 11ias was familiar with thc triad Father, Son and Hdy
namc of the Fathcr and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." Two Spirit ;3 and this fact, taken in conjunction with the cmphatic
chapters later, laying down reguiations about the people en- 'TFirst of a11",suggests that the basiç pattern of the catechesis of
titled to participate in the Eucharist, the anonynous author which this i s a fiaqmcnt rvaç Trinitarian. On the other hand.
desçribes them as " those who have been bapsized in the name w ct quotatioris of it are not forthçoming. rr:e can detect
of the Lord ", which is prohably only a cornpendious way of u ~blcechoes of the speciaI Christ-kerygma in both St
refesring to the lonçer, triune formula ernployed at the initiation CicrlrcriL dnd Remas. Tlie fomcr's aflusion ta "onc calling- in
sen~ice.In the Iiturgieç, as we noted in the previous chapter, to Christ " 4 rnay hint a t this : so rnay such staternents of his as " the
baptize in the name of tbe Faiher, etc,, rneant asking the ques- creator of a11 things, through Hiç heloved Son Jesus Christ . . .
tions '"ost thou believe . . .? " threc times and plunging tl-ie called us from darkncss to lightU,fior "Through the blood ofthe
candidate in thc water in three sucçessive imrnersions. As the Lord rede mption will be given to a11 who hciievc and hope in
Didmhe to0 eíivisages a triple sprinkiing, an interrogato-i-y creed G;od",6 Of "Jesus Christ our Lord, by the will of God. gave His
of this kind (whether confined to bare, unarnplified questions b lood on (~ u behalf",br
r a p i n " Of which resurreçtion Hc haç
about the h e Persom, Ice cannot of course say) js almust cer- made the Lord Jesus the frrst-fruits, raising Him from the
tainly presupposed. The author of r Citmcni b h out~a similar dead".s Hermas's referentes t o it are more open. The lãw of
formula when, echoing a verse of St Paul,z he inquires of his God which is $ven io the whole world, he declares! is " the
readerç,3 "Have we not one God, and one Chrjst, and one Son of God preached to the ends of the earth", while Christians
Spíri t of gracc Which has been poured upon us? " The stress on SIrc t hose who have hcard the kerygma and have believed in
one-onc-ORB is prornpted by his indignation at thc divisive con- H[im. The oficers of the Churçh are entitIed " tthe apostles and
tentiousness to ~vhichthe Corinthians haie succurnbed, but it iç teac~rcibuf the preaçhing of the Son O€ God " :" iit is their busi-
not irnprobable that he has the interroqatory creed of baptism ness to preach the name of the Son of God, and to bestow bap-
h mind. Ks mention of the Spirit, JYhich was held to be be- tism as the seal of it.11
stowed in baptism, and hiç rerninder in the next line of their
"one calling in Christ ",seem to presuppose a baptismal setting ' Lightioot, 36. Op. cit. 49 (Lightfmt, 31 r.).
and so to bear this out. It is perbapç not far-fetclied to ovierhear ' nfand. a (Lightfwt, 3 i t O . a Op. cit. 24 (Lightfoot, r8f.).
a Gf. Sim. 5, 6 , 2 ff.(Liglitfoot, 351 r.}- Sim. 8, 3 (Lightfoat, 362).
r Cor. 46 (Ligiitfwt, 30). lu Sam. 9, i$ Lightfoot, 386).
Ch. 7 (Lightfoot, 220). Ch-46 (Lightfoot, 30). Op. cit. 59 (Lightfoot, 36)- Sim. [i, [lightfmt, 3 8 7 )
a Eph. 4,4-6. ' Op. cit. ta (Lightfmt, i r ) .
68 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY
THE APOSTOLIG FATIJERS 69
The letters of St Ignatius have long been recognized as a Son of God by the Divine will and powei,
peculiarIy ternpting country to the expIorer of creeds. The begotten truly af the Virgin,
~ r h i t a r i a npattem is occasionaIly observable in them, an ex- baptized by John
arnple being Magn. r 3,l where hc invites his correspondents to that He might fulfil dl righteousness,
walk, in a11 their actioils, "in faith m d love, in the Son and the truly nailed in the Aesh on our behaIf under Pontius Pilate
Father and the Spirit, in the beginning and in the end", and, a and Herod the tetrarch . . .
few lines later, to be in subjection to the bishop and one another that through His resurrection He might set up aa cnsign . ..
&L
as . , . the apostles to Christ and to the Father and to the in one body of His Church.
Spirit". The very same letter2 brings to light an informal con-
Researchers of the oIder - .- school
. usualIy worked on the
fession of a reçognizable two-rnembered type : "There is one
assurngtion that 1Iassages like theise were freely paraphrased
God, Who reveaIed HimseIf throughJesus Christ His Son, Who
extracts fram the 1iaptisma1 creed used by St Ignatius. Theodor
Is His Logos corning forth from silence." Nevertheless his most Zahn,] for examlde, poirited confrdently to the expressions
noteworthy quasi-creda1 passages are Christological in forrn and
content, and provide some of the most convincing evidence for
" professing faith" ar -pro~essing
P
L< .
rhe faith ( a l u ~ c v&ayy~MÓp-
i

EVOL) " and " professing to belong to Cbrist (o; 2 ~ a ~ M ó p n m c


the separate existence of single-clause confessions. A sarnple of
Xptmo; c?vab)" in Eph8s. 14, z,2 and clairned to discern an
them is the summary statement in Ephs. 18,2 :3
aliusion to the underlying formula. The attempts to reconstruct
For our God Jesus Christ " the creed of St Ignatius" have bee n nurnerlous and audacious.J
was conceived by Mary according to God's pIaii, They were foredoomed to failure , however, for the martyr
of the seed of David and of the Holy Spirit ; bishop himself never so much as brearnes a- 1hint of the existence
_ A L A _

Who was born and was baptized ofsuch a formula. The passage cited by Zahn envisages faith as
that by His passion He rnight clcanse water.
an attitude, like love, not as a formulated body of teaching, and
h o t h e r comes in Trall. g :4 the three Christologies quoted above are manifestly indepen-
d~ent unihi. What is true is that the outliae of the prirnitive
Be deaf when anyane spe&s to you apart from Jesus Clirist,
CIhristologgcal kerygma ís visibIe through the loose folds of St
Who was of the stock of David,
Who was from Mary, Ignarius ,s polemical style. The Ephesian text, with its dry-as-
r.

Who was truly born, ate and drank, d ust enurrieration of facts, may well represent a cross-section ~f
was truly persecuted undcr Pontius Pilatc, lc)cal cate:chetical teaching. The other two have a solemn,
was t r d y crucified and died a1Imost hymn-like character which has made some schoIars4
-
in the sight of beings heavenIy, eartlily and uiider the suspect th e Euchairist or some other liturgical situation as their
earth, backgrourid. It is a distinct possibility, though the heightened
Who dso was truly raised from the dead, His Father raising style may be merely the by-product of the writer's intense excite-
.r .
Him. . . . ment. A unirymg feature in a11 .three is their basic identity of
A third is Smyrn. I, 1-2 :" theological outlook. They are all built on the same foundation
idea of the antithesis between the Lord's humiliation and His
. . . being fully persuaded a s regâids our L o d , exaltatien, and exhibit the same scheme-according to the
that He was truly of David's stock after the f?esh,
Das a@stolis& S p t , Erlangen-Leipzig, 454 f.
Liglitfmt, r 15. Lightfoot, I 15. ' Lightfoot, rog.
r Ch. 8 (Lightfoot, i 14).
a Lightfoot, I 10.
a
j Lightfoot, 127, a Cf., e.g., A. Harnack in his dnhnng to Hahn's Bibiiolhek; R. Seeberg in
-'?. xl (N.E. iii), 1922,3.
z.für
' So, e.g., H. Lietzmann in <.N.T.W. xxii,.xgng, 265.
7O THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS F K i T Y THE CREEDS OF ST JUSTIN 7I
Rcrsli, accordinç to the Spirit; son of David, Son of God. They \%+tten 155-160 and recalling a debate which took pIace at
cltand in the line of tradition which leads back to Ram. r , 3 and Ephesus some years earlier, are preciouç sources for liturgical
Phil. o ? 5-11. T h e second and third are remarkable For thc p c t i c e in the middle of thc sccond cçntury as weU as for the
pointedlp anti-Docetic nirt tvhich the author, conscious of the apologeti~t h e o l o g of the perisid. Their value to the historian of
mcnace of heretics denjlng the rcality of the Lord's human çreecls is imrnense. Unlike the Apostoljc Fathers, in whose
experientes, ha5 given to them. writine~:we can o d y catch distant echoes of çredal formulae, in
ririother witnesr: to the lively persistente ofthe ancient Christ- Stjustin we for the first time come acrass what can pIausibIy be
kerygma is St Polycarp. In his Ekislle to the P h i l $ p i u n s ~ erads taken to be quotations of semi-formal creecls, I t is t h fact rvhich
against peoplc who do not confess that Christ has come in the has created a special problem for students of creeds. They have
fleçh and deny the testimony of the cross (70 yap7.ilpiov 706 been mueh exercised to determine ruhat was the exacr relation-
watipoc), saying that there is no resurrection and no JucIgment. ship berween St Justin's firrnularies and the contemporary
He summons his correspondents to abandon the vanity of the creed of the Rornan church, So far as we are concerned, we
many and their false teachingç (&€v808~8au~d&!as), and to shall find it more convenient to postpone the cIetailed discussion
reFUrn to "the word deIivered to us at the bcginning (TÒV 2f af this question to subsequent chapters, when we shall have
6px;jr &CV .rrapdaP&ra hóyov) ". Beyond doubt it i; the traditional acquired a fuller acquaintance u?th the so-called Old Rornan
teachinq, compact in oudíne ifpIastic in verbal expression, that Creed. Here ir ~ dbelsuficient to observe that thereare marked
he has in mind. Tn an earlier chapter%f the letter we çan catch dkcrepancies betrveen this (technicalIy designated R) and the
an echo of it: formulac which mav be supposed to lie behind St Justin's
. . . l~elievingon Ifim language, and that in any case the hypathesis that Rome
IVho raked our Lord Jesus Christ from &e dead, porsessed a single oficial crted at this date is higizly doiibtful.
and gave Hirn glory and a throne at Kis right hand, Tlie majority of confessions found in S t Justin exhibit the
to Whorn are subjected all thingç in heaven and earth, familiar three-dause ground-p1an. It is indeed remarkable how
Whom every breath of wind serves, deeply the pattern was imprinted on his mind. A multitude oF
Who will come as judge of living and dead. minor contcxts çan be collected to illustrate this, such as
The structure of this confession is bi-membered, and it is Apol. I, 6, 2 : I
interesting to observe that the lengihier mernber, concerned But we revere and worship
with the Christolo.gy, is snbordinated grammatically to the Him (i.e, the true God),
shorter first member. 1'7 likelv i t a f r a p e n t of the routine id the Son, \.\%o carne From Him and taught us these ttimp ...
teaching handed out to converts in the Srnyrnaean churçh. The and the prophetic Spirit ;
fact that it is a cento of taps h m r P r f ~ r 3deserves notice as
throlting Eght on the way in whjch the body of catcrhetical or ,4poI, I, 63, 3
tradition was built up. Ta the Father of the universe,
throuqh the name of His Son,
3. 2Xe Creeds of St Jcrsh-n and OS the Hoiy Spirit ;
From the Apostolic Fathers we turn ta S t Justin Martyr. His r Apol. I, 67, 2 :3
first dpology, written at Rome 150-155 and addres~cdto the The Makrr of all things,
emperor Antoninus Pius, ãnd his Dialogue wifh T@ha lhe Jew, through Nis Son Jesus Christ, and
Ch. 7 Liahtfoot, 171). through the Holy Spirit.
Ch. +Z ilighrfoof, 168).
E..J.G., PC,. E.J.G., 74. E.J.G.. 75.
I
72 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS F'D3Tl* I
TBE CREEDS OF ST JUSTrN 73
The Ionpest and most elaborate comes in Apol. I, 13: I -4pol. I, 36.1 ,llmost certainlv, therefore, it repwduces rin aç-
Thus 3t.e are not atheists, since trre ivorship cepted bapti~mrilform. L h e test of the second and third cIauses
the creator of ~ h i universe
s .. . iç more iluid, but their content is broadiy cIcar. There is nothinq
and that IVC with cond r e s o n honour to shoir*tliat the CliristoloçicaI section w-as in any material \rray
Him V%o has taught us these chings and was bom for this fuller than our e c e r p t s indicate. If a n y t h i n ~is to be rcad, as
PVO", has sometimes been thouyht, into the phrn~c" the t h i n ~ sre-
Jesus Christ, lating to Jesus", it must irnply that n more or l e s ~developed
14'ho wás crucified uncier Pontius Pilatc, the govemor of Judaea in CliristoIogy was appended to the clause about the Spirir. E t was
the time of Tiberius Caesar, onty to be expected that scholarshi~would feel justified in
having learncd that He is the Son of the true God
atternpting to reconstitutc wllat may be caPPed " S t Justin's
and holding Him in the second rank,
and the prophetic Spirit third in ordcr, we shaII proceed to demon- creed". It is necessary, however, t o undcrstand clcarly wlist one
strate. is about. StJustin himselfexplains that the formulae (forformulnc
they wcrc) were uttered by the officiant ancl not by tbe cnndi-
The setting of the second and third of these extrracts is a descrip- date for baptism.Therepetitionof"inthc name of" bearsthisout.
I
tion af thr: Eucharist : possibly thev are s u m a r i e s , some~vhat -As we have sug~;ested,it is mest unIikcly that the baptismal
abbrcviated, of prayers from the sen.ice. The Iast is ob.rriously ã formula proper I baptize thee ín &e name-', etc.) wasinuse at
vep- free expancion, in the ~ i - r i tr's
e own 1mrds, of ' the creed we thk period. It would seern, therefore, as wTea r ~ e idn the preced-
are about to discuss. Its cbcumstantiality and expdanatory tone I
ing chapter, that what \\*e liave hereis not a declaratory ccreed of
-- n m .
are perhaps reminiscent of the lecture-ro----.
.-*
the kind tliat scholam have usually reccinstnicted, but the bap-
The nrro passaqes in StJustín which are ofoutstandingimpor- tirsmal interrogations. In St Justin's chiirch the questions asked
tance both relate to thc s&ce of baphm, and were quotcd in b! i tlle offilziant had assurned a fised outline and ran as zo C I1OIYS:
fulI in the last chapter. They have a striking similarity of word- . .
Dost ttiou beiieve in the Fathcr and Lord God of the universe?
ing, and this trait alone inclines one to suspect a. more or less Dost thou helieve in Jesus Christ our Saviour, Who w a crucified
scttled liturgical forrn. The first 2 i~ quite brief and runs : under Pontius Pilate?
For thcy receive a lustra1 washinfy in the Hrater in tl~e name (~fthe Dost thou believe in the HoEy Spirit, Who spake by the prophets?
Father ând Lord Qod of the universe, and of our saviour Jesus
m .

Christ, and of the HoEy Spirit. . .. Side by side tvith this strictly Triniearian confcssion, Sr Justin
could evidently draw upon a simple Christolo@calkerygma of
A few lkes later we come to the second passage :3 the type which, as we have seen, had had a continuous history
Over hirn who has elected to be reborn and has repented of his since thc preachhg of the Apostles and the tlnitinys of St Paul.
sins the name of the Father and Lord Cod of the universe is narned, There are mãny pxsaces in his ~.orkswhich reflect it: notable
the otiiciznt ~ h Icads
o the candidate to the water usinq this, and exarnples being :
onPy this. dacription of God. . . . 3ioreover, it is in the name of I V c say chat the \Vord, 1Vho is the first affspring of God,
Jesus C b s t , IVIio was crucifred undcr Pontius Pilate, and in the
~ v a sbegotten without carnal interçoiirsc,
name cif the Holy Spirit, 1130 through the prophets announced
Jesus Ciirist our teacher,
bcforehand the things relating to Jesus, that the man \v110 is en-
and that He was crucified,
lightened is wrashed. and died,
The phrasing o f the cIause about God the Father is identical and rose again,
in boih, and appears again, withour any significant change, in and ascended to hcaven;z
E.J,(;., ~ q . .4/~i1. I, 2I. I (E.J.G.. 4oi.
74 TECE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY THE CREEDS OF ST JUSTIN 75
We fiad it proclaimed beforehând in rhe books of the prophets that Jesus,
Jesus our Christ would come to earth, Whorn also we hãve recognized as
be born through the Virgin and be made man . .. Christ the Son O£ God,
wodd be crucified and die, crueifred,
and be raised again, and risen agairi,
and ascend into heaven ;l and ascended to the heavens,
But Jesus Christ, Mi'ho carne in our times, Who will come again as judge of a11 men right
was crwcified, and back to Adam hirnseIf.1
died, It caa scarcely be daubted that these excerpts have sornethiiig
rose agaín, of a furmulary ring about them :they are echaes of the liturgy or
has ascended into heaven and has reigned ;z
te if the Church. At the samc time it wouId be a grave
He was conceived as a man of the Virgin, e1 eat them as belonging to a three-clause creed with a
and was named Jesus, fuiiy expdnded Cliristological section of the type which later
and was crucified,
obtairied the monopuly. There were occasions, such as the ritc
died,
and rose again,
of exorcism or the eucharistiç service, as welI as the systcmatic
and has ascended to heaven ;3 exposition or preaching af the Christian message, when Christo-
logical confessions like these had a speçial appropriateness, Thc
For the rest you must prove that He consented to exm-cisticformula cited above, for example, bears every sign of
be born as a rnan through the Virgin according to His Father's
will, being a fairly close replica of one which was actually used. The
and to be aucified, shorter form given in Dial, 132, I is akin to it, aIthough it adbs
and to die, and dso that after this a mention of the Second Coming. I t is difficult to resist the con-
He rose again, clusion that St Justin h e w and, on ocçasion, had recourse to
and ascended to heaven ;4 a developed Chnistolugical kerygma which already enjoycd a
For in the name of this very Son of God and first-begotten of all rcleasure cif fixity and which was stilI quite independent of the
creation, T'rinitarian confessionç.
T l . - - .-
Who was bom throngh the Virgin, I rir works of St Justin thus have considerable importance for

and became a passible man, the studcnt of crceds. I t is pure guesswork, unsupported by any-
and wa crucified under Pontius Pilate by your people, thing that he says, to postulate I-iis acquaintançe with an oficial
and died, declaratory creed used at Rome or in any other church. On the
and rose again from the dead, 01 ther han~ d, he provides the earliest direct evidence we possess
and ascended to heaven, fcrr the enlergence of relatively fixed credaI questions at bap-
every demon is exorcized, conquered and subdued ;L tistr~;ana he illustrates the continued existente of one-cIausc,
A --2

You would not blaspheme against Him purely Christological confcssions alongside the Trinitarian nnes
Who has come to earth and been barn, employed at baptism and on other occasions. A façt which de-
and has suffered, serves notice is the fideliry with which these reproduce the
and has ascended to heaven, prirnitive kerygma, without bending it to any appreciable ex-
and will also come again;a
tent to polemical or apoIagetic needs or çolouring it with S t
Bid. 63, I (E.J.G., 168). Justin's own philosophicaI theology. It is interesting to observe,
9 D H . 85, r (L.J.G., 197).
V i d . 126,I (E.J.G., 246 S.}.
76 THE MOVENENT TOWARDS FiSIlT ST TRENAEUS AND RIS RVLE OF F.4ITR 77
in connection with the latter ofthe points just mentioned, that of passages in which he alluder to it or even reproduccs
there is a contemprary of StJustin's who can alço be claimed as s u m a r i e s of it, and we shall naw have to examine them. Of the
a witness to the Christ-kerypa in the rniddle of the second tnro matises which are ~elevant,the Epidpixk i and the Ad~erslls
century, the apologlst Aristides. Some earlier schoIars 1 jumped /!op~~ser,the former is a popular, Iess contrriversial work, xvritten
all too hastily to the conclusion, \\-hen the Syriac version ofhjs a compendium of CIiristian teaçhjng for the òcnefit of con-
Apology was discovered, that it testified io the existente of a full- verts under instruction, while the Eatter is af course St Irenaeus's
dress, formal declaratory çreed. Even if such optirnistic clzirns poIemicaI mngnum opus. Our task will be to detect suggestions of
must be rejected, it should be clear that ch. 2 3 of the Syriac forma1 or informal creeds and to observe the structure and inter-
text contains an illuminating paraplirase of the Church's relation of credal summaries.
tradition about Jesus. To attach this to the statements about Quite near the beginning of thc Epidcixis,i the author im-
God the Father in ch. I in t h e atternpt to reconstnict a three- presses on his reader jthe book is addressed to a fricnd named
rnembered creed is to rnkconceive the argurntnt of the Apolqy. llarcianus) the importante of faith and what it involveç.
The theological discussion in ch. I is quite separate, and in ch. 2 '.Fimt of aB," he says, '3t bids us bear In mind that \ve have
.4ristides is drawiny on traditional Christological teaching recei\-ed bapíism for thc remission of sins in the name of God the
which existed in its own right and bctrayed many points of Fãther, and in the name ofjesus Christ the Son of God, IVho
resemblance with that of St Justin. was incarnãte and died arrd rose again, and in the HoIy Spirit
of God." There is another reference to the threefold name in
4. St Jrennatls aled his Rule of Faith ch. 7, where he explãins that "the baptism of our regeneration
Next in order after St Justin as a witness to thc evoIution of proceeds through three points, God the Father bestowing upon us
creeds comes St Irenaeus, the great Christian theologian and regeneration through Wis Son by the Holy Spirit ". Precisely the
apoIogist of tbe second halT of the second cenhiry. It was his samc emphask on the " three points", or " articles", of bapitísrn
constant clairn that the Church's faith was eveqw-here one and recurs towards the end of the treatise.3 The clear implicatiori
the sarne, In a farnous passage3 fie dwelt on the fact thar, of his lanmage is that he knew a çeries oF baptismal quations
though It was scatterd from one end of the earth to the other, it I\-hich ran, at any rate roughly (there is no need to assume that
sliared one sysrern of belief dmived from rhe ,%postlesand their his transcription of thc test was neçessarilv h I I or esactj :
disciples, and that while the lanpages of mankind were various
Dost thou believe in God the Father?
" the sirbstance of the tradition ($ S ú ~ a ~+çw napa8óuwç) " Dost thou bclievt in Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
was identiçal in a11 pIaces. His favourite term for designating Who was i n ~ ~ r n a t e ,
this was " the canon of the truth ", hy which he did not mean a and died,
single univeisally accepted çreed, or indeed any kind of formula and rose again?
a$such, but rather thc doctrinal content of the Christian faith Dost thou believe in the Holy Spirit of God?
as handed down. in the Catholic Chusch.4 This, he çontended,
was identíca1 and self-consistcnt e%-eryvhere, in contrast to thc For a detailed exposition of the " three points", in a context
variegated teachings crfthe Gnostic heretics. There are a nurnber like~i-iseconnected tvith baptism, we turn to ch. 6, where St
Irenaeus writes :
C:f. ,J. f<rndcl I-Iamir. Trric nnd S~udiesI. rPqr. 9% R. This then is the order of thc rulc oF our faith, and the foundation
Op. cit. 36 f. The comspanding chapter o l the Gretk version in Bartaum and the building, and the stability of our convessation: God thc
Josaphaf is i5 (op. cit. i I o).
Adv. Iiatr. i , ro, 1-2 (P.G.7, 549 ff.). Found in an Armenian vcrsion in 1904.Referençes rvill be to the English
C For thr best discussion of tht meamg of "the mlc ofthe truth" scc D.van den
anslation by J. A. Robinson, London, rgzo (S.P.C.K.).
Iiynde, mrmcx de ~'mcigrrml
~Iirçlim,Paris, 1933, Pt. Ir, ch. vii. a Ch. 3. 4 Ch. ioo.
78 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY
ST IRENAEUS AND HIS RULE OE FAITH 79
Pathei, riot made, not material, invisible; one God, the creator of all and tRe one most frequently cited, is constructed on a different
things : this is the first point ofour faith. The second point is this :the $ân. It is the passage to which reference was made at the
Word of God, Son of God, Christ Jesus our Lord, Who was ma& beginning of this section, and runs as foIkows : l
fested to the prophets according to the form of their prophesying and For the Church, although scattered throughout the whole world
according to the rnahod oC the dispensation of thc Father : through as far as the lirnits of the earth, has seceived from the Apostles and
Whom (i.e. the Word) all things were made ;Who also a t the end of their disciples, handed down, its faith in one God the Father al-
the times, to complete and gather up a11 things, was made man mighty, Who made the heaven and the earth and the seas and aii the
among men, visible and tangibIe, in arder to abolish death and show t h i n g ~in them ; and in one Christ Jesus the Son of God, Who was
forth life and produçe a cornmunity of union hetween God and rnan. made flesh for our saIvation ; and in the Holy Spirit, Who through
And the third point is : the Holy Spirit, through Whorn the prophets the prophets procIaimed the saving dispensations, and the coming,
prophesied, and the Fathers learned the things of God, and the and the birth from the VIrgin, and the suffering, and the rising again
righteous were led into the way of righteousness; and Who in the from the dead, and thc incarnate taking-up into the heavens of the
end of the times was poured out in a new way upon mankind in all beloved Christ Jesus our Lord, and Ris second coming frorn the
the earth, renewing rnan unto God. heavens in the glory of the Father to sum up a11 tbings and to raise up
Manifestly this is not the baptismal çreed : it is rather a kind of all flesh of a11 humanity, so that . . . He may make a just judg-
ment among a11 men, sending into everlasting fire the spiritual
short commentary on it. It gives the gist of the pre-baptismal
powers of evil and the angels who transgressed and fel1 into rebdlion,
catecherical instruçtion, and illustrates how it was modelled on and the impious . . . among rnen, but upon the just . . . bestow-
the pattern of t h e baptismal questions. ing Iife and immwrtality and securing to them everiasting glory.
Both these credal summaries from the Efideixis are ihree-
clause Trinitarian çonfessions. So are the most important em- The peculiar feature of this is that it seems to be the result of an
bodied in Ad~ersmRaereses. An example is the farnous passage 1 ingenious conflation of a short, neatly balanced Trinitarian
in which St Irenaeus speaks of the odiodox churchrnan's "fully- confession with a more detailed and circurnstantial Christology.
orbed faith (aím~g6 h d ~ X ~ ~ oinç )one God almighty, from The forrner, like the passage quoted in the previous paragraph,
Whom are a11 things ;and his firm belief in the Son of God, Jesus re-echoes, though more distantly, the Pauline formula of I Cor.
Christ our Lord, through W'horn are a11 things, and in His 8, 6. The resernblance does not stop there, and in faet (despite
saving dispensations (7;s o2uovoPSas a G ~ o 0 )by which the Son of the word-order ' T h r i s t Jesus ",which recalls Rfiideixis6 ) there
God became man; and . . . in the Spirit of God, Who in each is a close farnily resemblance between Adv. kaer. r , 10, r and
generation discloses publicly among rnen the saving dispensa- Adv. haer. 4, 33, 7. The Christology, it is worth noting, does not
tions of the Father and the Son, as the Father wilIs". Though form part of the second section, a would have been natural
the second and third sections are very loosely paraphrased, it at a Iater epoch, but is linked up with the triadic creed as the
scarcely needs to be pointed out that this confession is de- subject-rnatter of lhe Spirit's prophesying. It has a11 the air
liberately modelled 0x1 the welI-known Pauline one in r Cor, 8, of having once existed as an independent one-clause confession
6. As regards doctrinal çontent, its kinship is close, for a11 its in which the severa1 episodes here represented by nouns (" the
teneness, with the creed-commentary in Epideixis 6. 30th stress comingM,etc.) were doubtless expressed by finite verbs.
the creative work of thc Father and Ris oneness, both teach that Alongside of these, however, chere are many creeds of the
the Son is the instrument of creation, and both dweli on the two-atticle type to be found in St Irenaeus, and our study of his
prophetic work of the Spirit down the ages. contribution would be incomplete if we did not take notice of
The most notable credai passage, however, in St Irenaeus, them. Some of them are reIatively simple tags, such as : 2 "And
1 Adu. hner. r, 1 0 , I (P.G. 7, 549).
Adr,. h e r . 4,33, 7 (P.G. 7, 1077) ddv. haer. 3, r , 2 : in Latin (P.G.7, 845 f.}.
80 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FlXITY ST IRENAEUS AND HIS RULE OF FAITH 81
a11 these evangelists have handed down to us that there is one were loose in their phrasing, as in Efiideixis 6, while at other
God, maker of heaven and earth, announced by thc Jaw and the times their structure was fairly taut and formal, as in the open-
prophets, and one Christ, the Son of God." Others are rnasked ing words of Adv. ham. I , 10, I and the two-article surnmaries
by a fuller Christology, the mention of the Son being elaborated cited above. None of them shows signs, any more than the
with an extended kerygma. Por example, he describesl tribes ~hristologicalcanfessions, of being a creed in the strict sense of
of barbarians who possess no writtcn Scriptures as having the the word : they are formuIaries which have become more or less
Christian tradition written in thcir Iiearts and believing stereotyped. Fourthly, the irnpact of the Pauline text I Cor. 8, 6
deserves notice. Lastly, the influence of anti-heretical motives
in one God, the maker of heavcn and earth and of all the rhings is, on the whole, surprisingly slight, especially when we consider
that are in them, through Christ Jesus the Son of God, Who because
the polcmicaI naturc of S t Irenaeus's work. It would be rash to
of His outstanding love towards His creation endured the birth from
the Virgin, uniting in Himsclf man to God, and suRered urrder Pon-
minirnizc it: the prominence given to the oneness and im-
tius Pilate, and rose again, and was taken up in splendour, and will materiality of God, to the identity between Jesus and the
come again in glory, the saviour of tl-iose who are saved and the Messiah prophesied in the Old Testament, and to the reality of
,judge of those who are judged. the incarnation in E'ideixis 6, probabIy betrays the desire to
rescue Marcianus from Gnostic fallacies. Such a trait as the
To these should be added a striking passageZaimed at Docetists emphatic "incarnate taking-up into the heavens " in Adu. haer.
who distinguish t h e eterna1 Son of God from the human Jesus, r , 10,I is also anti-Gnostic in tendency. These are superficial
in which the Christology is loosely prefixed to a mlnute two- features, however, and çan be easily separated from the body
mernbered creed reminiscent of I Cor. 8, 6 : of the time-honoured rule of faith. It is noteworthy that the
polemical note is entirely absent from the brief baptismal
Hc is HimselfcJesusChrlst our Lord, Who suRered for us and rose questionnaire.
for us and will again come in the glory of the Father to raist again a11 Perhaps this is the appropsiate place to rnention certain other
flesh, and to show forth salvation and demonstrate the d e of just formulae belonging to approxirnately the same period which
judgment to all who have been made by Him. There is therefore one
illustratc St Ircnaeus's creeds. Side by side with his two-article
God the Father . . . and one Christ Jesus our Lord.
confesslons, for example, wc may set the avowal put into the
rnouth of S t Justin (he suffered in the late 'sixties of the century)
This completes our survey of St Irenaeus. The evidencejusti- in the ancient account of his martyrdom : I
fies us in drawing cerrain çonclusions. First, he was familiar with
i short baptismal creed in the form of a threefold interrogation, Our worship is givento the God of the Christiam, Whom we believe
aIthough it is impossible now to determine how hasd-and-fast to have beein at the b eginning the sole r:naker of these thin gs and th e
its wording was or how far Epideixis 3 rcflects its authentic aui:hor of t he~whole M iorld, anc1 to the Sc~no£ God, Jesus C hrist, Wh O
terrns. Secondly, St Trenaeus also kncw the traditional Christ- h= j also bee'nannoui~ c e dby the proph ets as destined to come as a
heiuiu fi$ liinr:n+r +
u i A a i v a u u i i LO i h e r a L ~
"e .A mo* .. --h1
c r i ~ i land as a teaçhel ,,,e
kerygma, with its recital ofthe experientes and acliievements of
doctrine.
the Lord. It is interesting to study the ways in which he was
prepared to combine it with, or inscrt ii into, dyadic or triadic Similarly, Lietzmann-pointed out that the creed produced by
confessions. Thlrdly, he could further draw on two-articIe and
three-article surnmaries of Christian doctrine. Sometimes rhese ' Ach Iustint 2, 5 . The Iirsi half of the abbve C ~ P Preproduces
~ the tmt of P
(Parisimus, 1470, A . n . 890). Most editions give a text which has been hasmonized
with latrr creeds. Cf. P. F. de' Cavali~ri.Aluda e Testi 8, rgoz, 33 f., and P. C.Burkitt,
Adu. hmr. 3, 4,2 : in Latatin (P.C. 7,855 F.). 3.7,s. xi, igny, 66.
Latin (P.G.7, gng).
e Adu. h e ~3,. i 6, 6 : in 2 . N T.W . xxii, 1923, 27 I .
84 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXíTY
TERTULLTAN'S ÇREEDS 85
by the Lord's çommand. The problem is to disco~rerwhat item ent;tled to believe that Tcrtullian's interrogations çontained
went to makc up t hiç supplernentaw matter. +S.tiny ray oflight is itemç than the mere rnention of the Church, but what they
supplied by ãnot her passa@ 1 from the same book. .slfter speakinp 1~qy-ewe can only gum. The likdihood is, ho~vever,that, added
of the divine narncs rlfthe Three lt'ho are at once witnesses of our a toqether, they were not so numerous as to thmw the simple
fait h and arantors of ihe sal\-ation ~vhichive seek, he goes on : triadk schilrne çompletely out of balance.
So much for the baptismal pa_Fsages: it should again be em-
But after both thc attestation of our faith and the promise of sal-
vation have been plcdged under the sanction of rhree witnesses, a
$asized that these are the only ones where there is an unmis-
niention of the Çliurch is necessarily added ; for where the Thsee are, takabIe baptbmãl setting. For Tertuilian's citation octhe rule of
that is, the Father nnd the Son and the Noly Spirit, there the Churcli faitli we have recourse to four principal paçsages, and these will
is toa, whicIi is a 11ody composed of three. be given in chronoiogical order. The f i n r is from bis De prae-
scription~,lwritten abour 200, and runs :
We are not here çoncerned with the subtleties of Tertullian's The rule of faith is . . . thãe rule by which we believe that there
theology of thc Church, but we are concerned to observe tliat is one, and o d y one, God, and He the creator of the worId, U?io by
cvidently the Church figured in the baptismal intermgations. It W o d coming down in the beginning brought alE things into
figured alço, as tve noticed earlier in this chapter, in the credal being out of nothing; and that this F%'md,callcd Yis Son, appeared
summary in thc Epistula ,4posiolozurn: 5r.e shall shortly come in manifold wise in the name of Gdl to the patriarchs, made His
across it again as an article in the çreed af the Dêr Batyzeh 1-oice heard alway in the prophets, and last of all entered into the
Papyms and as a cIause in rhe baptismaI questions kno~into S t Virgin >lar). b~ the spint and power of God His Father, was made
Cysian. Ver). probabIy R E ~ S S T O NOF ÇLYS had a place in Ter- Resh in her wornb and was h r n from her as Jesus Christ, thereredter
tullian's questionnaire too. Suçh at any rate is the suggestion of' proclaimed a new law and a new promise ofthe kingdom of heaven,
a passage- in ivhich, dealíng 4 t h the problem of ~ h Jesus y wrought wondrous deeds, was n a i l d to the cross and rose again on
the tliird day, was taken up to heaven and sat down at the Fathcr's
Himself did not practise baptjsrn, he inquires derisivcly what
right hand, and sent in His place the power of the Holy Spirit to
Re çould have baptized men inte, finding reasons for dismissing guidc believers, and will come again in glory to take the saints into
each of the possible answers ("inio the remission of sinsl- the enjtiyment of life eterna1 and the celestial promises, and to con-
which he bestowed v e r b d y ; into HimaelfT-Whom He çon- demn ehe irnpious to everlasting fire, both parties being raised from
cealed with humility; into the Holy Spirit?-Who hacl not yet the dead and having their fiesh restored.
descended from tIie Father ; into the Church?-which the
Apostles had not yet erected"). Many scholars would go much Despite appearances, this is in effect a Trinitarian statement of
furthez and ~vouldw e s t out of tbe words " a somervhat fulIer faith and not a binitarian one, as has been aileged. The wording
reply" the su$yestion of an elaborate formula akin to, if not is extremely free throughout, and this excuses the inclusion of
identical with, the OId Roman Creed. The question d Ter- the belief in the Holy Spirit in a subordinate cPause inserted into
tullian's acquaintance w-ith this ancient formula 1%-i11 have to be the Ienghy Christolo_el.
explored later. Hcre ~ r f emust be content with pointing out that Our next m o passages strike a mote formal note. Qne, from
Tertullian's olsn language is quite unsuitabie if he has a fdl- a later chapter in the same treatise, Qxtob the common faith
dress çreed in rnind. "A somewhat fuller reply" ssurely impiies ~vhichthe Roman church shares with the Afrjcan:
tbat the creed consisted o£ questions, and that the core and Shc acknowledges one Losd God, creator of the universe, and
substance of these were constituted by the words laid down by Christ Jesus, Son of God the creator from the Virgin Mary, and the
the Lord, that Is, the names of the three Divine Persons. We are resurrection af the flesh.
De bopt. 6 (C.C.L.1, 2 8 2 ) . De bnpa. I1 (C.C.L. 1, 286). Ch. 13 (C.C.L.I, rg7f.). 8 Ch. 36(C.C.T.. 1,217).
86 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY

The source of the other is De vi~ginibus-~elmdis1 (dated bias. In sharp contrast the first passage abounds in traits which
208-2 r I) : are clearly traceable to Tertullian's animus against and eaqer-
nesç to refute rhe various seçts attacked in the treatise. The ane-
Thc rule of faith is one evrrywherc, alone incapahIe of altcraiioir
a n d rcfom-lhe rule ivhich teachcs us to beIiwe in onc God al- ness of God, for example, is set in high relief, aud the sug~cstion
mighty, creator of the world, and H k Son Jesus Chsi(tt, bom from of a s ~ r i n dGod is expresdy denied i ~ a u is
s identified ~ r ~ i thc
th
ihe \"irgin k f q , çrucifid under Pontfus PiIate, raised on the tfiird Mesciah of ancient prophccy and is declared to have ex-
day from the dead, taken up into heaven, now sitting on thc Father's perienced a genuine human birth from 3*ilaryis~voiomb;and the
right hrind, deçtined to come to Judge the liring and the dead resurrection of the Plesh is heavily underlined. These ivere just
through tiie resurrectíon of the flmh. t he issues over which Church and Gnosis drew-swords. SimiIarIy
the fourth passaye, from a hook devoted to exposing a heretic
Thcrc i? no mention of the Holy Spirit here, but it should bc ~rfhoconfounded the Persons of the Father and the Son and
noticed that the Spirit figures largely in the following sentcnces. 3at.e it out that the Father had actually suffered, rnakcs a
The fourth quotation of tlie rule of faith occurs in iidriprsw çpecial point of the separate existence d the two Persons. It
Prwam,qwritten aftes z 13: was tliis Jesus Chriqt, it argues, sent from the Father, Wlio
.
We, on ihe contraw , . believe that there is of çourse one God. was bom, as both God and man ; and it was He MTho suficred.
hut that açcording to ;he divine dispcnsation which we cal1 econorn; The hook was a product rif Tertullian" Montanist period,
tliere is also a Son of this one God, His own Word, Who carne forili and it i s ta this fact that we douhtless owe the special ernphasis
from Him, through Whom a11 things were made, and without Whom on tiie Spirit in the closinq section, On the other hand, all
nothing was made. (We believe that) this Son was sent by the Father this polcmical matter is on tlie surface, clearly separablc from
into the Virgin, and was b o ~ mfrom her, man and God, 5011 oírnan thc rule of faith, and has not coniributed any lasting elcrnent
and Son of God, and was given the name Jesus Christ; that He
to it.
suffered, that He died and uFasburied, according to the Scriptures,
and was raised again by the Father, and was taken up to herrven, The big question, however, is whether it can be cIaimed that
and sits ai the Father's right hand, and will come again to ,iudge thc passages bear witness to the existence of a creed in the
the living and the dead :IYho sent forth, as He had promised, the proper sense of the word. CIcarIy if there is a creed uriderIying
Holy Splrit, the Paraclete, from the Father, the sanctifier of the thern, Tertullian cannot have reqarded its verba1 exprcssion as
faith of those who bbea-e in the Father and the Son and the Holy imiolable. Otherwjse he would have felt some cornpunçtion
Spirit. abaut v a m g the lanpage in which he cIothed it to suit his
passing purposes. Ter~ullian,it should be recalled, was a
Nere agaln. as in the h t passage, we have a rnasked Trinitarian legalist : anythinq Iike an oficial form would have appcaled to
formula which might easilv pass for a binitarian one. Another him. The theor). of scholars like Katrenbusch, that he was de-
interesting feature of it is the way it terminates in a brieFTrini-
terred from rvriting d o the~oficial ~ text by the çonvention that
tarian creed.
the creed was a mystery whicEi could be revealed only to the
The first &g to be noticed about these exçerpts from Ter- initiated, has little to be said for it. It is hprobable that the
tullian's d e of faith is the way in which S i e y rnirror his disc$lina arconi exercised suçh an infiuence at this early date,
polernical interests. The second and third passages, taken from and Tertullian himself had no hesit ation about describing the
contexts without any doçt~nallycontroversial. flavour, are stark cercrnonies of baptism. It is impossihle, therefore, on the bnsis of
sumrnar~esof essential Christian tcaching. There is not a turn of his citations of the rule of fafajth,to argue that Tertullian knew a
phrase in them which is coloured by controversial ar stpologetic single au thoritative creed, even a local one.
Ch. t (C.C.L. 11, rzog). a Ch. 2 (C.C.L.II, i [tio). At the same time it is dificuIt to resist the impression that
g0 THE MOVEMEUT TOWARDS EmrrY THE GROWTH OF FIXED FORM$ 91
and fully understanding it from our expoaition may stand the =sage elsewhere and with the anaphora of the A$. Trud. itself. But
more FrrrnIy therein".] A thorough conservative in matters of (a) he was much more likely to expound his own theological
Church order, these wwrds suggest that the liturgies he inçor- ideas in the loosely worded anaphora than in the relatively fixed
porated in his treatise were those in use at Rome in his day and baptkmal questions; ( b ) I a . and Te~t.Dom. are agreed to be
earlier. Sinçe the book was written in the opening years of the rnuch the most reIiahle witnesses to this creed (c!?. the way they
pontificate of St CaHistus (2I 7-2 I), or more probably 2 tawards havc preserved Xp. 'Irlu., & v . . . & v . . ., { W w a ) ; (c) the
the dose of that of his predecessor Pope Zephyrinus (.rirta p f e r e n c e for <K . . . ai seems in part the result of the sub-
I 98-2 r ;r), we may confidently tum to it for information about conscious belief that H was identically the same creed as R ;
Rornan liturgical practice at the end of the second and the (d) if 2~ . . . ~ a was l original the presence d THKOUGH . . .
beginning of the third century. FROM in Lat. and Test. Bom. is hard to explain, since neither the
We have already had occasion to refer to the baptismal creed scribe of the former nor the redactor of the fatter was ap-
of the Tradition : in citing it here we shall endeavour to give the parently a Westerner,' whereas the presence O£ FROM . AND ..
reader a more exact picture of the faets. The restoration of the in thc others merely corresponds with Eastern usage.
true text rsbises complicated problems, for lhe Greek original of
[Credis in deum patrem omnipoten-
the treatise is lost : we have to do what we can with a number of tem?]
translations into Latin, Coptic, Ethiopian and Arabic, and with Credis in Christurn Iesum, filiurn
the revisions of the Tradition which appear in the Arabic Canons dei,
qui natus est de Spiritu sancto ex
of Hipplyr~sand the Syrian Te~tarn~nturn Domina'.The basic Maria virgine, ~t crucifixus Y U ~
ãuthorities appear to be the Latin of the Verona Fragment Pontio PiIato et rnortuua est [ e t
(fifth centus.),3 Test. Donz.%nd Can.H@.5 The sarting out of sepultus], et resurrexit die tertia
vivus a mortuis et ascendit in
the conflicting texts has been taken in hand by a number of' caelis et sedit ad dexteram patris,
scholars, notably R. H. Connolly,s R, Seeberg? B. Capelle,g ventums iudicare vivos et mor-
tuos?
H. Lietzrnann and G.Dix.10 Below are printed the Latin o£the Credis in Spiritu sancto et sanctam
Verona Fragment (with the first article, which is rnissing from ccclesiarn et carnis rcsurrectionem?
the MS, conjecturally restoredj, and a reconstitution of what
may be presumed to be the original Greek: an English trans- Thac this was a formal, fixed creed need not be doubted: an
lation appears on p. 46 and p. 1r4. It wiI1 be observed that, interesting echo ofit can be overheard in anothcr context of St
along with Seeberg and Lietzmmn, we have adopted the read- Hippolytus, where he speaks oF "confessing God the Father
ing THROVGW THE KQLY SPIRIT FROM MARY THE WRGIN. This is almighty, and Christ Jesus the Son of God, God Who became
supported by Lat. and Test. Dom. Copt. gives IN THE H. SP.FROM man, etc.".3 The question is whethcr we are entitled to desig-
M., while Can Hipp., Eth. and Arab. suggest FROM THE n. SP. AND nate it the official creed of the Roman church. St Hippolytus's
M. THE V. Connolly, followed by Capelle and Dix, prefersed this, regard for tradition and his anxiety that ancient forms should be
arguing that it agreed with St Hippolytus's personal theological respected have already been mentioned. They make it certain
Ch. i (c[. G. Dix, Thz Ajmtolic rrndikiora, Lrindon, 1937, 2).
that the rites he described so minutely reflect actual practice at
SO Dix, op. cit , Gm. Inlrod., xxxv ff. Rome. But caution is neçessary. Forma1 liturgical prayer was
Cf.E. Hauler, Didmtalirz~apostolorumfrag. ld., Leipzig, r gm, r ro f. stiI1 in its infancy. The eucharistic prayer which St Hippolytus
' (=f. ed. of I . E, Rahmani. Mainz., 1800. da
invites his readers to accept is manifestly his own cornposition
Cf. ed. af W.Riedel, Dic ~ i r c h m r e c h t s p e ~&s~ mPob. Alcx., Leipzig, r g ~zoo, ff.
J.T.S. XXV, 1924, r 31 ff,
' , Z . f Y x KG. xl, ~ 9 2 2 ff.
~6 R. Bh. xntix, 1927, 35 R. ' Cf.G. Di,op. cIt. Iiv f. 2 The original must have ended simply
* T.N.T.W.=vi, 1927,76 ff. '0 Op. cit. lx f. and 36 f , a Cf.Con. Nott. 8 (Nautin, 249). with ;r &yí? P ~ u X ~ o h ;
THE GROWTH OF FIXED FORMS 93
C)* THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITY
arrd designedIy gives expression to his anti-Munarchian believe in the Holy Spirit, and thae having free-wiI1 we are punished
for our rnisdeeds and rewarded for our gaod deeds. To take a case, if
theo10,y.l EPsetvhere in the book he concedes that in celebrating 3 man should appear to beIieve in Jesus but shodd not believe thas
the hoIy rnysteríes the bishop i s not absoluteIy bound to recite nhcre is one God of the laiv and the çospcl, If'hose glar). the heavcns
the prayers prescribed as though he had learned them by brought into being by Him decIai-ç: . . . t h i man ivould be de-
heart.2 He admits that it is a11 to the good if a bishop has the frctivc in a most vital artiçle of raith. Or agairr, i£ a man should
ability to pray "suitably, wirh a g a n d and elevated prayer". beiiciíe that Ke l'ho x m s crucified undcr Pontius Pilate . (but ..
The most he stipulates is that no one shall be prevented from çhould not accept) His birth from the Virgn 5dary and thc Holv
rising set forms ifhe ti-ants to. IR view of this it ~vouldbe hazatd- Spirit . - . he too wodd be most defective . . .
ous to assume that the goal oFPocaI uniformity had been reached Similar sumrnaries occur elsewherc 1 in Origen's works, and
irt the matter of baptismal creeds, though they lwre no doubt there is abundant evidence to show that he attached great im-
more fixed than the eucharist. As Connolly remarked long aq0,3 ponance to the ecclesiastical tradition of doctrine. TVhen these
"at the beginning of the thisd çenhiry the Roman creed was passages are surveyed, it is impossible to deny that what he had
probably not so rigid in its formation but that the personal ele- beforc his mind was some kind of triadic formula giving expres-
ment may still have had some play"'. Thfs is, if anything, a sjon to the kernel ofthe faith: the phrãses " born of the Virgin
conservative estimate : tvc may well wonder whether, in the hlary and the Holy Spisit ", " crucified under Pantius Pilate",
light of the evidence, we are not better advised to think of a and the like, are typical. And çince shc form is Trinitarian, and
nurnber of scrni-official forms than of a single authoritative it is cxplicitly said that the articles are indispensable ones, with-
Roman çreed at this time. But the further discussion of this ques- out which a man cannot be a Cbristian, it may well have been
tion must be deferred until we examine the OId Roman Creed a formula which was cmployed at baptism.
itsclf in the next chapter. IL'c havc no rneans of detesmining, of course, whether Origen
It is interesting to observe that a slightly youngex contcm- was thinking o£ an interrogatory or a declaratory confession.
porary of St Hippolytus, Origen, wiiting at Caesarea in thc late Wc do knorv, however, that towards the niiddle of the third
'thirties of the third century, hints at what Iooks like a formal ccntury. at any rate in yorth Africa, the forrn of the baprismal
creed,4 no doubt that of his native -4le'randria. Cornmenting" on quest ions had become settled and had acquired oEcial recog-
St John 13, 19, he has been pointing out that there are certain nition. Our infomatíon abvut this is desived from the cone-
articles of faith whjch are absolutely essential ("the artieles spondence between St Cyprian and Firmiiian to which refer-
which, in being believed, save the man wha believes them "j, ente was made in the preceding chapter. F i d i a n , it will be
and has been say-ing that the Chri~tianmust believe the rr.hnle recalled, .rtVasable to speak QoT an " ecclesiastical d e ' " of bap-
lot and must nst pick and chocice. Then. for the sake of c-lear- tisrn, of an "established and churchIy interrogatiori (intmo-
ness, he instantes some : ,fatia legitima et ~cclesimtica)", and even of "t he cusrornary and
First of alE believc that there is one God, 12%o created and framed established trmrds of the interrogation (wiiata ef legitima vcrbo
a11 things and brought all things into being out of non-bcing. We inlerrogationis) ". Nothing warrants us in assuming that these
must also believe that Jesus Clirist is Lord, and a11 the tmc tcaching thing w r e exceptional or out of the way in his eyes. A s Fir-
concerning both His godhead and His manhood. And w t must miIian was bishop sf Caesarca, it is natural to regard any in-
ferences drawn from his remarks as applying equally to other
' Cf. G . Dix. op. cit., xliv.
Cr. ch, X, 3-5 (in G . Dix's ed.). CF. in M d t , c o m m i , ser. 33 (Klnsirrmann-Bcnz II, 61);con. C&. I , 7
3.r,y. =V, 1914, 137. (K~rlschaur , 60); I j e $rim$. I , prncf. (Koctschau, 9-16); ira Ierm. hom. 5, 13
A On Origen's rule of faith, see G , Bardy. La r?fi de foi d'ori~ènr,in Rdwrthts dz (Klo~trrmann,42); in I Cor. Im. 4 ( c f .J'.%S. ix, 1908, 234).
~ ~ c i c n crrli,<irusr
c ix, 1919.162436. !:/r. 75, 10-1 1 (Hartel I, 818).
In <rm. Inann. 32, 16 (Preuuchen, 45 I r,).
94 THE MOVEMENT TOWARDS FIXITT SOME CONCLUSIONS 95
churches of Asia Minor, The language of St Cyprian, too, the Father's fight hand and His future coming to judge the
reveals that exzraordinary weight was attached to the precise living and the dead, reçurs wirh persistent regularity and in
form o1t he administration of the saçrameni, and that Novatianist language which is more or less fixed. No doubt ft had a secure
heretics udercshotving their cunning by imitating the Catholiç .iche in the exorcistic rite, in the anaphora of tlic Eucharist,l
pracriçe d o ~ ton ths minutest detail.1 He gives some indicatio~r and in çatecheticalinstniction. An intereçting point i s the variety
of what was contained in the qusstions, rnentioning God the of ways in which these different types of confcssions were some-
Father, Jesus Christ His Son and the Holy Spmt, and going on times combined with each other. In Sr Irenaeus's A&. hoer. r ,
to qunte verbally what appears to be the remainder of thc third 10, r , for example, we saw how an eIaborate Christology tould
article-"Dost .
thou believe . . in the remission of sins and be bterwoven with the third atticle oF a thrce-mernbered con-
everlasting lifè thraugh the Iioly Church? " fessicn=; whilc the same author's Adr. haer. 3, 16, 6 and Ter-
tulIian's Adr. Prax. I provide esarnples of ChristologicaI
7. Soma Conclvsions kerygma prehed, in the one case to a two-article and in the
It cannot be çlaimed that the survey we h a ~ just
e conducted other case to a three-article confession.
provide satisfaçtory answers to dl our questiom. Where the Having estabhhed this, however, what are we to sap about
dmuments are so sparse and their precise bearing often so creeds in t h e precise acceptation of the ~vord?Here our reply
elusive, complete enlightenrnent is sçarcely to be expected. wilI be calculated to disappoint many. Certainlv nothinq has
Nevertheless there are certain concrete gaim lvhich can be come to light to upçet the conclusion of the previoui çhapter
rnarked down on the çredit side. Xow- is ishe appropriate that declaratory creeds, stereotyped in form and oficially sanc-
moment for uç to draw up an account of tIiern even if it must be tioned by locai church authorities, had no çurrençy in the
at the cost of some repetition. second and third centwies. Still less woutd rhcre seem to be any
In the first pIace, it should be clear that there was no shortage warrant for speaking of "&e çrecd of Rome'kor " the creed of
ofcreeds, in the looser, less exact seme of the word, in the second Antioch ",as ifeach local comrnunity possessed a singlc acknow-
and third çenturies. As in &e Yew Lestament period, the ledged fornula of i& own. It is inconceiiahIe that if, at any
Church's faith continued to find expression in serni-forma1sum- pokt in oiur period, such a thing as an oficial declarato- creed
rnasies adapted, in general struçture, content and s ~ l e to , the had been Inexistente in any church ofwhich records have come
simations whicli called them forth. lia. of the codessions at .dom to us, it wodd have escaped without some mention, hoiv-
which rve g1,mced wcrc Trinitarian in their ground-plan ;others ever indirect. The familiar explanation that reference to it was
were binitarian ; still othca-s werc onc-clause Christdogical deliberatt-Iy avoided for motives o f cultfc reticente rests on an
staternents. :\I1 threc types, it wvould appear, e'risted i n d e ~ e n - anachronistic ante-dating oF the operation of these motives.
dently of each other, and we have seen no reason for supposing Admjttedl~great stresç is laid on erthodox beIief by inany ofthe
that t he latter twcl were really f r a p e n t s of more fully developed writers we have consulted, and they are aD convinced that there
Trinitarian creeds. Thc Christological group in particuIar O
,, universaIly accepted system of d o p a , or sule of faith, in
merits attention : it carried on the ancient Christ-kerygrna the Catholic Church. But this is never unambipously con-
which had pIayed such an important role in apostalic times. nected, even by theologians Iike St Irenaeus and TertulIian,
The principal items cornprised in it were well on the way to with any set form of words. Though they frec~uentlycite the rule
becoming stereotyped : the sequençc of Christ's birth from the The bent early exarnple is the canon of St Hippoly tus's dpsiolfc Tradiiion (ed. oT
Virgin Mary and the Hol y Spirit, His suffering and death under C.Dur, 3 f.1.
Pontius Pilate, His resurrection an the third day, His session at 'For 'other and Iater examplcr illustsating tEie long rsistence of this type
of mnflation, see H. Listnrnann, An/angr dri ~ l n u b e i i i & n n h i u t s ~ Tiibingsn,
?E/). Fq, 7 (Hartel I, 756). 1921, ri31 f.
98 THE MOVEMENT TOWAWDS I;I?U'IX SOME CDNCLUSIONS 99
played by the orthodox carnpaign agaimt Gnosticism in the f i ~ dccades
r of thc third, a bias in favour of set forms was
shaping oF credal furmularies, thcir kerneI dways conskted of making itself felt, and the prayers of the Gurch were being set
those primordial veritits which it was the Church's rakon d Y t r ~ do1i-n in writing. The most obvious illris~ationis p r o d e d by
to proclaim to the worId. .Imore exact account of the matter the A~ostalicT d i t i o n of St Hippolytus. In this movernent, itself
would be that part of the Catholic reaction to the Gnmtic cri& the product of causes deeply buried in the htinctive life of
was a renewed and enhanced insistence on the public, apos- institutions and societies, we can perceive 1zit large the gradual
tolically authorized deposit of doctrine which had been handed codification of creeds which we are studying.
d o m in the Church rrom the beginning as t h e canon or ruIe of
faith.
Finally, we may ask what factors, iF not &e desire for concise
official formulae which w o d d shut t h e gatc against heretical
kovations, were jnstrurnental in bringing about that measure
of unihrmity and codi6cation whiçh w.ere açhieved in our
period. A great change was wrought, though we may have
appeared reluctant to recopke it, between thc Xew Testament
çtage and the nilddlc of the third century. Even if locally
authorized creeds and formulae were not so early in the field as
optimistic scholam have sometimes liked to imagine, we werc
able to observe a steadily progressing tendency for the baptisrnal
questions to "freeze'' (thr process was not complete, of course)
into rí$d fonm, and we notiçed that she Iess formal sumrnarigs
ofdoctrine comprked under the mle of faith had a more precise,
detaminate outlinc and a more settled phraseology at ite
beginning ofthe third century than at the end of the h t . The
m w e r must be the unsatisfying one that the respomibLLity çan-
not be assigncd to any singIe cause. Brit a more proíitable way of
dealing with the question is to pojnt to the general, and uni-
versally recognized, tendency of the liturgy in this period to
assume a fmed shape. Creeds and credal formular, as E.
Norden Qad the acumen to remar$ and as H. Lietzmannz
was never tired of reiterating, are part and parceI of the Liturgy.
T h q share the forhincs of the prayers and services in rvhich
they are cmbedded, I l ' e shouid, of course, beware of ante-dating
tEie era of liturgical fixi5y. The Ianguage of the eucharistic ser-
vice was still fairly pliable in the middle of t h e fourth century.3
None the less, towards the end of the second, at any rate in the
Wf+Agiostur í'hm, Leiprig snd Berlin, I I 263 K.
v, e.,., Dit U$mm drr a p x l i s c h m $u%~tasbckmnt&lu,
(inSttmg~lrrrichtcder Ptetm, dkadmtis).
"4
k i i n , 1911)~
a Cf. G . Dk, 7hc Shapi Vtha L i t u r ~ hndon,
, 6 ff.
THE EVfDBNCE FOR R IOI

The one selected for use by the local bishop mmt quiçHy have
ousted all other s u m a r i e s oT belief current in Sie district, and
must itself have acquired the psition of the oficial s)mbol of
faith. The era of declasatoqt confasions was now in full swing,
THE OLD ROMAX CREED and while it would be rash to suppose that the text was treated
;is in~iolable,eaçh local church henceforth had its own crted,

r . 3he Evidcnce for R &ch rnight be marked by distincsve divergences Gom those
of jts neiçhbours. As the third century wore on, this situation
THEtkird century was, from a number of points of view, a beçame, it would seem, universal, and persisted for centuries
critica1 epoch in the Church's history. One arnang the many ifter ihe council of Nicaea had inaugitrated a line of conciliar
problems with which it had to grappIe was the influx into its srccds çlaiming a more than rnerely local allegiance.
ranh of an ever-swelling multitude of converts from paganism. One o€ the earliest of tocal creeds to take shape and be
Every thoughtful observer must have been conscious of the canonized in this way was that of the Roman church, It is the
grave threat to rhe integity of the Church?, traditional purpose of this cliaptcr to examine the docurnent ~vhichlias
teaching : the Gnostic crisis had demonstrated how easiIy i t been jdentified as the ancient Rornan baptismal creed (its
çouId he swamped by a flood of incorners vvlth incomplete or coni.entionãl description is R), to investigate its credentials,
çsassly mispided notions of the auihentiç content af Chris- and to give a bird's-ele view of its histçiry so far as it is re-
tianity. a counter-measure a thorough reorpznization and coverable. No apoloipu sliould be needed for aHocati31g so mucIi
elaboraGon of the catcchetical systcm was taken in hand :many space to it. The decent ofthe Roman creed can be traced \r-ith
signs of ir are disctrnible in contemporary Iitrrrgies and in the some d e p e e of confidente to the second century, at any rate
writing of third-century falhem. St Hippolytus's Aposiulic to its closing decades. If this is correct, it shoilld have a special
~raditi'Onshows that the Roman çliurch was earlier iii the field intercst as lifting the curtain a few inches from the obscure
than most with this overhaul. Henceforth most exhaustive period studied in the last chapter when there were a variety of
arrangements were made both for grounding candidates for local types competing for a monopoiy. Tts outstanding impurt-
admission to the Church in the main articles of betief, and for nnce on other grounds scarcely needs stressing. It became the
testing their success in absorhing this teaching. One offshoot of direct ancestor of a11 other local creeds in the West, and its
this tightening up, and one which js of direct relevançe to our influ>me even on Eaçtem creeds was rnarked. The Apostles"
studies, would seem to have been the development, some time Creed itse'lr, u-hich was Iater elevated to a prisition of unique
or other in the third centur). and probably in Rome first of ali, authority as the baptismal formula of Rome and thc M7est
ofthe rites ofthe handing over, or traditio, and giving back, or generallu, iç rnerely one arnong R's many dcscendants : jt is in
rcddilio, of the creed as part of the immediate prepararion for fact, as we shaI1 later discover, the old creed of Rome enriched
baptisrn. Once these conventions had estabhhed themselves. a with rniitter which had becorne popular in the pro~inces.
dedarator). fomuIa became necessay, and the cirçurnstances
Our prirnaly source for the text of the OId Roman Creed,
of its use by the bishop and of its being mcmorized and solemnIy in its T,atin form, i s the treatise Commeninrisrs irt y b o i u m aposto-
reliearsed by t i ~ ecatechumens were suçh as to surround ic witli lontn' which the Aquileian priest TyrannIus Rufinus wrote
imrnense prestige. The paraIlel development of the disc$liaa triwards 404. T t was fram this famous boak that, in tlie first
arcani, or rule o£ secrecy, with a11 that it carried with it of awc , culled the legend of the comporftion of the creed by
~ h a p t e rwe
and reverente attaching to the central mysteries of Christianity,
the twclve Apostles. In it Rufinus comments, çlause by clause,
only served to rnagnify still further the saçredness of creeeds. P.L. 2 1 , 3 3 5 4 .
rm
I O2 THE OLD ROMAN CREED THE EVIDENCE FOR R I"3
on the baptismal creed o f his own church, Aquileia, and m m - Reme in 340.An over-zealous exponent of Nicene orthodoxy,
pares it wjth that of Rome. His reason for this odd procedure he had f d e n f o d af the Eusebian party and had been expelled
was that, wliiIe he recoLgnizedthat the Roman church preserved from his see as being virtually a Sabellirin. Ljke others in the
the original cseed of the Apostles in its purity, he felt con- same plight at this time, he took refuge in Rome, where he
strained (by natural piety, we may conjechire) to use the seceiir~da w a m weIcome, His apologia took the form of a
formula he had himseIf professed at baptism as his working detailed statement oF his bdiefs on tlie theological issues at
basiç. Since he scrupulousIy indicates the points at which the stake: the i d a was that his Roman supporterç might have
Aquileian creed diverges from the Roman, it has usually been material with which to vindicate his innoctnce. Tn the rniddIe
regarded as an easy task to piece the latter together as it of this documentk sshort creed crops up which is a replica, in
e'usted in his das. The text thus obtained is corifirrned by the ai1 save a feew relatively unirnpwtant points, of the creed which
L a t h cseed tz-hich has been inserted. on the back oF t h e last can be reconstnrcted out of Rufinus's treatjse. This \+.as
page but one (p. 2 2 6 ticrso), into the Graeco-Latin uncial MS identified, towards t h e middle of the smenteenth çentury, by
Laud. Gr. 3j in the BodIeian Libra.. Thk is a sixth or seventh James U s ~ h e rt,h~e scholarly archbishop af Armagh (who had
c e n t q M S , and is b a t known as Codex E (Codm Antiquisnmus) also been t h e first to disentangle the Latin text af R from
of the Arts ofihe Aposll~s.Further c o n h a t i o n is supplied by a Rufinus), as the contemporal creed oT the Roman church. Its
Cottonlan IIS (z h SX) of the eiehth century, now in the interpolation by IfarcelJus ia his defence was, thought rssher,
Bri tish >.luseum, an ingenious move desiped to provide an absolutely un-
Printed below in pacallel columns are &e Latin text of R as jrnpeachable proof of orthodoxy by the innuendo that he
suggested by Rufinus and the 51% w-e hai~ernentioned and an coasidered the Pope's ow-n baptismal confession the best
Engljsh translation : expression of bis faith ; and \$-e know from Pope Julius's allusion
W o in dcum pairem omnipotcn- I klieve in God the Father almighty;
to it in his subsequent Jctter to the Eastern bishops that the
E r m: plan succeeded.3 PsacticalIy all scholan since Usshtir's day have
a in Chrisrum I m m filium eius uni- nnd in Chrh J e o l ~Kis odu Son, w r ~quiescedinhis identification. 3larcellus's cseed runs as foliows :
-, dominum nosirum, hrd,
qui n a t u cst d c Spiritu sanctn ct Maria )%%o s a
'
\ bom fmm the Holy Spirit
viqine, and the S7+n M q ,
qui sub Pontio Pilato rrucifixus rst ct Ii'ho under Pontius PiIate w a s m c i -
sepulrus, fied and brnied,
fcrtiadie rts-31 on the third day Tose again from the
a rnortuk, dead,
asccndit in cactos, ascended to heaven,
sedtt ad dextcram pairis, s i t ~at t h right
~ hernd of t l i t Father,
undc vmtunri cst iudicare whence He will come to j u d ~ rthc
vivos t t mortuw; living and the dead;
ct in Spiritum sanctrim, and in the Holy Spirit,
sanctarn ccclcsiam, the hoEy Chwch,
rernissionem prccatorum, t he remission of sins,
carnis resurrcctioncm. the resurrection of thc flesh.

Some sixty yeass before Rufinus wrate his book, a çreed


practically identical wjth the above, but in Greek, figured in ' See S t Epiphanius, Pari. h r . 7 2 , 3 (H011111, 258).
the weI1-known apologia wliich Marcellus, bishop of Ancyra a See his De Romaiias ecclesiae .'vmbnIo ajo~lolico wlzrc liliisqils jdeí f~rrnulif
diairibn, London, 1647
. ..
in Cappadocia, submi tted to Pope Julius I at the synod held in a CF. St Athan., A@í. con. Ar. 32 (P.G.
25, ~ o n ) .
'04 TETE OtD ROMAN CREED THE TRkDITION DEFEXDED 105
T h e text, it ir411 be observed, exhibits severa1 dcviations from The pivot on which thc whole orthodx tlieory tums ie, of
the Latin verçion suggested by Wufjnus. The chief 5f tthesc are oufie, the beIief that the contempasary creed of the Raman
the omission of FATHER ( . r r a ~ &in~ jrhe h s t articlc, and the c-,urch çan be reliably recovered from the h i n t s givcn by
additjon of ZFE EVERLASTMG ( z ~ r j va;&vlw) after RESURREC- ~ ~ f i n in
u shis treatise. Badcock was accordingly not siow to
TIQN OF TKE FLRSH : a Iess irnportant variation is the insertion of
drnw attention to the fact that a11 Rufinus pmrnised to pive in
APTD ( ~ a ; before
) O N TKE LWERDDAY and sr-rs.
bis book was the creed of his native church Aquileia. Adrnittedly
MarcelIus's letter is not the o d v witness to the Greek text he çin$ed out severa1 striking divegcnces between it and the
of the Old Roman Crceci : a MS of considerably later date çan Roman creed, but we have no reason to suppose that his Iist
also be cited. This is the çollection of litur@cal piecec known as exhaustivc. U d a s we can be sure that ir \Tas, the attempt
the Psalipr of AAheljtan, in the Cottonian Collection in the to reconstnict R ~ i t h the aid of his casual rernãrks is fore-
British lluseum. The cretd appears in the MS (Galbsi A doomed to collapçe. Stress has also been laid on the fact that
XVIII : 9th çent.) at rhe end ofthe psalter proper aIong with iliere are a number of respects in wlzich the çreed pieced to-
othes formulae, the Çreek words by a curious trick having been gether from the Cornment~riuirdiffers verbally from what must
transcribed in Anglo-Saxon characters. The contents agree liave been rhe current Roman form, Thus Rufinus uses in with
exactly with the Latin R,and the text differç from MarceZlus7s the ablativc, not the accusativc, whcn expressing belief in each
in a number of rninutiae ( ~ ~ t for v a K~~ / V E ~ V~, C Y J * C CYtov
Z for of the three divhe Persons. Again, for m ostu sox in the second
sò G-y~ovmrtpa, etc.!, as well as in the points mentioned above.1 artide he writes unicojitio P ~ W instead of &e undoubtedly more
plausible fiiittm eius uninirn. The accumulation of thtre and
similar points tendç to underminc coddence in the testirnony
The p r e c e d i n ~section has given a sketch of the argument for of the Commeatariris to the Roman creed.
supposing that Rufinus and MarcelIus bear witness to the Strictures like these betray a çurious misunderstanding ofthe
existente of a st~t.idardcreed at Rome in the fourth century. character and purpose of Rufinus's tract. If there is one thing
Vssher's briiliant surmise seerned to be çorroborated in a quite whicb he rnakes crystal clear in bis ppening chapters, it is that
rernarkabIe way when the tme date and authorshíp oF St he canceives of himself as cornrnenth~on the Apostles' Creed,
Hippolytus's Tradifion, with its interrogato. formula so closely rhe formula originally comocted by the Tivelye, and not
similar to R,n*ereestablislied at the hcginnuig oF this centur).. prjrnafily on the creed of his own or any other local church.
Before proçeeding Further, Iiowever, we muçt subject his case He severa1 times refers, in general terms, to the "tradition of
to a more seardiing scrutiny. The Roman creed is such a key the creed" and the "tradition" whlch "was given to the
document in the history of creeds that ahsoluie assurance as to churches ", and declares Qis içtention, in contrast to the
its credentials i s desirable. Moreevcr, while practically a11 b~haviourof the heretica! cornmentator Photinus, of "restoring
scholars since Ussher's time liave accepted the traditional identi- their plain and simple rneaning to the apostolic words". I n
fication, objections have been advanced against it by F. J. arder to estabtish tbe authority of the creed, he relates the
Badcock, whose worlí on ctecds has had comiderabEe hflrience familiar story oF how the Twelve severalily contnbuted its
in Great Britain. 12:e must weigh his arqument before passing clau.;es before departing from Jerusalem on their missionary
to an investigation of the earIier history 3nd pedigree of t he Old enterprises. At the same time-and this is the next point he
Roman Cseed.2 brings out2-he is convinced that thc veritable creed of the
b o s t l e s is preserved in its integrity in the Roman church alone.
1 It wns Abp. Usçhcr who madc use of Psa!!. Arihtl.
For Radcmk1sviews cf. 3.T.S.xxiii, 1922, 362 iT.and Th Hisiory of ilu Crttds, Hc was apparently of the same mind as St Arnbrose, who had
London, rogo and 1938. They havt not so far Iiccn fully discussed in print. I Cli. I (P.L. 21, 337). e Ch.3 ( P . L . 21, 339).
4"
1x0 THE OLD R O m N CREED T E ORfCINAL LANGUAGE OF R 111

v n e r a l orthodoxy in Roman eyes, there rvi;as none that he çould reluctançt about describing the eterna1 God, to Whom fie
appeal to ivith an q u a l çhance of çuccess. The practice of ~t'ord belonged, a~ Fathet in His ultimate being. H e was t h e
~roducingcreeds as proof5 of me's orthodoxy was, apparentlv, -. indivisible, absolutely one hfonad, and &e T$'ord resided in
conventional in the foiirth century, and agreed 1Viv;tti-tfr e pre- Him consubstantidly (GPoo6aros) as an inseparabIe energy,
vtiling disposition to Ireat creeds as tests. Eusebiius oT Caeaarea, ~ o ast a distinct hypostasis. It is therefore undentandable that
as we shnll see, followcd it at the council of NiciLea, and b--u UICI
J?>
he sheuld have preferred in certain contexts, such as the opening
Theophronius, bishop of Tyana (in Cappadocia), at the synod article of the creed, to avoid the t e m Father. Suçh a daring
of Anriocli in 34 r . I Marcellus went one better by quietly putting tampecing with the text (his Roman judges, biased as they were
forward as his own the creed ofthose whose favour he hoped to in his favour, were pcrhaps inclined to turn a blind eye to i t )
win. uras a manoeuvre as much in keepjn~uith his character as
The façt that the text as it has come down to us m w-irh his theolo~;-~.
severai variations Gom what was probably the true R
text need not pertwb UF.undulv: it is unlikely that it w u m w
anyone at the time, for the verk;a1 expression of creeds was not
then considered sacrosamt. In any case ~ v eare dependent for We may take it as established tliat the formula seferred to by
our knowltdge of St Epiphanius -->- irannrion
n. at this point on a .ufinusand quoted by MarcelIus is none other than the Roman
single MS %of the early fourteenth century. As for the prt creed of the fourth çentury. We zherefore possess it in two ver-
ef EVERLASTING LIFE ( 5 ~ at&~tov) 4~ in the fina1 article sions, Latin and Greek. The question arises which of them is the
scarcely cançeivabie that the words are an unconscious reli~iuh- original one. It is a question ivhich lias bcen much discussed,
çence by Marçellus of some Ea;tem çre not only to satisfy academic curiosity, but bccause of t h e
I. Much more
probably th- are to be explained as an bearing the answer haç sn t h e date and composition of the
ation, absent-
minded or deliberate, on the pairt of sont i t : sçnoe who semem- creed.
bcred the full text of the Apostla' Creed ta, loyaUy.3 The The practica. unanimous verdict has been that the Greek
a d y variant likeiy to cause diffculty is the omission of FPLTRER text is the original and the Latin a tr,mslation: it is borne out
(na~6pa)in the h t article. Archbishop Ussher hazardd the by the presence in St Hippnlytus~Trodilion of a closeIyrelated
guess that it was "lefr out, as it would appear, by scribal care- creed whose origina1 was Greek. A case has been advanced for
lessness". But this hardly merits consideration. It is worth tl-ie contr:iry thesis, however, the argument used 1 being that
noticing that there are two other plaçes in this letter where tlie Latin text reveals rhythrnic qualiries which are noticeably
L - ^ - & r--.
Marcellus shows a predilection for thc f o m " God almighty aL~crr~ L J Vthe~ Greek. Some of the ancient authors, like Faustus

(&o3 r r o v r o ~ ~ á ~".~ ~One


a s ) of the charactcristic points of his of Riez,2 even descsibe it as a camcn or hymn. It i s assumed that
theology was that íhe Word of God did not beceme Son until the version whicb is built up with stylistic care must have the
the Incarnation, His only generation being in the ITirgin's priority in time. But not everybody \vil1 h d this reasoning
womb, m d that thc titie Son, like those of image, Christ,Jesus, c1 g. In the case of liturgiçal pieces a rhythmic transla-
lifc, way, etc., was o+ propcrly applicable to Him during the ti i unrhy?hic original is just as conceivable as the

incarnate state.4 It was logical that he shodd feel a certain rt s a rnatter of plain fact, however, it is not possibIe to
observe in the Latin text any of the rhythmç fashionable in the
Cf. St Athanasius, De S+. 24 (P.G.26, 724).
J-Jcnmn's mcr. Bosc I (A.D. 13%). artificial prose style of the ernpire. Whether the test of quantity
Cf. the imprrssive array ofsuch alterations in Capari, Qwllcn 111, 108ff. Cf,H.jordan, Rhythmirch Prosa in der altchrisl~ichcnlul&iscltcn Lileraiur, 3905,'4 , /-1S';Z
Cf.Frae.+4-;r, 42, 48, 91. rog in E. Klusterniam's Ewcbius Mferke IV, 1 R., and J . Hausslciter, Trinitarischcr Glauh, 9 2 A. . '.
185-2 15 (Ltipzie, 1906). CX. his phsase v b o l r salutdrr car- in Dc Spir. s m . r, r (Engtlbmht, 1~5%'
114 THE DLD ROMAN CREED R, TERTULLIAN AND ST HIPPOLYTUS II5

expatiãtes on the close relationship between the ,4frican The resemblances leap to the eye at once, even in translation.
churches and Rome. ~ h e consisc
y not only in the general pattern of the creeds, their
"Let UUQexamine", he cries, "what that blessed church (Rome) agreement in stressing Christ's birtb from the Holy Spirit and
has Eearned, what she has taughc, what she has shared (confesserarit) h e Blessed Virgin rather than His pre-cosmic begetting, and
with the African churches: she acknowledges one God and Lord, their use of such characteristicaIly Roman turns as CHRIST
creator of tl-ie universe, and Christ Jesus, Son of God the creator from I
JESUS. They include also remarkable sirnilarities of language
the Virgin Mary, and the resurrection of the flesh," which can be picked out at a glance in the original texts. But the
discrepancies are obvious too. The first is thc ornission by H of
Many have been tempted to regard this as a manifest alIusion to, the description of Jesus as ONLY-BEGOTTEN and OUR LORD.
possibly even citation of, R. We have already suggestedl that Secondlv. ,, while H probabIv defines His earthly birth as BY THE
their exegesis is mistaken, and have argued that Tertuliian HOLY SPIRZT FROM TH s the distinctive wording
was not thinking of an official formula. This will be the plaçe mo1b í THE H(: ILY SPIR -Y. Thirdiy, R has AND
to probe the possibility that he was familiar with R rather more - ---
. -.
WAS BUIUED as againsr ri. s ANU ULXU (AND WAS BURED of Fmg.
thoroughly. Ver. is not original). FourthIy, H interpolates the word LIvrNG
Let us start, however, with the baptismaI creed of St Hip- before FROM THE DEAD. Fifthly, there is a difference between H's
polytus's Aposfolic Tmdilion, setting the two texts R and H treatment of the Second Coming and R% s: I-I probably had a
(=the creed of the TradibEon) side by side. It should be remern- 1
participle (ZpXdpmv),while R k a d WITENCE HE WLL COME
bered, of course, rhat in its present form R is a declaratory creed. (G8'8sv E p X ~ ~ a rSixthly,
). H hias noth ing to correspond (the
The probability is that if it was in current use in the first decade .- -1-
variant texts which insert tke worus are of later date) with
or so of the third century ir consisted of three questions. R'SREMXSSION OF SINS or RESURRECTION OF THE FLESA. Lastly,
it has severa1 minor differences of wording and the character-
Dost thou beliwe in God t h e Father I beIiwe in Gxi tha Father almighty; istiç IN THE HOLY CHURCH.
almighty? The impression left by a comparison of R with Tertullian's
Dost thou believe in Christ Jesus, thc and in Christ Jesus His only Son, our
Son of God, Lord, excerpts from the rule of faith is even more bafíiing. The diffi-
Who was bom 6y the Holy Spirit from Who was b o m from the Holy Spirit aod culty of assurning that he had any one formal creed in mind
the Virgin Mary, the Virgin Mary, when he wrote was rnentioned in the preceding çhapter, but
M'ho was crucified undm Pontius Who under Pontius Pilate was cruci-
Pilate, and died, fied, and buried, there are certain points which can be taken as settled. Thus the
and r m a g a h on the third day living on the third day rosc again from the brief surnrnary introduced in his De praescriptione 36 and quoted
from the dead, dead, above indicates familiarity with the form GHRIST Jesus so
and ascended into the heavens, ascended to heaven,
and sat d o m on the right hand of the sits on the right hand of thc Father,
characteristic of R and H. Again, the most formal of his creed
Father, extracts (De virg. vel. r ) agrees with R in singling out the Son's
and will come to judge the livjng and whence he will come to judge the living birth from the Virgin Mary rather than Ris eterna1 generation,
and the dead ;
the dcad?
and in the HoIy Spirit, theholy Church,
and in rnentioning His cnicifixion " under Pontius Pilate ".
Dos? thou bdieve in the Holy Spirit
in the hoIy Church?= the remission of sins, the resur- The Virgin birth also features in Adv, Prax. 2 . In addition some
rection of the ffesh. of his better-known passages reveal unmistakable verba1
coincidentes with R, such as the word-order " on the third day
The perplexing thing about these creeds is their çombination
resuscitated from the dead" in Da virg. vel. r , the sentence
ofstriking reaemblances with a number of significant differences.
"sitting now at the right hand of the Father " in De nirg. vel. I
i Sce ãhove, 87 f. ? See above, p. 91 n. and " sits at the right hand of the Father" in Adv. Prax. 2, the
r 18 THE OLD ROMAN C R E E D R, TERTULLIAN A N D ST IIIPPOLYTUS i I9
Roman credd forms) all represent differcnt cantemporaiy Si Hippolstus and R has already been foreshadotvcd. Scvci.nl
traditions enjqing the blessing of Roman authority. This, or credal surnrnarieç were probably in use in t h e Roma11 cliurcIi
sornething like it, is by frir the most probable hypothesis unless about 200. There is no reason to doubt that St Rippolytus
R's characteristic differençcs fmm H confirm Dom Capelle's introduce~us to ont of them, but rhere must have been otliers
view of their derivative status. as weZ1: the aye of Iitur,+cal frxity and u n i f o h t y had not yct
I t can safeIy be said that they do not. So far from there beiny arriced. R may i-eq- weI1 have been another. The striking
a n y t h i n ~distinctively ttiird-century about them, psaciically sesernblances between R and H are best explained on the
all of them represent material which might well have secured Iiypothesis that, while both were in a sense independent forms,
admittance to a Roman creed in the second century. This they wcre close relativa and jostled against each other like
applies notably to t h e titIe o t ?LORD,
~ but it is true also of the mernbers of a farnily. Thus there must Iiave been considerabte
clause T B ~R E - ~ ~ S ~ OFO Nsrxs, whatcves the açtual date of itç mutual influente, especially as on our theoq- creeds rvere still
insertion into Rornan creeds. The former was a cornrnunplace fairIy elaçtic in their verbal espression. Similarly Tertullian
from the earliest times,' while tlie latter figured in the mid- seems to have known R :some of Iijs statemem at aiiy raie read
seçond-cent~ryçreed of the Episfula Aposfolorum. There ivere, like echocs of it. But he seems to Iiave known, and to have
indecd, circles in the West which preferred, after the example frequently resorted to, other types oE doctnnal surnrnary too.
of the Old Testament, to confine the title LORD to God the One of these rnay have been H : there are points of çontact
Father, and this possibly explains its absence from H and tietween his language and that of H. Others were of the dis-
Tertullian" cceeds. The adjective OPILY-BEGOTTEN (povoy~Vjj) tinctivcly Eastern rnould. This explanation is the only one
may have ewed its ptace to Scriptural precedent, as Dom which does justice to the fact that no one çredaI formula had
CapeIle ãrgues, but there were probably dogrnatic motives ac apparently yet been granted a monnpoly. If it rules out of
work as well, and the date need not be so late as he suggests. court tlic neat but artificial rheory oF origin sketched by Dom
The clairn that Christ Iras the trtie Only-Begotten was heing CapcIlc, it at Ieast enab3es us to carry back the history of R
advanced by St Irenaeus against the Ta1en.tirilan Gnostiçs long with confidente to the turn of the second century. 'Ef it is
before &e second century ended.2 I&nppearance in R is much legitimate to foIlorv up the hint contained in the polemical
more likely to indicate a polemiçal gesture than a revenion to insertion of Monogenes as a description of Christ, ~ v ernay be
Biblicisrn on the part of the Rornan oficials of the early third emboldened to peer still further back into the obscurity of'the
cenhiry. The o&er variations of Panguage between H and R, second century.
whiçh Dom Capdle dismisses so lightly, serve to ernphasize the
difference bettveen the two creeds. It is difficult to believe, for
example, that a n y h n g rvas gained by attering the precise 5. The Holl-Hnrnack @polbsis
BY THE HOLY S ~ THE VIRELV M A R Y , whiçh
P FROM ~ probably IVitli this concIusion research inte the pre-&to. of R might
stmd in H, to R's simplet FROM THISROLY SPIRIT ?LWTHE WRGE be thought to have reached a dead end. The attempts wIiich
MARY, any more than by çhanging WTLL GOME TO JUDCE were formerIy popular to discern the shadowy outline of R
(2PXdLCEV~~)to WHENCE HP, W L L COME TO JUDGE [ ~ E tVp x € T U ~ ) . hovering behind the credal formulae of St Justin proveci sterile.
Lhe true solution of the problem presented by the sirni- True, his baptismal questions, as we reconstructed them, for a
larities and differences betwecn the creeds of Tertullian and rnornent tempt us to discover pointers to the Old Rornan Creed
Cf.,e.g., Rom. I, 5 : ro, g; St I r ~ n . Adv.
, hucr. 3, 16, 6;4,33, 7 (P.G. 7,925; in rhe absence of the ad-jectivc ONE with God the Father and in
..
u . 3, 16, I ; 2; 6 (P.F.7, 9 2 0 ; 921; 925).
i ' ~ ~ , d dhaer.
the prominence given to Christ's cmcifixion under Pontius
J. N . 8. Dom Capelle does not iicccpt thi3 rtading: see R. Rdn. w i x , i927,35 ff. Pilate. But the whole plan of thc creed is in fact quite ditTcrcnt,
I20 THE OLTI ROMAN CREED THE HOLL-HARNACK HYPOTHESIS 121

with its descriprion of God as "the Father and Lord of the deat1l oon the cross that God exalted Him and gave Him the
universe'" its ddesigna tioti of CIirist (Jesus Chrisil, be it noted) as name which is above every name, so that every tringue should
r & our Saviour", arid its rnention of ihe Spirit's prophesic confess that He is Lord (in the Gseek, KÚ~EOP),
the ~econdtitle of
rninistry. A çompletely fresIi line of investigation was, however, the creed.
opened up in rr)rr) bv a sei'ies of brilliant papers presented in Holl's lecture did no more than hrcak up R into its consti-
that year to the Prussian Academu of Sciences by Karl HolI, tuent elemcnts. 3ut if his arpment is valid, a furiher step ma)-
Adolf von Harnack, and H:ins Lietzmaiin. Some account must Iogiçatly be taken. R as we h o w it mu5t be a derivative creed,
now be given of their pioneer u-osk, &e sesults of which have a descendant ofa more primitive form which once stood alone
been acclaimed in many qunriers as solidly established. TIie and did not çontain t h e doubIe Christology cxpandinq the
mggestions they put fonvard, i f accepted, \r-ould hare tlie effcct titles attributed toJmus. This was the infwence which A. von
of placing the composition and character of R in an entircly Harnackhenplicitly drew in his supplementary artide çontri-
new perspective. buted to the B e r h Academy ane month after Holl'i. The
Holll confined hirnself to .in ana1:sis of the second, m original skeleton çreed must have m n as folIows :
Christological, scction of tEie crecd. First, he noticed that t h e r ~ T beIie1-e in God the Fathcr alrnigliv,
are m o descripti~etitles attactied to ÇhristJes~~-!aj ms OSI,I- iind in Christ Jesus, His only Son, oiir Loi-d,
swx and (b) OUR LORD. The C;iisistology xvhich folloits, he then and in the Holy Spirit, the holy Chtirch, the forgivr-
obsemed, breaks natural!. into t\v.\-oseparate passaem, and ench ness of sins, the resurrection of thc fleh.
cif these is introduced i11 the original Greek bu tlie clefiniic
t ~ a;ind ~ X r f2 4 n ~ v r l o vIltAdrou etc.':.
artide (7Òv y ~ n ~ e 4 etç. This creed, he polnted out, bears the proof of its one-time
The first af thesc describcs the birth of Jesus Chist from thr independence on i.ts face. X o t only is it built upon a s?.rnmetrical
Holy Spirit and the I'irqin Maq-. The second dweIh on His pattern. three main articles t\-ith three suborcIinate rnembers
crucihion, burial, resurrection, ascension, secsion at His each (he treated 'Z?IE. FORGTVEYXSS OF SINS and THE RESCRREC-
Father's riqht hand, and future coming in judgrnenit. It is most TIOX OF TRE FLESR as qoing toyether) , but a similar s~mrnetrical
unlikely, li; urgcd, that this 5)-rnrnetricalstructure, throwr~as i t ç a m p o n d e n c e can be observed in the flow of ideas.
is into sharpest relief by the reàuplicatien of the definite article, A forrnidable difficuIty confrontinp this hypotiiesis, as stated
ais accidental. What it suggests is that each of these descriptive by Hamack, is that of fitting the two items THE FOREIVENESS OF
passages is a theoIogica1 exposition of one of the preceding titles srxs and THE R ~ K R R E C T I D SOF THE FLESH into the alleg-ed nine-
ascribed to the Saviour. Thus the forrner of them explains and fold scheme. Not everyone was prepared to accept Harnack's
justifies the divine Sonship d o n g the lines o f l u k e I, 35,~ u h e r eit proposal to cut the knot by lurnping them together as two
is prophesied by the Anqel that the Holy Spirit wiU descend cornpIementa~ aspects oF one conception, the fruits of the
upon tlie Blesred vir@;, and that thereforc [note Sid in the rcdernption enjoyed by believerç. It was at this point that H.
Greek) hcr off~pringwill be called Son of God (uEòs Bcoü, the Lietsmann stepped in with his con triburian to the symposium.2
very title of the creed). Similarly the second wouId seem to First, he argued with rnuc1.i force that it was simply impossible
interpret Christ's position as LORD as beitag the reward of His to treat the two sub-claizses as one. Tlie truç soiution, he then
sufferings ancl detith upon the cross, The theology is precisely sugqested, rvas to omit THE REMISSION OF STNS as no part of the
that of St Paul in Phil. n, 6 K, where he makes the point that it skelcton creed. Tn rcality the primitive formula was a genuine
was bacni~e(note Si8 again in v. g) He humbled Himself to nine-clause one, and he pointed ta tlie çreecl of the Dêr RrtIyzeh
CT. Sittrrngsbcricliit der Pfruss;~chttiAkadonk, r g r g , T, 2 ff. Cf. also his Gc~ammltc 1 Sitrun~sberéchieder Preussiahcn Aiirdemie, 1 1)1 9, VII, r i 2 F
Atfinfzt I 1 5 ff. e np. rit. XVII, 269-74. V$EE ahovr, 8q,
I 26 THE OLD ROMAN CREED CONCLUSION 127
mentiu11 oE His forthcorning -Parousia and His final sumniiiig-iip important advance in credal studies. The questioti which nest
of a11 things, while " the namie which is alioire cvery name" i s rears its head concerns the date at which we may presume thc
clearly for him Chriç-, t Twirn. simple, three-articled formula which underlics the Old Rornaii
These are very serious objections: tliey strike at tIie rrcry Creed to have been enlarged by the inscrtion of ri fully devel-
roots of the sriggestion that the Christological seçtion of R i s ;i oped ChRstology. So far as general considerations go, a datc
twofold theological commentary ou the preceiling titles o!' somewhere within the second haIf of the sccand century would
Christ. The question arises whether in fact there is ariy com- seem most in accord with the available data. Anything latei-
pelling reason for accepting it. 1t is ~vorthpointing out that no would be difficuli to reconcile wifh St Hipprilytus's use of a
capital shouId be made out of the fact that the Christology baptisma! creed closelp akin to R and incorporating a similar
dweils sticcessivcly on two distinct phases of the Lord's ex- CIiristology. hloreoxrer, St Hippolytus, we know, was a çon-
perience, Hiç earthly generatioi~and then H i s passion and servative who preferred to walk in old pathç ; i t is antecedently
exaltation, as if thcir cornbination in a unified declaration in the probabIe that the litrir.gies he reproduces had the authority or
creed werc sornething çrying out for explanation. Esarnples of a t least a generation behind them. A date prior to I 50 ir;
the Christ-kervgma in h-hich the birth from the Blessed Virqirt esposed to specjal objections too. St Justin is an irnportaiit
and the passion are set side by side are forthcoming as far back witnt-ss for the existence of the Christ-kerypri ; but tiie second
as the letters of St Ignatius.' St Juçtin too, as we saw in the of his baptismal questions, whi1c mentioning die crucifcdon,
prexious chapter,' is a witness to precisei?: the same type OS does not seem to have induded a futl-length Christolog-tcal
kerygma. TIic creed of St Irenaeus's EpIdeixfxfs,3witith its referencc passage. The lke of tradition in rvhich he strtnds iç not csactly
to "Jesus Christ, the Son of God, IVho was incamãte, and died, that of R, but the suggmtian of his fomulae is that the firsi
and rose again'" stands out as the perfeçt f c r of the tentative experiments at interpolating Christological assertions
kind of Christollog ive meet wjth in R. The onl j feaiwrc into the second question were being made about ;themiddle af
about R is the onc which first attracted Holl s direricion, the the centuq-. In case it is hard enough to ftnd h e d famulae
reduplication of the Greek definite article TÓV (representcd in of any kind prior to StJustin. The first exarnple of a rather fuller
Latin by the rcpented qui), ~vliichseemed to hirn to throw the Christological insertion comes in a docament dating rrom n
two divisions of the Çhristology into çharp relief. No one can generation later, St Irenaeus's Epideixts. I f the laconic words in
determine now what was the redact~ir'smotive in inserting rhis his creed, "FVho was incarnate, and died, and rose again," ma)-
trait : perhaps he sirnpIy wanted to underline the t~r-o3speçt.s he taken as standing for somewhat more detailed stãtements, it
of the divine rnystel, the Lord's incarnation and His redemp- is not far-fetched to see in it an extremely close parallel to R so
tive açtion, By itself, however, it is much too feeble a buttress to far as structure Is concerned. Further pointets to the date of R's
sustaiii so claring and far-reacliing a construction as tlic redaction are suggesred by the possible motives in the minds of
hypothesis of HoII and his associates. those who carried it out. If their object, or even one of thcir
objects, was to provide a counterblast to Docetism by empha-
sjzing the reaIity of Christ's experiençes, this would supply
additiona1 confirmation of the date towards wliich the argu-
Even if so muçh of the three Geãman scholars' complex
theory must perforce be discarded, enough remains in their
dernonstration of R's cornposite character to signalize an
11 ment is tending. It was in the scvcnties and eighties of the
second century that the Church's polemk against Gnosticism
was beginning to take shape and becorning a force to be
Cf.the paasages fmm Trall. g and Sinjrii. I cited aboilc, 68F )I reckoned with.
'CCF. thc cxcerpts cited abnve, 73 C.
Sce abovc, 77. 'rhere is one important piece of evidence, tiowever, whicli
r 28 THE OLD ROMAN C'REED I CONCLUSION 129
has not yet been quoted and which may seem to demand a objection cannot count as decisive. More important is the dose
rather later date. This is the well-known passage, often identi- kinship of R in its developed form with the baptismal creed of
fied as a fragment of the Little LnbyrEnth and attributed to St I SLHippolytus's Tradition. The hypothcsis under discussion asks
I
Hippolytus, which has been preserved by Eusebius. The us to believe that t h e dissident bishop allowed the Christo-
author is exarnining the claim of his Adoptionist opponçnts to logical a r t i d e of his creed, which as it stands has a fulI-dress
reprcscnt thc primitive Christological tradition. account of the exploits of Christ, to come under the infíuence
"For they declare", he says, "that a11 the older teachers, including of a new-fangled addition to R introduced by his hated oppo-
the Apestles themselves, received and taught exactly the same doc- nent and contemporary Zephyrinus. This is altogether too much
trine as they give out now, and that the truth of the preaching was to credit, Equally important is the fact that the hypothesis rests
preserved inviolate ( T E ~ ~ ~ nU j v~ &4.j&tav
U L TO$ q p v ' y p a ~ o s )until upon the premiss that at the beginning of the third century
the times of Victor, who was the thirteenth bishop in Rome from there was a credal formula which could be designated the
Peter : but that from his successor Zephyrinus the trutli was falsified official creed of Rorne. There should be no need now to under-
B A ~ 0 ~ a a v") .
( . r a P a u ~ x a p á+v~ a ~ line the fallacy of such an assurnption. The really damning
Natusally the au thor reject~their plea, bidding them con- criticism, however, is that the theory is involved in a totally
rnistaken exegesis of thc passage we are discussing. To put the
sulr the rvritings of St Justin, Miltiades, Tatian, St Clement
and the rest, "in a11 of whom Christ is procIaimed as God
xp
( $ E O A O ~ E L 6~ L L ,; )". But thc: term ioses to empIoy
1 matier briefIy, that docurnent does not represent the anonyrnous
Adoptionists as talking about creeds or.officia1 formularies at
aII. Their grievance is that the truth of the preaching" has
('
have seemed to some rnodcrn investig reveal the fact
that rhe officia~ -1 TI -.A-. . .- -...-- ... - r r.
L i u r r i i i r i aurliriiiir y oi ialiri, rri other words the
been faIsified, and by that they plainly mean the Christological
creed, was tampered with in t h e pontificate of Zephyrinus.2 doctrine of the Church, not a creed. T h e Greek verb n-apaxapáo-
I n particuIar, the words "the truth of the preaching was UECYis equally c a ~ a b l eof signifying "falsely expound " or " mis-
falsified'" the verb s r a p a ~ a p d ~ a ~being r v taken in the sense o f
represent", as in a passage of Socrates 1 in which Eustathius of
Antioch is reported to have charged Euscbius of Caesarea with
to corrupt or alter a text,3 have secmed to bear this out. Hence
misrepresenting, or çaricaturing, the Niçene faith. That must
scholars like W. M. Peitz, j.Haussleiter and R. Lake have: united
in regarding the incident reported in this veiled langilage as be the sense it bears here, since its object is not a document but
being none other than the interpolation of the long Christo- . "the tmrh". Even had the author said chac " the preaching'"
logical section into the short Trinitarian formula which lies had been falsified, there would still be no reference to a creed,
bebind R. On this view the final redaction of the creed must be for ~ 7 j P v in ~ pthis context, as always, means the content of the
thrust we31 forward into the third century, the reign of Church's message and not the formula, if any, in which it is
Zephyrinus being r 97-2 I 7. officially embodied. He himself, a few lines further down,
The difficulty of supposing that one of the principal Roman defines the subject of discussion not as a formulary but as "the
I Church's belief (r05 ~ K K X ~ U L ~ ~ G+KpO~ Bm j p a ~ o ~and
) " , this
summaries of faith was still an imrnature nine-cIause formula
in the first decade of the third century is obvious, but such an shou'id put the question beyond all doubt.
This ill-founded coniecture having- been dcrnolished, we are
H.E. 5 , 9 4 3 ff. (Schwartz I, 500). The title LitilcMyrinth is due to Theodoret, free to return with renewed confidente ta the theory of a some-
Mwt scholan to-day deny its connexion with St Híppolytus: cf. E. Bardy, Paul dc
Samosate, 2nd ed., Louvain, 1928, qgo n.
E CF. W, M. Peitz, Stimnaen der Zeit xciv, 1918, 553 ff.; J. Haussleiter, T7ini-
I what earlier date. J. Eebreton2 hazarded the guess that the

tarischm Glauha, zgno, Gütersloh, 84 ff.; K. Lake, Harcard Theol.Ramew, xvii, 1924. H.E. i , q (P.G.67, 14).
I 7 3 fi-. Cf. HiStoire du dogme ds la Triniid, Paris, I 92 7 4 , 11, I 6i ; Recherches de scienm
CL for this iise Eusebius, H.E. 5, 28, rg (Schwartz I, 506). religieuse xx, i 930, gf K.
E.C.C.-5,
136 THE TEACRXNG OP THE OLP ROMAN CREED THE PERST ARTICLE 137
understoad in relation to His Son Jasus Christ. That this was en for granted in the second-century Church, was by no
part at any rate of the intention of the creed is obvious from ms identicaI with that of "Almighty " in Engljsh or omnf-
the language of the second artiçle. Most often, however, where pvtcnr in Latin. The exact equivalent of these would have been
the t e m "Father" was used at this time, t h e referente was to rawti8hapoç. Ilawi > ~ p c í ~ wjsp in the first place an active
God in His capaçity as Father and creator of the universe. word, conveying tlie idea not just of çapacity but of the
Thus St GPement of Rome couId speakl of "the Fathcr and actualization of capmaçity. h![ore irnportanr, the basic conçep-
í .1
creator of the whole univeme" and of "the derniurge and tion involved iç uricler man that contained in '"AImi,~hty".
Father of the ages", whiie St Justin was frequent in his refer- ITai p has the meaning "all-ruling ", " all-sovereiyn".
ençesqo " the Father oF a11 and Lord God" and " the Father Thi ight out in nurnberless patristic contexts, but with
of ai1 thing"'. A revealing text is that in which St Irenaeus i in the first few chapters of the second book oE
p a r ~ i ~ u alorce
declared that the universal creator waç c d e d Father because S t Irenaeus YS haare$c,S.

of Ris love (revealed in His creative activity), Lard because of "Either d iere musl! be ane 'God," he argue a~ainçtthc Gnostic
E-Fis might, and our maker and framer because of Hiç wisdom.3 theory of a -*A&
61dU,
,
h.
k
,
,"
,: of divine beings, " LTho contains all
St TheophiIus of Antioch has an interesting passage4 describing things and has made wery created being according to His will: or
God as "Father because of His being before the universe ", clçe there must be m a n y indeterminate creators or gds . . . but
while TatianS speaks of Rim as "Father of thjng perceptible not one ofthem wilI be M.For eaçh one of them . . . will be de-
and of things invisible ". So, too,.cvhen Xova tian expounds6 the fective in wmparison with ai1 the rest, and the name of ' Almightv'
clause GOD THE F A ~ AND R ALMTGM LORD i n his mle of faith, wilI come to nought (soicetur omnipotcniis appeliatio) ."1
he paraphsases it as meaning '"the all-perfeçt founder of ali St Theophilus of h t i o c h rnakes the çame point when he
thing". To Christians of the second c e n t u r y this was beyond '
CXFilains tI13t GQd
Ts called. almighty " because Re mles and
anv question the prirnav, if by no means the o d y , significance cornpasses ;aEl thingS. For t1ie heights of the heavens and the
of the Fatherhood of God. It was a beEef which tthey shared, as de1~ t h saf t he abysses and t he lirnits of the world are in His
the tliird book of Unfcabtes and the witings of Philo prove, hand." Similarly Origen rr1akes3 th e fact that God is alrnighty
14th Hellenistic Judaism' as well as with enlightened religious an argurnent for the nem:jary exis,teme of a çreated order.
people generany.8 "Thus God cannot be cal Eed evenI almighty unles He has
Xaturally therc was nothing çontroversiaI about this affirma- subiects over whom to hold sway; and consequently for God
tion of rhe divine Fatherhood. Nor was there about the epithet to : almighty, the universe must necessarily
ALMIGHI"Y which rvent clúseIy conjoined w ih it. Lhere was exi ou4 of his lectures devoted to discussing
abundant authority for its use in the Scptuagint, and in early n a t r o ~ p a - r w pO L uyri1 of Jerusalem remarks that the Almighty is
Christian writers it recurs on çountless occasions as a descrip- IHe Who mles all things, Who has authority over all thinpr.
tion of God's majesty and transcendence. Lhe underlyinp Peisple who isay there is une Lord ofthe soul, and another of the body,
meaning cif W ~ W O K ~ ~inT WGreek,
~ however, and the meaning irnp,?
-1.. .
+L-+ n p : t h ~ ;c
,.L.L.
r pedect. For how could he who has authority
over the soul, but not over the body, be almighty? And how could he
CIi. 1 9 and 35 (I,iqhifoot, 16 and 23). who is master of bodies, but has no sway over spirits, be almighty?
.'f~!. 1 , r l : h1 Ir. ti IE..],C;.. 33%7 R : 821.
/Irli*. Ano.:,, 17, 1 (P(;.7 . r i t i q ) : cb 2 , 3 n b 5 f .(P.G. 7.84off.1. ... But the divine Scripture and the utterances of the rruth know
, i d .=irt!o/, I , 4 (/'.C. 6, TOQ~). only one Gad Who rules a11 things by His powtr,
(17. d z ) . C r n ~ r 4
. (IC,,J.C;.3 2 7 1 ) .
e D E Trb'n. I (i..[.. 3, q 1 3 ) . 1A d o . h r . 2 , I , ~ ( P . G7,712).Cf.also2,6,2
. (P.C.7,794f+).
' C1: 111 .Mace. 2 , 2 I : 5 , 7 : and PIlilo. jminriirn. Ad Autol. r , 4 (P.G.6, ra2g).
"C, c.q., Epiçirtur, I , 3. r ; I . (i, 7; I , i y, r z : 3 , 24, 1 5 f. Alsri S t ,Jiistili. ..ipol. a De priacrp. I . 2 , ro (Kocrscliau V , 41 C).
1, 22, & i . 8, 3 (P.G.33, 628).
'38 THE LEACHING OF TIIE OLD ROMAN CKEEU THE CORE OF THE SECOND ARTICLE 139
The alternative rneaning, that underlying n-arroS;vapos not will to do them. "If God can be what Wt does not will to
and now obviously present in the English translation, was not be, He is not ornnipotent."
long in rnaking itselffelt. Thus we gather from Origen's Contra But the paradoxes and philosophical puzzles inherent in the
Ctlsua that t he pagan phjlosopher, no doiibt picking up scraps notion of divine omnipotence were altogether foreign to the
of Church doctrine, WLF under the impression that Christians minds of the authors of the 01d h m a n Cseed. The chief
taught that God could d o anything. " He can assuredly accord- doctrine contained in the fimt article of their interrogato.
ing to uç do anythjng, " replied Oriqm,' "that is, anythirig formula was the creative Fatherhood of God, His rnajesty and
that çan be done wittiout detriment to His diblni?, His good- transcendent sovereignty. It might appear that there was
ness w His wislies." Tliiis God can no more be unjust thari n nothing distinçtively Christian about sach a belief, for rhc
t h i n ~whose nature it is to be src-eet can, in virtue of its natural best Jewish and pagan thoupht of the age would have heartily
quality, prove i tsel f bi ttcr. In another passape "oncerned witli endorsed it. But a speeial atmosphere surrounded the words
the same dificulty, he contended that God could not do what as they were conned by the Chrktian catechumen in anticipa-
was base: if He could, He Who is God çauld not be God, for tion of his sacramental inítiation. He knew, asJtws and payans
íf God doesi what is base He is no lonqer God. TVhen Rufinus were not prideged to know, that the eterna] Father of the
comes3 to the word, he sticks to the k ~ d e rtradition, sayiny. universe was alço the Father ofJesus the Çhnst, and had even
"He. is çaIled almi~htybecause He rvields power over a11 vouchsafed to adopt him as His son by Face; and he knew
thinqs (quod ornnitim tentaf potcssbnl~rn'l:" and goes on to point ou t that the so~rereivpower which God possessed bg right had
that Ile does thic shrotl~hthe agency of the Son. St Auqustine, bem signally rnanifat in the resurrection of His Son and in the
however, was exercised about the probIem of what God could redernption of His chosen people.
and çould not do. In Sermon 2 I 3,4 for exampIe. he rernarks tliat
we can expect a11 rnercies From Him because He is ornnipotent :
to say that He cannot ãcir&ve a11 our sins is a blasphemous 2. ;rhe Core of ilic Second A rticle
denial of His omnipotence. He is. in a word, omnipotent to Detached fmm the specfd keqpgma about Christ, the seçond
perforrn eveq-thing that He wills. I-et he continues, "I can te11 article of the Old Roman Creed was extremely terse-rn 13
the sort of things He could not do. He cannot die, He cannot C R W W JESUS HIS 0NL.Y SOX OUR LORD (K& E ~ ÇXpmÒv 'ITw&
sin, He cannot lic, He cannot be deceir-ed. Such things He pvoyFv? rdv mfprov tjfriiv ; ct in Chrisiurn Iemm
vlOv a h o i i 1-0v
cannot : if Hc çouId, He would not be almighty." O n other filium n'us unicum domlntrm nosrrumj. Even this form must
occasions S t Ayqistine combined the older view with the more represent an elaboration of the t r u e original, for onLY almost
philosophic one. In Sesmon 214s he first of all teaches that tlie certainly seçused its place in the latter at some date subsequent
beIief in God's dmightiness is equivalent to believing that He to i& cornposition, and it is possible that LQRD too was a late
is the universal creatar : "Be rnindfuI to believe God omnipotent entrant. The unusual word-order CHRIST JESUS is a feahlre
in tlie sense that there is no creature which He has not çreczted." which pulIs one up at onçc with a jolt. Xt reappears in the
Then a few parayraphs later he discusses the problem of divine baptismal questionnaire of St Hippolytus's T~adilion,in one ai
omnipotence in n more speculative vein. Taking 2 Tim. 2, I 3 any rate of TertulIian's foms, and in thc crecds of Rufinus
(" He cannot deny HimscIf ") as his text, he points out that (Aquileia) and St Peter Chrysologur (Ravenna') : evcrywhere
the rcason why God cannot do certain things is that Hc does else it yields place to the normal JESUS cHarsT. The presence of
Con. C r f . ~3,. TU ( K o ~ ~ ~ I. cc ~ I ~ u Op. C ~ I . j, 23 ( K o r t s r h a ~11.
262).
the inversion is a proof of the primitiveness of the core of tbe
~ 24).
~ ~ i i m ? n . i t i ~ i 1 1 ~ ~ b . a / ~ . r , ( f . ~ 4. P
~ .1L,.~3 ~8 .311n.6 n L OId Roman Creed. Wiien it was put logether CHR1ST WBS no1
I'.L. QH, aci(;ti fl. See below, pp, i 73 f.
IP THE TEAÇHING OF THE OLD ROMAs CREED TRE CORE OF THE SECOND ARTICLE 141

a rncrç riame: sornething of itç orignal significancc as a ti&, a11 t h i n g in ordeç." Tht name itself, he adds, contains an
the equivalent of Messiah or the h o i n t e d , still hovered ahout f nefFable meaning (Ormp ~ a ail% ncp~41pvGyvwowv qpauhv).
it. St Paul was evidendy çonscious of the word's true implicn- In yeneraI it was the interpretation of Christus as "anoinred'"
tions, for hc çhowed a marktd prediIection for the order Christ which was to pefsist when the speçifically Messianic referente
Jcsus, But the most illuminating paralIeIs are to be found in had faded into the background, Tertullian, for exarnple,
accounts of the apostolic prcnçhing by the author of Acts. Thus pointed out 1 that Chrlslus was not properly a name but an
St Peter is re~resented( 2 , 36) as declaring, " Let a11 the house appellation and sipified "anointed (uractw)". He had been
of Israel know assuredly that God has made Him both Lord designated such as a resuIt of " the sacrarnent of anointing".
and Christ, this Jesus FVhom )-ou crucified." Latcr ( 5 , 42) i t St Cqnl of Jerusalem discusçed both JESUS and CRRTST in his
is said of hin and his companion apostles that ''tthey cceased tenth CatechcsLr,%onçluding that "He is called Christ, not as
not to teach and to preacb Jesus as the Chnst ".
-4pollos at anointed by human hands, but as hãving been anointed by
Ephesus, we are inforrned ( r 8, 28), " powerfulIy confuted thc the Eather etemally for a çuper-human priesthood ". Recurring
Jews, and that puhlicIy, showing by the Scriptures that Jesus to the same same point a little later,3 he summed thc matter
was the Christ ".
Evidently the nucleits of R joined handts with up by saying that "He bears rwo names, Jesus beçause He
the ancient kerypa. bestows saIvation, and Chnst because oF His priesthood".
The authority behind this usage was, of course, the OId Rufinus carried on the same tradition.
Testament. 'OXprmÓs, the Anointed, was the regular Septua-
gint transtation of the Hebrew Jfmkiak.' The Messianic cate- "'He is çalled Christ," he remarkd4 "from chrisrn, i.e. from
gory had been used by Jesus Himself, and it was natural for anointlng. . . . Christ is either a highpriestly or a royal narne. For
early Christianity, rooted as it was in Judaism, to appeal to it in the oId days lmth high-priests and kings wrem consecrated Iiy &e
anainting oT c1iiism. But rhey, beins mortal and cosruptible, were
as an explanation of the significance of His Person. I n the post-
anointed with an unguent of comptible rnattcr; but He is made
apostolic age other categories loomed into the foreground, and Christ through the anointing of thc HoIy Spirit."
the historical associations of the older Hebrew title were less
apparent to converts entering bhe Church from a Gentile To cmrs~ further descriptions were attachcd-ms
JESUS ~ W O
en~ironrnent.Hençe c m n called for elucidation. St CIement OXLY sos and oua LORLI, The word o r t u (p~vT's; unicirs)
of R m e uses the word more frequently wjth the article than rnerits some discussion, particularlv as it is probabIy a later
ivithout, and in some of hls çontexts ?t is apparent that it re- accretion to the original nucleus. In &e h'ew Testament it is
tained for him something of its 34essianic flavour. But St used by St Luke, St John and the author of Hebrews, hut by
Justin, who was fulIy appsised of its proper connotation (as no one else. Ets proper rneaning is clear3y brought out in Hebr.
Iiis Dialogue3 shows), found it advisable to explain tfie enigmatic t r , 17, where Isaac is described as Abraham's "only son",
t e m to the Roman Senate. It appIies, he said,d to the Logos, and in Lk. 7, 12, where the Lord raises the "only son" of the
Who is alone properly to bc called God" Sonn." Being begotten widow of Kain from the dead. As indicatinp; the peculiar rela-
in the beginninq when God created and set in ordcr aii thjne;s tion ofJesus to God it is çonfined to the Johannine wi-ntings.5
ithrough Him, He is çalied Christ in virtue of the fact that Hc There it stsewes &e uniqueness ofJesuç alike in His Sonship
has Hirnsdf been anointed and that God througli Him has set (so different Srom the sense in which men can be the sons of
Sce Harch and Rcdpath, Comrdnnce, s.v. God), in His intimacy with the Father, and in His conseguent
C f . , ~ . g . , 1 6r, ; 4 z , t;+4,3;4qi 1;54,2;57~3
(Lightfmti 13: =7;~9;$1;34;
35). iAdr.Prax.~O(C.C.L.II.~non). QCh.4(P.G.33,66)
E.R., 48 ff. (E.J.G., 146 R.). ' Ch. r I (P.C.33r 676). . . ~ b np.
< ~ o m n in . %( P L . 9I.g.45).
r Apl. 11, G (E.J.C.. 83). Cf.Jn. i, 14; 4 18;3, 16; sI 1 8 ; 1 Jn- 4,g.
r5O THE TEACHING OF THE OLD ROMAN CREED THE CHRISTDLOGICAL INSERTION r5r
them. Even where it is present in a passage taken as a whole, it polemic in the first two or three decades of the Church's
remains doubdiil whether WNDER P O N ~ SPUTE should be hiçtory. What is more to the poinc is zhat Chrjst's burial plays
taken as contnbuting to it. On the other hand, no anti- a prominent part in she Gospel narrative. Na doubt Christinns
Docetic argumcnt was directly and explicidy founded on the dwelt on it and exploited the details surrounding it beçause it
words in such second-ccntury writings as have come down to was the ilecessary prelude to His resurrection. It is to this
us. The real explanation of the presence of Pontius Pilate in interest that we must attribute the presence o f the clause in
the creed lies eIsewhere-in the façt diat the saving story of the creed. At a11 wents it is impossiblc to argue that the huriai
which the creed i s a recapitulation is rooted iu history. A date was treasured because it figured in ancient prophecy. Later
was called for so as to bring out that these m-ents díd not theobgia-s, like Sr Justini and Sr Cyril of Jemsalem,z wese
happen a n y h e r e ar at any time, and that the Gospel is not hard put to ir to ainearth prophecies in the Old Testament
simply a .tem of ideas. For once Rufmua succeeded in hitting showing thãt it was preordained. Otherç were frankly at a loss
upon the tmth when he sernarkeda: "'Those who handed d o m to explain its purpose in rhe creed, and Rufinus, for example.
the creed showed great wisdom in underlining the actual date suggested 3 that the insertion oF HE DESCEXDED TO HELL was
at which thtse thin,p happened, so that there mig-ht be no intended to efucidate the enigmatic dause.
chance oF any uncertainty or Irapenasupsetting the stability The rest of çhe article can bc disrniised in ri sumrnary
of the tradition." It'ithout anyone sa+g so in so many words, p a r a p p h . 0s TEE THIRD DAY ROSE A G A I S FROM T H E DEAD
the instinct of the Church recognized the need for a histoncal formed the Scerrrel of the apostolic preaching from t h e inaugura-
referente. Thus, while the final f o m in tvhich the dating tion of the Christian mission. Closely Iinkcd with it and with
crystaUized wras always L ~ E RP O ~ PILATE, S alternative one another are the h v o ciauses A S C E ~ E DINTO THE HEWXS and
forms were possible. St Ignatius, for exarnplt, in Smyni. I speaks SITS AT THE RIGHT ~ D THE FATHER. We obsen-e them
S OF
of Chriot as '"tmly nailed for us in the Resh in the times of both conjoined in I Pct. 3, 2 2 : "'Who is on the right hand of
Pontius Pilate and Herod the tetrarch", while St Justin' has God, hãving gone up to heaven." Other parallel passages
"undcr Pontius Filate, who was govemor in Judaea in the days which çan be cited are Bom. 8,34, Col. 3, r , Eph. r , 20,Hebr. r , 3
of Tiberius Caesar ". and 13, as well as Bcts I, 3 1 K, j,30 E., j, jj.Ultimately the
The clairns of the remaining elements in this section to ideas contained in these clauses go back to Ps. r ro, r : "The
belong to thc apostolic keygma are undisputed. WAS BURIED Lord said unto my Lord, Sit &ou at my right hand, until 1
was cited by St Pau1 3 as an item in the catechetical instruction make thine enemíes thp footstool," which according to St
he had reccived. That it was already an independent articlc Mark4 Jesus Rimself quoted in the çourse of His teaching in
of faith and that importance was attached to it i s obvious from the temple. Though it is not e~plicitlyaffirmed, the Ascewion
the fact of his prefixing "that (076) " to it. SQ, too, preachingd and the Session, as the words of the psalrn indicate, meant
at Antioch in Pisidia, Iie singled out the fact that "they took much more than rnight seem apparent on the surface. The
Hirn down from the tree and Iaid Hirn in the tomb ". We may first- and second-century Christian who expressed his faith in
be certain that the reason for adrnitting the cIause to the cate- them understood them as irnpIying that Christ had beaten
chetical tradition had nothing to do with its guaranteeing the d o m the hostile powerç opposed to Him, and çonsequently
realit y of the Lord's ddeath. Thcre was no need for an anti-Docetiç to His Church. The natural sequence of the glorious victory
was procIaimed in the words WHENCE HE WTLL COME TO JUDGE
Comni. in s p b . a p r t . 18 (P.L.Ii , 356).
a Apol.1, 1 5 (I;.J.G.,34). 1 Cf. Dial. 97; i 18 (E.J.G., r E r ; 236) : hc rclics on I$. 53, 9; 57%r .
I Cor. 15, 4. Cf,also h. ti, 4,which singles out the Lord's burial as a sig- Wf. Cmt. r3,34 and 14,3 (P.C.33>813 nnd 828).
nificant moment in Ais pargion. a Comm. in . p b . apost. 18 (P.L. 2 1 , 3563.
Acts rg, ng. ' 12,35 f.
THE SPIRITIN ACTION 161
r 60 THE TEAGAINE OF 'XTHE OLD ROMAE: C ~ E D

belong to the Church" as material-minded; they branded 1 for all. We recall St Peter's dramaiiç words,' "Repent and be
them as "ecclesiasticaI", and went so fas as to revife the sacred baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ unto the
name of the Church,* To counter their propaganda he de- remission ofsins ",and St Paul's indignant rebuke to the back-
veloped the view that mernbership of the Church was necessary sliding Co~inthians,~ "But you were washed, you were sancti-
fied, you were justified." So the second-century author OS the
to salvation. "He \vi11 judge a11 those who are outside the
truth, that is, outside the Church."3 Again he remarked,4 "AI1
.
those who keep outside the Çhurch . . bring condemnation
on themselves"; and we recall his teaching that it is onlg
within the Church that the Holy Spirit can be received. When
!
I
Epistlt of Barnabar rernarkedy3" We go down into the wa ter fulI
of sins and uncleanness, and come up bearing fmit in our
heasts," and Hermas4 wrote in a similar strain, "11,'e went
dowm into the rvater and received remissian of our past
it is rernembered that the earliest credd appearance of HOLY errors." St justin's famous acçounts of baptism delineates its
çmmc~ is in the formula contained in the Eptrtuba Apostolorum, ohject as being "that ri-e may obtain remission of our former
an anti-Gnostic treatise, it is difficult to resist the C Q ~ ~ U S ~ O ~
sins", and he assuredvthe Jew Trypho tbat the one tvay
that its presençe in the Old Roman Creed, w h l e not directly to secure this boon was to acknowIedge Jesus as Xfessiah
polemical (there is Iittle proof of that), is a by-prduct of that and undergo the bath prophesied by Isaiah. It'hat aU thh
enhanced and seIf-consçious ernphaçis rin she Chwch as an language enrisages, of coune, is rin cornmittcd prior to
I, baptism. ,hregasds sin committed after baptism, the usual
institution which was becoming characteristic ai orthodox
theology in the seçond haK of the centur)-.
Hard on the heels of thc rnention of the Church comes THE
1 rernedies suggested were prayer, repentance, confersion and
good worb.7 But preçumably thcse availed o d y for minor
E m s r a N OF srss. Tks did ncit starrd, as Jve have seen, among sins: the possibility of Christians being guilty of, and being
the baptismal interro*qationçin St HippoIytw's Tradifion. On absolved by thc sacraments of the Church imm, acts of
the ather hand, it seems to have had a place in Tertullian's griwous sin --as only begianing to be taken into consideration
creed-material, for in a well-hown passage of the Dc baptismo5 in the çecond century.
he raised the question why J a u s HimseK did not baptize and, FVe are therefore justified in conçluding that in practice, at
to demonstrate the folIy of the suggestion, asked rhetoricaiIy the time it obtained entrance to the Old ~ o m a hCreed, THE
R E ~ S I O NOF srss must have cçonveyed the idea of the washing
what He would have baptized people i n t e " the remission of
sins? Himself? the Holy Spirit? the Church?" The five-clause
creed of the Epislilla Apostolomm induded a mention of it. In
Eastern creeds, as we shall shortly see, it was a regular item in
I away of past offences and the opening up of a new Iife thsough
the instrumentaliq- of baptism. There is no serious arpument in
favour of the suggestion8 that the clause was a djrect reffection
of the controversy at Rome in the reign of Pope Callistus
the third article. Sometfmes, as in the Apostolic Comrtidirtions,~it
coincided with the Western forrn, but more often it was closely over the Churçh's power to absolve its rnernbers from major
conjoined with baptism, a typical wording being ONE B A ~ S M sins. Apart from other considerations, ic is manifest that the
UNTO THE REMLSSIQN OF sms.'
words had worked their way into the recognized creed material
Probably this supplies a clue to the original btaring of the long before the outbreak of this dispute. In confirmation of our
clause in R. One of the grand convictions of Christians was view it is worth noticing that in the Epistula A~astolorum the
that in baptism a11 their past sins were washed away once and
lAdu.hr.3,15,1(P.G.7,918). 4Adu.hagr.1,25,3(P.G.7,68~).
a E@,BL%. I I (Lightfoot, 256). ' 4:
M d . 3 (Ephtfoot, 322),
A@[. I, 61 (P.G.6,420 f . ) . " i d . +J (P.C. 6 , 571)
Adv.haci.4,~3,7(P.G.?,1076). aAdv.hmr.~,~6,3(P.G.7,633).
"e bapf. t I (C.C.1.. r, 286). Apost. Canrt. 7 , 41;7 (Funk I, 446).
1
7 c F . , e . ~ .I , Clm. 51 : 2 Clm. 8 : 17: 16; 19:
32;16i49!5lpf;;64).
-
- . -6,Rarn. i o . 10-11 ILiahtfoot.
.
7 CC., r.g., thc old rrccd or.Jeriisalcrn (sre pp. IR^ f.) and the creed nf Con-
a Cf, F. J. B cock, Thc Hishry of fhc C r r d , 2nd cd, t 938, '33.
stantinople (our Nirrnc Crccd).
r 66 THE TEACBINE OP THE OLD ROMAN CREED

which the Church had either inherited from Judaism or herseIf


received in the Gospel revelation. The clearest proof of the
authenticity d the Old Roman Creed l i a in the way in which,
while some of its çlauses have received a sharper definition and
others a heightened emphasis from the cantroversial atrnosphere ÇHAPTER VI
of the second century, they one and a11 hark back to the
primitive kervgrna of zhe apostolic age.
i CREEDS WESTERN AND EASTERN
1

THEinformation at our disposal about the "crceds" of zhe


seçond and early third cmttrry Rornan chusch is, reIatively
speakin-;, extraordinarily rich. Thanks to it. we can write at
least a tentative h i s t o l of the beqinning-s of the OId Roman
Creed. If it is a history u+h severa1 zaping lacunae, and if the
historian has to rely more often than he would choose upon his
imaglnation, we can at least discern in shadowy outline the
proceçs by which R carne into being. The local creeds of other
churches fared Ias fortunately. Apart from those with Rornan
connections, the ernbryonic femulae of the second and earlv
third cenmries glancd at in Chapter TI1 make a ptetty meagre
harvest. In t h i s chapter our objeçt %i11 be to provide some
account of TVestern bapptmal creeds other than R and of
Eastern baptismal creeds in the followinq tu-o çcnturies. The
reader would be well advised not to pitch his hapa too high.
Even when full-blown declarato? creeds begn to take the
stage, the exarnples rve çan reconstmct with çonfidence are
few and far between, and tbe story of their earlier development
rernains wrapped in mystery.
The reasons for this state of affairs, which rnight seem singular
to a newcomer to this field, are not really difficultto conjecture.
For one thing, the Rornan church was probably a pioneer in
the production of crystallized credal forms. The liturgy at Rome
had made big strides in the direction of fixity (thougli, of coutse,
the goal had not by any means been reached) weI1 befare St
Hippolyrus drafted his Trodilion as a model. Other churches
lagged behind, and the East was if anything slower than the
West ta stereotype irs liturgical rites and prayers. Credal sum-
maries of faith, whether interrogatory ar declaratory, were a
by-product of the liturgy and reflected its fixity or plasticity. In
167
I70 CREEDS WESTERN AND EASTERN THE PAUCETY OF CREEDS qf'
is na hint there of its being a novelty, we are justified in carrying guarantee of the apostolicity of their own was that they were,
it at Itast a couple of generations back. Some scholarsl have and always had been, public.
çonttnded that its roots lie in the fisst decades of the second Evidently the d e of secrecy was of gradual growth. At first
century, if not earlier, and imagine that t h q can trace glimpses it covered the sacraments, only later the çreed. Even when it
of i t in St Juçtin'ç works. This is extravagant, however : St reached its heyday, as we know, the çreed was not regardded as
Justin not only has no word that could be trvisteci into an quite such an esotekic mystey as the sacraments. Whereas the
allusion to it, but he felt not the slightest compunction about fuller teaçhng about these was resen-ed until after baptism,
describing the çaçraments in detail in a treatise desiped for the creed was handed to the catechurnens in the final stage
pagan eyes. ,4 reticente of sorts when speaking of the sacraments of their preparatiou. We shall not be far wrong if we place its
çan be observed in Tertullian and Origen. The former up- extension to the creed somewhere io the second half of the third
braided2 conternporary heretics for admitting both the faithful centuv. I t cannot hãve been much easlies than that : Iater it
and catechumens indiscrirninately to their services, implying would be hazardous to date i t in view of the testirnony of St
that in the Catholic ChurcIi (hs had not yet become a Montan- Cyrjl of Jerusalem. Lhe eRect of its introduction (and this is
jst) the sacraments were fençed about. Origen too, arguing with what is of importante to us) must have been to impose a virtual
Celsus, had to admit3 that Chrjstianity had certain esoteric censorship on the direct quotation of baptisrnal creeds. Even
mysteries. I n one of his hornjliesk he expressIy declined to ex- the influential Rornaii creed fel1 under this. The reader must
plain the significance of Chrjst's Body and Blood before a rnixed have fel t surprised that there should be such a dearth of evidcnce
audience: "Let us not linger on these matters, which are weI1 for its existence in the third and fourth centuries. Marcellus is
known t o initiates but cannot be reveaIed to the uninitiated." the only writer between St Hippolytus and Rufinus who quotes
Bat the practice was obviously an1y at an embryonic stage. St it directly. Even he was scrupulously carefuI not to attach an
Hippolytus, writing in Tertullian's lifetime, feIt at liberty to explicit idensification-label to it. Rufinus, too, did not reproduce
publish the baptismal and euçharistic IituLgies. Moreover, the full text of either the Aquileian or the Roman creed: we
nothing goes to show that in the times of TertulYian and Origen have to piece them together Eike jig-saw puzzleç. Practically a11
this reserve extended to the Church's doctrinaI norms. Tertul- the other contemporary Iocal creds were Iost to sight in the
Iian, like St Irenaeus, rvas continually quoting, on oecasion same deliberate bIack-out. Tlie complete text of one or m o
quite faithfully, quxi-credaI surnmaries of the nile of faish. Easteni creeds has s w i v e d for special reasous, but in no singIe
Origen, in the fist of the two passagcs mentioned above, ridi- case have we a direct, continuous quotation of a 1CTestern
çuled the idea ofChristian doctrine heing a seçret. To drive his formula. FormnateIy a number, both JVestern and Eastern,
point harne, he rehearsed severa1 articles of what çounds like can be recomtructed, mostly out of sermons or expositor\.
a creed, declaring that the whole world was familiar ~viththem. essays. But for this v e q renson, if for none other, it would be
St Hippolytus set do~vmhis haptisma1 quesnons iri full 14th the dangerous t o c'laim anytliing like absolute certainv for their
rest of t he rite, and nowhcre so mucIi as hinted at the handins wording.
out of a carefully guarded formula to the catechurnens, Chris- The sparsenas of material available is disappointjng ror
tian teachcrs and aptllogists of this period, as is well known, othes rezsons than the f r a p e n t a r y knowledge of actual creeds
made a special point of taxing heretics with the secrccy in whicli it perrnits. I t means that tliere are few, if any, of the
which they wrapped their doctrines, and claimed that the best widcr questions about creeds in this period to which we can
-,g., F. X. Funk, AIttr drr ArA-rindis~plin,Paderborn, 1907,41-55. return satisfactory answers. One of these is the precise date of
Br pwtwr. hoer. 41 (C.C.L. I , gsci).
.
I,>HI.L r i i . I 7 ( K I ) P ~ > LI.~f r~i ) L
. I tlie establishment of the rites of the tradition and reddition of
'' IXiiti 11i I,p?i. 9. In ( B a ~ h s ~ r+3H).
i~, the çreed i11 different districts. Again, was it only the largcr
182 GREEDS WESTE RP4 AND EASTERN 6ASTERN CREEDS 1 ~ 3
3 3 ~ i(or 340)~submitted at the cou~icilof Nicrica
10 ished iii proportion as it was a mere ad hoc generalization of
(32j),~C hirnself in the letter of self-justification
set i t down çreeds in the CathoIic East. But his own statement to the çounciI
which lie suhsequently thought it prudent to despatch to his makes the position absolutely clear. Re introduced the formula
ffock. An important item in the statement read out before thc with the words : "As we received from the bishops Gefere us,
emperor Constantine and the council (we shaI1 have an oppor- both in our catechebcal instruction and when w e were
tunity of discussing it more fully in the next chapter) was a ~ &c 70 hourpGv iAappúyop~) . . .
baptized (h~ j ijc a r r ] ~ r r cual
creed, tlie test of which runs as fallows : so a1so we beIieve now and submit our belief to you," The
inference that the creed which he then proceeded to insert was
the çreed of his own baptism, and so of Caesarea, js the only one
iCÉ bclicr-e in one God. the Faiticr al- which does justice to his words. Since Eusebius, who was bom
rrpe+opu, r9v r& inriww~Opa+;v 7r rui +h., maker of all things iisiblc
&+7w1. m t h i - . and int-isiblc;
circo 263, had been brought up as a Christian, we are jristified
Kai &a rúmnr 'I~au& X p t m , ~ O v m t .4nd in one LorcIJews Christ, thc in concluding that a recopized baptismal formulaq on these
Pcoü A+u, &&v ir Proü, &k;ir t b r 8 r , of God. G d from G d , light from lines must have been current at Caesarea in the Iatter half of
<YY CM i+.u ~ Ò v p ~ ~ ~- pi uj &, r o r o r liqht, Iife from life, S o m only be-
the third century.
viqi w i v c o ~ npô
, n 8 i . r ~rcüv
~ a;&vriri, pottrn, frnr-hgottm of all mation.
tr 7°C xa7pos y~vrrri]/,i,rii: ãt' o; *.m; k q o ~ t e n kforc all agcs from the A second e~arnpleof a local Eastern creed of fairIy early date
Fathrr, throuqh tlhorn all t l ~ i n ~ is the baptismal creed ofjerusalern. JVe awe our knowledge of
carne into k i n q , IClio k a u w ofciur
dr-ation wzincarnate, a d dwcIt
jt to Sr Cpril ofJemaIem, w-ho while still a priest (or possibly
among men. and .wffmed, and roqt as bishopj commented on itç clauses in the catechetical Iectures
ayain on the thLd day, and axrndcrl he deIivered in 348. Yaturally S t CyiI did not quote the text
rr? thc Father, and will come aqain in
gIory to j u d liring
~ and dead :
of the creed in tiis díscourses : the discipline of reserve prevented
\\'c lxlicr-c alxi in one Holv Spirir. that. But it can be reçonstituted from the sectlon headings of
the lectures (these, of course, are the work of editors, not of the
This creed, possibly ~ 6 t ha fiilIer final çcction, is almost preacher himsdf) and from the body of the lectutes them-
certainly Eusebius's ourn: the crecd, that is, of the local com- selves.I A point worth noticing iç that St Cyril, although pre-
rnunity at Caesarea. Some criticsl have shown sceptiçirm on pared to do battle with Acaçius of Caesarea over the privileges
this point, thinking that he could never have had the impertin- granted by the couacil of Xicaea to the see ofjerusalern, de-
ente to fojst a forrnulary of his orm oa the grand ccumenical clined ta incorporate anyíhing of the Kicene docttine into the
council. Tts basiç structure, they argue, may well hal-e been creed which he handed out to his catechumens. Like many of
borrowed from the Caesarean model, but its contents were his contemporaries he was apprently suspicious,3 at this period
probably an amalgam of baptismal creeds in general. But çon- of his life at aay rate, of the new-fangled Nicene term OF DNE
jectures like this are wide of'the mark, and spring from a mis- SUBSTANCE, which seemed to smack of Sabellianism.
understanding of the actual situation as well as from an extrava-
gant measurc of scrupulous caution. As a matter of historica1
fact (we shaI1 develop this point later) Eusebius did not bring I T t u ~ c Ú o ~ rls
rv <va @&v, m r & a newoitpa- U'c bclimc in rinc I>d, thc Faihcr ai-
the creed forward witlz a view to its being adopted by the ~ o p a mt7r;lv
, oijpauou ~ a 1p j s , 6pu~ú1i, mighty, rnakrr oT hcaven and carth,
T E múwcuv itai dopirwv. of aatl things visiblc and invisible;
council, but in vindication of his own orthodoxy, which at the
time lay under a çloud. Jts apoIogetic value would have dimin- Sce Cal. 7-18 (P.G.33, 605-1060},The words printed within brackcts occur
oaly in the editor's stction headings,and so cannot be tnistcd.
1 So, t.g., A. Harriack in hir article A p o ~ t o l i ~ c hSynibofuim
c~ in Hauck's Rca!t~rii- a For St Cyril's theological position at this time, sct tlie ualuable articlcs by
cyklofiacdic, 3rd cd., I . J. Lehon inX.ff.E. xx, 1924,r81 íF. and 357 Cf.
r 86 CREEDS WESTERN AND EASTERN EASTERN CREEDS 1 ~ 7
suspicious air about it. In the Christological sectian we observe I am baptized also in t h t Holy Spirir,
how he has silentlv altered the Greek FROM MARY THE HOLY that is the Paradete, Who worked
in a11 ihe saints from the beginning,
VIRGIN, attested by Eusebius, to FROM MARY THE VIRGIN, pre- and afterwards was e n t to the
sumably to bring it Into line with thc Rornan usage. A similar aportles aIso from t h e Father accord-
motive may have inspired the substitution dr BELIEVE for the ing to the prorniue of our Saviour ãrid
Lord Jesus Chriut, and after the
more usual WE BELIEVE, 0f QUR LORD JESUS CHRIST for OPTE LORD apostlcs to all believers within the
JESUS CHRXST, and o~ TIIE TKXRDDAY ROSE AGAIN for ROSE AGAIN ho1y Catholic and apwtolic church ;
ON THE T ~ R DDAY. Despite these touthings up, however, in thc resurrection of the Aesh and
in the remission of sins and in the
we have every reason to idenrify the underlying form as kingdom oi heaven and in the Iife
being, Jike the Jerusalem creed which it resemblcs, an ancient of the age to come.
baptismal symbol, Another interesting creed which has come to light recentIy
L o t h e r Syrian creed, also used at baptisrn but much longer is the one used at baptism by Theodore of Mopsuestia (in
ãnd more detailed, is found in the Apostolical Consfitutions in the CiIicia). He was ordained priest at Antioçh in 383 (circa),and
acçount 1 there given of the ritual of initiation. The treatise itself exercised his ministry thereuntil he was consecrated bishop of
was probabIy cornpiled in Syria or Palestine towards the end Mopsuestia in 392 : 6 e died in 428. In his çatecheticaf ~ e c t u r e s , ~
of the foirrth century. which have survived in Syriac, he expounded the baptisrnaI
creed to his neophytes, citing its severa1 clauses textually many
APOSTOLICAL CONSTITUTIONS
Kai flonrl[opac d
s lsvu &:v-
times over, and thus it is possible to piece the formula together
~emdw K U ~ And I believe, and a m baptized, in one
as a whole. It bears a remarkabIe resemblance, it is worth
- -.
q r o v P d m ~aX538~~81'BEÒV RUMDKP&- unbegotten, only, t m e God alrnighty,
mi-v
ropa, 7dv ru+kpa r06 Xp~w~oii, thc Father of the Christ, creator and recalliuig, to a Syrian creed used by the Nestorians which Cas-
I C d hpl0iiWÒv TCÜV ( ~ T Ú W W V , <f 06 T A frarner of a11 things, from Whom are pari reconstruçted in what must have been approximately its
?rdm. a11 things ;
k41 ris r d v d p w v 'IquoCw r d v Xpwrdv, And in the Lord Jesus the Chrisr, His Greek: form. As it stands it bears obvious signs of having de-
7du p o v a y r y o k o t ulóv, TÒV ?rpwrÓ~ortor onIy-begotten Son, the first-begotten veloped in the controversial atmosphere of the fourth century,
súuqs U T ~ O E W S , TÒV ?rpd aihjyww r i S o ~ i ~ of a11 çreation, Who before ages was
TOÜ RUTPÒS y v 8 ; v ~ a06 W?LO%&Q, 81'
but its basis is no doubt ancient, We reproduce the creed below
born, not created, by the good plea-
03 r d ?MWQ ~ Y ; V < T O 7; :V 0i&#0k sure of the Father, through Whom in English along with a retranslation iito Greek rnade by Pèse
~ a :&?ri y i j ~ ,ÓpCL'Td 71 ~d dÓpa~a, 7 d ~ a11 things carne into being, in heaven J. Lebon.3
ar' <qÚ7wv TWV +epGv KUTEABÓMQ and upon the earth, visible and in-
2f o G p a G v ai w p ~ Ba ~ Q ~ ~ v T;K u , visible, Who in the last days carne MOPSUESTIA
r;jç dyias ~ a ~ 6 & o M v U ~ : Qy<T8i.ra,
S down from heaven and took flesh, W e believe in one God the Father
xal m X ~ ~ a u ~ Ú ~ 6ulws w o v xa~4. mii~ born from the holy virgin Mary, and almighty, maket of a11 things visible
vÓpw 70; 6 ~ 0 6KU; ?rarp8ç aho+ov,~ a ; lived in holy wise according to thc and invislble ;
oraupwO~mvrra$*ri ITowiov 1TtXLrov, uni laws of God His Father, and was And in one LordJesuli Christ, the m l y -
2?rot4avÓma +&v, &ai 6vamÚwa crucified under Pontius Pilate, and begotteri Son o i God, the first-bc-
r'ic vcupSv p r ~ 4 76 ra&Tv ~ ~ p i q died for us, and rose again from the gotten of all creation, Who was be-
$p4PII, ai Lv6hOÓnvra ris rads 06~:parodr dead, after His passíon, on the third gotten from His Father before dl
xai ~ a B ~ u 8 ~ 2u w ah.$+TO; rarpdr, day, and ascended to heaven, and ages, not made, true Gcd from tmc
ai T ~ L V~ P ~ Ó p ~ OVYT<IÇ:~ ~ v TO; sat down on the Father's right hand, Gd, of one substance with His
*:&vos p c ~ bS Ú t q s ~pcvuva~~ & w a çr u i and wiI1 come again at the end of Father, through Whom the ages
vci~po&, 06 7 5 s #aurkias 0th ;ma& the age with glory to judge living
riAoc. and dead, of Whose kingdom there
Published for the fimt time (the Syriac with an Engliah translation) by A.
Mingana in Wodbrookt Studies V (Carnbridge, r 932).
will be no end ; t a Caspari, QwIIm I, 116 and r 18. Cf. also Rahn 132. The text survives oriIy
n Syriac.
i Ap. Cumt. 7, 41 (ed. of F. X. Funk, I, 444 ff.). a RiHiE.rucrii, 1936, 836.
I90 GREEDS WESTERN A N D EASTERN EASTERN GREEDS ]g1
Asius went on i o assert t11at this faith of his was baçed on ihe r& aldvuv r& 8BCvorv ríjc d p a p ~ i a s ages, \Vho a1 lhç cunsummation uC
i ~ ~ ~ p $ ai~ a uapxi,
~ a r j i r irr 7+r the agcswith a vitw ta thc destmc-
holy Scriptures, jn which rlic Lord had rommanded His dis- dyias napú'iimv Mapias ;um@ ;rrcor$- tion of sin sojourncd in Ilrrh, which
ciples to go and teach a11 riations, baptizing them in the threc- oam, +ÒY m a u p w 8 ; ~ ~mim dmBa~Órra He tmk from thc holy V i q i n Marv,
ai d v a m á ~ ~ a T ~ \Vho~ was crucificd nnd died and tvas
foEd Name. Yct i t can scarcely he cIairned that liis formula was *ai T~&'LTO, ~ T
iri'fi no; aa8c~Órrmr :ir 6rEü roú husicd, and rwt again nii the third
more than distantly related ao curyent baptjsmal hrrns. Sozo- nnrp87, KO; x a i v i p ~ ó p t w v& r4 p;A- day, and sits on t h t right hand nftlic
men reportsl the opiniori OS some diat it was "an artificial Am71 u;&vi ~ p i ~ mGMET
t NU: I Y K ~ U T . Fathcr, and will come again in thc
".
çoncoction ( Q E ~ V C K WmS u y u ~ k - 8 a ~ ) and ceriainly the body of coming agc to judgc 1iring and dcad ;
And in rhc holy Spirit. l\'lio ir con-
it seems to have been bascd rin tlie Niçene creed, thougli care- +ubstantial ivith tlie Father and Hiu
fully excluding the latter's distinctive teaciung. Tlie historical 14-0rd. LCZur bIicrc a150 iii thc
passage in the central seciion, it wi31 bc obsen-ed, is an abbre- rcsumrion of sou1 and body. as thc
.+pos~lc-1%. "Ft is mnn a natural
viation of the Xicene wording. It is the concluding articlc Imdy, i t i s raiscd a spiritual bndy",
which sounds coi~vincinql!*Iike a IocaE Egvptian crced. Thc ctc.
Sicene formula confrned iiself to a menti011 of the HoIy
Spirit, and it is not easy to imagine any special reasons why .- I
sljqhtly different version, omitting thc word SOJOPR?EED,
.4rius, if he wanted to continue, should have irnprovised out
mcntioning the ascension ta heaven, and rnaking a few changcs
of his own head. hIoreover, thc omission of HOLY with ~ I I C rif wording and word-order, is given in a Paris 3 f S . T l i e
Church recalls Alexander's rseed, while the unusual elabora- details of the story are quite realistic, and there scems no
tion of the future lifc aligris the formula w i t h thc creed af the reason to doubt that it sepresents a gcnuine reminiscence,
Aposiolical Conriiti~fionr. cmbroidered \?th the miraculous in haqiographical fashion,
Our other Egyptian creed is the forrnda kno~i-nas tlie crecd of St Ilfacarius, who died in 390 at the aqe of go. Thc çrced
of St Macarius. Thc descnption is not very apt, for, if the evi- itself reveais some striking points of contact with t he crced of
dence on which ous knotuledge of it depends is weI1 founded. St AIe'íander of Alexandria, such as thc sentcnce +9TTHE COS-
SUMMATI05 OF TRE AGES NTTH A VIEW TO THE DESTRI'CTIOS OF
ic is net ikis creed at a11 but the oficial formula ofsome Eg)-ptiaii
church. According to onc oF the stories appended to a nintli SIN SOJOPRSED, and the sequence of participlcs c R t F c t n E D LYD
century Viennese codex of the so-caled ripothegmata Macarii, nED . . ., Míithout
mention of Fontius Pilate in either case.
the saint was catled upon by a local bkhop in the neighbour- It also resembles the creed of Arius, e.g. in the short first articIe
hood of Arsinoc to assist him in dealing with a heretical monk.? without allusion to the Father as makcr of heaven and carth,
The monk wanted to recite Iiis faith, but St Macarius oãjected, in the description of Christ as Eogos fallowcd imrnçdintc1)- by
"Let not an evil faith he so much as narned before the peeplc, the reierence to Him as the agent of creation, and in the clause
WILL COME TO JUDGE without any mention of glory. These
but let us pronounce the Catholiç faith of the Church," and
pessuaded thc bishop to recite it. Lhe following is the creed. points not only serve to cconfirm the inferencc that St Macarius's
crecd i5 an authentic E_gyptian onc, but also acld ~veightto our
ST. MACARIUS previous ar,e;ument in favour of she view that Alexander had a
L'rrrrdw d s Ba fltóv, nmQu aauro- I believe in aire a, the Fathcr creed in mind and tliat Arius was basing his rip~lo~gy on ari
U&TO~~. almighty ; Egyptian formula.
Ka; CIS 7th ÒPwwiov a h o t A+, St' And in His wnsubstantial Word, The above are a number of specimcns of local creeds wsed
av' ;m:qor sohr aiwras, +&v aumArlp through WWhom He rnade the
by churches of the East . The selection has bcen deIiherately
Hist.e~cl.I, 2 1 (P.Cr
67, ioiz).
a For the story, nnd the imt o f t h t crccd printcd below, see Kattenbusch 11, This MS was followed by E. Prcusdien in liir PoIlndiiis iind Rujniis. Giessen,
242 ff. '897, 1 2 7 .
r g2 CREEDS WESTERN A N D EASTERN COMPARTSON OP EASTERN AND WESTERN CREEDS 193
confined to local creeds or formulae deriving from them : the of the premisses on which its depends. First, it invo1ves a serious
symbols framcd by ecçlesiastical assemblies have been excluded errar about the date and manner of the ernergence of dec2ara-
from consideration for the moment. Even so, the list should not tory creeds. Even at Rome it is unlikely, as we have seen, that
be rgarded as complete. Some, possibly the majority, of the there was a single authoritative creed of this kind until the
conciliar çreeds of the fourth çensury are local creeds wearing rniddIe of the t h i d century. Before then the baptismal creed
a thin disguise. Besides these, however, there are severa1 other proper had bem the interrogation regarding belief, and we
formularies which have been passed over in she meantime have arnple evidence that this existed in the East as well as
because they make no speçial contribution to the present dis- the West, Dionysius of AIexandri a, for example, in the middle
çussion and wil1 be more fittingIy examined in a subsequent of the third çentury knew af I '"the faith and the confession pre-
chapter. Arnong these are the so-çalled creed 1 of Lucian the ceding baptism", and of" the questions and answcrs'" Firmiliari
Martyr (died 3 I I), which is supposed to underlle the second of Caesarea, a littie before Dionysius, could speakc of " the
formula of the synod oF Antioch (341), and the two creeds "of established and churchly intemgation" and ""te customary
St Epiphanius. The present selection should be sufficient for and established words of the interrogation". Secondly, so far
our purposc. The reader should no-iv be in a position to form as surnmaries of faith are concerned, tve possess çuch early
some general idea of the charaçter of Eastern creeds. He çIionld Eastern examples aç the profession of the presbyters of Srqrna3
also have gained some irnpression of the nnumber and varietu and the creed of the Epistula Aposfolonim.~Thirdly, it seem
of confasions of which the Eastern churches could boast. highIy likely zhat several of the creeds listed above derive from
I t wiII not escape notice that they are wi-idely distributed a period weU before the counciI of Kicaen. This applies at any-
over the Chrjstian East, and that some of them must go well rate to the creeds of Caesarea and Jerusalern, and very probably
back into the third centui. The hanrest, we are led to suppose, to the underlyiny bask of others too.
would have been muçh fuller if the discipline of resenpehad In vicw oof this evidence, and the absence of any facts pointing
not been in operation. T h e irnportance o i this is far-reaching. in the oppoçite direction, the only natural conclusion is that
Some of the older critics, under the irnpression that Rome had Eastern creeds followed a c o m e of devclopmcnt closely analo-
nn oficial creed in the second century and unable to disçoves gous to that of JVestern creeds, with t1ie difference that the
any parallel in tlie East, took the \lew that baptismal creeds peculiar position of the Roman çhurch secured a special role
were in fact a novelty there and did not exkt as formal docu- for the formula it finally adopted. At the primitive stage tthere
ments before the last generation of the third century. Thus were the ancient baptismal questions and answers, arid at the
Harnack3 and Kattenbusch,' the Ieaders of credal research in same time more or less fked cateclietical summaries were
their day, thouglit they could trace the two earliest Eastern coming extensively into use. Later, in the third century, with
creeds, those of Caesarea and Jerusalem, to Antioch. Their the elãboration of the catechumenate and af the baptismd rite
theory waç that the Old Roman Creed was adopted there after itsclf, declaratory creeds were introduced and spesdily became
the deposition of Paul of Samosata, about 272, and that after regular.
undergoing radical revision to comply with the special sequire-
ments of the East at the time became the parent of a11 Eastern
çreeds. This latrer hypothesis will be considered later, but for
the rnoment we must be content with observing the weakness The local Eastern forrnularies rit which wc çlanccd i i i the
i Cf. St Athanasiur, Da syn. 23 (P.C. 26, 721 K}. preceding section make a rnotlcy ctowcl. Thc firsi general
Rncorntw, r i 8 and r rg (Holl I, 1 4 - 1 4 g ) . In Euseb. Hist. e c d . 7, 8 and 7, 1) (Sctiwarta, 275: 276).
CF. art, Apastoliscliss symboium in Hauck'~Realmcyk., 3rd cd., I, 749. Cf. St Cyprian, @I. 75, 1 0 f. (Hartrl 1, t i i t l ) .
I, 380 R., 11, 1g.i ff'. See above, p. 82. Circ abovc, p. 82.
E.C.C.-7
]g6 CREEDS WESLERN AND EASTJSRN THE DESCENT OF EASTERN CREEDS '97
(6vamávra) For Chist's resurrection, as opposed to R's ROSE of their theary that Eastern creeds derived from the revision of
AGAIN FROM THE DEAD. A srnaI1 point is that they a11 express the Old Roman Creed carried out, as they supposed, at Antioch
the ascension by the Greek B v ~ X B ó w aas against R's charac- about 272. Others who did not s h x e their view of the Western
teristic &vafiáma, R is also exceptional in stringin,g togetht
- :r the basis of Eastern creeds were equally confident that, behind
various itemç in this section of the creed without any con nect- the mass of local variations and çonwliary revisions of the fourth
ing particle (Eastern çreeds repeat the conjunctiorIAND bet ween century, they could descry a comrnon plan. The question was
.,
WAS I N C A R N A ~ ,SUFFERED, etc.), and in prefacing irs account reopened, with characteristic thoroughness, by H. Lietzmann
of the Second Coming with WHENCE (othes Western creeds have more than two decadts ago. He devoted the third of his farnous
THENCE, whereas Eastern creeds generally read AND WILL COME Symbolstudien 1 to an exhaustivc analysis and collation of all the
AGAIN). principal Eastern formularies. As the fruit of his researches he
The third article presents stilI further material fcIr contra.sting drew up a simple creed of three articIes which he feIt sure must
the two types of creed. Some of the Eastem form1s represient a represent the original confession underIying a11 Eastern çreeds,
transitiorial stage at which its contents were lirnitea-1 m a. bare
L. L.

and whjch lie accordingly labelled 0.


mention of the HoIy Spirit : so the creeds of Caesarea, Nicaea,
and possibly the first creed of the council of Antioch ( 3 4 r ) . I I b e l i m in one God, the Father al-
m i g h t ~ ,maker of a11 thinps visible
The majority, however, elaborate the third articIe much more noiqnjv. and invísible ;
fully than R does, as often as not referring explicitly to baptism Ku;C.?? &l~ 6 ~ '1f 7 l0l 0 h~' &~078~,TÒV And in one Lord Jesus Ghrist, the only
and subordinating THE REMISSION OF SINS to if, and usually viòv 706 8doU T ~ Vpovwym$, TÒV begottrn Son of God, Who was be-
706 ? T ~ T ~ Ò Sywq8iivra ?rpò aáwwv gotten from the Father before ali
describing t h e Church as ONE and c ~ ~ a o (sometimes
~rc APOS-
V;. al&vwv, 81' od 76 ?rdwa i y < v ~ r o . ages, through Whom all things carne
TOLEC as well), and adding LIPE EVERLASTING or LIFE OF THE TÒV [Si& r;lv + E T ~ P U Y G ~ ~ I U Vi~~av-
] into being, Who pecause of our
COMINC AGE. Bpwx?joavra, raBÓvra, uai dvawr&a ~ f i salvation] became man, suffered,
T~LT?? trai dví;ie8vra ctç 70:s and rose agaia on the third day and
el;pavoúç, #a; [r;&hrvj ;p,yórwot' ~ p y t ~ a ~ ascended to heaven, and will come
tWvraç ~ u IiC K ~ Ú S . [again] to judge living and dead;
Ka; ris 70 áYuw mrcpa. And in thc HoIy Spirit.
The accumulation of characteristics commoi1 ta Eastern
creeds which we listed in the preceding section Is sufficient to In this formula, or something very closely reçembling it, he
justify us in speakinp of an Eastern type. The problem we now argucd,. we have " the comrnon archetype out of which the
have to face is whether we can take a further step and assert that Eastern confessions grew"."
a11 Ertstern creeds belong to one family and actually descend The va'tue of Lietzmann's metiçulous sorting out of Eastern
from a. single stock. The aiialogy of tthe lineal connection credal forms cannot be rated too highly. The third of his Sym-
between all later W7estern forrnularies and their ancestor the bolstud~enis a painstaking piece of work which w i l remain in-
OId Rornan Creed has naturaily been ternpting to scholars. It dispensable to students for many years to come. His skill and
would be highiy satisfying if a similar course of development ingenuity, too, in seizing upon the recurrent Eastern traits and
could be posited for the East on the basis of the undoubted re- reassembling them in O deserve acknowledgernent. Whether
semblantes between all Eastern çreeds. This was the assump- O ever had historical actuality or is rnerely a scholar's artefaçt,
tioli on which the majority of alder students worked. With it certainly rcmains the rnodel Eastern creed. It represents
Kattenbusch and Harnaçk, of course, it was an integral part
&V.T.W.xxi 1922,5-22.
Scc below, p. 2 6 5 CF. its curious words, "But ir something must be added, Ste his artidt on creedr in Encjclop@din Rrifmnica, 14th edition, Vol. VI, 657,
we beliwe also concerning the resurreçtion of the flesh and eterna1 Pife."
lg8 CREEDS WESTERN AND EASTERN THE DESCENT OF EASTERN CREEDS '99
a commen partem which reveals itselfwith surprisino; frequency Our doubts are redoubled when we turn to the text and
behind the diverslty of Eastern confessions. Yct i t is difficult to compare the Eastern creeds rnarshalIed and sun~eyedby Lietz-
repress the conviction that he made a rnistake in deciding mann with one another and with O . Strikjng as are the resern-
to set out upon the path trodden hy so many previoui scholars bhnces which they display, they exhibit none of that unde-r-
with j1l success. Thc analogy of the histov of crceds in the I ~ i n gidentity lvhich was sa obvious a fearure in Western
I\:est may have hcen ternpting, but it was deceptivc. There is, formularies. No one who examines them is likelv to conclude
on the face of ir, no reason why the course of dcvelo~ iment at once that they are a11 variants of a comrnon f o m . On tht
should have been similar in the East, and aImost every reason contrary, side by side with the similarities there are equally
why it should Iiave been different. Thc status and authoi-ity of irnpressive divergentes. Thus the general agreement over the
ihe RIIman ck-iurch, it should bc remernbereá, were quite First article hardly arnqunts to more than wc should expect in
peculia.r : therc was nothing remoteIy parallel to them in the view of the common Christian teaching. Lietzmann himself
East. Elecause i f its prestige, aided by the relative lateness o€ adrnitted that the second half of it, which appears ia O as
the rise of other local churches, the Roman church was able MAKER OF ALL T ~ G 'VISIBLE S AND ~ I S I R Z E , C O U I ~ not be
to exercise a quite extraordinaq infiuenc:e on the: Iiturgy ILn the recomtmcted with any certainty. In addition to the form he
areas which acknowledged her suzeraii1s.Even apart from selected for inclusion in 0 , there were traditions which read
the testimony of actuaIly recorded çreed, I" -..-
~ Y C"L r--- the
- + . T A 11um
SIIWUICI
TRE CREMOR ( K T ~ Y )AXD ?~QXER ar TRE L ~ ~ R S E OT , ~
start have been prepared to find the JVestern churches looking rvhich expresscd the same thouqht b:- the Pauline "from TVhorn
to Rome for an authoritative liturqical confession. O n the other are all thingsW."here may also have been a tradition, repte-
hand, unless faced with very compelling considerations to nhe sented by Egrptian creeds, t.r.hich omitted all reference to the
contras., we should naturallu be prdisposed to betieve that Father's creative work. Ayain, while 111 the second article the
the Eastern çIiurches developed their ç~edalforms in some mention of OYE LORD JESUS CHRZST was praçtically universal,
measrire of independence of each othcr. I there tvere some irnportan t creeds 3 fiom which QXE was signifi-
The.whoIe presupposition of a comrnon archetypc for Eastern cantly nbsent. Others again4 diverged from O in describirig
creeds :;eems to rest upon a miscimception of the way in which 1
the Son as FIRST-BEGOTTEN DF ALL GREATION, a credal tradition
creeds took shape in the- conrext
. . .. of the baptismal service. So at least as 01d zs St Justin." notable discrepâncy with O js
far as our evidence goes, the questions and aiZSWCTS at the the appearance of thc session at the Father? right hand in a
rnoment of baptism were the creed in ernbryo. These ques- great number of Eastern creeds. Their independence in this
tions and answers, however, toqether with tht: catech eticaI respect from R is proved by their preference for the Greek
summaries with which they - -rvt:re çonn ected, wcie as
.A-- -- much
.
K ~ B F ~ Ó ~ Eor to R's ~ o @ r j ~ ~ iLastb,
Y ~~I a~% í w v r a wv- a \vider
part of Eastern as they 7sere of 1Nestern practice in the second background than O's çurt AXD r': LHE HOLY S P ~ I Tmust sureFv
and third centuries. Consquentl y, each li>cal chusch rnrist have be souqht for the third article. In some creeds it was no doubt
possessed, virtually from tne stan, tnt ~eginninqxof a creed or
9 .

confined to a bare mention of the Spirit, but we knotv, from St


creeds as part of its Iiturgical apparatus is no need to Justin and from St Irenaeui, as \%.e11 as from others, that an
posit an U f i m or Grundppsrs at alt, so E : East is c.on- 3
expanded third ârticIe had won a footing quite early.
cerned, muçh less one so elaborate and pa~c~iiiy rnacurc as O.
-*A----

Gf. thc third creed of h t i o c h in St Arhm., Dr gn. 24 (P.G.26: 724 f.) : qrc
The fact which is singular is the position of R vis-d-rtis other iI infra, p. 266 r-
Western creeds, but that is explicable in the Iight of its early CL the formula of Nic6 (359) giwn by Theodoret, Hs'st.eccl. 1,2i (Parrneniicr,
I 145 f.).
origin and the extraordinary pre-cminence enjoyed by the Cf. tht C~ECCISof Antioch, Aposl. Coi~t.,and Egypt a i a n above.
Roman church. l ' Cf. thc c r r d s of Caesarea, Antimh, Apb. Const., Mopauestia.
' <:C. Ilirrl. 85 (E.J.G.. 197).
THE PRQMULGATTON OP N 215
'I4 THE CREED OF NICAEA
at one of the sessions in the presence of the emperor himseif: a satisfactory explanation had been put upon every clause both
This began with a short preface declaring that the faith whicli of the symbol itseIf and of the anathernas at the end.
he now believed, and which he was now submitting to the As well as suppiying precious hints regarding the origin of
çounçil, was the faith in which he had been instructed as a the creed of Nicaea, the letter is a fundamental authority for its
catechumen and had been baptized, and which he had himself text. In addition to the appendis to his De decret. &;c. gn.,St
taught both as a priest and as a bishop. There followed irnme- Athanasius quoted the creed again in hls letter to the Emperor
diately after this what was manifestly a baptismaI creed, in all J0rian.I Other important witnesses to the au thentic text are
IikeIihood, in view of the previous statements, that of the çhurch Socrates the historian,2 and St 3asil.J The creed was repro-
of Caesarea.1 In its turn the creed was followed by a brief duced, of course, by many other Greek authors in the çentury
theoIogica1 explanation and elaboration of its çlauses, asserting following the council, and numerous Latin versions of it were
i n the plainest terrns the continued separate existence of each carrent.4 A text based on these authotities is printed below with
of the three divine persons (" the Father is in truth the Father, an English trandation. Its purity is g-uaranteed by what took
the Son in rruth the Son, the Holy Spirit in truth the HoIv place more than a hundred years later at the council of Chalce-
Spirit "1, arthouqh tactfuIly avoiding Eusebius's fawurite and don (451). Xt the third session, held on 10 Ocrober, thc
charaçteristic description " three hypostases". To çoncIude the assernbIed bishops: caused the creed oF Kicaea to be read out
rnemorandum carne an assurânce of his unswening attachment in their hearing. According to the ver\. fuH account presen-ed
to these doctrines in the future as in the past. Eusebius then in the Acts of the cauncil, this was done by Eunornius, bishop
resumes hjs Ietter proper, sernarking that 'hhen this faith had of Kicomedia. The choice of this dignitay, metropohran of
heen ser forth by us, there was no soom to gainsay it. Our Bithpia (in which Xicaea was situateci), um dictated. w e
belored emperor himself was the first to testie thãt it was can be sure, by- the desire to have the creed recited in its
entirely osthdox, and that he himself held exactly the same authentic, original text. The latest editor of the Chalcedonian
opinions. He insrmcted the others to s i g n it and to assent to its a t a , Eduaid Schwartz, has showns that tht tcxt read out, so
teaching, with the single addition of the word 'consubstantial far as can be judged, difíered only in rninutt particulars from
( ~ p o v " w ~ 0'5"). the one printed below.
Apparently Çonstantine added hiç own interpretation of NKXEA
tbis contentious word in language designed to counter n'ur'fV i r &a Bróv,m i p u *=TO- Wt helievc in one G d , thc Farher
possible objection in advance. "He explained that ~pooúucos u&mpal nivmr. Gparulv rn KO; &pí~cuv a h i g h w , rnakcr of all L hings visi blc
notdv. and invisiblc;
was not used in t3ie sense of bodily aflections, for the Son Ka; rir &ri k p w r 'ITm;vXPcmó~,&V And in onc h r d j c s u ~Christ, the 5on
did not derive His existence from the Father by means of uGv r& Bmü, y c v q 8 b m mú am.rp3c OS a, bqoztcn from thc Fathcr,
p o e , T O V T ~ ~ I Ui~ rikhs mü ody-beptttn, that is, from tht sub-
division or severançe, sinçe an immaterial, intellectual and +i$
m ~ f i r , B E Ô ~~ Z K@€o;, i~ dwrds, stancc of the Fathtr, God írom Cod.
incorporeal nature could not be subject to any bodily affection. Brdv dlv8ivÒv CK BcoS ~ ~ B C W Uyf~?,- , Iight Srom light, iruc Gcd from true
These things mtist be understood as bearing a divine and in- @&Q o6 =or$&a, Ó P o ú u ~ o uT~T~~ T ~ L . God, b t ~ o t t c n not madt, o f onc

effable signification." The council, however, on the pretext of ar' 05 7; & n a + ~ r a , r&T E IY T+ oiubtancc with the Fathm, throiigli
adding CONSUBSTANTTAL (npo&aa i-+ mG Ópootsu~ovr p ~ ~ t h j ~ v r ) .
E#. a d l o a . im g (P.G.
26, 817).
<L
produced this forrnulary "-and then follows the creed of (
Hi.tt. a i . I, 29 (PC.67, 58).
& E j . 125,2 (P.G. 32,548).
Nicaea with its anathecas. Eusebius brings his letter to a close Tom, 1,
See C. H. Turner, Eccitsiae Occidenidit Monumsnla Iilrir Antigiiis~iiti~a,
with a 10ng passage explaining how he insisted on scrutinizing Fase. 2 , 297 (Oxford, 1913).
".C.O, 11, I , 2 , 79. Sre a170 <.&.T. W . xxv, 1926, 48. rv. Bardy in f i i s i o i ~ e
the creed, and refused absoIutely to append his signature iintil dt ['EgliJp (FIiche et Martin) 111, 87 and A. D'hl$ii n Rschrches de ~cicnctreli&tsc,
For the tcxt of this, scc above, p. 182. =vi, 1936, 85 R., have misundentod his arvment.
2 16 THE CREED OF NICAEA COMPARISON OF N AND CAES. n17
oVpat.+ raC TA;v yf, +;v &r' &ás Whom all things came into being,
mhs du#pdnov~ ra; 6iA n ) v ijPrripav things in heauen and things on earth,
uwqpíav rrartA6'6vra *ai uap~w&ma. I V h o because of us men and bccausc
ivav8puim$aaute, nirt4Ówa rra; rivaorávra of our sd>-ationcame down and be- The twafoId probIem çonfrenting the student of creeds
ri ~$9 * i p q , dvrA8dvra r;s 0 6 p ~ v c 6 s , c a m e Licamate, becoming man, concerns the identity rind intention of che short formula
nai ipxiprvov rrpiwi bcüvras wai v r c p ~ ú r . suEcred and rose again on the third
day, ascended to the heavem. rind (technically known as 5 ) w-hich was rhus canonized by the
wiI1 comc to judge the li\ing and the ecurnenical council. What is the histoty of this creed whic1t
dead ; Constantine suçceeded in persuading the three hundred and
Ka;r;s 78 e'Ym~nvcüpa. And in rhe Holy Spirit.
Tnk 82 k<yowa$. $r 'MC i r e O & $v, ai But a5 fur t h w who y ,There war eighteen bishops to accept, and what fine shades of rneaning
r p ; v yçwilO?wr cic +v, mi &i;,t &ir when He s a s not, and, Before being nttached to its diçputed cIauses? The solution to the first of these
Ómwv i y l ~ c oI ,j ;
[ iripnc i k m B a < w s bom He was not, and that H e camc problems which held the fieId until reçentlv, and which rnay
oGuiar &uuovsap tirar. r r i o r 8 v +j into existente out of nothing, or whn
rpc;rr9r 4 &ro+Òv +&r u;Oi, r o ù Proi;, açrert that thc Son af God is oí a still be met rvith in many text-books af Church history and
&.uPcPar;~ttri. *ciBoAtir+ iirrrAriu;a. diferent hypmtasis or aubstancc. or authoritative encyclopaedia articles, is based upon a sirnple,
is creatd, or is mbjeci to a l t m t i o n rather one-sided reading of the apologetic letter of Eusebius
or change-these the Cathoiic Churrh
anathematizm. referred to and surnrnarized ahove. N, i t was argued, is none
orhes than the local creed of Caesarea (hereafier designateci
A? this point we Ieave Euscbius's letter, and to reconstruct C m . )raised in the light of the empetor's instructions. T h e
the rest of the çtory must rcly on frapentary reminiscences in çornrnittee appointed to c a q out the revision inserted, as
other wri tem. The bishops were invited to vote on the synboI admonished, the -rs,ord, óFwo6wro~( =OF QXE SUBSTLVCE) , and
whiçh was now laid behre çhern.' There xvas apparently much tmk ad~antageof the o p p o ~ t u n i tithile ~, thev were at it, to
ernbarrassment, much heart-burninp. The emperor's laboured make severa1 other changes in the same direction. This is t h e
explanations were not calcuIated to allay the bishops' suspicions view lvhich was carefulEy worked out and enesgetically defended
of what appeared to them a new direction in theological inter- by the EngJish sçhoIarç F.J.A. Hart' and A. E. Rum,2and which
pretation. Arius and his friends were piven the choice dsigning -4. von Ramack3 maintained for most of his life.
or being sent into exilc": they chose the latter. 3ut thev were These scholars wese weil aware that the divergentes bemeen
a small compan?r. Apart fsom the heresiasch himself, only CAES.and S. xwse rather more numesous and far-reaching than
Secundus of Ptolemais and Theonas of Marmarica declined Constantine's encotmagement, to judge by the accepted readinp
to give their sipatures. Even Eusebius of Nicamedia and the of Eusebius's letter, rnight appear to have warranted. But they
local prelate, Theognis of Nicaea, were found prepared to had ingenious and ably worked out expIanations ready ta hand.
conform. T h e idca !hat they subscribed a text in which the Thus, according to Hort, the çlauses FIRST-BEGOTTENOF . ~ L L
word ó S r o o d u ~ o(="of
~ the same substance ") was replaced by CREATIOK ( n p ~ ndqs ~ ó ~ ~ ~U E ~W Pand
~) ~BEFORE ALI. AGES
Oproúuws (="of like substançe"}~ Is an ingenious fiction ( r p Ò n-dví-wv 7 i j v al&vwv), which appear in CAES.but not in
invented so as to save their honour. In fact they limited N, were "possibly dropped because of the danger that they
their opposition to a refusal to endorse the oficial con- rnight play into the hands of the heretiçs, who liked to appeal
dernnation of Arius himself, thtir argument being that his to the former as suggesting rhat Christ was a creature, and who
teaching had been ~rossly misrepresented in the formal could interpret the latter as impIying tl'iat 'there was wlien He
accusations. was not '." The title s o (VI&) ~ was substituttd in N for LOGOS
Cf. Tm Diaertutioiar, Cambridge, 1876, 54-72.
Philoriorgius, Hi.rt. cccl. I, g (Ridez, ! o ) . ' CC. Introdilctzm t o bhe Cveds, 76 R.
Ae continzied t o hold the samc view in Thc
!'liilnglnryiu.i, Hi.rt. tccl.
l'hilo~tnrqiils,I f i ~ twti.
.
I , ga (Ridez, 1 0 ) .
i. 4 (Bidvz, i o f.).
Councii 01
Nicuea, London, I gng .
3rd ~ d . X1,
SCC Hxuck's R~ulanc~klopnerlic, , 1 5 f.
sI8 THE CREED OF NICAEA COMPARTSON OP N AND CAES. 119
in CAES.beçause of its Biblical associations, and because the MAKER DF ALL T-GS WSIBLE AWD I N V ~ L E the Greek vávrwv
latter word had been discreditcd by Arian misme of it. Hort ÓparGv T E irai Gop8rov m r T n j v l as against CAF.S.'S ròv TWV
indetd wmt further, and in contradiction to popular mis- &dwwv Ó p a d v T E ~ a 20PC;rwv
; m i r l r ; l v . In the third article
representations of his vieivpoin t insisted that other creeds than $ reads K Q ~~ 1 s76 Üytov m . ~ U p a(AND IN THE ROLY S P ~ I T ) ,
CAES.made theu contributions to ?i'. The insertions and modifi- while C-. offers a m ~ ú o p c v~ a El ~ SN mw*p Zytov (N.R. OXE
cations in the second artide, he noticed, correspond fairly HOLY SPLRIT). Admittedly these are insigriificant differen c&
exactly to the phraseology of extant Sy-ian and PaIestinian
creeds. The inference he dsew was that, despite Eusebius's
for whkh it is not easy to conjeaure a motive. But, from our
point of riew, their very insiqnificance rnakes them a11the more
-.
sitence on the point, the leaders of other greãt chutches must irnpressive. IVhy should people have bothered to make such
have been iavited to çollaborate in drafting the new forrnulary. changes, especialiy áhe change in the third articlefrorn a superior
I'et these admissions did not shake his conviçtion, based upon to a much inferior form? In the first of these divergentes from
what seemed to him the unrnistakable meaaing of Eusebius's CAES.,it should be noticed, N is in line with the çecond crecd
words, that N "might with equal cotrectness he described as of St Epiphanius, while in itç omission of o- from the third
the creed of Caesarea with additions'"." article it agrees with his first creed.1
Yet, however we take it, this description hardly rallits with But it i s in the structure of the seçond article that N stripped
the facts. The truth of the matter is, as anyone can discovtr for of the anti-Arian sentences reveals itself most strikingly as aEien
himself who cares to make an exhaustive comparison, that to CAEJ.Thus while CAES.separates ONLY-BEGOTTEN SON (viòv
CAES.and N differ £ar more radically than Hort and his fol- p ~ ~ Y ~ tand 6 j )BEGOTTEN FROM THE FATHER ( 2 ~ roÜ m.rpÒç
lowers, even in their most liberal rnornents, were prepared to y ~ y ~ v p 4 m v ) , and pIaces the latter towards the end of the
concede. It is not just a question of the ma~pulationof a few firse half of the article, N joins them together and pushes them
technical slogans. If the two formularim are placed side by farward to the very beginning. N aIso uses the aorist participle
side, it can be seen at a glance what dauses in N are specificall~ ycvvt)Q&a instead of the perfect ~ E ~ ~ for ~ BEGOTTEN.
Y O Y
anti-Arian imertions. Manifestly the sentenct THAT IS, FROM There is nothrng in N to correspond to the theollagically
THE SUBÇTANCE OF THE F A T ~ R( ~ o w i m r v;K +s o$aCaç rov^ colourless LTFE FROM LIFE {[w;lv 2u tw7js) of C A ~Corning . to
=arpós) is onc of them. The clauses B E G O ~ ~XOT I MADE the second half, we ob.sert.e that C.s~s.'s 6: o6 ~ a &ivrre ;
(y+3~70& 05~ mtfl@&a)
~ and OP o%%s v s s ~ ~ ' wmrr c ~ THE 78 xávra (THROUGH WHOM ALL T ~ G CAME S ISTO BEWG) re-
FATKER ( Ó p Ú u v T+ .rrarpl) fatl e q u d y obviously into the appears in ?; as St" ou' n ú m &2&70. The foilowinn; lines
same cateqory. So toa, it i 3 appartnt, do the words TRUE GOD (on the basis of the theoq under discussion) abound in similar,
FROM TRUE GOD (@eGv & I ~ % t i . O v 2~ 8eoU &%T$~iroC), which to a11 seeming pointless, changa and additions, such as the
assert the fullness ofthe Son's deity. If these item are removed, cEumsy insertion of THIIU-GS1% HEAVEN AW T ~ G ON S EARTH
and at the same time (for argurnent's sake) the clauses in CAES. (r&7~ & r+O+OL+ t 2v fn yfj)*the insertion af BECAUSE
~ a TA
stipatized by Hort as possibly suspect are reçtored, we should OF us MEIJ AND {Zt' T O ~ E6v8p&mvs ai), and the insertion
expect to come face to face 4 t h the Caeçarean fomuIary. of CAME DOWN (K~TEAOÓWU), the omission o£ a couple of AND'S
Actually what çonfronts us is a creed braadlyresernhling CAES., as well as (Tos what conceivable reason?) af rrI GLORY (;v 865:3),
but also diverghg from i t in a number of particulars, mjnute and the change of TO THE FATHER ( r p Ò s 7th maripa) to TO
~ the fim article, for example, N has for
and i m p ~ r t a n t .In TI-IE HEAVENS (dq 06~avo$q), and of the participle 7jtdwa
(WILL COME) t o 2 P X ó E t ~Thc . resulcz is the definite
~ ~ ~ net
Op. cir, 58.
Tn this discussion I bave relitd Iargely on the masttrly coliation oF thc two L For St. Epiphanius's mcds, sct hia Atmratw, 1 I 8 and r ig (Holl I, 146-149).
c m d s givtn by H.Ljetzmann in X.N.7. W.m i v , 1gri5, 196 ff. l . , d.,XI, i 5.
I:f. Harnack, R t d ~ i ~ k k 3rd
220 THE CREED OF NICAEA THE LETTER OF EUSEBIUS 22 1

assidation of N to the Jeriisalem-Antioch type of creed, and ot was intended to be, the resu1t of a revision OS the creed of his
Rarnack wen argwed that thcse dterations çould be regarded native church. The key sentence comes at the ver). beginning,
as "undaynatic concessions" made by rhe drafting committee where he announces that he is going to quote, first, '-tlie
to the powerful patriarchs of those sees. Actually we have no statement about my beliefs which I submirted (+v $4' ~ J A G Y
reasan to believe that people were so interested as all that in the s p ~ c 8 ~ T a .rrrpi
v srloi~or ypadrfv)"? and then the second
exact phrasing of their Iocal creeds at thrs date. PT they rrrere, '.w.riting (ypqbj~)'\hich the bishops had psduced "after
it is extremel!- odd that personages so weighty should hare making additions to nj-words Irais $ p ~ ~ ; p a l çdwi*a> r p a -
heen content ~ 4 t hsuch insiqnificant conces~ions. s ] ' ' . Eusebius's "statement ribout rny
d r f ~ a&~c ~ ~ ~ ~ v T E Here
beliefs", to whích additions were rnadc, cannot have beçn
sirnply t h e creed of Caesarea. The description must refer to the
4. The I ~ f f eofr Errsfbiw whole exposition wkich foITows, and which (as was pointed out
The efTect of the above considerations is inevitably to cast previously) inctuded, as well as the creed, both his personal
grave dowbts on the Hort-Harnack hjrpothesis that Y was the declaration that he had been brought up in this faith and Iiad
result of a recasting of CAES.They compeI the question whether hirnseIf loyally taught it, and (what is directly relevant) the
in fact that hypothesis is necessitated by the testimvny of Euse- theological elucidation appended to ihe creed. If this is so, then
bius's letter. And here it is warth noticing that none of the " my words ",to which he complained that additions had been
authorities who preserve the letter so much as hints that it made, cannot be taken, as is cornmoniy done, as being equiva-
implies any lineal connection between CAES.and N. St Athana- lent t o the Caesarean creed. They cannot refer to any text as
sius? sbject in reproducing it was frankly enough avowed' : he such, but must refer to the general theological position ex-
wanted the world to know that even Eusebius, who had re- pressed in the whole passagc. The emphasis, in other worcls, is
sisted stoutly untiI the eve of Nicaea, had eventually come on the old inherited faith of the Church, taught by the bishops
round to adrnit that the Nicene teaching represented the faith preceding him and ultimateiy derived from the Lord HirnseEf,
of the Church and the tradition of the fathers. His letter was much more than on the Caesatean creed considered as a docu-
thus at once a confession OF the error of h 2 former ways and a ment. I t is this traditional teaçhiig to which, by his account,
repudiation of Arianism. Sirnilarly both Socrateshnd Theo- the bishops listened so respectfully and which the ernperor
doret,J knolrrinp the p r a t i ~ ewhicich Eusebius enjoyed and the himself so generousIy applauded, cornrnanding that it should
way the Ariam had of expioiting it, were glad to use the Ietter, be iiidorporated in a formal profession containinp the worcl
with irs admission, albeit reluctant, thãt the Ncene formula homooilsios. There is no sugsestion that either Eusebius or Con-
could be interpreted in an acceptable seme, as a stiçk ~ 4 t h stantine expected the final doçurnent to be the actual Caesarean
which to beat the heretiçs. These facts deserve to be recaued creed with the Xicene key-word inserted. 12'hat Eusebius im-
because the rnodern scholar unçonsciously slips into the plies that he had a right to expeçt was that it would givc ex-
assumption that the interest of ancient chroniclers coincided pression to the docfrine which he had professed to the çatisfacsion
with his own, and fotgets that, ~vhilethe letter throws valuable of the council. the only fresh fcature being the nuancc intro-
light on the cornposition of N, it only does sa indirectly. duced by the use of homoowios.
A poinb of decisive irnportance to be noted at the outset is A similar and parallel misunderstanding vitiates the current
that Eusebius himself nowhere claims in his Ietter that N was, interpretation put upon the other key-passage. This is the
sentence by which Eusebius introduced the creed of the council :
But they, on the pretext of adding Irornoousios (~po$cíwi3 s
s Òpoovw~ov Í T ~ O U B T ~ K ~ Sproduced
), this docurnent.'"ome
226 THE CREED OF NICAEA THE BASIS OF N 227

which the Arians first praented their formuia as a basis, only 5. TheBasis oJN
to see it Indignantly rejected, and then the venerable bishop of
If the commonly acçepted theory of tlle relationship of C m s .
Caesarea stepped forward with the haptismal confession of his
and i\T is reiected, the question of N's background must be
church amid the e;cneraI applause, must be discarded. His reaI
C; ickled al?&h. Tbie most o b ~ i o u sapproach is to inquire what
object in subrnitting a creed, it wouId appear, was to clear
is, this bas,i, creed which, as we saw, stands revealed when tlie
i ) --- - :
himself of the taint af heresy and so to obtain his theological
a i p a ~ ~ \T:-~tr;nr;
p-l--Ll-- insertions are strippcd off. What rernains, it
rehabilitation. If this be so, the episode must have ocçurred at
is worth emphasizingí is not just ri rnusilated torso, but a com-
a preliminary stage of the agenda, whereas the creed-making
plete and, to all appearances, independent forrniilary. The
probably carne much later. Kot onlp is this the case, however,
Nicene alterations, on oiu new assumption. can he restricted
but Eusebius's letter, if read aright, nmvhere suggests (contrary
to the widespread notion) that he ever clairned that the
t<) ( a ) the 'HAT E, FROJI TAE STBSTANCE OF THE F.J,TNER,
and ( b ) th pasçage ~
con
E FROM TRYE GDD, B E G O ~ S
V
Caesarean text as such had been selected as the working basis
of the official forrnufary, much leçs that he ever complained ?G OT MADE . SL-BSTAKCE There is TIOW
WTH TAE FATHER.
no need tu suppuse Siat I ice stooc1 wtierc rhe Sicene
that the creed-drafcing cornmittee falled to adopt it a their
basis. His disappointment is obvious, but its cause was not &e iãSiers ti-rote soxi or that ILTFE FRO:5% LIFE a1~d BEFORE ALL AGES
were for some -season strr ick out, or that other modifications
committee's cavalicr tampering with, or disregard of, his ox+m
wese introduced for subtIe motives sucn as xhose suegested h:-
Caesarean creed. The verbal differençes between h. and _h;
Hort and Harnac:k. It Ivas lony ago obçemed that 5 bore a
were apparent to every careful eye, but he was apparentlv not
striking r1esembla~ c eat çertain points to crceds oF the Syra-
i n t t r ~ t e dirr them. The real ground of his disappointment was
Palestiniat--. L ? p L i H. fietzrnann foilowed 1 up this hint, and
C.**

&e theological t m e of the nelv creed, as he showed by the wav


argued tf iat the creed underlying X, into which the Sicene
in which Pie scrutinized ctreryspecificall>-theological clause in
t;igs were interpolated, must have been one helonging to the
the formula itself and itç anathemas. The g i s t of his cornplaint
Jerusatem f a d y The çreeds to tvhíçh its kinship is most rnarked
was rhat, whercas the emperor had comrnended the traditienal
are the fi~t of the t ~ s . oquoted by Sz Epiphaniiis h a d dthe one
teaching of which d ~ statement
e submitted by himself had pro-
u sed by S;t Cltj_i of Jemsaiem in Ris carechetical lectures. 3 'Ihe
vided a sample, and had simply urged that greâter precision
be given ta it by incorporating the one word homootlsios, the
.-.+..-r
ablum -..
eed which the draftiny cornmittee used, thought
committee had exceeded his injunctions and had completely Lietzmann, has nd~t SUMV ed, ancl it js irnpcissihIe now to mess
distorted the teacling. They had introduced, not so much a the chrirchtowhi.ch it bel onged.
This is an amacnveA-. . suggestion,
L .
arid it liolds water even if,
new creed, as what looked dangerously like a new theology,
as is prob able, we should be driven to conclude that the present
which Eusebius was only able to accept (so he ãssured his
tiext of St. Epiphanius's first creed has beén intmded into the
correspondents) after he had tested every a h d e of it. Only a
niisreading of his language, and the diçappearance of the records nnanuscrijpts by the carelessness or mlsplacecl zcal of Iater
SIcribes.4 7Thc Palestiriian traits in Y are unrnistakable, as anyone
of the synod of Antioch, have led scholãm ta take his rerninis-
C an pel-ceive who takes the trouble to collate is with creeds from
cences as evidence for a direct relationship beiween CAES.and
M. Properly interpreted, they do not, as we have seen, support 3lyria ancI Palestine. It is also possible an this view to açcount
such a conclusion. Xndeed, they do not give the least colour for any resemblances which N may be thought to have to CAES.,
to the idea that he was even interested in the problems which
for CAES.too is pr'esumabl-y a creed of the same Syro-Palestinian
naturally exercise modern credal research. family. P;I and Cd4~s.are therefore related, not, however, as
. - - I 923, zny.
Z.N. T.h,,r.. xxiv, -- ---
e Cf, Ancoralur, r r8 (Holl 1, rqti).
a See ahove, p. r 83 f. Scc LIrIow,p. 3 I i3 If.
228 THE CREED OF NICAEA TIIE BASIS OF N 229
ofispring to parent, bat as two denizens oF one and the same of Eusebius's letter rrhich was developed in the preceding
ecclesiastical region. Tbere is nothinp intrinsically improbabIe section is correct, there Is no ground for supposins that he evcr
in the çommittee's having: reçourse to a Palatinian f o r m u l a ~ clairned any relationship between CAES.and S. Thus &e key-
3s a working draft. The alternative hypothesis, that they did
stone oF Harnack's arch çollapses. Quite apart from this,
not use an existing creed as a working draft buc improvisd however, it is not true that the existence of the underlying
their formulary de novo, hris not much to be said for it. The formula is a rnatter of pure guesswork. As has heen pointed
procedure secrns unlikely in itself, and the creed which is left out, tlie Nicene technical catchwords are obvious in N to
when thc patently Nicene passages are removed has all the every eye. If they are detached from the body of the creed to
air of being an independent formulary. wkich they adhere so Ioosely, they teave behind a complete
Harnack, however, though persuaded towards the end of his snd, to all appearances, independent fomuiav. It is dificult
liFe of the untenability of the hitherto conventional theorv, to see how we are to explain this on the basis of Harnack's
which he himself had once supported, of the relation of C m . reconstmction of the course of eventç. lioreovet, iF the editor
to N, found Lietzrnann's substitute proposal too difficuIt to
tir editon were piecing to~etheran entirely new c c r d out d
digest. His objections 1 were, h t , that the whole existençe of this elernents contributd from n. varietu of xourçes, it rernains, in
lost Palestinian creed was chimeriçal ; secondly, that the sug- spite of Harnack, a myrteq- why they did not do their joh
gested picture oF the çourse of events scarcely does justice to better. One would expect the resultant formulary to be a homo-
Eusebius's narrative; and, thirdly, that it fails to account for geneous whole. Instead, as we have seen, we have a complete
the stylistic peculiarities of N, Eusebius may bave bbeen wrong, creed of the familiar Eastern type with the anti-Arian clauses
wiIfutly or unconsciously, in postulating that CAES.was in- added, to a11 seeming, alrnost as an afterthought. They have
tended by the ernperor to be the solc source of the new conciliar been interpolatd with a gaucherie and disregard for st)-listic
formdary, but his argument implics that there must be some grace which are hard to reconcile with Rarnaçk's picture of a
kinsbip behveen C X S . and S. Consequently he argued that, new formula built up from &e foundations by the drafting
once the coirncil was ageed ihat a ncw çreed containing the cornmittee. If, on the other hand, the plea is put fonvard thnr
homoousian catchwords was to be promdga-ated,a number of the veiy varie- of cçornpeting çlaims rendered their task
bishops of the orthodox and central partia, arnong them difficult rind conduced inevitably to clurnsy workmanship, i t
Eusebius, probably produced thtir creeds. Lhe offiçial or must still be asked why this clumsiness should make itself
05ciaIs appointed to campose a draft of the new symbol had, manifesr only in respect of the anti-Arian passages. The rest
therefore, no option but to piece together a cornposite document of the creed, these çlauses removed, runs smoothly enough.
reflecting a variety of ecclesiastical traditions; and since in addi- Ramack's objections thus fali to the ground. There is no
tion last-minute suggestions were probably thrust upon them, it need to examine them further, or to inquire what evidence Iie
is l i d e wonder that the formula was dumsiIy witten. As a had for his theory that the bishops of severa1 se6 must have
result, Eusebius, and severa1 oher bisbops too, could with some proffered crceds to an ernbarrassed drafcing cornmittee. His
show of justificatiou claim that their creeds had been impressed reconstmction of ivhat happened was clcarly conjectud. W'e
to pEay a part in the rnanufacture of the Kiçene fomulav. are Iefr ~,-iththe meagre conclusion that S consisb of some
This cornpromising solution has secured support in certain local haptisrnal creed, of Syro-Palcstinian provenance, into
quarters,' but is open to serious criticism. If the interpretation which the Nicene keywords were somewhat awkwardly inter-
<.fl.r W ,miv, 1925,203. Hia remarh art added as a "kritiucher Epilog "
polatcd. To go beyond this and attempt to identify the under-
tn No. r 3 of Littzmann's Symklslardun. lying formula would be an unprofitable exercise. The drafting
E.g. from F. J . Badcock in thr 2nd edition of liis book. ~ommitteewas prohahly left a fairly free hand, subject to tlic
230 THE W E D OF NICAEA
result of its labours proving satisfactory to the body of t h e
counc3, and we have no rneans of <weçsingwhat lines they
worked upon. There was a tradidon, rccaIled many years later
by St Basill but in iwelf quite unobjcctionable, that the leading
spirit raponrjble for actuaily writing the creed rvac a Cappa-
docian priest called Hermogenes, a staIwart opponent of Ariirs THE M E A N I Y G XND U S E O F T H E
who was destined to become bishop of Caesarea. Even if we E YTCEYE CBEED
accept it as reliabIc, however, it must rernain an open questían
whether hir achievement was confined rnerely to proposing thc r . The Arian Theology
specificdly anti-Arian cIauses, or whether he also suggested IN the last chapter we were so much taken up with the literary
thc local formula into which they were inserted. In any case, problem of the Niçene creed that we had to leave severa1 other
we may surmise, he and kis coIleagues were much more con- important questions virtually untouched. In particular, the
cerned to bolt the door fimly against Arianism than worried theological significance of the creed and the motives, doctrina1
nbout the Rval clairns of different credal texts. or otherwtse, which lay behind the characteristic terminology
in which it was expressed, deserve rather more extensive
treatment than was tthen possible. TYe shaI1 therefoce in this
chapter attempt to elucidate its crucial clauscs in a way which
will bring out th&r d o p a t i c tendenq. It wi41 also h+ to clear
UQ some cornmon and wiciely prevalent misconceptions if we
devote some attention to the use made of the formula in the
deçades fo1Iowing the ecumenicd council. As the principal
aim of those who rnanufactured the creed was to cal1 a halt,
once and for alP, to the Arian heresy, our discussion will have
to be prefaced by a brief account of the heretics' rnain positions.
The reader who desires detailed and authoritative information
should resort to the full-sized bistwies of doctrine or, better
still, to the fundamental documents of the controversy, such
as the surviving fragmen~tsf h ' s own writings.1 The sketch
which is aii that can be proxided here wilZ confine itself to
emphasizing points witk a bearing on the creed.
The outbreak of &e Arian debate is probably to be p l a c d
sornewhere in 318,"when Anus was presiding as priest ovcr
tk h of Bauçalis. The broad lines of his sustem, which
w leI ofdovetailed logic, are not in any doubt. Its kty-
L I h c ninit conrenient rollrrilon of thme, as v í thr haerncnts of ,&teriu$ thc
Sophisi, i\ to br found In G. Rnrrly's R~cherchcs~ t i rmint 1,ucicn d7.4nfrochr, Paris,
1936, azG H. For the documents in grneral, see Opitz. Clrkundm.
Tliis tradirionxl datc, ~ i i s i ~ a roif autumn 323 aq proposcd by E. Schwariz

i f.Nnclrrich/. I;ot!. 1905, 297). h a ~hrrn shown still to he h r ~ zupported


i (cf. H.G.
pirs. <,.h<T.1If.xxxiii, 1934, 131 E.: N. H. Bayncs..7.Y..V.xlix, ~gqH,1 6 5 4 ) .
931
232 THE MEANING AND USE OF THE N I ~ N ECREED

stone was the çonviction of the absolute transcendente and the Pauline text being inserpreted to mean that Ne was in-
perfection of the Godhcad. God (and it was God the Father cluded arnong creatíon. And, like all orher çreatures, He had
Whom he had in rnjnd) was absolutely ane: there could be no been created out of nothing (if O ~ KOwwv). To suggest that
ether God in the proper sense of the word beside Him. The He participated somehow in the essençe of the Godhead was,
carefully drafted prdession of faithl which he sent to bishop hinted Arius with a mischievous touch, to Iapse into a sprcies
Alexander from Niçomedia,2 always recogziized as classlc of Manichaean perversion.
authority for his teaching, opened ~ 4 t hthe ernphatiç words: Secondlv, as a creatifre the M'ord must have had a beginning,
"\Ye acknowlcdge one God, Who is alone unbegotten, alone only the Father being without beginning (8vapxor). "He carne
eternaI, alone wi t hout be~nning,alone tnie,alone possqsing im- into existence before the times and the ages", said Anus in his
rnortality, alone wise, alone good, aloae ruler, alone judge of letter to Eusebius of 5icornedia2: naturally, because He was
all, etc." This God was unengendered, uncreated, from ever- the creator of "the times and the a g e " just as much as of a11
la9ting to evcrlasting: Hjrnself m-ithout sowce, He was the the rest aF the cmtingent order, and so was " begotten outside
sourçe and origin of whatever ebe epristed. The being, sub- time (bXpóvws y q 1 7 ~ í s ) " . But, continued Arius, "before
stance, essence (ot:u/a, TÒ I X ~ t v ) of the unique God was He was begotten or created or defined or established, H e was
absolutely inco~mmunicable. For God ta communicate His iiot ".Halaring been created by God, He was neccssarily posterior
essence or substanee to another being ívould imply that He to God. Rence the familiar and repeattdly used Atian
was divisiblt and subject to change. 3ioreover, if another being * . ,> slosan,
"There was when E e was not ($v ?r071 OTE OGK T V ) . H e n ~ , -_..
were to &are the divine natuse in any valid sense, there would too, their exasperated protests against the orthodox counter-
be a pluraIity of divjne Beings, whereas God was by definition c ~ ",God fmm everlasting, the Son from everlaçtinq; the
unique. Thus eveything else that existed must have come into Father and the Son together alwayç (ar; Bcór, &i uEór* &a
e'ristence hy an act of creation on Ris part, aud must have namjp, GCLntiES)",3 and their rejeçtion out of hand of the
been çalled into being out of nothing. idca thar the Son could eternally coexist with the Father.
The jnescapabIe çorollary of this was the drastic subordina- Thirdly, it MIowed from a11 this that the Son couId have no
tion of thc Son or Word. God desird ta create the world, and real knowledqe of His Father. Beinq Himself finite, He could
for this purpose He emplqed an agent or instrurnent. This was not cornprehend the i n h i t e God : indeed He had no fulI com-
nccessary bccause, as one of the exponents of the Ariao theology, prehension of His own being. "The Father", remarked Arius
Astenus the Sophist, prit it,Qthe created order could not bear
in a parsage cited 4 by St Athanasius, " remains ineffable to the
the weight of the direct action of the increate and eternd God. Son, and the Word can neither see nar know His Father
Hence God brought inta existence His Word. But, &t of all,
the Word was a creature, a ~ s t m p aor n-oi~pa,as the Arians
.
perfectly and accuratdy . . but what He knows and sees, He
knows and sees in the same way and with the same measuses
were for ever reiterating, Whom the Father had brought into as tve know by our own powers." The same point was rammed
existence by His fiat. Tme, He was a perfect creature, and was
horne on many occasions.5 A fourth conseguence was that the
not to be compared with the other creatures, but that He was Son was liable to change and sin ( T ~ E W T Ò S K U ~ aXhorws8r).
to be ranged arnong ather derivative and dependent beings
they had no doubt. He war "the fint-begotten of a11 creation", I
' C t his profesaion of faith cited a h v e . For Lhc Manichaean idta that God was
I light, i.e. a material substance, andJcsus Christ a f r a ~ m t naf
t thc divine light, scc
W. S t Athan., DEsy.i 6 (P.C.26, yd i.) ; Opitz, Urk. 6, n. St Aug., C~nfer.3, 7 , 12; 5 , 10,20 P.L. 32,688; 715f.).
W. Ilrelfrr has rcndcred Anui's flight to Nicornedia doubtful (3.T.S. xxxiii, In St Epiphan., Paa. Iiae*. 69,6 (Holl 111, 157) ; Opitz, Urk. r .
1936,60 ff.). 1 a Cf. thc letter to Eusebius just cited.
a Cf.Sr Athan., Or. con, Ar, 2 , 1 4 ; sce also De decrrt. Nic. syn. 8 (P.C. 2 6 , 2 0 0 ; q, Ep. ad ejisc. Aeg. et Lib. r n (P.C.25, 565).
E:T. St. Athan., Or. con. Ar. r , 6 ; De pn. 1 5 ; St Alrxandtr in Socrates, Hisi.
437)- 1,6,(P.G.2 6 , 1 4 ; 708; 67,48).
D*
THE REPLY OF THE NICENE CREED 239
nonsense to talk of God being subjected to necessity if His t 7 e y the binding formulae containd in the Church's creeds should
nature was to beget. In ansrver to the objection that then the be expressed in w i r e d language w-as:~lolated.The orthodox
Father must, since it is natural for fathers so to be, be prior to had their answers to a11 these ca1iIs. They would hal-e pseferred
the Sou, they had recourse to Oigen's well-horin teaçfirrig of a more Scriptusal term, but they had discovered that every
the eterna1 generation of the Son by the Fãther. The Godhead Scnptura] title or ima- that was put fonvard was immediateiy
had never betn without His 1Vord or His Wisdom: so the G s t e d by rhe Arian rninority to s u i t their orvn purposes. St
Father had never been other than Father, and had never been Athanasius was later to argue' that, if the word did not appear
without His Son. The Son and the Father must therefore have in Holy Writ, the meaning it stood for did ( c l KUZ p+ o h w s ;v
coexisted from aII etemity, the Father eternally begetting the ~ a t sypa4ais E E ~ V at Aitrrs, &A +V GK TWV ypa+Wv Stávo~av
Son. E . X O U ~ ) . As for the Antiochene fathers who had anathe-
But it was in the fourth characteristic phrase of the creed, rnatized Paul's use of the word, they had understood it, he
the words OE ONE SUBSTANCE WITH THE FATHER ( d p o o á u ~TG ~~ argued, in a purely materialiçtic sense.2 He vigorously denied
*arp:), that the full weight of the orthodox reply to Arianism that the word irnplied that the essençe of the Father was
was concentrated. The previous history and use of che word divided, ar that the Son tvas a portion of the Father, on t h t
will be çtudied in the next seçtion, as will the motives for its analogy ofhurnan generatioh. The dicine esscnce was, of course,
seleçtloa for insertion in the cred. Here it wiU be suficient to indivisible, and as such it must be whoIly possmed by the Son.
point out that it completely travcrsed the Arian position by As if the Arian theolo_q had not been plaçed under a total
assertjng the full dei. of the Son. T h e son, it irnplied, shared ban in the creed itself, the anathemas return to the attack with
t he very being or essence of the Father. He was therefore fdIy senewed vigour and particularization. A1 the phrass singled
divine : whatever belonged to ar characterkzed tht Godhtad out for condemnation are typical Arian catchwords or slogans :
btlonged to and characterized Nim. The word itself, as well most of them had been repeated again and again by krius
as the idea it contained, had been expliçitly repudiated by the hirnself in his ill-fated Thaiia. To a certain extent they repcat
AIlan Ieaders, and it aroused objection in quarters outside the the analogous anathemas apperided to the profession of
heretical camp. There were four chief grounds for this hostility faith published by the council heId at Antioch earlier in the
to it, and each of them carried different degrees of weight with -
year. Lhe, first proposition pilloried, "There was when Hc
different people. First, there were mãny who thought that the was not (?v r o r E ;TE OUK $ V } " , pithily çurnmed up t h t
term mwst entail a rnaterialistiç çonception of the Deity, the Arian derlia1 of the Son's eternity and asserted His posteriority
Father and the Son being regarded as parts or separable por- ti3 the Faither. It I:rops up so frequentlv in the literature of the
tions of a concrete substance. Secondly, if the Father and the --- cunrrovcisy that detailed referentes are unnecessary.3
Arian - A .

Son were taken as bcing of one rubstance, it seemed to many Origen, it is worth noticinq, had long ago given the ditect
that Sabellianisrn with ail i& perils must lurk round the comer. negative to speculations along t h a e lines, declaring' in so many
ThirdIy, the semi-Arians made the point at the councii of words that "there was not when He was not (non tst quando
Ancyra (358) that the word had already been çondemned by J4lius non 1rilitufui$)". St Dionyslus of Rome, too, had rernarked,"
sound and orthodox bishops at the Antiochene synod (168) <I
Ter if tlIie Son carne into being, then there must have been
which had dealt with Paul of Samosata. Fourthly (and this -
DEd m t . Nic. syn. 11 (P.C. 25, 4533.
consideration worked upon the minds of many who were far Dr v-45 (P.G.2 6 , 772).
Or.mn.Ar. r, 11; rq;Dt?)n.
rtrnoved from Arianism proper), the word consussTANnAL, no I

more than the plirase FROM THE SUBSTANCEDF THE FATHER, was I
I, 5 (P.G.r+, 849); Dc
(28) (Koetschnu, 9gri).
not to be found in HoIy Scripture, and thus the tradition that rim$.
In 4SI
:
I
tlihan., De dc~ret..,V~íir.!iln. zG (P.G.Ij,464).
240 TAE MEANINC AND USE OF THE NICENE CREED THE REPLY OF THE NICENE CREED 24 1

when Hc was not. But He has been from everlasting (&i Sk íjv), noi so much for their doctrine (they rnereIy re-echa thei
if indeed He is in the Father, as He Hirnselfsays," The second Alian cliché that the Son was not af the Father'ç suhstance},
formula condemned, "Before He was begotten He was not but hecause they show the tcms h3posbasis and ousia employed
( 4 v y B r y @ ~OUK~ +v) i~ not much more than another
'I,
as qiaivalents. The history of the relation of these mo kcy-
rnethod of expsming the thought contztined in the first. -4tius words can hardly be set forth afresh here. It will be enough to
had used it in his letterl to St Alexander, and aqain in his remind the seader that, while their separate applicationç weit
Ietter 2 to Eusebius ofXicomedia.Judged tq-orthodox standardr, settltd at the synud of Alexandria (3621, their çonfusion prior
its error lay in conçeiking of the Father's generation of tht Son to that had k e n a sousce of cndless trouble. Afier 362 the
as a temporaI act, or at least as an act which had had a be- meaning assigned to hyposiaris in r e g r d to the Trinity was
ginning at a particular point in erernity. The orthodox view "penon" : its role was te stress the inditiduality of eaçh of the
aar that represurted by Origm in his ninth Homily on Jere- three males or f m in which the dix-ine essence existtd.
miah that the Fathcr for ever begets the San. Eusebius, it may Ousia was reserved for the divine essence or substançe itself,
be pointed out, seemo to have been guilty of a curious (and, we the very being of the Godhead. Earlier the etpology o f @o-
may be sure, wiEul) misunderstanding of the intention of the s t a k (i;$~rrrávat="lierinder ") had made it susceptihle of the
creed. In recounting his attitude to the anathemas. he savs that meaning "substratum", and so it had approximated to ousia.
he had no objection to this one, for everyone was agrecd that Origen had âttempted to discriminate between them along the
- - of God existed prior to the íieshly generatian. Xn other
the Son lines which were later adopted, but without success. In the
- - he was taking " begotten" in the-sense, never heard of
words, controversy between St Dianysiris of Rome and St Dionysius of
in the contrwersy, of Christ's historical birth, In the next Alexandria, one of the chief causes of misunderstanding had
paragraph he recalls that Canstantine himself, when explaining been uncertainty as to the precise sense in which the terms
thc anathemas, had urged the point that the Father, as change- wert being used. The Pope, for exarnple, suspected his Alex-
less God, must always have been Father, and that the Son must andrian namesake of virtual tritheism when he-spoke of "thsee
therefore be conccived as havjng cxisted "porentially (6wdpcr) " hyposfmt~~',while his own prefcrençe for " one nuria" must
and " without generation i&EYVj7~s)" w i h the Father before have 1ooked like SabeIFianisrn to the bishop. At the time of the
Hc began to erist "achlally (ivípyr&)". This was an ingenious çowncil of Nkaea &e West, Egypt and the orthodox party wese
atttrnpt to get mund the Xicene teaching, which was that rhe inclined to i d e n w the terms, describing God as one a u i a or
Son had been really begotten from all eternity and had always onc Iiypostac*s indifferently.1 St Athanasius maintained this usage
existed in the M e s t sençe as Son. until t he end of his fife, and Tn bis E$. od Afros episcofios, written
T h t remaining anathemas c a q on the same theme.. "He probably in 369, remarked,? "Hypostasis is ouno, nrrd means
carne into existente out of nothing (2f WK Ówwv i y i v n o ) " nothing ehe than 'being'." But in the East generallu about this
needs no special comment after a11 that has already been raid. time the rneaning "individual existent" or " person" for
A genetatson later the banned phrase became the wntchword Iiyposhis was the current one. We saw that Eusebius himself,
of the Anomoean p a e , who in consequence werc d u b b d in the profession of faith which he submitted to the council,
" Exoukontians "-4 Thc words "Of another hypostasin or tactfully avoided the formula rpds h o m á u c i s (three hupo-
substance (2f :ripas h o i m o ~ w rjs oiioías) are more importam,
jJ
stases), but it was the one he noimally employed and which
In S i Athan., De 9.r6 (P.G.26,709)~Cf.Opitz, Urk. 6 . expressed bis theology. The treatment of the two terms as
In S t Epiph., Pm.haer. 69, 6 (H011111, 157).Cf. Qpitz, Urk. I . having the same meaning was, therefore, another token of thr:
a Hom. in Icrm. g, 4 (Klostemann 111, 70).
Cf. St. Athan., De svn. 3r (P.G, 26, 749); Sacrates, Hisl. CCGI. 2, 45 (P.G. 67, 1 Cf. St Athan., Tom. adAnt. 6 (P.G.26, 803f.).
360). 2 E#.ad Afr. 4 (P,G.26, 1036).
brushed aside 1 the insinuation that the Son was a "consub- technical term to describe the relation of the Father and the
stantial portion (pFpos o*p~ov'~aov) " oF the Father : it seemed Son, and, seçondly, that they expected it would be recognized
to him, as many contexts show, to imply a division of sub- and approved at Rome. It is equally significant that St Diony-
stance. Eusebius of Nicomedia was envisaghg precisely the sius abstained from pressing the necessity of using it upon his
same idea when, in his letter to P a h u s of Tyre,: he angrily narnesake. His formal reply 1 condemned the views reported to
exclairned that they had Rever heard of two ingenerate beings him, in particular &e separation o f the divine Being inte "three
(dyÉV.ra) nos of one divided into two or ssubjected to any powers and unrelated hypostases and three divinities ", and
bodiIy experiente. That many more than the out-and-out took a rnarkedly hfonarçhian line. St Dionysius of Alexandria
Arians took this i'iew of Iiomoousios is clear h m the fact that, made an extrernely skilful defence of himself. W'hile maintaining
according to Eusebius's famous letter, Constantine felt it neces- a11 the essentials of t h e Oriyenist position, he esplained that he
sã. to explain that the word çarried no qnasi-physical impli- had not used homoousios because it was not a ScripturaI word,
cations and must not be taken as suggesting anv division or but haci reallu intended the doctsine it enshrined. To prove
severance from t he Father's substance. this he claimed that he had produced as illustrations of the
A most ifluminating: ilfustration of yet another current inter- relation of the Father and the Son such irnages a5 the reIation of
pretation of Aomoousios was prorided by the afF& of the t ~ v o patent to child, of seed to plant, and of the well to the stream
Dionysii in thc 'sixties of the third century.3 Bishop Dionysius which flow-s from it, all these being examples of entities .iv'hiçh
of Alexandria, it will be recalled, had b e m put to much trouble were 'bftthe same nature (dpSLoyn.ij) ". Of course, this was quite
bv an outbreak of Sabellianism in the Libyan Pentapolis. 'll'hcn a different exege& of hrnoouios than the Sabellians wanted,
he took forccful rneasures to eradicate it, the Ieaders of the dis- and a quite different one too from what the Pope may have had
sident group made a formal complaint to the Rornan pontiff, in rnínd. TVe are back again at the generic meaning of the word
alleging arnong other things that the bishop of Alexandria de- favoured by Origen and the Valentinian Gnostics before him.
clined to say that the Son was hotnooruio~ wíth Gd."Dionysius, It js possible that St Dionysius of Nexandria prwed tao subtle
it appears, tvas a keen protagonist of the Origenist theolo-qu. and expert a dlalectician for h i ~Rornan brother, and that his
There is Iittle doubt that the Sabellianç stood for that ancient profession ofw-illtigness to accept the formula counted for more
and, in popular circIes at any rate, widely established brand of than his carefully argued exposition of Trinitarian doçtrine.
Monarchianism whiçh regarded Jesus Chnst as she earthIy The next occasion on wkich the t e m cropped up rvas, ap-
rnanifcstation of the divine Being. To them the Ongenist parently, at the synod of Antioch in 268 whiçh condemned
appzoach, with its dis tinction oF the three hypostases and its Paul d Samosata. Though there is no recard in the surviving
tendency to subordinate the Son, was anathema. When they docurnents reIating to the council, and though the tvhole
appealed to hornoou~iosas theit watchword, they meant by it episode was completeIy lost sight of untiI the Serni-Arians
that the being or substance of the Son was identical with that dragged it out of obscurity at the council o€ Ancyra (358),it
of the Father. The way in whiçh they invoked hornoowios in seerns certain that Paul's application of thc description Fromo-
their complaint to the Pepe is thus highiy significant. 11 sug- ousios to the relation of the Father and the Son was condemned
gests, first, that it was already becoming in certain circles a by his judges. The question whiçh faces us is what he can have
meant by it.2 Some modern scholars,3 basing themselves on
Sce his Icttcr to St Alexander i n 5t Athan., Dt syn. 16 (P.G.26, 709) : Opitz,
Urk. 6. "cc Fcltoc, I 77 ff.
a In Theodoret, Ifiixi. PCCI. 1, 6 (Parmcntier, 2 8 ) : Opitz, Urk. 8. a The most satisfactory treatrnent o t this diEcuIt. gucstion is by G. Bardy, Paul
The mwt cnnvenitnt ditien oF ihe corrcapondence is that o f C. L. Fcltoc & Samomte, 2nd ed., Lauvain, rgzg, 333 ff.
(Cambridge, 1904). My whrences arc to it. E.g. G. L. Prestige in God in Putrtstic Thouxhl, Lnndnn, 2nd cd. 19.52, Ch. X (a
' See Feltm, i RO. rnmt valuãble chapter).
T H E HOMOOUSfON 253
Another valuable link in t h e chain of evidence is provided honioorrsios with the Father, we can readily perceive that the
by a story told by the historian PhlIostorgius 1 to the effect that way was clear For an agreernent between Ossius and the bishop
Ossius and S t Alexander reached an understanding together in of Xlexandria.
Njcomedia, before the council, on the use of the very term Shroiided as they are in obscurity, it is irnpossible riow to
komomios. The fact that Arius repndiazed it so forcefully in hjs pick one's wa): with any confidente through the deliberations
letter to St Alexander might be read as an indication of his of the council. One thing which may be regarded as fairly
awareness that his bishop's mind uvas veering in its direction. escablished, however, is that the preciJe trTay in rvhich thc
The courre of events thus adumbrated would suggest a wider, homoousian formula was to be used had not been finallu deter-
more complex baçkgraund for the fomulation of the creed mined in advance by the personages who ,guided the proceed-
than those who regard it as rnerely a unifying device of rhe ings. This is borne out by the strong tradition, which St Atha-
emperor's are prepared to admit. F. Loofs Qsharply crjticized nasius recalls,l and which is in itself most probabIe, that the
Philostargius's report on the ground that St Alexander, to judge original intention was to frame a definition in language
by his cncyclical letter3 and his lettcr 4 to Alexander of Byzan- bomwed from Sçripture. This was only ahandoned when it
tium, had pitched his tent in thc moderate Origenist camp. was seen that e v q conceivable text or biblical turn of phrase
The thcology he there expounded, Loofs arg-ued, ivas markedly could bt ingeniously distorted l ~ ythe Arians to look like
Origenist in compleúon, with its shess on the eterna1 genera- evidence in support of their speculations. St Ambrose tells a
tion of the Son, its predilection for "like in a11 things", and its story,2 which lias already been cited, that Eusebius of Nico-
insistente that Father and Son were two hypostases. But it is media was himself responsible for throwing the word hornoowios
rnisleading to place this c~clusiveernphasis on one anpect of into the debates. Re goes on to say that "when his Ietter had
S t Alexander's thought, which nas sery far from being a been read out, the fathers inserted this w r d into theis definition
lopicdy coherent rystem. Side by side with the Ongcnist of faith because they obsewed rhat it stmck terror into thtir
strain thert was a strong, not always cEear1y worked out, con- a&-ersaries' hearts. They thought it an excellent idta to sever
viction of the inseparable unity forrned by Father and Son. This the head of the foul heresy with the l7e.erysword which zhey had
carne to Ught in such statements as that the Father could not themselves unsheathed." Loofs thought3 this a "feeble hook'bon
be conceived to have ever heen without His Word and His which to hang such a mornentous happening, but there is no-
Wisdorn (Woyos roi á d o s ) , 5 tthat the San (cf. 3. 10, 15) thing Intrinsically unlikely in the reminiscence, although St
had a perfect knowledqe of the Father6 and was His perfect Ambrose may hare been gir?ng a rnther generalized account af
Image,e that thc Father and the Son were two inseparabk what took place. Ossius and his confederates mau welI havt
beings between Whom no inten~alcould be thought (&ArL\jlwv judged that the enemy was playing into their hands, and that a
dxdpcosa np&yparu ~ Ú o ) , and that the Son, if not (r +js handle had been given them, at the opportune moment, tu
s , $6 ahoC 705 OWOÇ ~ a r ~ d g . With
odulas 5-00 r n ~ ~ d was 6 ideas spring the prearranged m r d on the assernbly. After the
Iike t h a e in his head,' and with his spccial knowledge of blasphernies of Eusebius of Kicomedia, the atrnosphere wa3
the way the Arians reacted to the daim that the Son was hound to be more favonrable than they had dared hope. And
C HLrt. C&. 1, (Bidn. 8 f.1.
the emperor had been won over to be their rnouthpiece.
Thus the different partieç present at tbe ecumenical council
understood its creed in very different ways. For Constantine:
himself the theological issue was neither here nor there: ht
~ h o u i hnot dto&ther sympathctic to St Akxander, Harnack bmuqht out Sce abovc, p. 2 13. D r j d . 3J 1 5 , 125 (P.L.16, 61.1).
h i teachinq
iht c s s m t i a l s of ~ in Lrhrbrrrh I r Dogmnier~cAithtr,gih td., 11, ? n j R: a Ft~fg&, 80.
in substance ". A11 these fomulae were Iater to be brande$ as a town lost in the depths of a desert aad iniiccessible to sounds
Arian or Semi-Anan in their bias. Yet at this stage St Athana- from outside."
sius apparentIy preferred to ernploy them, and consciously We have here a body of, at first sight, star&ng facts whiçll
(it must have been consçiousIy) kept himself dear of homooirrios. suggest that the status of the Xicene creed was very different in
I t was oniy in rhe early 'fifties, when he w m t e the De scntmtio the genesation or so foIlowing the counçil from what many have
Dionysii and the De dmelis dVit~~nae gnodi, that he carne out been brought up to believe. One is perhaps tcrnpted to sym-
into the open as the charnpion of the Nicene fomulae. pathize with the somewhat radical solution of the probIem pro-
1
To be linked with these two points is a third, the extra- vided by that school of historiansl which treats the Kicencs
ordinary ignorance about the docurnents of the Arian contro- symbol as a purely political formula representative of no strain
versy which apparently prevailed for many years in the West.L -C thought in the Church but irnposed on the various wrangling
It is interesting to note that the Western chnrches had no first- boups as a badge of union. If this reconstruction of the situa-
hand knowledge of the principal texts expounding the Arian 3n is accepted, d1 the awkward facts seem to fall at once into
position-such texts as the letters of Arius ãnd the letter of ,_açe. St. Athanasius's reticence about the homoousion ceases
Emebius of Nicomedia-until Iittle short ofa quarter of a çentury to be at all mysterious once it is agreed tliat, so far from being
after the coundl of Nicaea. The year 355 kpprobably the earliest one of the instigators ofits adoption at tlie council, he was still
date to ~vhichthe publication of the first Latin translations can at an Origenist phase of his theologicd developrnent,%attaclied
be ascribed. Even more remarkable, however, is she fact that the to the doctrine o£'three hypostases and highly suspicious of the
comesponding orthodox docurnents were equally slow in coming ernperor's chosen term. The apparent disregard for the council
to the notice of Western churchmen. Ko doubt there was a and its work beçomes expffcable in the light oT she realization
general Imowledge :ef what had taken pIace at Xicaea, and of that it was not conceived as having presçrikd a positive
course the papal chancdiery, and probably the archives of theology, but rnerely as having passed sentence on Arianism
other great sees too, possessed authentic copies of the creed and
the canons in Grcek with Latin translations. But it was St
Hilary of Poitiers who abolished the blackout and introduced
I in its original fom ând as having atternpted to restore unity in
'ie divided Church. Just as there were no Nicene theologians,
iere were no anti-Nicene theologians: a11 were united in
the West generally to the crucial ttxts of the Arian controversy. :kriowledging its achievemcnt in the sense described.
Even before his exile in 356 he had published some : in his De There are certainly valuable and true features in this bold
synodis, addressed in 359 to the bishops of Gerrnany, Gaul and .ternpt to elucidate the course of eventç, but it Is marrd by
Britain, he carried on the good work. But the reaI measure of ie determination to make the piçture altogether too clear-cut.
the ignorance in which the Western churches were s t U en- ,he insistence on eliminating the Nicene group of theologians,
veloped is disdosed by a confession whiiich he made in his DL and particularly St .4thana~isius,is its most disastrous weakness.
synodis2 regaxding his orvn acquaintancewith the Xicene symbo1. Far too much has been made in certain quarters of his absten-
"Though I had been baptized ", he remarked, ''some time tion from using the term hmnoausios, as of the alieged drastic
previously and had been a bishop quite a while, I did not hear development of his theology wliich is associated with it. As
of the Ticene creed untíl X was about to set forth to exile Vdem stated by Loois, the theory depended, it may be pointed out
Nicaenam mnnguam nisi emabirms audiai)." Yet, as a modern in passing, on his being abte to assign the three Oraliunes cnnlra
schoIar 3 has aptly commented, " Poitierç was not at this time Arianos to an extremely early date, 338 or 339 : only so was he
Cf. G . Bardy, L'occident ct Ies
sRaic.5~reiigiwses KX, I 940, 28 R:
donimnats L ia wntrovarm aricm, in fim d a ' An exccllmt txample or a book writteu o11 thne linrs is H. Lietzrnann's
Gerrhichic &r altcn Kircht, TII Berlin, I 938).
' D ~ s s y n . gr (P,L.ro, 545). a G. Bardy, art. n't. adfln, !
I So F. L a i 6 in Rcaletigkl, I, zoa T.
264 THE AGE OP SYNODAL CREEDS
with something more approaclijnq precisíon, the varying posi- should we foIlow a priest ? "1, and that, so £ar from taking him
tion of ? i eyes of the contendinq g~oups.
in the as their teacher, they had only ieceivdl Arius back into com-
The firçt creeds tvhich it falls to us to investiyate are the munion dter rigorouslp testing his orthodaxy. To cIlnch t h i s
four tsaditionaIly associated tr-ith the Dedication Council held they appended a çrecd,' which opened: "For we have been
at Antioçh in the surnmer oF 34 I . I Sinety-seven bishops, all taught from the beginning
Eartern and all adherents of the Eusebian way of thinlíing, E<&a BeÓv, r D v rGi. &i Bdv, rrtmúrti,, T o h I i c v ~in onc W, thc C d of
met in conclave at this synod, and the emperor Constantius .r& d v r w v vgriiv rr u d d+Gv the univmc, the crcatm and pt-
hFwv&v +C -q3o+~. \+der of ali t h i i g intelligibje and
imitated the precedent set by his fãther by being present in perceptiblc ;
person.=The imrnediate and ostensible object of the gathering Rui rk &a uL8v m9 B ~ o i ipowyEYjj, vp& h d in one only-begotten Sou of
was to celebrate thç: dedication (hence the Greek titlc of the &wuv a i h w h+Xovrrr ai d w a God, bcfore a11 agea subsisting and
council, 4 r o l 9 2 y ~ a t v l o c s ) of the golden church founded
TG y ~ y w q u ó radròv
~ n a ~ p i ,8 ~ 0' 5 7d
?rÚrra Z y i v e o , 78 +C ciPard xa1 d
mexistiRp with the Father Who
begat Him, through Whom xll
ten years previously by Constaniine and now brought to &&ma, &v KU; &" xá^^^ +pep& things carne into being, t h i i s visible
completion by his son. In fact, the ecclesiastica1 çeremony K ~ T 'd o u ; a v roü t r n ~ ~ ò~r a d @ & r a and invisiblc, Who in thc last days,
rccording to the Father's good
prmed to be no more than a convcnient pretext, and the real pl-c, camc down and was in-
motives at work ufcre not long in disclosing thernselt-es. St camate d the Vi-, and fdhilcd
Athanasius, w e ma? recai& had been deposed by the council a11 HL Fatha's will, mEwcd and
w-as saisad agalo, and asctndcd to
of Tyre (335), and Marcelius of Anq-ra by the councit of heavcn, and sits on tht Fatha's
ConstantinopIe (336). On the death of Constantine both had nght hand, and will come again to
been pennitted to return to their episcopal thrones, but the judgc liiing and dcad, and abidn
&g and G d for thc w ;
Eusebians had taken speedy steps to extnide &em oncc more. LVe kliew also in ~ h Holy t SpLit.
They had taken refuge in Rome, and the synod convoked by h d if somcthing must k addcd, wc
Pope Julius I in the spring af 3413 had pronounced them k l i w e also concming the resume-
tion of thc flcsh nnd life werlastirig."
guildess and readmitted them to comrnunion. One of the chief
concerns of the Declication Council was obviously to present St Athanasius, who quoted this creed along with the other
a united front to tliis Western insult, and to reply t o tlie Tetter,4 cretds of the Dedication Counçil in his De synodis, hserted
fuli of rernonstrahccs and accusations, which Pope Julius had the ungenerous innuendo that they were proof of the "Arians' "
sent announcing the Roman decisionç. But doctrinal issues passion for novelty and their general indecision. But there is
carne to the fore as well. Eusebius and his friends had evi- r e d y nothing to show tliat this, the so-called First Creed of
den. been cut to the quick by St Athanasius's reiterated ,htioch, was formulated as an officiâl confession of the counçil
charges t h a t they were ~iriuallyhrians and by the Pope'r at all. The protest about their not behg Arians with wliich
insinuation, put forward at S t -4thanaoiusys instigntion, that - - bishops prefaced it suggests, eveu in the Fragmentar). fom
the
they were beinq dislqal to Kicaea. Hençe arnonx the first ~tAthanasius's citation, that it was In fact sirnply an extract
measures of the counciI (the exaçt order of events cannot be n the apdogetic letter rvhich the council prepared as an
reconstructed) was the prornulgation of a solernn staternent wer to Pope Jdius. As it stands the formula cantains
protatinp that thcy were not Arian ("How, bcing bishops, nothing particularIy striking. In pattern and substance it is a
In my discussion nT this council 1 rely, as must all students, on E. Schwanz's creed of the recognizable Eastern type, and is no doubt a
mast~rlystudy ofit in <tir Ge~chichtades Aihnnasitu IX (Jllach~icht.Gbi!. 191I , 46, ff.). baptisrnal form modified t o suit the requirements of the
= so st ~ t h m .nc
, syn. r5(P.G. 26, 725).
T h e date is Schwartx'c, : the one more usuíilly givcn is 340. St Athan., Ds sp.az (P.G. 26, 720 L).
For the leiter, sce St Athan., A@l. con. Ar. 21-35 (P.G.ng, 251-p8).
9*
266 THE AGE OF SYNODAL CREEDS THE DEDICATION COUNCXL 1 ~ 7
council. J. F. BetIiune-Baker misleading irnpression Kd ir &v &Av aVroc ròv powyn;F, Beòv And in Hii only-begotten Son, the
of it when hc said 1 F ai uoqliav, ~ d v~ U ~ r o v divine
I b y o v , SJvapu M'ord, Powcr and Widom,
t lat "it t anizing ' not only in its +&V 'ITmW XPimÓu, 61*OQ +i ri-, our Lord J ~ U Christ,
J throughwhom
avoidance of any ex pression Arians cnuld not have T&Y yt-wq8eh-a TO; ?mip& xp& T& are all things, Wlio w~ bqottcn
accepted, but also in ~nationof ONLP-BEGOTTEN and aidvwv. BrOv í k v ir Oroti T ~ F ~ U , fmm thc Pather btfort the ages,
in its marked attrihuti on of the work of the Incarnate Son to rol dwtr r& 8c& Vnomdoct, ~ d m Gt d frorn pcrfcct God, and
i*" <G+~WY 8; ~ T Õ iV p e f i v ~ ( a B b w a Whn mists as a prrson wiih God.
the good pleasure and purpose of che Father ". The term homo- ~ a ymrilOtma
l iic ~ & uw m & ancl in thc laat dayi came down and
orisios, adrnittedly, does not reature " in ia, and to this extcnt it 72s ypa#&t, &d&vm, m8óvra was born fmm thc Yirgín accordinç
silently evades the full Kiccne theology. But ,4 xianisrn in the wir; Qwm&a d& ~ ~ p l I(&ú ~ , to the S a i p t w , kcarnc man,
&dEBvra mM c i ~ p ~ o & ,ai im@rrr- suffrrd and r w c again tmm tlie
proper sense of the n-ord is delibera tely sul43d O U t 13y the 8iwu i r c 6 c ( i v mi7 nmp0r ai-&, K& dcad, and asccnded te hcavcn, and
affirrnation that the Son existed before a- 1i3 r a g a *riu , --J --
coexisted n& ipSwv p - 6 S&rrtai B+wr sat down on thç right hand of Mis
R-ith the Fathier. ,4t thie same *time the bishopc seized the op- x p h u 5L;nns H& YEX~OW,ai p i m ~ ~Fathcr, ~ and will a p i n come with
<;E s õk aiGviis. glory and power to judgc ti~íngand
portunity to rnake a ! . h t at ti-ieir much-hated ãoe dcad, a& abidcs for thc agts ;
1larcelIus of i~ncyra,agaimt whom the statement about the
L
K& r:g & m U p TÒ áPv, TÒY n+*l\'l- And in tht Holy Çpirit, thc ParacItic,
+d m&pa +r &$kíar, 6 rc& the Spirit of qruth, \I%ich God
Son's everlasting kingdom and divinity \+-asai was a TO,,
&A TU; rr++ov InmtSam ó $E& throuqh the prophct pnimispd to
characteristfc article in his é e a c h i n g a h a t C1 rdship I q i c w M r o k J-G h 6 . b ~ =a; 6 p u r out upon His wrvanu and the
must one day he terminateci, as St Pad hirnself st-çriiea ro impl y A p t o s i-rL4- n & h -roi* I a m ; - : h r d p r o m i d to scnd to Hü dis-
when he said ( r Cor. r j, 25j, "For He must reign until He set ,a&pis, D xai ~ ~ c &c rr; ,ir&rrp cipla, ll'hich also Hc scnt, a~ thc
s&v d-DXum papn*p,Cm. .4cts d thc :\psiln tatiry.
ali His cnemies under His feet." Thus the dil-ine llonad, which ffi &;6i -@ m;nfY r+ m * m MÚmi But if a w n t tcaclics ar holds in hi$
in the historical reveIation had unfolded ItseIf successiveIy so ? & &w@, W E ~ Z-, U t. ~d k r t anything oihcr than this iaith,
as to form a triad, ivi retum, 1by an ordered MW&v TO; ' A y n h r , $ ZaBd3.;ii*, .
let him bc anathcma . - of Mar-
res-ersaI of the proçess, tity, and God would be
+ i l a d h v mü &p~crm;os, ,d&hPa ccllua of :tih.r;i, or of Sabdlius, or
ZUTW ~ o a& i& K& .í&.rrr ol iriir- of Paul of Sammata, Icr lioth him
all in aI1. M a n y creeds occasion to observe, wM-ms &(;i. and a11 who r h a r t with him bc
stamp A~iarcellus'sdoctrine as hcretical by asserting thc un- ar~ithema."
ending reic? o f the Son.
There is another formula^^ which, dapite being mideadindy This creed apparendy satísfied the company, and all the
called thc Third Creed of h t i o c h , haç reaily na title to be an bishops subscribed it. kike tthe first one, it plainIy reptesents
official staternent of faiith promiulgated by &e r:ouricil. So far a rernodelled baptisrnal çonfession, although t he alteratiions and
from ernanating from thc asseinbly itself, it .tvsis the forrnula interpolations are probably far more nurnerous in this case.
which a certain bislio]-. TI...-- ~hroniusof Tyarra, . :
in r
dappa- Perhaps this is what St Athanasius had in mind when he said'
that the formula was the cornposition of Theophronius hirnself.
docta, thought it pru deposit with his colleagues.
Possibly he had been i I of heresy, and was conscious It is chiefly noteworthy for itç strong insistente that the Son
of the desirability of dearing iiimself. 5Iis creed3 opened rrith is a hypostasis, and therefore, presumably, not a mete functioii
an unusually solemn adjuration , "God knows, Whom I cal1 to of the Father. Both Paul of Samosata and Marcellus had demed
witness t o rny soul, thar thus I b elieve : this, and therefore are anathernatized at the end along with
E/s6t0i na.rdPa x a v r o ~ ~ d r ~ 7Òv
p a , rtüv -ln God
- . . Sabellius. The words AND ABIDES FOR THE AGES applied to
the Father almiphty,the meator
ÔAwv m i a ~ vua: i< T A
T O L ~ T ~ ~ V ,0 5 and maker of the universe, from Christ reigning in glory represent another cut at Marcellus.
ndvra. Whorn are a11 thigs; It wãs his teaching, it would seem, that the council viewed
Earfy IiisUiy of Clirisiion docarit~e,5th ed., London, 1933, 172. with particular apprehmsion. It is likcly that thc cloud under
Cf. Frafig. 1 1 I ff: i11 Klosicrmann's appendix to his Eusebius IV,200 ff.
a See S t Ailisii., Be vil. 24: (P.G. 2 6 , 724 f.).
268 THE AGE OF SYNODAL CREEDS I THE QEDECATM31V COUNCIL 26g
~vl-liichTheophronim stmd w*asbecause of his sup]posed Ieatnings plory of tht Fatbcr, tht kt-kgottrn
in that direcsion. The bihops probablv wecorned the oFP"r- of a11 m t i o n , fVho w a s in the h*
g k ü y wí:h Gd, C*od the {Ord
tunity of signing the disclainer containe:d in the creed, a.nd of accordinq to what was said in thc
thereby putting their disapproval of Marcellus on record once ~ospel,' Xnd thc \\Ord H-s C 4 ',
more. throuyh IVliom ali t b g s -e intu
king and in \+.horn a11 t h g s can-
The o d l - official statement of faith ratified by the Dediçation sist, \$%o in ihc 1st da:% camc down
Council in its own name was the so-called Second Creed of ímm abor-c, and was bom from a
Antioch.' According to S t Athanasius's not wholly unprejudiced Virgin accordinq to xhe Scripturcs,
and btcamc rnan, mtdiator of Gad
account, the bishops had repented of, ar changed tlieir minds and men, and Apo~tleof our faliirli,
about, their enrlicr definition ( p c m y v ó m ~ s&T t T O ~ FT P O T ~ ~ O L Ç ) . and Princc of lifc, as He says, 'l
St Hilary gave thc story a differcnt, and more credible, twist carne dowii From heaven, not to do
my own will biit thc will of Hirn Wlio
by saying that the suspected heresy of one of their number senr me', Who auffcred for us, and
prornpted the composition of the creed (cum in sus~icionem rosc agaín on thc third day and as-
i~cnissetunus ex ~pistuptjquod p a r a ~scnlired). If this j t, the cendcd to hcavcn, and sat d o m nn
ihc Fatber's right hand. and will
gurlty man may wel1 Irave been Theophronàus a, for come a g i n with g 1 0 ~ and powcr to
~ h emain tcndency of she creed is antiSabeiiian anci anti- j u d v Iivinq and dcad;
SIarçeHan. It is a long, rambIinq docurnent, having as a basis And ín &e Holy Spirit, I\'ha is giwn
to be1ism f.ir camfort and sancti-
a typical Eastern baptismal confession greatiy expanded ~4th c a ~ o nand initiation. as ako our
biblical phrastses oF theologiçal import and teminating in a Lord Jrsus Chnsr cnjoined His dis-
group oF anathemas. There is an ancient tradition that the ciplts, sayinq, 'h, tcach alI natinm.
baptizkg thcm in thc namc of the
creed of Lucian of rlntioch underlies this formula, and the Father and oí rhc Son and nT the
possibility that it has some link with him çannot be dis- Holy Spirit', i.c. of a Fathtr M'lio
missed.2 Our creed runs : iu truly Fatlim, and a Son M'ho i s
truly Son, and of tlie Holy Spirit
Agrceabiy witli Lhe evangelic and Wha is truly Woly Spirit, the narntil
apostolic t'raditiún wc beliwc Ls one not being ~ i v e nwithaut meaning ar
G d t h Father almighty, thecreator effect, but dtnoting accurately thr
6TCuovWóv~cum; not7+v rai rpvom'v. and rnaker and provider of the peculiar suhistcnce, rank and glory
ifo 6 r i rávra. unirrcrsc, from 12-hom are all thirigs; nf cach that ir named, so that thcy
liai CIF &a AKfjp(ov'I~aoÚvXpxpro~ó~,I& .Lnd in one h r d Jesus Christ, His Son, are threc in ~ u b i s t t õ r e ,and ont in
~l:&r, &t 76" pot.OYFy &&v, SL' 06 -ri only-kyotten God, throuqh 1I"hom a - m e n t.
d w a , r ò v yrwil8itro np6 r& dúww arc all things, IVho was kgoiien T a h p oi5. +mrr n j v n:orrv, ira; i( Holding then this faith, and holding ir
roü narpós, Priiv & O~roü,ZAov 3 &L., bcrore the ages from the Fatlier, G& -r * a ; p i X p +<%v5 +WCS. *wf. fmm the M i n n i n g ro the end. Yi thc
@LPV ~ÓIPV, ~;.!cwI' K
: T&OL*, fmm &c?, whoIe from wlio2e, wle -roV BcoC na; roV Xjxnrit ~üurir a:pr+i*?i' sight oTGod and oFChristn,c anathc-
@arnXla<K fiouhjWr, O& inrp~ot; Srom d e . perfect from perfcct, K& rrli&!;ai. 6vrn8cp~;íopn.. *a; f i rir matize çi-try hcrctical hctcrdoxy.
A+v <&ma, d i a v 5c;Qav. .L$- from King, Lord from b r d , liring =+i 4, &I+7;. yp& Q@+r 4miv And if anyonc trachts contrary to tlic
811,ó,,ÓGv, d j d ~ r a s%
. i & m u wzarpim.
, Il'ord, Iiving \Vidom, truc Light, S i G 0 ~ 1hiyw, i x & ~ v $racp9v ja:Gm wwnd and right faith of the Srríp
@irpai; órp~rr8r.rr irai ~ P ~ M o L3 j ~3 ~ I : \\ay, Truth, Rcsurrcction, Shep- 4 c l v u r 4 yvyci&i -6 mV ?O-- m, that time or season m apr:
Br6qrw QUULQ~ +e ~ a Bouhjr ;
S w L ~ w rrtd S ô b r mü na+pdr &ma-
xoi had, Doar, unalterablc and un- @vai. &v L,:&, dd8rpa Zmw. KU; <: either is or has bcen before the gmci -
chnngable, exact Xmage of the God- +L< A+t 7 8 u víòv uriwpa &r êir r& ation of tIic Snn,let him be anathernrr.
p á M ~ m o vrlnóva, +;v rpwró+omv r ú q s htad, substance, will, v e r and rswpárwv ? y i v q u a &s ;v r& yyrv- Or if anyone iay that the Son is a
I

VccStAthan.,Dcsyn, 23 (PbG.26,721 R.); StHii.,Dcsyn. 29 (P.L. ro,502 e.).


J Y&TWY 4 n o l ~ p aAs r& noc~pritwv, creahirc as ont of the creaturtn, or
ai fi? &r a i B c L ~ Lypa$at anpa8&w~riv an oíTupring as one of the offsprings,
For a full discussion, sec G. Bardy, R~chcrclrcssur saint Lucisn d'Antiochc, Paris, TWV X ~ O ~ L ~ ~ ~; Z KYU W
~ WY6 6 ;,emu, or a werk as onc of tht works, and
'.936,05 ff. not as the divine Scrip- havc
j r l TL PMo 8t8Úunrr rj &ayycA;(rrar
THE DEDICATION COUMCIL 271
* 7O THE AOE OF SYNODAL CIèE.EDS I

which Eusebius of Caesarea had put forward at Nicatal and


nnp' u" naptAÚ,!?oCcev, B i e t g Zww.

6nd
~ci~Scão~&m s TC
~

npa+tir
$pc;s
yip r i v i *o?< da r&w BeEwv y p $ r j v
ai
handd down the aforcsaid articics
one aftet aaother, or if he teachcs
or p r e a ~ h etmidcs
~ what we havc
1 which he l a t a repeated specfically against MarceIlus.2 The
latiter had taken Asterius the Sophist, the disciple of Lucian,
& ~ m d h&Air&v&
~ v +e K U ~i p q 3 8 f i ~ n i remived, let him be anathema. For
mmfiopw x a ; droAov80Gpcu. a11 that has b m n handd down in task for precisdy this teaching.VThe string of descriptive
thc d i h c Scriptums, whcthct by rases from the Bible IWD FRQM COD . . . GXACT IMAGE),
pmpheb or a p t l u , we do tmly
and revcmtly beliwe and ioIIow. : to mention a nurnber of other passages, is strongIy rerninis-
This formula, the authentic creed of the council, is remark- cent of language which Asterius had used and h4arcellus had
able for the light it throws on çurrent controversies as well as vigorously denounced.4 Marcellus had asserted that such ti tles
as "exact image of the Father ", "Life'", " Way ", " Resurrec-
on the general theoIogical position for which the Eusebian
parpr was fighting. The intensely Scriptural tone is unmistak- tion", rcD~or'', etç. belonged only to the inearnate Christ,S

able. Not onlly is its doctrine expressed as far as possible by whereas the creed pointedly applies them to Him in His pre-
extracts from the Bible, but the sipatofies tbemselves clairn incarnate state. Positively ir has a rnarkedly Osigenist flavour,
biblical authority for their teaching and osmçize aZI who ,
.
.c d e e d its use of Col. r , 15 shom. Ia guiding conception iç
a*,

praurne to deviate from the n a m w Scriptural path. Arianism of tliree quite separate hypostases, each possessing its own
proper is exduded, and the creed piles up descriptions 05 the subsiistence and rank and ~ l o r v ,but bound into a uni. by a
SOIIas WALTEMBLE ASD ~ C H A K G E A B L Eand m o WAS m m com1mon h m o n y of xvill. This reprduces exactly what
B E G ~ wmr G GOD, as well as putting a ban on sweral Arian
Origen had taught when he spoke 6 of the Father and she Son
domines in the concluding section of the anathemas. Z t will as bcing "mo things in subsistence, but one in agreement and
be recailed, however, that Arius had had a sense of his own hamony and identity of wili (&a SÚo n j 6nomdu~tT&-
whiçh he was prepard to put upon U N A L T E ~ L EAKD UN- para, S i T$J Opi.oCI KQZ 717 ovP&ui~La ~ a l rawóqrr TOV
CHAPUGEABLE, Moreover, the -4rians could have quite m i i y
/ I o ~ h < ~ r n'st) i Kothing çould be more opposed than this
hierarchicaiIy construaed Trinity to the Monarchianisrn
got mund such a dacription as A C R E A ~ - R EAS OXE OF THE
G R F . A ~ E S , for tht pnidtnt f o m of h e i r teaching was h a t
recently appzoved at Rcime and represented in its extreme
the Son, whiEe a creature, was a perfect one and aot like other form by IiarceElus. The qmod was working with a theology
çreatures.1 In fact, there are severa1 points of resemblance which, wkle by no means sytnpathetic to Arianisrn, was
between this ctttd and the fomulary whích Arius and Euzoius franldy pre-Xcene in its tone. In expressing thernselves thus
submitted to Constantine to secure their rehabilitation. it must not be assumed that the bishops werc consciously antí-
As regards the anathemas, the addition of mim OR SE.~SON Yicene. St Athanasius himself considered it politic at this
on AGE robbed the Nicene ban of much of its force, period to ernploy other t e m s than the hornoousion. They
seeing that the Arians wtre ready to concede that the resented, and probably sincerely, any insinuation that rhey
creation of time and the ages was to be attributed to the were undermining the Nicene decisions, and they re-echoed,
Word. admittedly in a weakened form, the Nicene sentence on
In its main drift, however, the creed is violently anti- Arianism.
A fourth syrnbol is traditionally connected with the
Sabellian, anti-Marcellan. This comes out forcibly in the exe-
gesis attached to the baptismal cornrnand of Mt. 28, r g. With See his lettei to his church.
its insistence on the separation of the three hypostãses and on Con. Marcel!. I , i (Klw termann TV, 4).
the fact that they are not just three names, it re-echoes teaching a Cf.Fragg. 65; 7 2 ; 74 (Klostermann IV, 197 ; 198; 199).
1 Cf.Frag. 96 (Uostermann IY,2 0 5 r.}.
I

Cf. Arius's formal proieasion sent to St Alexander and rcproduced by St I Cf. Frnx. 43 (Kloõtemann IV, 1 9 9 ) .
Athan., De m, 16 P.E,26, 709): Opitz, Urk. 6, Con,Cels. 8, 1 2 (Koetrchau T I , 299 f.),
272 THE AGE OF SYh'ODAL CREEDS THE DBDLCATION COUNCIL 273
Dedication Council, though its acha1 oripin is somewhat to Gaul by the hands of four of theit nurnber (Narcissus af
obscure. Its t e ~ tas
, given by St Athanasius and Socrateç,T runs Xeronias, Maris of ChaIçedon, Theodore of Heraclea, and
as foilows : Mark of -4rethusa) and delivered to the emperor Constans (he
ITLmúpw d s &a &bv. m&pa 1í-a- lVe icbrlirve in one çnd, the Father uas orthodox in the Athanasian sense) at his court at Trhes.
rpko,pa, r i q v xa; rmt* TA almiehty, creator and m a k a oi ali ~ocratestells rhe more picturesque s t o v that the four envoys
nuvxua: C[ oi n2ua a a i p k i r - oipiiiLc thinp, fmrn ll%orn cvcry farnily in ~ h ohad been sent to the West with the official creed of thc
nu; id r;";. dwG5trai. hmirn and earth is nsmcd;
Kai rir r& p o v o y d a h o ü v&, &v And in His only-begattcn Som our Lord Dedication Gouncil conçealed it at the Iast moment in their
m t p ~ o+@v~ ' J ~ u n hX p ~ ó v v,;"
, vpd Jcsus C k s t , Who was bcgotten from çlothes, and delivered this one, of their rrwn cornposition, to the
n ú i r w v ~ ú i vaiúvwv z'u T O ; xerpGç yw- thc Fatber before all agra, Cod from empcror. It rçmains a rnystcry what prompcecl this strange
~ O ~ X T UBrdv, i u Bcoü, d r j s ;u $mó; S t God, light from light, tlirough Whom
ob Eyiveso 7& aárru, i v TO:? O A ~ ~ W L Ç ai\ things carne into bcing, in heaven emtiassy of Eastern prdates to the Augustus of the West :
ai i r ; r$s y$s, 7; $parti ~ ar& : 2ÓPa~a, snd on earth, visiblc aiid invisible, Socrates's confused explanation that it was in response to
hdyov &ir xui oo.$iav uni S w a p r v ual bcing Word and Wsdorn and Power Constam's own requesc for further information about the
[w$v ~ a$&li l d 7 S ~ ~ & ~, Ò ir'
Y tOXÚ7wv and Life and tnie Light, Who in the
+WY jW@v St' SpZs Ili.nv8pwlrjwvr~ last days bemuse of us bccame m a deposition of St Athanasius and Paul of Constantinople scarcely
itd y ~ 8 t 5 mt~c+r LyLap sropF&ov, and was h m fmm rhc holy líirgLi, r i n g s true, Frobably E. Schwartz was right in discerning in
7 i v omupui@&a *a; d n o 8 w ' n u m; M'ho --ai rmdfied aad dicd and was the delegation a rnanoeuvre on the patt of the East to satisfy
7a&ra moi Z I P ~ Y I;K ~ ITK&Y rj buricd, and sase again from the dead
7 p i Ijplpo.
~ rd6w)t+Oira C;P oGPmPv, on the third d z y , and u-as takcn up Constans that a general council (for m-hich the ltktern emperor
KC~; K U ~ C & & ~ &J &e.fr+ 705 ~ Q Y & , I Cd iw hcaven, and rat do-TI on thc was pressing, but. which thcy were n x i o u s to avoid) was un-
~ P X ~ ~ F I& D-r:Ymwrt.klçr0Ú &SVE ~ p i m Fsther's ri# hand, and will camc
5i;i~ns Ka; wirpai~ rrni ri&fi-m
necessary. LAt anl-rate the intrinsiç chasacter of the formula-
a t the end af thr age rn judge Iiving
i ~ c b - rKU=-6
~ r& +a ,
a 0: 4 and drad and to reyard cach accord- suggests an attempt at rapprochement between East and JVest.
@awd~~~La & d n m m o r o& GtwIvr~ inq to his rvorks, Ib'hosc rei- is un- For the most part it has the air of being an old-façhioned bap-
ri$ TO& ZmLpow ~ G V U TZ*n m c y 2 ~ ccilsing and abides for cndlcss ages;
na@i[óprwis & 6e.f~$ roC xmlw;ç ou
tismal creed. It abstains from Iaying down the Iaw on tht
for He wiii be sítting on t hc Father's
pávrir & roj a&bt ~ 0 0 i r & ~ , Iai& & T,+ ríght hand not only In this age but separateness of the divint hypostases, and t he questionable
~tiMowc. a!so in the coming onc : formulae of Asterius. have disappeared. It does not, of course,
Kai F:P 76 mcCpu TÒ JYIOV,T O - ' ~ L TÒV And in the Holy Spirit, that is the
T ~ ~ ~ K A ~O 'TH EQ~ ~v ~, T u ~ ~ c ~ % ~707s w s l'araclete, Whom Fie scnt as He
mention the hornoousion, but there was nothing provocative
iro&Aots p ~ +?v d FZF o i p o w k a h ü prornised to the Apostles after His about such reticence. The condemnation of Arianism is much
~ V O ] O V d.irr'rn<dc ScBQac a&& xai asecnt to heavcn to tcach them and more outspoken, and from the Westerri pojnt of view much
i.nop@nus mLvre, Si' 08 ual 6yta.T- to rcmind them of a11 ~ h i n pthrough
,
fievvrac d TGY rihtup~dr E;$ ~MÒY Whom also the souls of whoac whe
more satisfactorv, than anything that had appeared in the
~ ~ . ? W K & Wk Y a'. hai-Cs L i m l y klicvcd in Him w-dl other formularim. The insistence in the anathemas that the
T& ãi A b m s 2.f os* S.*wv 4~&i, i
ht sanctified. Son had m3 t come into existente out of nothinq, and that He
hrIhDSC,,.hO caY htthe son is fmm wais not of another hypostasis but from God, cut the ground
<f i7.+~%im o m ú u i ~xai pij mG nathing, orisfrom mother hyxwtasis
PFoV, KU; ?v 707~X&~DS &c o& +-, and ís not from Gid, and rhat t h m frotrn unde ..
t any h d of Xriani~m.On the other hand, the
&Uurpíoz~o& 4 ne801tmi &irdif&. was a time w h m Nc wss not, thc authors fels free to let thernselres go in thejr onslaught on
3farcdlus, whose doctrine of the Lunited reign of Ghrist was
St Athanasius" account of the matter is that, some months repudiated with unusual thoroughness. As a theological state-
after they had published their first three formulae, the bishops ment it differed substantially from the official creed of the
felt dissatisfied with their work, and being indecisive in mind council, and if passions had noo been so excited and if the issue
drew up yet a fourth statement of fizith. This they despatçhed had not bten complicated by theologically irrelevant factom,
it might not have proved so unpalatabie to the West.
Gcsch. dfhn. I X (Nothrkht.Gft.Igr I , 514 E).
2 78 2'HE AGE OF SYNODAL GREEDS FROM SERDICA TO JIRMIUM 279
the Son is one and the same as that of the Father. Yet the Fathcr his policy to uphold the Nicene syrnbol as the sole authoritative
and the San are not identical. "We do not say that the Father çriterion of orthodoxy. On the other hand, it is cvident that the
is the Son, or again that the Son is t h e Father: the Father is Eustathians of Antiorh to whom St Athanasius wrote about the
Father, and the Son of God is Son.'"~ Logos o£ the Father, the creed supposed that i t was the symbol of the counçil. Theodoret
Son is His powçr (SGvaptç) and wisdom (uo&a). Tlie techni- was of the same opinion.1 Mareover, we have a letrer2 from
cal terms employed by 3Iarcellus were studiously avoided, and Ossius to Pope Julius assuring hirn that the çreed was not
it was mcn asserted against hirn that " the Son reigns endlessly intended to dethrone the Nicaenum. It is odd that he should
ir-ith the Father, and His kingdom has neither t e m nor passing- have taken the trouble to wTjte such an apoloiry Por a formula
a w q " , The theolo,p, nevertlieless, betrdyed his iduence at the which was of a pureh private nature and which the s ~ o had d
cmcial pointç. The Father, it waç conceded, is greater than che deliberately decjded not to endorse. The m e account of the
Son, but "not because He is another h p o s t z i s or in any way matter is probatilu git-en by the historian Sozemen.3 Accordinp
diRerent, but because the name oF Father k superior to that of to hirn, the çreed fomed, despite the embarrassrnent it was later
Son'" The explanation that They are one in t-irtue ofharmonv to cause to St Athanasius, an authentic part of the enq-c1içaI
of 1411 ( S r A r;lv ~ ~ ~ & r . L oK vC ~ +v ópóvorav), the formula letter. Ossius and Protogenes thought it advisable to write to
bonrowed from Origen b?-the Seçond Creed of h t i o c h , ' tms Pope Julius in case he should suspect them of being disloyal to
stigrnarizcd as ùlasphernous and corrupt. But d e way in whic11 Sicaea, and &e defeace they pleaded was that thcy ~vanted,
They are separatc Persons in any çomprehensibIe sense was for the sake of clarity, to give a fuller exposition of 5 . 4
not made clear. Two more crceds fall to be mentioned here as belonging to
This was, it must be obtious, an extreme and highlv provo- thi phase of the great dopmatic controversy, both of them the
cative statement, and the abusive Ianguage in which it i v a s handiwork of the Eastern par.. The first O€ them, the famous
couched did not render it any more acceptable. In itself the Ecthenr Aiocrosrkhas, or Long-lined Creed,s was carried to
theology involvcd was di fficult enough for e\-en moderate men Milan in 34j by four bishops charged with the task of expIain-
in the Eastern camp to tictv with sympathy, but it finally ing the Eãstern theological standpoint to their \%'estern çol-
darnrned the door in their face by corning dorvn deçisiveIy in Ieagues and the emperor Comtans. The tide had meantime
favour of the formula "one hypostasis". There has been much been flowlng in favour of St .4thanasius, and Çonstantius him-
debate as to how far it çan fairly be decribed as the official self had been sho~vinghim and his supporters unwonted favour.
creed of the council. AI1 agree that it tvas probably the com- Nanirally enough, therefore, the creed breathed the spirit of
position of Ossius and Protoqenes, but the general opinion has appeasement. Composed probably at Antioch, it consisted of the
been that the synod never in fact stanped it with its official formula of PhilippopoEis, i.e. the Fourth Creed of the Dedicã-
approval. I e wanted to do ço, hut St Athanasius, who apprt- tion Counçil aIoag with the additioeal anathemas,s expanded
ciated its firebrand character, persuaded the majority to he to severa1 times its original size by eight elucidatory paragraphs
content with the R'icene creed, Xut the chief authority for this addressed to Western churchmen.7 The most noteworthy featurc
version of the affair i s St Athanasiusz hirnself. He was writing of these was the scrupulous avoidance of the miçleading and
a t a time (362) when much in the Serdican creed was distinctly contentious words hyposta~M and ousia and of the Formula, so
embarrassing to him (its insistente on "one hypostasis " did
not square with tbe dccisions oF the synod of Alexandria re- Hisi. eccl. 2, 8, 53 (Parmentier, I 18).
I n the collection of Thedosius the Deaçon (P,L. 5Gi 839 1.).
garding the iise of fpFostasis and ousia), and when it had become HisfaeccL. 3, 12, 6 {P.G.,67, 1065).
See thc discusion by I?. Loofs in T h ~ & c l uStidian uiid Krifikdn, r 909, 29 r ff.
S c t above, p. 269 ; 2 7 1 . See S t Athan.,Dcsy. 26 ; Socrat., Hist. cccl. I
, rg (P.G.26, 28 E.;67, 224ff.).
* Tom. ad dtrii~cli.5 (P.G. 26, 800). Sec above, pp. 272 and 276. X
7 For tmt cL Ha n 359.
286 THE AGE OF SYNODAL CREEDS
I THE TRIUMPH DF AKlANISM 287
one shodd prr:ach thenn, for the nd that tIiey urc suspicious staternents about the Son's subordjnatirin, and i t
not contained in inspiired S c r i ~ 'e the subject is even hints that, as opposed to the impassibility OS the Father,
beyond the knt>wledge c,f man, a e can e qilain the nativity
.. -
of the Son, regarding Whom it ia ,. ,, ihail explaili His
tGl,$%nr

generation?" For it is plain that ody the Father knows how He


He was in some way passible through association with the rnan
Jesus. We may note the significarit façt that, while every creed
bcgat the Son, and the Son how H e was begoeen by the Father. of the central Eastern party de~ised sincc the Dedication
There i s no qucstion that the Father is the greater. For it can bc Council had contained anathemas of Arianism as a rnatter of
doubtful to none ihat the Father is g-reazer than the Son in honour, çourse, such anathemas are for the first time conspicuously
I
dignity, splcndour, majesty, and in the very name of Father, the absent here. The Kicene tvatchward, while noi declased false,
Pon Hirnself testiíying, "He Who sent M e is greater than 3." And I is put under a ban, as one might expect in n thoroughly
no one i s ignorant ttiat it is Catholic doctrine that there are t ~ o I Anornoean formula. The FinnisIr scholar J. Gurnrnerus gave
Persons of rhe Father and the Son, and that the Fathcr is greater an accurate estimate of its character whcn he wrotc' : "'1S7ithout
and tht Son suhrdinated to tIie Fathcr, tqether uitli a11 thosr directly preacIiing Arianism, tbe formula was an edict of
thngs which tlic Fathei. lias subjected to HLmw3f; and thar tlic
Father has no hqioning and is in\<siblc, immortaI and impassilile, 1 tolerante in its fa\-our, \*-Me the biçene p a r v found itse1f
exduded from that tolerãnce." The Sicene creed, towards
Imt tliat the Son lm bern begotten from the Father, C;od from God,
light rrom light, and that ihe gcneration o l this Son, as has drcady
whiçh a11 sections ofthe Church had hitherto obsewcd a comcct
lxen said, no one knows except H k Father. .4nd that the Son 01' and tactful attimde, suddenIy found itsclf declared unortho-
God Himself, our Lord and G d , as w-e read, took flesh or body, dox and unlawful. Oaius of Cordoba, one of the original
that is, man, from the tvornh of the Virgin l i a 3 as the angel fore- psomotors of T,now an aged rnan, was present at tiie synod,
told. And as ai1 the Scriptures teach, and especially the Apostle, the nnd the framers oof the "Blasphemy", in thcir eagemes
doctor of the Ientiles hirnself, He took h m the k-irgLxi hhry man- to arm their çreed .rt+ithas much psestiqe ns possible,
h d , through d i c h H e shard in suffehg. The whole faith is did not scrupieQo foire lllm to attaçh his siqnature to
summed up and is securcd in this, that the Trinity rnust alwags bc I it too.
preserved, as we rcad In the gospel, "G, baptize aü nations in the Put forward as a formula oF peaçe (sucli thc emperot iiaively
name of thc Father and oi" the Son and of the HoIy Spirit." Com- supposed it might prove), thc Second Creecl of Sirrniurn was
plete, perfeci is rhe nulnlier of the Trinitv. But the Paraclete, the " a trumpet which was heard from one end of the empirc ao
Spirit, is througli t l ~ eSon: Ne was sent and carne according to thr
promi! :o instruct, ~ c a c hand sancti+ the apostles and a11
the othet".J In the Jrest it raised an imrnense stir, beinç a
helievi t'Cresterndocurnent composed in the main by \Vestem bishops,
and the resuIt W ~ aS strengthening of the position of the Nicene
'fie mos[ noteit.orthy things about this creed are its extra- rreed. Sliortly- aftenvards, for exarnple, we find Plioebadius of
ordinary cmphasis on the oneness of God the Father, nnd its Agcn clescnbing the latter as " 'the perfect ruIe sf Catholic
explicit prohibition of the use both of AomooiLsros and homaiowios. faith " , 4 and attacking the " Blasphemy ", A Gallic çynod
St HiIary shrewdly observcd that the fomer af these points attacked it too about the same time, and formally condemned.
was made at the cxpense of the full divinity of the Son, and i t . 6 In the East the effect of the publication of tlie Sirrnian
went on to point out that the agnosticism professed rcgarding manifesto, with the contemporaneousernergence of the extrerne
the Son's generation left ihe door open to believing that Hc teachings o£Aeths and Eunamius (the leaders af lhe Anomoean
was borii either from nothing or from some other substance
than God the Father. It is M e wonder that Eie described thc 1 Dic AomSurianiscAa Partes' bis ;um Tode des Koii~lnnriw,Leipzip, igoo, 57
Sozom., Hisf. % 67, 1 1 2 1 and 1144).
, c.! 4 , 6 and 1 2 (P.G.
documenf as " the blasphemy7"1 Apart from this, it is full of 3 H, M. Gwatkin, Studies of Arianisin, 2nd ed., Gambritlt~c,i 900, i 62,
' COR.Ar. 6 (P.L.20, 1 7 ) .
6 St Hil., Desyn. n and 8 (P.L, 10,481and 485).
288 THE AGE OF SYNODAL CREEDS
THE TRfUMPH OF ARIANISM ~~9
party), was to open the'eyes of the great body of central church- mitted to both councils for their discussion and, it was hoped,
men or " Serni-Arians" to the rnenaçe involved in the new, approval : I
more virulent Arianism. A crisis meeting was held at Ancyra in We beIieve úi one only and true G d ,
358 under the chairrnanship of Basil, the local bishop, and the "C"", the Father alrnighty, creator and
sfly framer of ai1 things ;
reaction was vividly expressed in the synodal Ietterl which Kui EL! And in one only-bcgotten Son of God,
announced its decisions. While failing to rnention Nicaea and 7tp& , Who was begotten impazsítily from
dov;; God More a11 ages and before all
ir1 fact condemning hornoousios (the word, they pointed out,
beginning and before a11 conceivable
had been rejected by the council which sentenced Paul of time and bcfore ali comprehensible
Samosata), the Semi-Arians were outspoken in their hosiiIity eswnce, through Whom the ages
were fashioned and a11 things carne
to the Anomoeans and insisted upon the doctrine that the San into existence, begotten only-be-
was like the Father in substance ( 6 p ~ ~ ~j .ÚWhen
u ~ ~ delegates
s gotten, alone from the Father alone,
of the synod of Ancyra, Ied by Basil, made conract with Con- God from God, like the Father Who
begat Him ãccording to the Scrip-
stantius at Sirmium a littie later in the samc ycar, they suc- tures, Whose gcneration no one
ceeded in winning him over to sympathy with the Serni-Arian, knows save only t!ie Fathes Who
or homoeousian, standpoint and obtained his agreement to begat Him. We know that this only
begottcn Son of God, at the Pather's
the drafting of a formulary refleçring it, the so-called Third bídding, carne from beaven for the
Creed of Sirrnium.2 This consisted of the First Creed of Sir- abolitiou of sin, and was b r n from
mium (i.e. the second creed of the Dedication Council with tbe Virgin Mary, and consorted
with the disciples, and fulfitled all
anathemas directed against Paul of Sarnosata and Photinus) the economy according to tlx
augmented with a number of anathemas whlch figured in the Fathm's will, was crucified and died,
Ancyran Ietter. and descended to hell, and regutted
things there, Whom the gatekeepers
Flushed with his success and çonfident of being abIe to steer a of hell saw nnd shuddered, and rosc
course between the Anomoean teaching and the troublesome again from the dead on the third day,
homoousion, Basil of Ancyra now pressed the emperor to and consorted with the disclples, and
surnrnon a general council wkich rnight legislate a find settle- fulfrlled all the economy, and when
forty days were completed was taken
ment. After some changes of plan and consequent delay, which up to beaven, and sits on the right
the Anomoeans skilfully exploited so as to recover much of the hand of the Father, and will come
on the 1 s t day of the resurrection
ground they had lost, Constantius granted his request, but the with the glory of the Father, render-
dénouement proved, as the creeds which we shall now consider ing to each according to his deeds;
will show, very different from whttt Basil had expected. The Ka: E ~ ST Ò áymv m<U,uu, d UWÒF d And in the Holy Spirit, Whom the
p O v o y 4 ~705 &03 'Iitfl06~xplUTd~ Only-begottcn of God, Jesus ChriSt,
arrangement which Constantius fcnalIy sanctioned, at the sug- Himself prornised to send to the race
2Tw~lhani nkpJa4 r+ +L TWW
gestion ofthe Anornoeans, was that two paralIe1 caunciIs should &8+wva TÒV n a p & ~ A l y o vi,c a ~ i76 yc- of men, the Paracrete, as It is written,
be held, one of the Western church at Rimini on the Adriatic ypapplvov n i ~ 4 p x ~npds p ~ trdv r u ~ i p a ' I go to My Father, and I shall pray
p u ai n a p a ~ d d u wTQV warlpa, ml the Father, and He will send you
coast of North Italy, and another of Eastern bishops at the sea- ! ;.&v n a p á ~ ~ q ~n&&ir
ov Upb, 78 another Paradete, the Spirit of
board town of Seieucia in Cilicia. Meanwhile, in May 359, a me+a 7fr &TOrl~s' 2urlvor &c TO^ truth: He shall take of Mine, and
small cornmittee met at Sirmium and, in the emperor's presente, ~'~$,~€T K uUL~A~Ú&LK U ~& T o ~ V S U € L shall teach and remind you of a11
drafted the following formulary as a working basis to be sub- ;C"s +?áv*cr#. things.'
In St Athm., De y.8 (P.G. 26, Ggz C ) . Socrates, in Hisa. PCCE. 2, 37 ( P , G . 67,
See St Epiptian., Pan. hner. 73, 2-1 I (Holl 111, 26g28q). '
Cf. Sozomen, lfisl. ecc]. 4, I 5 (P.G. 67, I I 5 2 ) . ! reports that the original was Latin.
>.C.-I0
2Q0 THE AGE OF SYNODAL CILEEDS THE TRIUMPH OF ARIANISM 2g1
But whereas thc term 'substance' has
been adopted by thc fathers in sim-
- si1 of Ancyra and his influential party would have liked to
plicity, but being unknown by the ve seen LIKE J N SUBSTANCE sanctioned, but had to be
people givcs offençe, because neither Ilent with LIKE IN ALI. THINGS. At l e a t that went further
do the Scriptures contain it, it has ciidn Valens and Ursacius wanted, with their belief that the
seemed good to rcmove it, and that
there should be no further mcntion Son was like the Father "in will and energy", but unlike Him
o f substance in regard to God, be- in subsrançe. When it carne to appending their signatures, the
cause the divine Scripturm nowhere leaders of the severa1 groups could not conceal their dis-
refer to the çubstancc of tht Father
ar the Son. But we say the Son is likt gruntlement. Valens, we are told, tried co write simply LIKE,
the Father i n ai1 thing, as the holy leaving out IN ALL THINGS, and had to be pulled up by Con-
Scriptuces themselves declare and , the copy which Vdens was to take to
stantius. Basil, t o ~ in
tmçh.
Rirnini with him, added a lengthy postscript expounding his
Because of the elaborate dating prehxed to it ("in the con- own interpretation of the creed and emphasizing that the Son
sulate of the most illustrious FIavians, Eusebius and Hypatius, was like the Father "in a11 things, and not just in wili, but in
on the eleventh day before the calends of June"), this creed, hypostasis and in existente and in substance".'
the Fousth of Sirmium, became k n o m , rather sardonically, as This creed appears again, in 'a dress slightly but significantly
the Dated Greed. Its critics thought it ridiculeus to suggest that altered so as to bring it more into harmony with the taste of
the Catholic faith could be datcd.1 The final drafting of it is VaEens and Ursacius, as the forrnuIary signed on ro October,
supposed to have been the work of Mark of Arethusa. It seems 359 in the Thracian town of Nicé by a delegation of Western
to have been bâsed upon a baptismal creed of thl: conventionai bishops from the council sitting at Rimini.2 This crowded
pattern, although the alterations and interpolations have com- stssembly (over four hundred bishops are said to have attended)
pletely disrupted the ground-plan. Some feitures in the under- had shown itself ardently Homoousian, had acclaimed the Nicene
lying text hint at a kinship with the creed of Antioçh. Such creed and rhe use of "substance'" had deposed and excom-
-=inicated
1 111 Ursacius, Valens and their caadjutors, and had sent
AGES WERE FASHIONED, etc. recall t l ~ cvery similar terminology an embassy to Constaniius to acquaint him with their decisions.
employed in the symbol quotcd in Latin by John Cassian.2 TI?ie emper or, as we can appreciate, was by no means pleased
Again, this crecd stands out as being the first to give oficial . :. J..-
. . _ ~ r : 1nis
th: . L
uraft Homoean creed had been so hastity brushed aside.
recognition to the Descent to Hell, But its reaI importance is The emoys were directed to Nict, where they were gradualíy
theological. It was a mediating manifesto, designed as far as worn down by the protracted delay as well as by the propa-
passible to please everybody, and it gave expression to the new ganda and threats to whiçh they were subjected.~ventualIy,
" Homoean " formula of compromise proposed by Acacius of contrary to their instructions, they consented to sign a revision
Caesarea and accepted by the ernperor-LIKE rN ALL R=- of the Dated Creed, which was now put forth as "Nicene".
P E C T S ~ ~strictly
~ avoided technical terms. The "orthodox", Most of the alterations were purely verbal and of little come-
it was thought, could noce with satisfaction that it proclaimed quence. Of greates moment, however, as betokening a sub-
the Son's generation in a way incornpatible with Arianism. stantial weakening of the draft creed agreed at Sirmium, were
The new Arians for their part could congratulate themselves (a) the omission of rrI ALL THINGS With LIKE, and ( h ) the pro-
that the use of ousia, and withit the homoousion, was condemned : hibition not only of ousia but also of 'bon hypustasis" in the
the Son could not be described even as LIKE IN SUBSTANCE.
1 For th-c details, see St Epiphan., Pm. Iusr. 73, aa (HoU III, 295).
U.St Athan., De gn.3 (P.C.26, 685). a For text see Theodoret,Hist. wI. 2 , 2 I , 3-7 (Parmentier, 145f.) ; Hahn 164.
Sec abow, p. 184 f. St Hil., &a$. h&. 8, 4 (P.L. 10, 701 E).
52 g2 THTs AGE OP SYNODAL CREEDS THE TRIUMPR OF ARTANISM 293
doctrine of tlie Trinity I"nor of the prosdpun of the Father arid iole world graaned and wondereti to find jtself Arian (ings-
oi the Son and of the Holy Spirit must the phrase ONE HYPO- it t0tu.r orbis, et Arianum se esse m k tius 1
STASTS 13e used ") . From the official point of view, therefort:, tlie faitli cif the
The subscription of this çreed was a demonstration that the iurch was now Hornoean. To complete thc work, however,
Arians were cleverly exploiting the new Homoean compromiçe waç necessary to bring the decisions af the delegates of
to their own advantage. Meanwhile events were taking a not mini and Sdeucia before a great united counçil and obtain
dissimilar course at the paralld Eastem c o m d at Seleucia. The i ts final ratification for them. To this end a synod,z dominated
great rnajority were Hornoeousians, led b ~George
* of Laodicea, by Homoeans and çonsisting Iargely of bishops from Bithynia,
and wanted to endosse oficiaIIy the Second Crecd of the Dedi- was held in Constantinople In danuas. 360. Tlie fdlowing is
çation Council. Indeed, they ratified it at the second session the creed which it promu1gated:J:
(28Septernber) hehind closed doors, the minority of Rornoeans
li-e klicvc in one Gãd, iht Fathcr
led by Acacius hat-ing wivithdraltn. At the next session, alrni~hty.fmm IChom are all thinqs ;
however, on September the minori. returned and, with .\iid in the onIu k o t t r n Son ef G d ,
the imperial cornrnfssioner Leonas acting as their spekesman, 1\30wat bcqottcn from Gud bpforp
a11 a- and b f o r c all licyinniny.
put fonvard their creed.1 It opened trith a short preface whicli ihrough \Chorn all thinga carne into
declared that tlieg did not rejeçt the authentic faith publishcd y r p + i , ~ 64 ~opoyn$,pBm~ & PÓWU cxisirnm, v35ible and inririible. be-
ar the Dedication Çouncil, but that trouble had arisen since m ú -c+, Prdr in 8m6, Zpomv r& gottcn only-lxgottcn, alonc from tht
YC1~+va~ t m r p i md AS ypa- Father slnnc, God from God, tikc
then because of lhe words homoousios, homuiousioj, and anomoios. m&Òv
t h t Fathtr l\-ha k o t Him açcord-
o; +v y i i w w o L ~ E ; Y~ t & ~ ~ .
" JVe accordingly repudiate hornoousios and homoiowios as alien r i P+ B & ~ O ywnjwm~aMdv r m n j p . ing to the Scripturcs, 1 C h genera-
~
to Holy Sçriptuse, and we anathernatize anomoios." The doc- r o i h r oíSapm p v r v r j Brot tion no onc knows savt a!-c thc
n í P m m ü m p O S aapa).ry+- Fathtr f\*ho bcgoi Him. %\'c know
mine to be accepted waç that the Son was "&e the Father", ihat this only-knttcn Son c r i C&,
Par i*. r& ~ 6 p m & 6 s -r;Ypu=at.
as the -4postle had said of Him that He waç the image of the Ên; u u + J ~ t+s á,+s 4 mU the Faiha smdinq Him. a m c from
jnvisible God. Then folIowed their creed, which w a ~in effect B ~ m m; , yrny8;vm m-6- hravcn ss i t is ~ ~ i t tfor
mthe dtstruc-
*s r;o@&v 78 ~ a & tion of sin and dcath, and was b r n
the Dated Crecd of Sirmíum witk some minor alterations. The &&v. ;a
írom t h t HoIy Spirit, from thc T i g i n
oiprra & & p u m , itd Lrnrnp~+'i.ro
cmcial words IS ALI. T ~ G were,S however, omitted after LIKE. pni MF paapTWw, ~ u i& q g 7 j ~ Ma. as rcqards thc Rnh as it is
There fdlolved a protractcd debate as to what exactly was oi'iiwopls d r l p d c i u q r K& n j v nas- writttn, and consortcd with the
p n jp. fiúA7mv, m w & 8 7 0 & KOI-o- disciplcs, and haring fulfillccl alI the
implied by "like", and in the end Leonas dissoIved the çouncil cconcimy according to thc Fatfier's
%mYC;m r a & ~ a I(& ~ i r4 s URTU,~-
without the matter having been put finaIIy to the vote. Like BOpco r m r r ~ ) i v 8 & n , Cm~irirm; a h ò r will wns mcificd and dicd, and wss
the çouncit at Rirnini, both groups sent deIegations to thc i (+N, &&r ~ld Lid t u r i d and dexendcd to the lower
~ W wcpiiv
Y r p i q Gpipo ~ u SIi;TP(&E world (at ZZ'hom hell itsel~qriailcd):
emperor at ConstantinopIe to report their decisions, but
ptrB ~ Ü I YPni%pG~,KU; r A T p ~ @ ~ l u W v Who alro rosc a p i n from the dead
Constantius was determined that the Homoe~risians, no less r c u ~ n p i ~ o i - r o$prptüv &v&$499 on the third dav, and sojourncd with
than the Western Hornaousians, should sign his Homoean draft oCpavo8r rro: no#i(~rar i v & a [ i $ 706 tht disciples, and when lorty days
creed. After a Iong struggle lasting well into thc night he wrung ~ a + p ó r UNUÓ~NOS
, ;V 3 ?iq$q wcrr fulFiIlcd was taken up to beaven,
njc ~ W O T ~ & O S i u 6 ? T U T ~ L K8Ói9, ~ and sits on thc Fathcr's right hand,
their signatures from thcm on 31 December, 359.2 Thus thc i r a &mo6G : ~ & m w~ n r d TA Cpya a h o ú . purposing to come on thc last day
Hornoean victory was complete, and it was this sequence of of tIit rcsurrection in the i?ather*s
glory so as to render t o rach acçord-
events wIlich S t Jcrome liacl in mind when he wrote that " the ing io hiq dccci~.
CF.St. A t h n ~ i . Qc
, syn. 29;S ~ c r a tHist.
. ~ mcl. 2,40 (P.G. 26,744 f.; 67,337 ff.) ; DMI. con. L w ~ ,19 (P.L. 23, 172).
St. Fqiphan., Prin. harr. 73, 2 5 (HolE 111, 298 E). . 4, 24 (PJ.67, r r 8R r.).
For this synod, see Sozomen, H i ~ t cccl.
"r. Sozomeii, Nist, itcl. 4, 23 (P,G. 67, i 188).
?
3 Cf, St .\than., De gn. 30 (P.G. 26, 745 K).
=94 THE AGE OP SYNODAL CREEDS 'i'HE TRTUMPIí OF ARIANIYM 295
Kal rls 78 Úycov nucvpa, Ómp aMdr d And in thc Holy Spirit, U7hom thi: of the old heresy and explicitiy condemns Anomoeanism. Its
t t . 3 4 ~706 8 ~ 0 6VIAS O XPLG%& A onIy-begotten Son of God Himdf,
iriprop ~d B r d ~ +&v Anpyrficrro Christ our Lord and Gcd,promised deliberate vagueness, however, made it capable of being reçited
n i p m ~ vr+ yiijrr 7Wv i ~ @ ~ W r wm vp ú - to send as a Paraclete t o the race by Christians with very different sets oF ideas, Comprehension
K A ~ T O V ,X ( I B ~ T <y~d y p a v o i (17.i 7rucCfia
of men, as it ís written, 'The Spirit was Constantius's aim, and the term LIKE, without any qualifi-
dT8r:asli, &tp u i ~ o í s ír~p$cil of truth', Whom He sent to them
ÕTF ievijABm rls TO<* O & ~ ~ W W I Ç . when He had mcendd to heaven.
ration or addition, seemed better adapted to achieve this than
Ti 6) ómPa aioíoc, &tp &:Aoúm<por But as for tnhe name 'suhtance', which I question-begging phrases which were tied u p with elaborate
;rM 7Giu a a r i p w v &i&, Bj?.tiothnrii. 6; ivas adopted simply b!+ the fathen, 1 spstems of specdative theology. The creed tvas circulated to
70;s XUO;S u~u18doz'Idepe, 8rGrt pq&i but beiny u n b m t o the peopre
e; y&a; ~ o i c o acpiixovoiv, + p ~ a r ocwioned otrençe, hecausc the
all the bisbops of Christendom\vith an imperial lettcr command-
~repraipff+ai r o i noi.irA& pCLOSfrr;ai. Scripnues t h m r l v u do not contain ing them either to sign it or take the consequences.'
p j P ~ vr o t AeimaF y;lrírRab, hcifi$nrp it, it has pleased us r h t it should bc .4t this point our survey may be fittingIy brouyht to a dose.
~?1; 9 ; @tini yp&l oC6nP;F ;pqgó- aboiished and that no mrntion ar a11
It is not for a book U e this, devoted solely to the shidy of
r r w a v mp: oth;ac nmp8r h-o; ~;or:, ~(i;
y 6 p o i 8 i &arr & h a u i r m p ; -a;.&
uai V ~ O CK& BY;OV r v c $ p a ~ o cGr.ap8Çcc-
should be made of it henceforth,
>inceindecd the divüie S c r i p m no-
r\hcre h - c made rnention o l ttie
I
I credal fomulae and concerned only indirectly witli rhe hiatory
of doctrine, to trace the stages by which in the course of the
@ma. Õ p o r o ~&i Aiyopw 7@ a u y i ;.;v subsrance of Father and Son. Kor
Mòv I& d;F~.riti, a: B c k r ypada; rrai i n d e d shodà the term h y p t a s i s bc
next twenty years the 'iicene faith reasserted itself and made
LGuru~.mt. 114ea~ll*iit: (I;~<OC~Ca ; T C u d of Fathw and Son and Holy i t pmsible for a creed giving expression to the homoousian
.. ~pOlcpor~ a ~ c ~ $ & p aroi
ra1 r a i w í p r yBwvrac ; i m Í ( ~ i
v iiiriiug
-++
Spir:'. But we say the Son í s Iikc t h t
Father, as the dirine Scripnirw say
doctnne to oust and supersede rhe speciously neutra1 formula
ivwm .yjlr i m c P d q ~ ypndr;r, 3nd reach. But let a11 the h m i a
of Conszantinople.
Bwí@rt~o ioriwar.. which haix eithcr beoi condernned 1 (3f. *tu, Ktt- r&. 2,43 ; Sozorncn, Hiri. tcrl. 4,26 (P.G.67,gj 3 ;r 1g7).
pciiowlv, ur h a x z come aliout mure
rmently and arr: in opposition to this
mcd?h anarhcma.

This is the last of the long line of creeds promuigated in this


era so prolific in their rnanafacture. The spod which ratifid
it expressIy rejected a11 previous syrnbols, and forbade the
formdation of new ones in thc future. In itself the new creed
represented the complete triumph of that Homoean com-
prornise which attempted to drive a rnediatinq road bet~veen
the irreconcilable positjons of the Anomoeans on the one hand,
and of the Hornoousians and the Homoeousians en the other*
It is, af çourse, the cseed of Nicé, and so the Dated ~ r e e of d
Sirrnium, in a slightly altered dress. It became t h e oficial
formula of wi~sitwas henceforth t o be known as Arianism,
especially arnong the barbarians on the outskirts of the
empire. It was not for nothing that Ulfilas, t h e national bishop
of a colony of Goths established an the banks of the Danube,
whorn chance had broughc to the imperial city, shared in the
deliberations of the council. 1 Arianism, it will be appreciated,
is really a misnomer, for the creed asserts none of che articles
Cf. Socratcs, HiJt. CCC!. 2 , 4 1 ; Sozomen, Hirt. tccccl. 4, 24 (P.G. 67,349; I iBg).
THE TRADITION ABOUT C *g'f
CrGied Iiaving been publicIy read and acclaimed, tlie imperial
çonnrnissioners ordered " the faith of the I 50 fattiers" to bc
reald out too.1 The description they used was the one popularly
applied to the council of Çonstantinople of 38 r . Aetjus, the
arçlideacon of the capital çíty, immediately got up and recited
THE CONSTANTINOPOLITAN CREED documcnt. It again played a prominent
our creed from a w r i t t e ~
t at the fifth and sixth sessions,? on 22 and 25 October,
:n it Iras incorporated along with the Nicenc creed in the
BY far the most influential credal product ofthe fourth century inition adopted b?- thc council. On the latter oçcasion the
was the ~ermulawhich iç sometimes technically called the ueiinition ernbodying it was s i p e d , in tlie presence of the
Xiliceno-Constantinopolitan creed.1 Ordinary 4 IS are emperor Ma~cian,by the papal leqates and a11 the bishops
familiar ivith i t as the creed of the Holy Eirchar -e it L% present. The minutes, or acfa of tlie council of Clialcedorr,
rnisnarneci the Kiçene creed. Its hybrid Gtle curriu~iim the which S U ~ ~ YinC fd,tlius constitute our prirnary source for
..*a,

popular but erroncous tradition that it is none other than the the creed. The Greek text printed beIow, along ~ 4 t ha trans-
tme Nicene crecd enlarged with the theary, widely held since lati an, reproduces t h e cersion read out at the third session as
the middle cif the fifrh century at any rate, that the occasion it appears in the magisteriat edition of Eduard Scliu-artz.
of itç enlargcrnent was the second genera 1, held at Con-
stãntinople in 381. OF a11 etristing çreed e onIy one for {\é belicvc in oac God thc Father
alrniqhic, makcr of hcavn and
which ecumenicity, or universal accept;a+l~~, ~ a-i L- piausibly
it: -7-
u canh, of a11 things 1 isiblç and in-
claimed. L'nlike the purely JTestern A4postIesTreed,it war; viriblr ;
admitted as authoritative in East and JYmt ãlike from 45 r . h d in onc Lod Jcsus Christ, thc anly-
bmotrcn Son of God, bcpottcn from
onwards. and ít has retained that position, with m e sig-nificant the Farhcr More all ages, lieht From
variation in its text, right donm to t h ~ t da< 5Eo far light, truc r m d from rme Gcd, be-
piittcn not rnadc, of one srrbstance
from dispIacing i t, the Reforrnation r d its bi nding with thc Father, thraugh l\'Eiom all
character and gave it a new lease of IZe extendetd cur- t h i q carne ínto txictrnce,
renc): bv translating it into the vernacular tongum. It is thus hecausc of us mcn and becaux of
one of the few threads by which the tattered fragments of the aur sahation carne d o m from
heavcn, m d was inçarnate from the
divided robe of Christeridom are held together. Yet the circurn- HoIy Spirit nnd thc Virsiri Mary
stances of its composition and prornulgatlon, we31 as the and b r r a r n r man, and was crucified
courçc of its history, are far from clear. í t wiIl ble the bu siness for us iindct Pontrus Pilate, and
suffcrcd and was buricd, and roic
of this and the following chapter to at tempt ti3 unravt:I the agafn on thc third day iiccordinq ta
tangled skcin cif problems which they raisc. the Scripturrs a ~ i d ascended t u
First of aii, die origina! tcxt of the creed, known as C for heavril, and sits on thc right Irand
oi thc Father, and will come again
short, must be estabIiçlied. Ets first appearance, at a11 events with glory to judgc liivitig and dcad,
as an officialforrnulary, was at the council of Chalcedon (45 r ) . of Whosc kingdorn therc will be no
At tlie third session of the cozincil, on IO October, the Nicene cnd ;

The ?ame srprna io Iiavc Iieen First applied to it by Joh. Bencdikt Carpiinv
(Carpzoviu~)in thi: rniddlc rif the seventeenth centiiry. Cf. hiq I r q n g r in lihror
rrcfcrinrirm Luthrrnnnrrtm !ismhnlirnc, Leipzig, 3rd rd., i6gn, 57.
d
" X . 0 . 11, I, ii, 79 f. Mansi VI, 957) counted this tIic second scssion, but
Schwartz lias restored the true or er.
8 if.C.Oi 11, I, ii, 128 and 141.Only the formrr cites tlic rrecd in extrtiso.

296 1: o*
298 THE CONSTANTTNOPOLITAN CREED THE TRADITION ABOUT C 199
Kai r k 78 n v r ü p -r& JYrciv, 76 Apmv And in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and tradition that it was the sy mbol of the council of Canstantinoplc.
xal +d {womrdv. 1.0 70t n~rp6s life-giver, M'ho procecds Srom the
imropnidprvriv, +ò sVv n a ~ p ;uai v i 6 Fathcr, Wlio with the Eatlim and At Chalcedon it was introduced as such, and the fathers
U U ~ T ~ O U K W O ~ ~ uoi ~ V~ I J S O ~
~ ~ O U ~the~ Son
~ ~ i sY together
. worshipped and apparently (we shall consider their attitude more çlrisely later)
sD la)i+mv -
Si8 s&i, np&?+ljr. c;$ p;av togeiher gloritied,Who spokc through accepted the description without dernur. In the form prevalent
&yLav X U @ O A ~ K I ~ Y ~~OP*OAIK;~V CKUATJ- the prophets; Ln onc holy Catholic
oim. OpdcyoCpcv ii. p ú y u p a rlp and apostolic Churcli. U'e mdess one from the sixth century onwards the tradition asserted that C
Ü+E~~& Ypmplcir.. :I;- baptism to tht temission oi sins; w c was sirnply N eIaborated by the interpolation of clauses designed
look fonvard to the r m c c t i o n of to counter heresies rc+ich had croppcd up sulisequently to
ihc dead and the Iife of thc world ta
come. h e n . Nicaea. There are Lnts in the rninutes of the çounçil of
Çhdcedon that the theory af a revision of N was already in
There can be no doubt that the test of C, as of Lu', publicly the rnakrng. At the first çesçion,l for exarnple, Eusebius of
recited at the third Çhalcedonian session and repsoduced above Dorylaeurn and Diagenes of Çyzicus jurnped up and açcpsed
sepments the primitive, authentic shape of the creed. 'lt'hether Eutyches (whose case, it l i 1 1 be recallcd, w a ~under investi-
ar not it was acttrally composed and ratified in $31 (1r.e shalI gation) of falsehood in denying that tlic friith of the Xicene
spend some time sifting this tradition a Jittle Jater), its con- council çould receive aiiy additioiis. "The çreed received
nection 14th Constantinople was apparently taken for granted. additions", cried Diogenes, '' Srom tlic holy fa thers on account
Thus the motive for inviting the archdeacon of the imperial of ihe perverse notions of Apollinarius and 'l'alentinus and
uty, Aetius, to read it out, as for calling upon Eunomius of Macedonius and men hike them. The words W-IO C.ME DOWIL
Sicomedia ta read out K, was plainly to nake sure of an A?m WAS NCAKKATE FROM LRE HOLY SPIRIT r\ND THE S R G W
açcusatc vemion. T h e texts to tvhiçh the assembIy listened had MARY were inserted into the creed, but Eucyches has left them
been extracted frorn thc archives in tvhich the original docu- .
out because he is an ApoIlinarian. . . For the exprrrçsion
rnents were presumcd to have been deposited. It shouId bc which the holy rathers at Xicaea used, viz. WAS INCARXATE,
observed that the texts ernbodied in the Definition appeat to rhe holy fathers who came later çlarifiecl by adding monr TFE
have differed in severa1 respects fsorn tSiose recited at the thlrd HOLY S ~ ~ Thouph lie did not ex-
TRE 1 - m MARY."
P ~ 3 ~- n
session, and that E. Sclr~vartzhas suggestedl that they were pIicitly rnention C, it is probable that Diogeneç had it in mind
deliberatelu modified, at the request of Marcian and the when he spoke of nn expanded vei-sion of S . His statement
Empress Pulcheria, so as to be brought into closer harrnony \ v x not allosued to pass unchallenged. The Egyptian bishops
with eaçh othcr. lt'harever the final verdict on this difficult at once pretested agaimt the idea of anything having been
question ma); be,+tue mau rest content that it can do nothing added to tbe creed of the Nicene fathers, and dedared that
to upset our confidente in the antiquity and ãuthority of thc Eutyches had done right ta quote it in iis original forrn. But
version of C quoted at the thircl session. It is intercsting to notice the episode is p o f that, even at this reIatively early date, C
that the creed was formalty rchcarsed and subscribed on 16 was being regarded as an expansion of' N carried out hy the
September, 680, at the eighteenth session of the sixth general r50 fathers.
council, the tliird of Constantinople, and that it is the f o m The same point of view came to the forc on severa1 occasions
printed abovc that the recorded minutes preserve.3 at ChaIçedon. For exampIe, at the fourth session, when mem-
Having settlecl the texc, let us now t u r n to the problem of bers were giving their testimony to the agreernent of St Leo's
C's identity, Referente has aIready been made to the universal Tome with N and C, Florentius of Adrianopolis in Pisidia
7 . N . T . W . =V, ~916,3&ff.
characterized our creed as "proclairning clearly that our Eord
J *k b ~ hasn a dciailcd criticisrn of Schwartz'e case in R.H.E. xxxii, 1936,809ff. Jesus Christ was incarnate by the Holy Spirit and the Virgin
a Cf.Mansi XT, 633. A.C.0. 11, Ix ia ! ) I .
in S it is placed alongside of B E G O ~ YFROM THE FATHER relation of C to the council oF Constanhople of 38E. To this
tiithout the artide. ( r } 50, too, Y s yfiw$&a EIK 705 ZCCT~ÓSi? we must now turn, but rve can do so with the ful1 asçurance
reproduced in C as ~ ò & v 706 na-rpÒç y~~v%&a.( d ) 145th the that the tradition is in errar at least in its identification of the
cnccption nf mavpw~&íz (CRUCIPED), the severa! members of basic stock of C with N.
the sccond artldt in C are linked together by AND. (e) In
the third article the simple K U ~ E ~ STÒ +OV .rrvcGpa (AND IN
TPE HOLY SPRIT) of N reappears in C as uaZ E;Y r8 mieiipa ~d
+YLOIJ. I t is diffiçult to con-iccture why the suppascd revises of
The uni\?ersal tradition, as we have already noted, dating
3' shou'td have gone to t h e trouble of making these, for the ar Eeast from the time of the çauncil of Chalcedon /451), is
most part trifhg, alterãtions. that C was she creed ratified by the r3o bishops who fomed
This statistical cornparison makes it certain that, whatewr the council of ConstancinopIe (May-july 3811, and who had
else C may be, it cannot accurately be described as a rnodified been summoned, along with some 36 bishops of *Macedonian
version of N. T h e two are rctaliy two utterly difTerent texts, sympashies who later withdrew, by rhe emperor Theodosius I
resembfing each other in a broad, general way, but to no for tlie threefold purpose of finishing once and for nll with
greater extent than any othcr pair of Eastern formularim. Arianism, settling the Macedonian Heresy as amicably as
Hoit summed the matter up 14th çonvincing succinctnes when possi ble, and appointing a new patriarch for the imperial. city.
he pojnsed outl that o f the r 78 (approx.) words in C e d y 33. or Lntil recently the great rnajority of rnodern scholars have been
abour a fifsh, can be p1ausibIy derived from S. If C had a direct united in their rejection oF this ancient ~ i e w of C's origin. The
relationship ~ 4 t hany faurth-century creeds, jt was çertainly objections apinst supposing that C was composed and pro-
not with h-,but with çertain others which Iiave not so £ar been mulgated by tlie çouncil of 381 have seemed ovewhelming,
rnentioned. It is interesting to observe, in passing, that it is both in nurnber and in weight. One or two notabIe scholars
practically idcntical with the first symbol quoted by St Epipha- liave stood their gsound, but the general opinion 11as been that
nius to~vardsthc cnd of his Ancwufus2-that is, if the hfS the Chalcedanian fathers were just as much rnistaken about
etidence can be trusted. The onIy respects in which the lattcr C ' s original ratjfrcation as they, or at any rate their successors,
differs from it are jn the incIusion of (a) l a 4 1s~ THE were about itç relatianship to S. So far from beinq the authori-
SXXSiAXCE OF ??IE FATHER, ( h ) mGS T?í REAVEX .4';D TEISGS tative formula., or ckdh~sis,of the bishops assernbled at Con-
o s EARTH, and (r) the Kicene nnathemas. C also bears a çertain stantinople, it must be some local baptismat creed .rr.bich some-
resernl~ilanceto a çurious Larin creed found in the collection of how os other (at this point the suggestions mooted differ
Theodosius the Dcacon, in Codex Verona LX (58),under the msirkedly) beçame connected with the counciI. Some such
obviously unsuitahle titIe Synhalus sanctae synodi Snrdici.3 This
reads JESUS GHRTST OUR LORD, has tlie order TRUE GOD EROM
I theory, it is held, would explain how a creed which manifesdy
could not have been the oficial proilouncement of the council
GOD, OXY-BEGOTTEX SOS OT;COD, O I T ~ OF
~~S 03T SV8STANCE M r I W nevertheless succeeded in persuadina uncitical generations of
TRE:FATHER, and ornits one or two items i11 the third article, but churchmen that it was.
otherri-ise seems to coincide with C.A discussion of these texts, The considerations which have been regarded as fatal to the
however. rnises Iarge issues which çan only be satidactorily tradition deserve detailed recãpitulation.1 First, such first-hand
treated against the balckground of the rnain problern, viz. the evidence as we have bearing on thc activities of the council o£
1 Two Disstriations, i a7 n. Cf. Narnack, op. (ir., I 19, Constantinople is innocent of reference to C. The official
8 Anror. I 18 (Iloll I, iqG f,).
For t h tcxt,
~ sce A. E.Rurn's article in .7.T.S. ii, 1901,102R.; C. H.Tumcr, See, e.g.,F,J. A. Hort,TuioDi~serWioss,73ff.; A. Harnarkin Redencgkl.,yded.,
Ecciuiar Occidriitafis nionumcnto Iurir Anfipirtima, Oxford, I 939, I I, iii, 468. XI. I 7 ff. ;.J. Kunze, Dnr niconisch-konr!antim~lifnni~rhc
,+nbol, l,eipzig, rB@, 5 ff.
3 0 ~ 'FHE CONITANTINOPOLITAN CREED I THE CASE ACAINST T H E TRADITEON 3O7
rninutes havc nvt been preserved, no doubt because the counçil recently irivented". Here again, it js argued, tlierc can be no
was not reckoned as ecumenical unta much Iater. O n the other referente to a newly forrnulrited or recently ratified creed. Thc
hand, there is no mention of a cseed in the four canons which fomox of Constantinople, like that oF Antioch, must have been
the çauncil sanctioned or in the letter which, on completing an extended theological manifesto witli anathcmas subjoined.
its Iabours, it despatched to Theodosius with the canons.1 Secondly, the externa1 evidence of historians and otbcr rifriters
True, later collections include thsee additional canons with has every appearance of being in accord ~vithtliis version of
our çreed appended, but it is agreed that both they and it are what took place at the ceuncil. Socrates,' foi. example, in his
i n t s u d e r ~ .The
~ first of the genuine çanons confines itseIF to account of the proceedings, describes how, aftet the secession of
confirming t he Sicene faith in the words : the llaçedonian bishops, the fathers settled down to the
re-afimation of the Iiicene faith (2fl~fla;waaraVRts +v h*
The faitii of the 3 r 8 Sathers who met at Xicaea in Bithynia must
?u'rua;u aímtv). Earlier in the same chapter lte had remarked
not be set aside hut must be maintaind as binding, nnd every heresy
must be anath~matized,and in particular that of the Eunomiam, o r tbat the object of the cmncil was "to ratify the Yicene faith".
Anomoeam, and rhat of the Arians, or EudoXians, and that of the Sozornenhand Theudoret3 te11 the same tale, using almost
Semi-.4rians, or Pntumatomachians, and that of the Sabeliiam, and identical language. Harnack wãs convinced that St Gregory
that ofthe ?r.iarccllians,and that of the Photinians, and that of the of Xazianzus, u.ho had actuauy been president of the council
Apollinarians. for a time, must abo have taken the view that its work was
lirnited to ratify-ing the Sicene creed. Shonly after the çouncil
The lettcr to Theodosius epitomizing the cound's work sirnply he wrote a Eetter 4 to çledoniuç in answer to his request for " a
says: '"ter that we published some concise definitions
( m ó p o Gpovs~ ~ ;[E+W+Q~W~, r a t i f - g the faith of the / cancire definition and nilc of our bdicf ", remarkinq in i t :

I
Nicene fathers and anathernatizing the heresieç whiçh had lie for our pari have never esteernrd, and ncver çan esteem, any
sprung up against it." It is difficult, the critia think, to take doctrine preferable to the faith af the h01y fathers ~ v h oasrembled at
Siçaea ro destro! the ,4riari heresy. !';e adhertp with God's help,
rhis as an allusion to C, not least because C is devoid of ana- and shall adhere, to this faith, supplementing rhe p p s which they
thernas. Very nearly the same company ofbishops foregathered i left, conceming- the Holy Spirit brcausp this qupstion had iiot theii
again in Constantinopie in the following year {382), and sent k e n raised.
a famous syndicai letters to Pope Darnasus excusing them-
selves on various grounds from accepting his invitation to an The natural irnplication of this, the German scholar argued,
ecumenical council to be held in Rome. In the c o m e of it, was that St Gtegory admirted only thc Nicene cseed, despite
after summarizing their theologicaI views, they referred their his consciousness of its deficiency in çertain particulars, He
correspondent for a fuller exposition of them to "the statement could ilot have wRtten in such terms had he been aware that
(r@ 7 Ó p W ) of the s p o d of Antioch" (which had bem sent to
a fully satisfactory alternative formula liad already been
the Pope in 3791, and also to "'the statement which was last solemrtly prornulgated a few months before.5
year published by the ecumenical synod held at Constantinople, The third and most impressive objection is t3ie secmitigIy
in which documents we have confessed our faith more fully ahsotute siIence regarding a Constantinopolitan creed whicli
(bv citr d a r 6 ~ é p o v r;lv nímw & p A o y $ a a p ~ ) , and have in apparently reigned from 381 to 45r . This silence i s particularly
written form anathematized tbe heresies which have betn striking for the various synods which met i11 the period, at
which some allusion to such a creed, had it existed, rnight have
For tht lerter and canonr, 8Ce Mansi 111,557 ff.
Cf. Mansi 111, 67 for thc crtcd. Hist. CECI. 5 , 8 (P.G.67,576 ff.). Hist. ecci. 7, 9 (P.G.67, r 436 E.).
Ciad by ~ h r o d o r i tIíirt.
, rrcl. 5 , g (Pannrntirr, 289 R The rclevant xetion Hiji. cccl. 5 , 8 (Parmentier, 288). 4 E/). rnn ( P . C . 37, rg?),
is 1 3 on
~ p. 293). <:r. Hauck's R~ril"icykl.,3rd ed., XI, 18.
3I2 'PHE C O N S T ~ I ' I N O P O L ~ L A CREED
N
as the proof of his theological correçtness ; and the creed which
he wodd present would be the reviçed creed o f Jerusalem.
This would be entered in the minuta of the council, and mau):
yean later, when peopIe had fogotten the precise order of I The çonsiderations listed in the foregoinpl section combine
ta confront the traditional aScripti0ri of C: to the council of
events, may well have come to be rcgarded as in fact thc creed ConstantinopIe with an crnharrassing question-rnark. \+'e
promulgated by the corincil. cannot casual2y bmsh aside such facts, if façts they- are, as
An alternative scilution was advanced by J. Kunze in his (a) the absence of any hint in çontemporary documents that
important Etrle book on our creed.1 Mis view, which was taken tlie council made itself responsible for anything more enter-
up enthusiastically by A. E. Burn,2 was that C may liave bem prising than the re-affirmation af N, ( b ) the unquestioning
used at the baptism and episcopal çonsecration of Nectariius,
praetor of the city, who was clecred bishop of Constaritinople
jn the course of the council and, in consequence, bccame its
third president. At the time of his election he is known to have
i assumption in the long span between Constantinople ancl
Chalcedon that N was the sde arzthoritative formula, and (c)
the evidence for C's vogue as a purely local baptismal crccd
dmost a decade before tlie r 50 fathers met. Tt is not surprising
been a Jayman and unbaptized. It js probable, acgucd Kunze, that many scholars have found the case overwhdming. O n the
that he receivcd both baptismal instructian and the sacsarnent other band, there have always been a rninority who have
itself at the hands of Diodore of Tarsus, rvho had sponsored his refused to bow the knee. Caspari, it rnay be noted, steadily
crtndidnture. The fact that C firsr comes to light in Cyprus adhered to the tradition, despite bis apprcciatian of the diffi-
.
(Sdamis was St Epiphanius's see-city) and passed t ticnce to culties it entailed. Even in the hey-day of the Hort-Harnack
SI-edra in Pamphylia, seemed to Kunze to makc i t i adoption hypothesis, voices could be distincdy heard questioning its
b the church of Tarsus, in Cilicizi, a distinct possihility. Its validity. Arnongst these consenrative stalwarts may be num-
use at the baptism and ordhation of Nectarius would thcrefore bered the German scholar W. Schrnidt,l the Russian eccIesias-
be perfectly natural if Diodore waç the bishop wtio adrnin-
istered them. Granting that it was so used, C wauld inevitahly
(
I
tical historian A. P. Lebcdev,2 and thc Greek archbishop Chr.
P a p a d o p o u l o s . ~ h eEnglish F. J. Badcock4 Iater joined their
I x associated thereafter with the council, the more so as ranks. More recently still Eduard Schwartx 5 added bis powerfril
Nectarius probalsly made it the oficial creed of Conatanrinople
thcreafter. Among other pieces of evidence which seemed
to Kunze to tally with his conjecture is a curious note
I influence to the defencc of the tradition in its most uncom-
promising form. 50 great is the prestige of his tearning and, in
particular, of his knowldye of ihe day-to-dav working of the
crnbedded in the minutes recording the voting at Chalcedon synods of the early centuries, that the position which he es-
on the question whether X and C agreed -4th Leo*s Tome. poused, oncc abãndoned as untenable in most quarters, har
A s fie çast his vote, Calliniçus of Apamea in Bithynia, a t o m evidently beiçun to be taken serioudv again.
iiot too far removed from Constantinople, described thc counciI It is easv to s)mpathize with the dksatisfaction of these more
r i r 381 as Iiarlng been heId "at the consecratiori oT rlie ~nriçt
cautious students. There were p t 7 e weaknmts in the Hort-
pious Sectariur ".TThere was evidently some corulection in hiç Rarnack h ~ p t h e i wiiich s i t s brillíant façade could no6 çonceal.
mind between the creed which formed part oof the Definitiun h'ot every student, for exampIe, will be prepared to admit its
and the elevation of Nectarius to the episcopate.
Cf. Nmir firthlichc zmdickrqt x, I 899, 935 E.
e For a summary oF his views rre J.%S. ic, 1903,285 FT.
See ' E r r r l i ~ ~ ~ o v r2rcmpir ~ 'ABqvrjor
' DOSnit&isclt-konsfonb. Symbol, 32 R: a
Atheiir, 1924.
m) ?
:r B ~ o A v r + r o ~ o h fTOÜ mirnrn~~~iloii.
maEnc@n/)&ia Bri;sniiicti, r I tli cd., VII, 391i. CF.3.T3.xvi, rg15, 2a5 aiid liis bonk (2nd ed.), i86 R.
A.C.O< 11, 1, ii, 11q.
~..N.T.I17.xxv, $926, 38 ff.
1 THE TRADITION RE-CONSfDERED
318 THE CONSTANTINOPOLITAN C U E D 3'9
in spite of their understandable detachment and even coolness, whjch St Epiphanius himself used in thc surrounding coi~text
no one wns apparentll*disposecl to çast doubts on its banafidfs. I is more consistent with the creed's being h' than C ; and,
\Ve sliould bear in mind that they were mera of spirit, quite secondly, the intrinsic characier of the creed which follows in
courageous enough, as in the case of their refusal to draw up r 19, known as E#. 11, seerns to presuppose X ratther than C:.
a new creed, to stand out against the plainly expressed wishes As re~ardsthe former point, Sr Epiphanius comrnencled Iiis
of the ernperor. The implication is diat they must have ?xen crecd to the people of Se-edra as one belonging to the wholc
satisfied that it had a real and sulxtantial connection with the Church : he spoke o€ it as this holy faith of the Catholiç
"

council of Constantinople. To suppse tllat they abstained C:Iiurch, as the holy and only virgin of God seceived ir from
from questioning its crdentials, ar that when they questionerl thc holy Apoçtles of the Lord as a tmst to be preserved". *Gter
them they allo~vedthemselves to be hodlwi-inlced by Anatolius setting it down ia f d , he wcnt on explicitly to ascribe it to
and Aetius, reveals an extravagant rneasure ofscepticism. Thc Yicaea in the \rrords: "This faith was handed d o m from the
hoIy .?jpostles and <xlas publisk~d?) in the Church, the holy
only reasonable conclusion to draw, in tiew of their initial
bewilderment and their eventual readiness to canonize C aIong
with h', is that in the meantirne trustworthy evidence had been
produccd showing that it w5s indeed the creed of the counçil
1 cit?., by a11 the holy bishops, above three hundred and ten in
numbcr, yathered together then." The dder Lnterpretation of
thesc cnigmatic words, which took them ns implying that the
of 381. creed embodied apostolic, Jerusalemite and Nicene elements,
The failure of the Hort-Harnaçk hypothesis to explain the overlaoked the true reference of " the holy city ". As K. H011
attitude and language oE the Chalcedonian fathers is its funda- pointed out in the Berlin edition of the Ancoratus,l the phrasc
mentalIy unsatisfaçtory fcature. In the light of it the uttempi of was commonIy used by S t Epiphanius to describe, 1iQt the
some scholars recently to discover ways and means of rehabilita- earthly city of Jerusalem, but the heavenly JerusaIem of the
cing the tradition is not surprising. One great obstacle in their Church. What he was really saying in his complicatcd way
i
way has been the presençe of C, or a çreed remarkably like it, I was that the crced he had just quoted was the Nicene creed.
in a treatise of St Epiphanius'ç written severa1 ycars before 38 r . 1, In harmony with this Iie terminated it with the Xicene m a -
'CVe should perhaps remind the reader that the implications of themas, which undoubtedly Iook somewhat aut of place at
this argument h\-e sometimes been catrjed too far. Granting thc end of Ep. 1 as it stands in the text at present. Secondly,
it its full weight, it would still be posible to hold that thc
fathcrs of 381,even if they could no Ienger be reckoned as
1 when he proceeded to write out a fuiler creed (Ep. I I j in
ch. I rg, he announced in so many words that it would confum
C's authors, rnay nevertheless have adopted it as a suitaMe itiith " the faith enjoined by those holy fathers ",but trtould takc
account of the various beraies whiçh had raised their hcads
expression of th& teaching. The obstade, however, sterned
wnsurmountable to many until, as a result of a closer analysis 1 since they had published it. But when E). I1 is studied closely,
of the rext of St Epiphanius, certain facts were disclosed which, it is seen to add little or nothing to the anti-heretlçal content
jf solidly establkhed, disposed of it once and for all. The of Ep. I : the most ehat can be said is that its Ianguage i s slighily
schalars to whom this discaven~is due are Lcbedev, Papado- súffcr and more precise. If N originaIly stood where Ep. I now
poulos and Schwartz-I stands, Ep. I1 must have provided a valuable supplement to
To state their conclusion in a sentence, there are grounds for it, but af'ter Ep. E it was virtually superfluous. Moreover (and
believing that t h e creed originally occupying the place at this is the realIy startling point), Ep. I1 is in no sense a re-
present held by Ep. I in A~uruttar.r r8 was not C but N. The rnodeI1ing of Ef. I, but consists of the ancient Nicene creed,
reasons for making this inference are two. First, the Ianguagc N, cnlargcd with an anti-Apollinarian, anti-Macedonian
SCCtllcir worka ciied on p. 3 13. 3ec nutc od lm.
3*O TAE CONSTAN1TNOPOLI'I'A;Y W E D t THE TRADTTIOPL' RE-CONSIDERED 32 I
running cornrnentary, and with the third article elaborated
dong difkrent h e r from the third article of Ep. I. The con-
cluçion is irresistible that the only \vau of explaining ihis queer
assortrncnt of fncts is to arrume that rhe position now usurped
by Ep. I righrfufly beionçr to X,and that the present situation
carne about through the rnisplaced aeal of some scribe in sub-
1
I
I creed. Thus one of the pseudo-Athanasian dialogues De Trini-
fofe1 represents ?r3acedonius, who stands for the heresy called
aftes his name, as being accused by onc Otshodoxus of beinq
dissatlsfied with the Sicene creed and of hab-ingmade additions
to it. He counten t h e charge by inquiring whethcr the orthodox
toa had not been guilty of the same offence. Orthodoxus has to
stituting, or adding as a marginal glors, the form which he took t admit that they have added to N, but pleads that their addi-
to he the fully deueloped, mthorizcd Nicene creed. Since at tions were nat inconsistent with the Nicenc creed and concerned
this point thc Ancoroiur depends on a single, not very accurate
MS, no objection against this inference can be convincingly
raised from that quarter.
Another obstade façing the champions of &e tradition \vai,
II matters which had not becn raised at the time of Nicaeã. The
date and authorship of the dialogue are uncertain, but it must
have been wrirten prior to the outbreak of the Nestorian con-
voversy, and recent scholarship has produced an irnpressive
ar we sawr, the complete absencc of any suggestion in suis-ivinq ! case for attributing it to D i d p u s the Blind (3 r 3-3g8).2 It ma7
records that the council of ConstantinopIe had been sesponsible therefore well belong to the decade irnrnediately following t h e
for a crced of its own. Yet the quertion has been xked recently
whether this reprments an altogether fair account o l the evi- i
1
counçil of 381. Again, Theodore of Xiopsuestia, in his com-
mcntary on thç Wiccoc crecd,3 nftcr arcribing thc wholc of it
dente. First, E. Schwartz and his supporters have called for a down to the words AND IN THE HOLV SPIRIT to the Nicene
rcconsideration of the letter, preserved by Theodoret,' which r fathers, declared that thc more devcloped tesching about the
the synod of Constantinople of 382 deipafched to the Western Spirit which followed was due ta " the Bthers who carne &ter
bishops asrcmbled at Rome. I n this, we remernbcr, tliere was them". The ini tiative, he said, was taken by a synod of Western
a relerence to "die tomos of the synod of Antioch" and " the bishops, but was confirmed by a Iater gathering of Eastern
tomos which was 1a.t year published by the ecurnenical council bishops. A few pages later4 he repeated his point, again affirm-
held at Comtantinople, in which documenu Ire have confezsed ing that "the doctors of the Church, who assembled from ali
ou, faith more f d y " . There is nothing far-fetched, it is argued, parts of the earth and who were the heirs of ehe first blessed
i11 taking tomos in thir parsage as a description of C.The verù fathers," endorsed the Nicene faith but added clauses about
"we have confessed" js precisely the one used h r s e t t i n ~out the Holy Spirit. We noticed above that Diogenes of Cyzicus
one's faith in a creed. Secondly, a parallel reconsideration of the took the same line, though with regard to a different clause
letter which Flavian sent the emperor in 449 has been dernanded.2 of C, at Chalcedon, saying that FROM THE HOLP SFIRIT AND
It has been açked whether the reasons for excising "and in THE: VIRGIN MARY had bcen inserted by " the holy fathers who
Constantinople" from lhe text are valid. The words have the carne. IaterFY.5The same tradition, as we saw earlier, regarding
bacliing of some irnportant MSS, and the surnmary of iiis the activities of the x j o fathers was rnaintained in orthdou
faith which FIakian gives in the following sentences seems ta and Monophysite circles after Chalçzdon.
praupposc a fdler creed than S. It is not surprising, in the light of these and similar consídera-
Thirdly, in addition to these obscure and much dkputed tions, that the traditional theory that the council of 381 was
passible allusionr, there are a number of quite unambiguous
paflstic parsaga wliich suggat that the Constantinopolitan Dd.dtjanc. trin. g, i (P.G.28, 1204).
: Cf. E. Stolz, TkvIogi~ch.tQuartnEshrifi Ixxxvii, rgo5, 395T., and the very
fathers wcre known to Iiave made alterations in thc Nicene thorough study liy ilnseim GdniIicir, O.S.B., iii Siudta A n s t b t a n ~XI, Roine, igqr.
I a Cf.A. Mingana's edition, Woodbrwke Stuciar~V (Combridge, 1932)~ 93.
'1 H U ~r .c c ~5 , 1 3 (Parmcntier, 293).
a rf.C.0. II,T,i,3g. I ' Ibid. I 0 1 f.
See abovc, p. 299 (A.C.0, 11, I, i , 91).
E,C.C.-T f
33O THE CONSTAN??NOPOLlTAN CREED 'TOWARDS A SOLm'ION 33l
Again they wrore : probably in the course of some extended statement d its
We decree ihat the exposition of the right and bIameless faith of teaching, of the formutary now known as C. This creed setrned
the 318 boly and blrssed fathers, assernbled at Nicaea in the time to it, in harmony with current usage, ta bc " the faith of the
of tbe crnperor Constantinc of pious mernoq-, should be pre-eminent Nicene fathess", but that faith set forth in a fosm better
Y ) , thc dccisions of the 150 holy fatherç
(.rrp&pnc~v ~ ' L E Itvhilc ... adapted than N for dealing with the heresies of ihe hour. In
should dso hold goodl. adopting this view of the matter we are in effect returning to
the position held by many scholars before Hort rind Harnack
Later still in the Definition they declared that the council had worked out their critique of the tradition. J. R. Lurnby,
has decreed primarily that ihe creed oF the 3 18 holy fathers shouId for cxample, in his Hki%r)l af t h ~Cre~ds,pubtished in 3873,
remain invioIate; and on account of thoçe ~ r ~ hcontend
o against t h e dtveloped his argument along similar Iines. "o too 'IV. Bright,
Holy Spirit, it razifies the teaching subsequently set forth by the in his weltknaum Canom ofthe FirsirsfFour General Councils 1880),
I j o hofy f a t h e ~asembled in the royal city conceraing rhe essence made the point2 that "th-e mernbers oF the council of 381 A.D.
of the Spitit, nw as adducing an?zhing Ieft Ia&g by their pre- would not consider themselves to be in any sense invalidating,
decessor~,but making distinct by Scriptural testirnanies their con-
but rathet confiminp and perpetuating, the forrnulary of A.D.
ception concerning tlie HoIy Spirit against those ~ v h owere tqing
to set aside His sovereignty.-
325, when they adopted, with hardly any change, a develop-
ment of It " tr-hich they found in St Epiphanius'ç Ancoraliis. In
" I r e get the irnpression ", remarked Père J. Lebon,3 " tl~at, this chapter zve have not been ready to accept the text of St
except for special reasons, the ChaIcedonian fathers wouId have Epiphanius as it stands, but perhaps tlie case we have set out
preferred to have recalled simply the Sicene creed. . . Their. has given rene~vedweight and additional dai-ity tu \\+lint is
wsentially a conservative position.
sperial reason for açcordiny an apress and distinct mention to
the intewention of the Gnstantinopolitan fathers is given by P. 63 r. 1'. tki r.
the bishops sf Chalcedun in the r7ery t e m s in which they
define the nature of the work of the second general council in
regard to the formula of faith. For t hem the Constantinopolitan
fathers reçeived the syrnbol of the 318 and set their seal on the
same Fai th, but tliey also, against the Fneumatomchi, clarified
- their thought, ~ 6 t happropriate Scriptural referentes, about
the HoJy SpiLit.'"
The conçlusion to which we are thus drawn is one which,
while rejecting the Hort-Harnack hypothesis of a purely
accidental association of C with the counçil of 381, avoids thc
radica1 alternative espoused by Eduard Schwartz and such
English scholars as Badcock, viz. the theory that the council
actually propounded a new creed of its owri and elevated it
to a position parallel to that of N. It seerns clear that tbe
council's only ohject was to restare and promote the Nicene
faith : only, in doing this i t availed itsetf in some way or other,
3 38 T H E TEACIIING AND HISTORY OF Ç THE HOLN SPIRIT TN C 33c
Fiaptismal crted with which they were working (St Cyril had council of Constantinople. The council's obkct, rnai~ifestly,waç
clwelt on thc cloctrine in his catechetical instructions), i and to dispose ançe and for a11 of a11 the varioiis heresies by which
that its presencc there was one of the fãctors suggesting that the pure teaching of the Nicene faith had been embarrassed
this particuiar formula was well adapted to their purposen. since its fomulation, and sinçe it was platina the Arians and
their successors under its ban, it was fitting that those whose
error Iay on the Sabellían side should be proscribed as well. In
aEl probability the dause or WHOSE KTNGDOM, etc., alreadv stood
While the anti-Apollinarian bias of tlie clame about Christ's in the creed which the r 50 fathers took over and made their
birth is not unarnbiwously dear, there can be no doubt as to own, It was an item in St Cyril's creed as early as 348, and
tbe polemical bearing of the next cIause in C to eIabrate and it must have spread to other creeclç of theJemsailem and re'lated
extend the teaching o f the original Xicene creed. This is, of farniIies.
course, the sentence OF h-OSEKISCDOM THERE SHALL BE NO The ban on MarcelIus" doctrine has seemed to some scholars,
END. These words, taken bodily fsom S t Luke ( I , 331, were not altogether jwtIy, as a mere pro forma re-enactment of ana-
aimed at the doctrine, attributef to MarcelEus of iincyra, that thernas which had become conventional. But thc third article
the relationship of Sonship in the Godhead w a limited to the of the Constantinopolitan Creed byond question represented
Incarnation, and would diçappear when the p u v e s for which a development of and advance on the teachíng of K which the
thc ll'ord became incarnate had been açcomplished. The controvmies of the hour made imperative. Severa1 of the
It-ord weuId tken a p i n become, what H e had been from a11 çredenda listed iu it-the Church, baptism, the remission of
eternity, immanent in the Father, ll'ho lmdd be a11 in all.2 sins, the resurrection of the dead, the life of the world to come
We saw in Chap. I'; that anti-llarcellan clausw, expressed in -were perfectly norma1 constituents of the third article of
these or similar terms. were incorporated in most of the Eãstern i . Eastern baptismal fomularies. The clauses in which the dis-
I
conciliar çreeds constructed in the 'forties and 'fifries of the tinccive i d a of the second general cauncil found an outlet
fourth century: they tcstify to the dread in rvhich l*iarcellris's I
were thme concerned with the doctrine of the Holy Spjrit.
views were held. The words thernsdves made an appearance The heretics against whom they were directed were the
in the creed cornmented upon by St Cyih of Jeruçalem, who I Pneurnatornachíans, otherwise known as 1,Iacedonians. (The
gave his animosi. against the heretic fuF1 rein : "If ever you latter name, which later historians liked to use, was scarcely
hear anyone saying that there is an end te the kingship of appropriater the Serni-..Zrian hlacedonius, ~ v h o had been
Christ, hate the heresy. I t is another head of the dragon whiçh bishop of Constantinople behveen 341 and his deposition in
has sprouted latelv in the region of Galatia."3 MarceZlus died 360, was not realiy the founder of the party called after hirn.)
in 374, and the excitement over his dangcrous doctrines had IVhile the Arian controversy was at its heipht, the problems
to a large extent passed away. Yet so late as 337 St Basil's raised by the status of the Holy Spirit had been kept in the
letten reveal that they were still feared, and that there waq background, aithough neither Arius himself nor his fdlowers
opposition to restoring to communion too easily those tvho liad concealed their view that the third Person oF the divine
shared thern.4 The Marcellians and the Photinians (followers Triniiry, like the second, was to be ranked with the creatures.
of Marcellus's extremist disciple and ally) were among the In the late 'fifties, however, of t21e fourth century His true
Ileretics sinsled out for condemnation in the first canon of the nature and position began to be rnatters of public discussion.
WCF.Cai. 1 2 (P.E. 3 3 , 7 1 5 ff.). About this time, as we Iearn from thc lettersl which St Athana-
8 Sec xbovc, sius addressed (356-362) to St Serapion, bisliop of Thmujs in the
4 I=F.Epp.g6$.5:265,3 (P.G.39,981;988f.). P.C. 26, 529-676.
341 'CNE 'LEACHING AND HIS'I'ORY OF C

(WY uúPmv) was the Septuagint equivaIent of the Hebrcw biblical phraçes which, however unexceptionable if pressed,
Tahwch, though its use was too widespread in the Hellenistic could be accepted by the Macedonians in their own sençe.
world for it to be decisive. The aI1-important clause, however, Ssholars have pointed to rhis faca as çonclusive evidence that
iva W H O IVITH I X E FATHER Ah'D THE SOX IS T'OGETIEER WOR- this article could not be the work oF the comcil, which must
SHIPPED .WD TOGETHER GLORIFIED. The expressions used alrnost havc cxpressed itself in rnuch more dccisive Ianpaqe if it had
reprduced St Athanasius's owm choice of words, "'Who Is made a credai pronouncemtnt on the Spirit. yet such ar@-
glorified with the Father and the Son."l Even more strikingly ments k t r a y a curious failure to understand tHe historical
did i t reflect St Basil's usage. He had spoken of " that sound situation. The aim of Theodosius in summoeing the council
doctrine acçordiny to which the Son is confessed as homoousjos was genuinely conciliatorv, and he had insisted on includiny
wftIi the Pathet, and the Roly Spirit is nurnbered together wihi a quota of Macedonian bishops i n his invitation. Acçording to
Them and worshipped together rvith Them with identical Socrates,' "the emperor and the biçhops who s h a d the same
honour (Óposrpwç r r w a p ~ @ ~ rTf E~ aua;
~ ( T W ~ ~ T ~ E Ú F T U ~ } 'Hc
'.~ faith spared no efforts to bring Eleusius and his party into unitv
11ad also writteri.:3 "Glorifying the Holy Spirit with the with them". Renewed eEorts to win them over were to be made
Father and the Son because of the conriction that He is not a couple of years late+ : hopes ran high that the Church might
alien from the divine nature. For that which i3 foreign in be reunited on the basis of the Nicene faith. At the same time
riatiire could not have shared in thc same honours." TIx it must be remembered that not aU in the orthodox ranks felt
starting-point of his rreatise De Spiritu sancto was his desire to completely easy about the frank description of the Roly Spirit
demoi~stratethe legitimacy of a doxology giving glory te thc as God and as consubstantial with the Father and tlie Sari
Father "with tlie Son and with the Holy Spirit ". The burden which was beçoming de rigueur. Their leaders generally, starting
of its central section" was the dernonstration af the identity of with St Athanasius, had deliberately exercised restraint in their
honour (Oporcp;a) enjoyed by the Spirit with the Father and language about the Spirit. St Basil, En particular, practised a
the Son. For St Basil these phrases "congEorification" ancl diplomatic caution which was sometimes harslhly judged in
" identity of honour " had a very definite rneaning : t h q were more uncompromising cirçles,a and even in the De Spinru
the equivalent of "consubstantial" since their applicability sondo, while in effect pleading for the doctrine af consubstan-
was based on identity of being.6 tiaBtv, had desisted from using the t e m . There is a rwealing
A feature of t h i 5 article about the Spirit which is at first passage in one of the sermons of St Gregos of Xazianzus,
sight somewhat puzzling is the comparative miIdness of its preached almoçt contemposaneously with the council, in
tone. The criuncil oF Çonstantinople, our records say, took its which, expatiahg on the prcvaiiing unçertaint). about the
stand on the full consubstantiaIi~of the Holy Spirit with the real status of the Roly Spirit, he admined that some of
Godhead. Ir was because they çould not stomach this, ap- those who held Him to be God kept this as a pious opinion to
parently, that the Macedonian representatives decided to take thernseIves.4
their departure. yet t h e clause we are studying scrupulously Bearing these points in rnind, we can appreciate that C's
avoids the term h o r n o ~ ~and o ~ contents itself, apart from the fim but ternperately worded theology of the Spirit mau well
mention of the cvorship and bonour due to the Spirit, with have corrwponded exactiy to the teaching which the 150
CP.Ad Strnp. i,3r ;Ad Iov. adjn. (P.G. 26, Gor ; 820). fathers felt it advisable to incorporate in their creed. In thcir
EP. W,
' Ep. 159,22IP-G- 32,473).
(P.G.32, 621).
*
Hiri. CECI(. 5 , R (P.G. 67, 577).
'' IJafi. 9-14 (P.G.32, 108- 173). Socrat., Wist. CECI. 5, 1 0 (P.Ç. 67, 588 r.).
CT, the anecdote told by St &eg; ~ a z . Ep. ; 58 (P.G. 37, I i6). Sct alm
For a tull d~rcussionof St Baail's position and the significance for Iiiin oF Iiioi
Iwmtirnns, aee the edition of Dc Sj)irrlu sanclo by B. Pruche, O.P., 12 ff: (editions QraZ. 43, 68 (P,G. 36, 588).
du CrrJ, Paris, i 946). "Oral. 31, 5 (P.G. 35, 137).
344 'THE TEAÇWING AED IUSTORY OF C I THE BAPTISMAL USE OF C
345
discussions with the Ifacedonians at the h t session of the 318 fathers as confimed by the I jo fatherç as the only symbol
council t h q could hardly conceal their acceptance of the con- with ~r.hiçhChristians were baptized.1 Yet the context maka it
substantiality of the Spirit. S o doubt they pressed Eleusius pIain &ar they rm-e thiiinking of C as the complete, definitive
ancl his supporters to join 14th them in acknowledging the f o m of the Kicene creed. JVhen shortly aftenvards C was
homoousion. But C rvas a çreed intendcd for widespread popu- I interpolated into the Bucharist at Constanhople, we are
lar use : iS it was to be regarded as thcir version of the Nicene distinctly told that hitherto it had been used as the baptismal
faith, it was natural that thcy should show a certain reserve. creed.2
They had both those within their own ranks who were s t i l not In process o£ time, however, C was destined to become the
whoIly çoiiverted and ttie Macedonians, of whose conversion sole baptismal creed of a11 the Eastern churches. A few corn-
they had not given up a11 hope, to think about. Hoivcver boldly munities detached from the cen-1 stream of Orthodoxy, such
they had exprmsd themselves at rhe council, or in the fuller as the Jacobite church of Syria,3 and the S e s t ~ R a nArmemans
,~
official exposition of their teaching sent te Pope Damasm, the and Abyssiniane cfiurches, continue to ernploy creeds marked
creed stood apart as a specially binding formula, and in the wibh traits dratvn from S. But, broadly speaking, C , to all
ciscnmstances it was dcsirable that its wording, while fim and , intents and purposes in its original fom, has enjqed a mono-
to the point, should steer clear of provoca6on. ! poly of baptism since the sixth century. Thc stages af itr progress
to this unique pesition cannot now be traced in detail, but it is
apparent that they were not accomplished a11 at once. At first
the practice in the East was to insert the Nicene key-words into
As canonized by the council of Ctinstantínople and re- the frarnework of local baptismal creedç : the creed of Antioch
afirmed in the Chalcedonian Definition, C, like the original çited by John Cassian is an obtlom exarnpIe. Later, in the fifth
Xicene çreed, appeared in the guise oF a formal tmt of orthodox centufu prior to Chalcedon, fomuIaries were in use a t baptism
belief: Tfierc is every reason to suppose, hotr-mer, that it was which bore a remarkable resemblance to C, as \rvesaw when
I
also ernployed from early times as a baptismal confession. Such we studied the çreeds of Yestotius and Theodore of Mopsuestia.
had probably been i& original funcrion before the 150 fathers There is no real basis for the w+despread view that N in its
appropriated it, and its smooth-fl owing style and balanced
theologica1 content marked it out for liturgical use. It is not
unlikely that it was established in Constantinople and the sur-
rounding region before 451 as t11e oficial baptismal creed. It
Ii 1
pure f o m was frequentiy used at baptism, or indeed that it
was ever used at all. The assumption that it was has to explain
how a creed so manifestIy defective, particularly in its meagre
tliird artide, cauld ever have lent itself to catechetical purposes.
would be natural for Constantinople, a city whose church life What has given currency to this view js the failure to appre-
had been presided over mainly by Arians since St Alexander's ciate that it was regular to describe any fomulary which was
death, to adopr the orthodox çreed of 381 for catechetical loyal to the Xicene tradition as '-the faith of Xicaea". After
purposes. This would help to explain the marked eagerness with Chalcedon the process of bringing local creeds into line ~vitjth
tvhich the imperial comrnjssioners and the eccIesiastica1 spoke- C was accelerated, altliough the iwitjng of FhiIoxenus of
rnenof Constantinople pressed its claims at Chalcedon. That &ler Hferapolis (Jlabbugj' and Set-erus of ,4ntPmh5 show that
4j"it was the baptismal creed oE the Constantinopolitan church Evagrius, Hist. itcl. 3, 4 m d r 4 (P.C. 86,2600 and fiz+)-
scarceIy admi t s of doubt. As ilIustrations of the façt we may note % Cf.Thcodorus Lector, Hid. ecct. 2,frog. 32 (P.G. 86,201).
a Hahn 128. 4 Hahn 132, "ahn 136. Hahn 141.
that Basiliscus, in his encyclical issued in 475, declared rhat he and He died drca 523. Cf. his De rina C sancta Trinitatc rncorpwato ti parso dissert. I
(Pairo/. Osient. XV, 489 L).
a11 the faithful before him had been Isaptized with the Nicene He died in 538. Cf. his Lib. con. irn). grmnin. 3, i I (Corp.~ c r i p Chtist.
. Orimf.,
creed ;while Zeno in his Hcnoticon (482) spoke of the creecl of tlie Script. Syr.,Ser. ]V, Tom. v, r.+q : cd. J . Lcbon, Louvain, rgzg).
354 TIIE TEACHING AND HiSTORY OF C C IN TIIE HOLY EUCHARIST
355
mass. O n the othcr hand, Aeneas o£ Paris (i8 7 1 ) ~writing given his licence for &e singing of the çreed in the royal chapcl
about thc middle of the same century,l speaks of '"the Catholic at Aachen and elsewhere in GauI, he ttad neves sanctioned
faith, which on Sunday the entire church of the Gaub chants AND FROM THE SON. Thc interesting point which emerges, so
at mass ". Thtre are two outstandingly irnportant passageç, fas as we are concerned at the rnornent, is that the singing of
however, which point Sie way to Sie m e solution. The the creed in the Frankish rite had been approved in Pope Leo's
first is by Walafrid Strabo, abbot of Reichenau ($849), and reign, i.e. at some date after 795. This agr-ees exactly with Wala-
deserves to be reproduced in fdf.? ãrid's independent statement that the custorn began after the
"The syrnbol o l the Catholic faith", he wrote, "is rightly rehearsed deposition of Felk the heretic. Felix, we know, was the famous
in the solemnities OS the m a ~ s&r the gospd, so that by means oC Adoptionist bishop of Urge1 in Spain (there was a great out-
the holy gmpel wc rnay believe ~ i t the h heart unto righteousncss, break of Adoptionism in Spain in the çlosing decacles of the
and by rneans af thc creed çonfession may be made with the lips eighth centuryj, who Jvas finally condemnd and obliged to
unto salvation. And it is u~orthnoting that the reason why the make his submission at a counçil rvhich met at Aachen in
GreekJ transposed that creed (rathw than another) which we, in October 798. W7e mau observe, in passing, that the position
imitarion oi thern, have adopted in t h e mass into a mmicd chant, assigned to the creed by the Franks was that which it now
was because it was the peculiar codession of &e c o d of Con- occupia h the ITest, r i z . immediately after the gospel. Evi-
stantinople. Ptrhaps BISO it seerned more suitable for setting to dently they were an-are that they were breaking 14th the
mwic than the Sicene creed, which was prior in time. Furthermore,
they tvknted the p i e l of the faithfid, at &e celebration of the sacra-
practice elsewhere (e.g. in Spain), for llTafafrid thought it
rnmts, to counter the poisons of heretim ~ 4 t hthe mediune con- proper to supply an edif'inq justification for the Fm&sh
cocted in the imperial city itself. From there the usage is believed position.
to have passed to rhe Romans. Among the Gauls and Gerrnam, Ire have not yet, however, exhausted rhe impottance of
however, the same a e e d began to be repeated more wideIy and 'ZVaEafrid's d d e n c e . It need not be supposed that he had
kequently (latiu ri crcbrius) in thc euchansc ofEces after the de- rnerely a chr~no~ogical intent in citing the deposition of Fefix.
psition of the heretic Felix, who rr-as condemned in the reign oE tht The unmistakable innuendo of his rvords is that the Adoptionist
glorious Charlcs, ruler of the F~anks." contro'c-ersygave an impetus to the liturgical innovation. Can-
Our second irnportant context is an account, preserved by firmation of bis insinuation çannot be looked for in the acts
the abbot Smaragdus,J of a conference held in 810 between of the counciI of Aachen, for they are lost. Rut there are strong
Pope Leo I11 and three delegates, or missi, sent to Rome by reasom for supposing that St Paulinus of Aquileia, who took a
Cliarlemagne. The passage is too long to print in fulI, and in Ieading part with Mcuin in çnishing the Adoptionist outbreak,
any case the barbarousness o f the Latin does not çonduce to
deliberatelg fixed upon the Constantinopolitan Creed as the
eiegance of translation. The real topic of discussion was the most effective Instrument for suppressing the heresy. Hn all this
Iegitimacy of including the words AND FROM THE SON in the he had AIcuin behind bm.For example, at his synod at Civi-
creed in the clause about the procession of the Holy Spirit. dale de1Friuli in 796 or 797, after inveighing eloquently against
Indeed, the purpose of Charlemagne's embassy to the Pope Adoptionism, he advised the assembly that the hesr nostrum
may well liave been to extract from h i n some sort of oficia1 against errers of this kind was the çreed of Constantinople.
endorsement for tht inclusian of the contraversial phrase in
He dcclared in so many words that the true doctrine with
the creed. Thc gist of the Pepe's reply was that, while he had
which to counter Adoptionism was inculcated mucli better
by the creed than by anything else, and he enjoined the
1 Adv. Grm. 93 (P.L. 121, 72.1). learning of the creed by heart on his clergy.1 A close anaEysis of
Dc m/.vrrm cxord. et incrmr. 22 (P.L,E 14,947).
P.L. i02, g7 r r.; also Mvn. Cerm. Hist., Comi. 11,240 ff. "m. Gemi. Hist., Cencil. Ir, i 80 f. ; iBg.
C IN TIIE HOLY EUCHARIST 357
the Caroliiigjan text of the creed, which is approximately tliat
had sciit to tlie Gallic churcli at the request OS Char.lcliiag~le,1
used in the Wmt to-day, shows that it is identical with the one
and into which rubrica1 directions regarding thc creed had
promulgated on that occasion hy S t Paulinus. In the light of
probably crept. All the really solid evidence (e.g. Smaragdus's
tlris acknow1edgiid policy of his, and the fact that the text çir-
report of the interview between the missi and Pope Leo) leax*es
çulated in Charlemagne's dominions was drafted under his
the çlear irnprasion that the recitation of the creed at mass
influence, it js dificult to resist the conclusion that tlie chief,
was frowned on at Rome.
if not the only, motive for bringing the cseed into the mass waç
Two hundred years had to pass before another emperor,
thc desire to rol1 back the menace of Adoptioaisrn.l The prac-
perhaps a I s s famous figure in European history than Charle-
tice, it shouId bc pointed out, would not have smck people as
magne, but the batower offavours on the Pope which the Iatter
at a11 revolutionary. The Carolingian empire extended far d o m
may well have Telt obliged to repay, sucçceded in inducing one of
into Spain, and tlius included provinces where the creed had
bcen chanted at mass since the d a p of king Reccared ; and it
Leo's successoss to bring the Roman usaqe into conforrnity 14th
the rest of Christendorn. Abbot Berno af Reichenau, who
is highly likely that the custom prevaiied in the nortli of
was himself an e-wjtness, tells the story of haw the emperor
England too. I t i s this fact which explains l t T a l a f r i d ' ç otherwise
Henry 11, visiting Rome in ror4 for his coronahon, was
puzzIiny staternent tliat the repetition of the creed became
"more widespread and frequent" after the deposition of Fclix.
shwked to discol-er that the mass celebrateci there still lacked
Thc placinz of rhe creed in the Frankish sewice after the gospel a creed.'
probably betrays the influence o5 Alcuin. Coming from Xorth- "If we," wrote Berno, "as is often stated, are rorbidden to sing the
urnbria, where tiie creed ma7 hatte been sung at this point, he angelic hynn on feastidays because the Roman clcrm do not sing
was probably responsible for the preference being given to it it, we ma?- in like manner leave unsaid the ç r e d afttr the gospel,
rather than to the Spanish position. lxcause the Romanç never sang it even up to the time of the ernperor
IIeanwhiEe the Roman church, with the whole ecclesiastical Henry of blessed memory. But bing asked by the said emperor in
region subject to its liturgical swap, held aIoof with çharacter- my prescnce why this was theu practice, T heard them +e an
istic conservatism and refraincd fmm f a l h g into Eine 14th answcr of this nature, that the Roman chutch had never been
the new fashion. The student should be on his guard against taintcd with any &eg of heresv, but sernaincd unshaken in the
soundness of the CathoIic faith according to the teachinq of St Peter.
taking too Iiterally sta tements Iike that of Walafrid that " frum
and so ir was more needfd for that s)?nbol to bc sung frequently Liy
there (i.e. Constantinople) the usage is believed to have passed those who might be suliied bg anv heresy. But the h r d emperoi did
to the Rornans ". Probahly this represents what Frankish litur- not desist unta with generaI çonsent he persuaded the apostolic Lord
gists wanted to think, and perhaps sincerely did think, al- Bcnedict that they should chant t he s?mliol at t11r public mas<."
t hough t he qualifying word cr~diturreads iike a twinge uf mis-
giving. We should be cautious, t o ~ ,about s ~ c ha refercnce The Pope was already heavily in Henry's debt for assistame
as thut of Amalarius of Metz, in his Eclogae de oJcio missae,?o 1 in overcoming the rival pseudo-pope Gregory in ror 2, and i i i
the Roman custom of saying the creed. The book is probably 1
general his position vis-&vis thc ernperor made cornpliiincr
8 1

a tenth-centurycompilation ; and, in any case, what the author with his requests sound comrnon-sense in mat ters like this. Tn
had in mind was not the practice of the Roman church itself, i any case Rome was at t1iis period very much undcr the litur-
but the Ordo Romanus which Pope Leo's predecessor, Hadrian 1,
On all this sec thc
~nlld.il 192;9+
I~IIC. 7 11:
very suggeutive article by Dom B. Capelle in Rah. th(ioI,
I
I
gical influence of the German church, and the adoptioil oi tlie
creed was rnerely the climax of a long series of borrnwings.3
For the Pope's letter, see Moii. Gcrm.HiJi., EM.111,696,
P,L.155, 1 3 2 3 . * W. his L Q d . dt quiblrrdam rcbw ud tnrsr. o8.r. lirrlin, (P.L.1 p, irif;o 6).
Cr. Tli, Klau~er,Historischrs j'ahrburh liii, ~ g g g ,r 69 fl'
358 THE TEACWING AND HISTORY OF C THE PILIDQUE 359
procceded from the Son was avoided. St Aups tine, however, felt no
n m d for reticente. His Trinitananism did not start with the
CuriousIy intertwined with the seria of iacidents by which Father as the source of the other two Persons, but 14th the idea
&e creed worked its way into the Eucharist is the problem of of the one, simple Godhead JVhich in Its essence is Trinity.
rhe fatefid interpolation in the third article which, ever since the TFhe logical developrnent of his thought involved the beIief
tighth century, has been one of the most explosive topics of that the Holy Spirit proceeded as trul>-fiom the Son as from
debate betrveen the churches of East and JYest. For many the Father, and he did not scruple to expound i t with knkness
hundreds of years the text of C accepted in the Latin church and preçision on numerous occasions.l He adrnitted that, in
and its daughtec çommunion~Iras contained the clause PRO- a primordial sense (princ$alitex), the Spirit proceeded from the
~ E E D W GFROM THE FATHER AND THE SON (jliuque) of the Holy Father, bccause it was the Father Who endowed the Son with
Spirit. The Orthodox churches of the East have remained the capacity to produce thc HoIy Spirit.2 But it was a cardinal
fiercely, even fanatically, attached to the more primitive PRO- premiss of his thedogy that whatever could be predicated of
CEEDING FROM TRE F.~TWER.A full discussion of the portentoua one of the Persons could be predicated of the others. So it was
addition in a11 its implications would necessitate an examin- inevitable that he shouId regard the denial of the double pro-
azion of at least three questions-the theology of the double c&on as violating the iznity arid simplicity of the Godhead.
procession, the history of the insertion of the filiogue, and the This way of t h h d h g beçarne unimrsallu accepted in the
histciry ~f tthe long-standing quarrel between East and West West in the fifth and s k t h centuries: there could be no more
over it. Here we shalI. be mainIy concerned with the second, illuminating instance oT the hold the great African had on
although a few rcmarks about the first must be set down by Latin Chriseianity. Greek theologv, however, was by no rneans
way of prefacc. Thc third belonp by rights to the fiefd of church prepared to take the bold step whiçh seemed so easy and natural
history proper rather t h n the smdy of creeds. to St Augustine. Many passages can be cited from the Eastern
50 far as theology is concerned, the doctrine that the third fathers, and have been cited in the course of the Iong, cm-
Person derives His being equally and coordinately from the bittered controversy, which appear t o approximate to the
first and the second was charaçtcristic, in its fully deveIoped doctrine 05 the double procession. One or two writers, like
forrn, of Western Trinirarianism and, in particular, of St St Epiphanius,3 may even havtve succumbed to the infiuençe of
Augussine's presentation of it. From the days of TertuIlianl their Latin associates so far as to echo their language. Generally
the typi-I-formula had been, "From the Father through the speaking, however, they never lost sight of the idea, which St
Son ". 3n tHe fourth century, however, the deeper irnpIication Gregov of N y s a brought out forcibIy at the close of his Quod
was extracted from this that the Son, conjointly with the non sunt tres dii14 that what accounted for the distinctions in the
Father, was açtually producti~~e of the Holy Spirit. The tmt Trinity waç the fact that one of the Persons stood in the
to which appeal was reqdarly made was the Lord's staternent relation of cause (4a l ~ t o vto
) the other nvo. Thus they found na
in Jn. 16, 14, ' T e (i.e. the Spirit) will receive of mine." In dificulty in saying that tbe Spirit proceeddfrom the Father
St Hilarv,z Phoebadius of Agena and St slmbrose,4 while nhis through the Son, the Son being considered the Father's iinstru-
teaching was cIearIy inculcated, a certain reserve in its fornu- ment or agent. But they treated it as axiomatic that the Father
latiom was observed, and the affismation tbat the Spirit alone was the source or fountain-head of Deity, and th5t both
1 Cf.Adu. Prax. 4 (C.C.L.I I, r I 62) : spirilum non aliundc pufo quam a jiotrr prrjlium.
E Cf. De ttrin. 2, zg; 8,20; 8,26 (P.L. 10,69;rrgo f; 255). 784 f ; 8 ~ &9.4.
' Dcfd orth. 8 (P.L. 20,49). It is possible that tht author ofthis work i s Gregory
nf Elvira
E Cf. n s i n n . 1 5 , 17,29;~ 5 , 2 6 , 4 f(P,L.42,1081 ; 1095).
3 Clf. Aiircr. 7 , 8 (Holll, tg).
P.C. 45, 133.
360 THE TE.4CHlND AND HISTDRY OF Ç

the San and the Spirit derive$, in the only legitimate sense of which has often been fathered on the fint council af Toledo
t h t word, from Him, the one by generation and the other by (400)~'but which Dom Morin suggated "ight be the long-
proccssion. Their srtadfast refasal to fall into line with the lmt Libellm in mudum sgmboli of Pastor, bishop of Gdicia in
Latins was not the fmit of mere obstinacy, but sprang from an . Hese, toa, belief is expressed in "the Spirit, the Paraclere,
instinçtive sense of the deep principie invoIved. 7iVhat realIy .o is neither the Father Hirnself nor the Son, but proceeds
divided East aand M7estin their acnmonious and often unsai70uay n the Father and the Son "'. hiany other similar texts rnigli t
quanel over the Jilioque was a fundamental difference of ap- ue quoted, and the student rnight be tempted to infes that there
proach to the problem of the rnustery of the triune Godhead. was sornething particularly deadly to Priscillianism in the
Naturallp the leaders of M'estcrii Christianity, while fuIly flzoque. Tlie true explanatiori, however, is that PriscilIianism
accepting and teacIiing the dactrine of the double procession, was marked with a deep strain of Sabdlianisrn, and ihe refuta-
were far too cautious and diplomatic to flaunt it ar an official tion of it dernanded a dctililed exposition of Trinitarian teach-
dogma in the face of Eastern theologians. Gatherings held far ing. The preçençc of thejlioqus in Spanish crecds of this period
from the centre, like the third council of Toledo (589) and the rnerely testifies to the popularity of the doctrine in this section
E n ~ l i s hsynod of Hatfield (680),1 rnight proclaim the doctrine of the Wcstern church.
and anathematize iits deniers, but the papa. deliberatelu re- A vivid illustration of the hold the double procession had on
sisted the temptation to cornrnit itself. To take but one erample, Spanish Ctiristianity is provjded by the record of e\-ents at
thê procession of the Spirit from the Son as well as from the Reccared'ç councii la in 589. At the openin- session
Father was expressIy taught by St Gregory the Great' (590- ihc king addressed tl sled bishops and notabIes, dwellinr:
Gog), but the formula expressing it was carehlly omitted from at Iength on his ow rsion and his earnest desire to do
the profession of faith put out almost a century later (680)h-! what he could to set forth the time faith.3 Thercupon he pro-
Pope Agathon in the name of a s y o d held at Rorne.3 So far ceeded to recite an exposition of it, In the course of which tIic
a9 creeds are concerned, the double procession made its first following statement occurred :
appearance, i t would seem, in Spain, jn a series oflocal formulae In equal degree must the Holy Spirit be confessed hy us, and wc
clirected against ihe PrisciIIianist heresy. One OS the most must pr-eaçh that He proceeds from the Father and the Son and is
ancient of these is the so-calted creed of Damasux,4 in iis of one substance with rhe Father and the Son : moreover, that the
original form ascribed to St Jerome, which A. E. Burn iden- I'erson oi't he Holy Spirit is the third in the TTinity, but that Hr
tified as the Pope" rreply to thc treatise addressed to him by nevertheicss shares fully in thc divine essence with the Father and
Priscillian of Avila in 380. K. Kunstles hazardcd the guess the Son.
zhat actual compilarion H-as tlie work of the s y n d of Sara- Evidentlv the doctrine ~ c c l s regarded as clincking the case
gossa, which condemned the heretic in the same vear, aiid against Arianisrn. Tt implied that the Son, as the sourçe e q u a l l ~
which mav have scn t it to Damasui: for his approval. Markedly of rhe Spirit, was in no sense inferior to the Father, and that all
anti-Friscilfianist in tone, it çontains the statement :"11'e believc three Persons were completely çoordinate and participated
. . . in the Holy Spirit, not bqotten nor unbeyotten, not egualIy in the divine essencc. The council followed Reccared's
created nor made, but proceedin~from the Father and the lead enthusiastically, and drafted the third of its anathemns i ti
Son." Another example is the crced with twelve anatlrcmas the forrn: " Whoever does not believe in the Holy Spirit, or
Cf.&de, Hist. eccl. 4, r7 (P.L. 95. rq8f.). doe, not believe that He proceeds from thc Father and the
= cf.Mord. r , 22,30 ; Hom.2 6 , z (P.L. 75,541 ; 76, 1198).
For text see Hahn 168 ; also Maii~iIIJ, f 003.
.!3. 3 (PL.87, 1220).
For texi s c t Halin roo. Cf.A. E. Durn, 245 ff. H-Béir. x, 1893, 385 F.
" Anlipriwillinnn, Frribiirq irn Brrireart, ignj, 46 ff. Maiisi IX,977 11.
II*
362 THE TEACHENG AND HISTORY OF C

Son, and denies that He is coeternal and coequal with the adherence to the decisions of the first five ecumenical councils
Father and the Son, let him be anathema."' The suggestion and oF the Lateran synod heId in 649 under Pope Martin I.
of thjs langrzage is that, while the doctrine was considered in- But the profession of faith which it published ran as follows :
dispensablc, it did not strike the council as revdutionary, but
rather as an accepted asticle of orthodoxy. We acknowledge and glorify our Lord Jesus Christ as they (i.e,the
It has often been held tiiat the interpolation of the word fathers of the general councils) glorified Him, nrither adding nor
JSlioque into the actuaI text of the creed must date from this subtracting anything, and we anathernarize with h e x t and voice
those whom they anathematized, and we acknowledge those ivhom
occasion. King Reccared formaIEy recited the Kicene creed, they acknowledged, glorifiing God the Father wittiout beginning,
with its anathemas, and the Constantinopolitan Creed as em- and His only-begotten Son, begotten of tht Father Ixfore all ages,
bodying the faith of the first four general councils. l e has seemed and the HoIy Spirit prwceeding in an incxprcssiblc manner from tIie
incredible that, after his own forceful langurige on the subject Fathet and the Son, as thme holy apostIcs and prophets and doctors
of the double procession and the enthusiasrn ~ 4 t hwhich the taught wvhorn we have mentioned.1
council took it up, the t e m symbolizing the doctrine should
not have been incorporateci in the creed. The evidence of thc Lãnguage like this reads a11 the morc sttangely when it is
hlSS, however, is not free from ambiguity on the point. bfany rernernbered that archbishop Theodorc, who presided at the
years ago A. E. Burn drew attention to she fact shat sweral symod, had once been a monk at Tarsus and so presumabIy was
important hiSS containing the acts of the council either lack familiar with the m e text of the creed. Sooner or later, how-
the cmcial word or exhibit it inserted by a later hand.VThe ever, a clash bens-e-een E x t and JVest w a hound
~ to come. Lhe
matter stiu requires investigation, but the conc2usion seems first round seems to have been fought at the çouncil of Gentilly,
inescapable that, as original1:- recited at the council of ToIedo, at Easrer 767. The imrnediaáe subjects under discussion 1%-ere
rhe text of C was the pure one 1vithoutfi1iopue.Yevertheles~it the worship ofimages and the return of territofies in Italy, to
was inevitable that, with lhe groiving stress laid on the doctrine, which Const-antinople f d t it had a clairn, but i t is reported 2
the word should speediIy creep into the creed. Spanish MSS of that " the question about the Trinitv was ventiIated between
the subsequent centuries give abundant iIlustrations of the the Greeks and the Romans, and whether the Holy Spirit
proceçs at work. pmceeds from the Son in the samc way as H e proceeds from
The sest af the story is familiar enough. The use of the the Father". Apparently what happencd was that the TVestern
jlioqire spread from Spain to Gad, where, even bdore it delcgates accused the arnbassadors of t he emperor Constantine
Enstalled itseIf in the creed, it found a niche in some ntes in V [Copronymus~of neglect in the matter of the worship ef
the Preface of the mass.3 At f i s t the West seems to have been images, and thcy retorted with a reproach about the impro-
genuineIy unawase that the doctrine of the double procession p"ety of insertingjlioqut?into the creed.
represented a definite advance on, or certainly dafication of, The dispute which had shus flared up almost aecidentaIIy
the teaching of earlier centuries. Thus she synod of Hatfield, rvas not long in developing into a steadv blaze. Pippin, king of
summoned to stabilize the Church against the presumed France, who had been present at the counci1 of GentiIly, died
Eutychian tendencies of Monotheletism, expressed its Ioyal in 768, and his son and successor, C h a r l e m a ~ e took
, up the
JIioque &h sornething Iike fervour, using every opportunity to
Mansi IX, 485.
Cf.his bricp nrticlc in J.rS. ix, 1908,301 f. Unfortunateiy no onc setms to parade it before the horrifred East and trying his best to inducc
havc followrd up and confirmtd his researches. the papacy to lend him its moral and praçtical support. A
Cf. the first contr~baliaof the third of the Galliçan masses of Mone (P.L. 138,
8671, inscribed on a Rcichenau palimpacst dating fmm circn 650: the Spirit is ' Rede, Hist. ecd. 4, I 7 (P.L. 95, igg).
addresscd as "nubsisting by rnystic procession Trom tbe Father and the Son* . "{ansi XI], 677; Ado Virnnensis, (P.I,,i n3,
~hr01t. 125).
364 '1'1IXS TEACITING AND IIISTORY OF C THE FIL10QUG 365
good exarnple was the remonstrance he addressed to Pope the royal chapel ai Aachen, and in the Frankish dominions
Hadrian I in 794. The Patriarch of ConstantinopIe, Tarasius, generally after 798, aIso contained thc dis~iutedclause.
had çirculatcd a letter ta the clergy of Antioch, Alexandria and Nevertheless the papacy had not becn tvon over to accept
Constantinoplc giving a creed expressing helief in the proces- it, and Charlemagne, who saw the Jílioqtre ns a tnirnp-card
sion of thc Holy Spirit from t h Father~ aIone, and it appeared against the Eastern ernpire, could not rest until he had per-
that Haciririn hacl given his assent to this confession at the suaded Rome to fall into line with his policy. Ht made a strong
scventh general council helcl iit Nicaea in 787. Charlernagne attempt to do so an the occasion of the troublesome incident
rebuked thc Popc for adrnittins such erraneous doctrines as which took plaçe at Jerusalem in 808. There was a convent
those of Tarasius, " who professes that the Holy Spirit proceeds of Latin rnonks setsled on Mount Olitret, and these were
not from the Father and the Son, nccording to thc faitIi of tlie treated as heretiçç and threatened with expulsion by their
Kiçene svrnbol, but from the Father through the Son ". The Orthodox neighbours because they c hanted the Constanti-
Pope in his seply, written also in 794, defended the Patriarçh, nopolitan Creed at mass with the addition of AVD FROY THE
arsniins that his tlieolop- was not his own, but was conscinant s o ~ SaturalIy
. t h q resisted, protested rheir rights in the rnatter,
\iith the teaçhjng of rnriny ancient fathers rind ~s-iththe practicc and addressed a letterl to Leo I I I complaininp: and inquiring
oSthe Rornan churçli.' what they should do. They requested him to inform Charle-
In the same y i s t hc f;/inr/ile rcccived great putiliçi 1:- ;i[ tlir maqne, for it was in his chapel that they had htard the creed
synod of Frat~kf~irt-on-lc1ai11, which mct to condemn +c suny 14th thejliope. The Pope, it appears. first af a11 sent rhem
Adoptionist heresy nnd its chief supporters, Elipandus of ToledrI a profmsion of faith aimed at rhe Easíern churches and affirm-
and Felix of UrgeI. Charlemagne waç present in person? and inq the procmion of the HoIv Spiric from the Father and the
the Pope was rcpresented by legates. -4mong the docurnents SOII.' Then he iaformed the ernperor of t h t affair. I t was as a
read out was thc Libcllt~softhe Italian bishops agahst Elipan- result of these happeninp that Charlemagne, wha assurned dze
dus, which was probably thc work d St PauLinus of AqtiiIeia. role of protector of Christians in the H01y Land, commissionecl
Here the doctrinc of the double procession I\-= vigorou~ly Theodulphus of Orleans to write his treatise DFSpiritu S ~ ~ C S O "
asscrted.2 Latcr in the proceedings a letter of Charlemagne's and assernMed a council at Aachen in 8 9 - 1 a. The delegates
to Elipandus and the other Sparrish bishops waç read out, and present approved and endorsed Theodulphus's book, pro-
appended to this was a f o m of creed h whích he, too. pro- nounçed in favour of thejliopt, and possibly even enjoined its
clairned belfef in the double procession."wo yean later, in addition to the creed.4 It was: as a. consequence o f this gathering
796 or 797, at the synod of Cividale which St Paulinus sum- that Charlemagne sent that ernbassy to Leo I1 I of which abbot
moned, the symbol set forth was C with thejlfiliogacin the third 'Smaragdus preserved an account. As his report of the conver-
article.4 Én his jnauqurnl addsess St Paulinus skilfullv justifrccl sation still shows, the envoys used a11 their arts on the Popc
jts insertion : jt no korc violated the principie tliat new creeds without av,ziE. With Roman conservatism, and a shrewd
must not be framcd than did the alterations which the fathers scnse that if he yielded he would put hfrnself in an awkward
of 38 r had felt obfiged to make in N. It had becorne necessai-y positioi~vis-&vis tPic East, he parried their ingenious argu-
to interpolate A N D FROM THE SON "OR aççount of those bereiics menis, The doctrinal truth conveyed by thejlioqiie, he freely
who whisper that the Holy Spirit is of the Father aIone".b We adrnitted, was essentiai to orthodoxy, bu t not nll essential
need not daubt that thc form in which the creed was sung in rruths were enshrined in the creed. He adrnitted, too, that he
1 CT. Ep. ptrrgrin. monnch. (P.L. i ng, I 257 ff.).
Hi.ri., F$p. V, 7 ff.
1 A f f ~ t t .Fcrin. Alan. Getm. Hisi., Comil. 11, I gG. a.E#, 15 (P.L.1 0 2 , 1090 ff,, and rfg, rz6o ir.).
9 M o n . C;crni. Hist., finei!. 11, 163. ' Mori. Germ.Hist., C m i i . 11. i U 7. P.L. 105 239 E.
6 Moti. Gcrrn. Htst., Lonctl. 11, 182. q o n . Gtrm. Hist., Cancil. 11, 235 r.
I TIKE RECF,IF'ED 'TES'S
3 69
so-called Ordo Rornanrr~ontiquiis, rvhicli hr tnade the openin~:
sectioii nf his influential De diDinis catholicnc ecclesiac o&ciis nc
ministPnis, published in bis cathedral civ in 1568.1 It is identical
with t h e one which was authoritative in the iVest in the later
THE APOSTLES' CREEB rniddlc ages, and which t he reformers thernscIvcs adopted as
I
their norrn-esçept that Luther read CH~ISTIAS for C~THOLIC.

Credo i n dcum patrcm omnipotcntcm, I believe in Gxi thr Father alrnigliry,


NEXTto the Constantinopolitan Creed, the most important crcatorrm cmli t t tcrrae; m a t o r UT htaven and carth ;
confessional formulary in Christendom is the so-çalled Apostles' I Et in Tesum Chnstum, rilium eius .eid in Jcsus Clirist, His only Son, our
Creed. Except in Anabaptist circles, its authority was generally unicum, dominum nmtrum, qui con- h r d , IVho was conceivd by t h t
i ceptus c ~ de t Spiritu sancto, natus Holy Spirit, born irom the Virgin
recognized at the Reformation, Martin Luther singling it out I
ex Maria virgine, passus sub Pontio Mary, suffcfd undcr Pontius Pilatc,
as one of the threc binding sumrnaries of belief, and both Calvin Pilato,mcifixus.mortuuset repuitus, was crucified, drad and buricd, dcs-
and Zwingli including it arnonq their doctnnal norms. The dmendit ad infenia, tertia dic resur- cended to hcll, on the third day rost
rexit a mwtuk, awmdir ad coeiw, a p i n from ttie dead, axended to
Enslish church has gven it unu'iual prorninence by requiring sede? ad dm- dei patns ornnipo- heax-en,sits at the right hand ol W
i t s recitation twice daily at rnorning and evening prayer. It rentis, indt wnturus est Eudicarc rhe Father almightv, thence Hc will
has neveir ranked arnong the theologiçal standardr;, and con- rivos ct rnortuos ; cometojudgethe liiingnnd thedead:
Crdo in Spiritum sancnim, a n c t a m I be1ier.e in thc Holp Spirít. ihc holy
sequently has no pIace in tAe Piturq-, of the Eastern Orthodox rçclesiam atholicam, sanctomm Cathnlic Church, the communion o l
churches, but the suspicion 14th which they onçe regarded i t
has long disappeared. In the ttventieth cenhiqr its prestige
Iras been enhanced and extended by its acknowIedgement
hy severai ecurnenicd gatherings as a uniquely authoritative
statement of Clvistian belief. I n 1920, for exarnpie, it was put I
1 I
comrnunioncm, mninimcm pccw-
torum, carnis r m c r i o n r n i . ct
i i t a m artcmain. .lrnrn.
&ts, thc rcmiuion of sins, thr rt-
surrcction o[ t h t flwh, aiid rirma!
life. .4mcn.

Firsi, we should natice (the fact ha9 never b e i i denied) tlint


what we have here is simply a rather elaborate variant of thc
forward by the Lambeth Conference, in its famous Appeal to 1
Old Roman Creed (R) which we identified and studied in
a11 Christian people, as one of the four pillars (the Hol y Scrip- Chapters 111 and IV. For ease of reference the canventional
tuses, the two dominicd sacrarnents, and the ministry were labet T (=textus rccqtris) is customariIy attached to it. We
the others) on which the visible unity of the Church rnight be observed in Chapter VI that &e creeds ured in the Western
ereçted.1 Sirnilarly, at the World Conference on Faith and Church in the early çenturies for instructing catechurnens and
Order which met at Lausanne in t927, churchmen from the 4 ridrninistering baptism were aIways variant foms of R. ICc
East as well as the U'est recited it in unison at thc opening glanced at creeds of this description hailing from Xorth Italy,
session, and joined in acclaiminp i t as a fittinq exprcsiion of khe Balkanr, Korth Africa, Spain and Gaul. In a11 of thern thr
the Christian rnessage2. core was R, and ihey were distin,.gshecl frorn one anotber and
T h e text of tht A4posnlesTreed,in its Latin and its English from R either by minor rnodifications of phrasing or by tlie
dress, is printed below. The Latin çorresponds exactly with the I
inclusion of additional rnatrer. In the case of T the chasaçterjstic
Form given by Melchior Hittorp, canon of CoTogne, in the trimminas, all told, amount to eleven-{a) T ndds CREATOR OF
<,

"te Section VI d lhe Apped, whirh formcd the ninth of tlíe Reaolutinn~ HIEAVEN A'ND E A R ~(crealor~mmeli et I m a r ) ; (6) T alters R's
adopied by the Canfertnce (p. 28 ofthe Rcport, pulilirhed tgzn), I
I 1
CF. G . K. A. BeII, Ilorirmcnts nf Christian Uni& 2nd ser., 1930, 9.Thc Orthdnx Cf.. p, 73 oF the 1568edition. SCC alno hfaxima bihlinlliccd wteriim$utrum r; ariti-

I
representatives safc.garried their traditional attitiide h! a rautiaiir fnotnotr. giiorilmrcriprvrunr cccbiastimxm, Lii~diini,1677~
L..
XTIT,(i$,wlirrr the B r h Rornorisir
368 rrniiqiriis i.i convenicntly reprinted.
THE RECEIVED TEXT 371
distinctive word-order cmrsT r ~ s u sto the more common JESUS and Iaying it down that the brethren in a monastery, at the
CHWST ; (C) T gives precision to R's BDRN FROM TEE HOLY SPIRIT closc oE their night prayers, "should a11 together with a united
rn THE VIRGPI ~ I A R Yby reading CONCEIVED BY THE HOLY voice recite the sjmbol of thc: Christian faith." 1 ITe havc to
SPIRIT, BORN FROM TRE VíRGIY hI.4RY; (d) T adds SWFFERED wair until mueIi later for definite cvidence of its use at rnattins
(pmw) before ~ E PONTIUS
R PILATE; ( E ) T inserts DEAI) and prime. Alcuin does not rnention the practice in his Iitutgical
(moriuus) ; (f;l T insem DESCENDED TO HELL ( d e s c d i t ad infma) writings, and the fint to prescribe the use of thc creed bpforr
after BITRED; (9)T expands R's AT TRIZ RIGHT HIWD OP THE rnattins and prime, as afim çomptine, are St Benedict ofAniane
FATHER 10 AT TRE RIGHT HAXD OF COD THE FdTKER ALMIGHTY (tBn I ) , the g e a t reformes of monasterim under Cliarlemagne
(nd d p x t m m dei p a t k omnipokntis) ; ( h ) T changes R s WHEXCE and Louis the Pious,%nd Amalarius of 3Ietz.q~utthe presence
(undt) to T ~ E S E E(indej ; ( 1 ) .T adds CATHOLIC (catholicam) to R's of the creed in early psalteries proves that its imerhon into the
description of the Church as HOLY; ( j ) T interpolates COM- rnorning ofices can be safely carried back a p o d way before
~ N I O NOF smm (sanctorum communionm) as an article of belief; their epoch. By this time a11 the other derivative versions of R
(k)T adds ETERNAL UFE (pitam a e f e m m ) . had given place to T, and it thus fel1 to it, as the mature flewer
Secandly, we should recall in passing that, dthough the of Western credal developmtnt, to inherit an impressive role
milieu in which R and its daug-hter creeds grew up was rnainly in t h t daily worship of the Church.
catechetical and baptismal, T was from its forrnation called There are severa1 closcly connected problems which T
upon to discharge muçh more extensive functions, Its primary raises and which it will Ise our task in this and the follawng
rale, of course, has aIways heen to serve as the declaratory chapter to examine. One blg question to which we musc
creed at baptism. In that capaci ty it has featured in the bap- attempt t o supply an answer conçerns its identity and prwen-
tismal rites of the Latin West since the eighth century, and in ance. 1s T a provincial creed, a cousin of all those others which
that of the Rornan church, in conjunction with the shorter flounshed so prolifiçally all over Wetern Europe and North
and more primitive interrogations, since a date only a Iittle Africa after the third century? If it is, to what region must we
latcr which w e s h d have to discuss in the foIlowing chapter. assign i t ~birthplace, and by what fateful sequence of evtnts
But alrnost contemporaneously 4 t h its find redaction T ob- are we to suppose that it carne to be promoted to a paramount
tained a Fwthold in the divine ofice toe, and this it has re- position a-en at Rorne? AlternativeI>.,is it in façt a revision of
tained evcr since. Long More that happened, when their R çarried out by the Rornan church itself. Parallel with this
creeds were still Auctuating and immature variants of R, S t literary and historical inquir). is the probIem of the meaning
Arnbrose and St Augustine were speaking of the symbalumfisn of the additiond matter which reprwents the cUference betwetn
as n talisman to be memorized and recited at stated intervah. R and T.Il'hat were the motives for its incorporation, and to
"Say the creed daily," the latter advised his flock.x '"When you what extent was the teaching of the çseed altered by i#
rise, when o u compose yourself to sleep, repeat your creed, presence? For rhe moment we shall limit our inrestigatian to
render is to the Lord, remind yourselfofit, be not irked to say the theological and doctrinal aspect of the Apastles' Creed.
it over." At this early period the regular repetltion of the creed This is so intricate and importnnt that the whole of the prestnt
had nothing, so far as we know, of canonicai obligation about chapter will be taken up with it. In the final çhapier we shall
it, but was a matter of private devotiou. In the rniddle o f the turn to the even knottier problem of T's origin and emergtrnçc:
seventh century, however, we find St Fmcruosus (icerca 6651, as an independent creed of European authority.
archbishop of Braga, assigning the creed a place in compline,
"tg. m o n d . 2 (P.L. 87, ~ogg).
Strm. 58, I r (P.L. 38, 399 r.). Cf. St Ambrwe, De mrg. 3 , 4 ; &pEm. p t b . ad Cí. Vitu S.B m d . Anian. {Bolland. Acto SS.,Antwcrp, 1658:Tom.IV,618).
init. (P.L. 1 6 , 2 2 5 ; 17, I 155 and i 160). 3 C:l: I1e CCCL. O ~ C 4?
. 2 (P.L. 1a5#I 168).It was published not long aftcr 820.
1 CHANGES 1N THE IIKS1' AR'rIGLE

I'rurner of all things, Who suspended the heavens aloft, estab-


lished the solid earth, etc." i Xicetas accurnulated a whole row
3 73

The first artide need not detain us long. It has already been
pointecl out in Chapter V that the original import both of
'1 of adjectiva which, he said, belonged to God-"unbegotten
. . .invisible . . .incornprehensibIe . . . unchangeable . . . good
FATHER and of ALMIGHTY very early faded into the back-
and just, frarner of heaven and earth".%uffnus made a passing
ground. After the fourth century, if not before, exegetes and allusion ta God as "altogether the author of a11 things ".3 But
expositors alrnost always interpreted the Fatherhood as refer-
I
overt referentes to this aspect of His being were infrequent and
ring to the spccial relation of the first to nhe second Fersoii late in Westem creeds. Xorth Afriçan formularies were the
first in the field witli tllern, if rue can judge from the words
within the Holy Trinity, Once the theolo@cd conception of
the triune Godhead had begun to become expIicit, it was in- CREATQR OF ALL -GS (univer~onirn~.taturem)in t hc text handed
evitahle that churchrnen shouEd come to regard the creed as a down to us by St Aupstine.4 The ideniical phrasing of our
cornpendious exposition oF current Trínitarianism. A p-picaI Xpostles' Creed is attested by the creed of St Caesarius ofAr1es.J
comment was tha t of St Faustuç of Riez (fi. 450) 1 : "How excel- , Thc choice of words is curious. For long thc Western tradition
lently throu~houtthe whole creed the separate Persons are seems ta have hovered between C Q X D I T O R E ~and CREATOREU,
distinguishea. How manifestly in all these the Tini. is un- wliile FACTOREM (aIw,ay preferred in Latin translations of the
folded." AFrnost a century before him li'icetas of Remesiana Constantinopolitan Creedj Sailed ao win much support. What
had characterized tht creed, apart from the articles folIowieg rnay haire unconscioudy determiried the uItimate selèction 01-
CREATOREM ma?. h - e bem the fact that the Vulgate version
m HOLY SPIRIT,as "this profession of the Trinity",? despite
the fact that 3t had been fat from the intentions of R's framerri of Cm. I ! I read: "In the beginning God rrratcd (creami, not-
to make it such. So GOD was regularly understood as çonnoting
withstanding the L S X &oíquw) lieaven and carth."
the one Godliead, and FATHERas pointing to the Father of Did any special considerations prornpt the in terpolation of
Jesus Chzist. ALMTGHTY, too, gradually lost its prirnitir-e sense, the clause? Some hax-e overheard the rurnbliny of anti-heretical
suggested by the Gseek T ~ W O K ~ ~ TofW "ali-niling
~ , ", and under polemic in it. It is weT1 known that the Church did not hesitate
to use its inherited dogma that God had madc earth as well as
the influente OS the Lazin o m n $ o t m was taken to irnply zhe
ability to do all things. heaven as a powerful weapon against the Gnostic denial that
. .
The only nm:e! clausii wliiçh appears in T's first article is the material order could have owed its existente to the good
CREATOR OF HE:AVP,N A! m EART : predicate like this,
God. But this was in the second and third centuries, when
siressing God's creative: açtiviq m almost invariable Western çreeds were as yet innocent of dlusion to God's
elernent in Eastem çrecds. Its absence rrom R was one of the çreativity. In a lates age PrisciIlianisrn rnight have furnished
t he occasien for a pointed deçlaration tIzat God was ~ h author
e
most chararterisric fcatures of that formulary. Western theolo-
gianr nlwavs tauyli t the doctrine, of mune, and catechetical of rnatter no less than spirit, for {tojudge by the anatliematisms
expositions oS thc rule of faith no doubt always explained and pronounçed against it by the counciI o f Braga oF 563 6) therc
was a strongiy Manichaean strain in its teaching. It refused to
elaborated the first article by dwdling on God's work in the
creation of the universe: it was a truth which marked Chris- I
;idmit that flesh was the Ilandiwork of God, preferring to
tianity off from all other reIiGons. So Novatian, in the middle Dc lrin. i (P.L. 3 , 9 1 3 ) .
' D4 rymb. 2 (Rurn, 39 f.). This clauar rnay havc f i ~ u r c din his creed. Ser ahove,
of the third century, demanded thaz we believe "first of all, in E
I
rim
.."ok.
174. f.
iiisymb.a@d.q(P.L. 21, 341).
God thc Father and alrnighty Lord, that is, the all-perfect ' Srrm. 215 (P.L.38, 1072).
I
3
CE. Hom. I dt .ymb. in Caspari, QwEIcn TI, 188.
De symb. 8 ; 9: 1 0 (Rurn, 46; 47; 48). a h See a h v e , p. 179.
hlansi IX, 774 ff.Gf.especially Nos. 4, 5 , 7, 8, I i , iz, 13, aiid 1.1.
SOME MiNOR MODIFICALIONS 377
A rather more interesting elaboration of R's original text is divina Spirit, it may well have occasioned iineasiness to later
the reading wao w ~ sCONCEIWD BY THE HOLY S P T R ~ BORN , theologians, with their fomulated theory of the personal and
FROM THE WRCIN MARY, so characteristic of the Apostles' Creed. eterna1 distinction of the Son from thc Spirit.1 The burden
The earIiest rormulary to exhibit this is the one alleged by St of this sugg nay be :accepted, even if t2ie underlying
Serorne to have bcen drafted by the orthodox par- at Rirnini CIiristology lifferent Trom t he: one proposed. The intra-
i11 359 (this was thcir e m crceci, nat the onc their representa- duction firsr or sep,arate pr,epositionis, and then of the fresh
tive signed at Nicé! , which has been attrihutecl to one of their participle c1O s m I1, .may .. .L

we31 have been detemined by the


leading mernbers, Phoebadius of A~en.1About the same periocl instinctive d esire to t hrow what the fully developed theologl; of
\%-ecome acíoss cchçies of thc ivording in St Hilary.2 A ccntu- the Trinity considei-ed the true perspecnive into the sharpest
later St Faustus of Riçz vouches for its cumency in Provence : Ilt! relief. This expIanation derives some suppors from the patnstic
treated it as an accepted articlc of his creed.3 The sentence has disç:ussion of &e clã,use. Rufi.nus, for , wliose teut read
often been printed in one of St .%u.ptine'ssermons, but the BP and FROM but not coxai; m D , W ins to ernphasize
. 0 .- C -- f-
reading is almost ccrtainlv fauli!..' Both h i s other semons and thar -1.
L

rne m n rs7a ererrraii) a v ~ iir i riit: rlcntciis, and that BOBN


L -L 1 1

his w ~ i t i n ggenerallu irnpI!- tliat tlie text he was familiar %vith su m~HOLY S P ~ mereIy T rneant that He (the Son) had built
approxirnated to R at this point. IfTemar- notice that, tvPiilc a ternple for Himself in the Virgin" swornb.' St Hilary re-
the openiiig article of the orthodox formula of Rimjni w;ic peatediy underlined &e fact that the role of the Spirit was to
ohviously- iimpro~ised with an e!.e to the theol~gicalksua of con m e creixl apparently lacked the
the hour, its ChristoIogy has all the air of hax-ing been cxtracted dist in and B ORN, was fully aware that
b d i l y from a baptisrnal creed of &e R-type. It is plausible to BORn r - ~ u u li ~ nvcu
t
. -----
ù r w i .%L" IHL WRGIN MARV might lead
conjecturc that, if Phoebadius reallu had any hand in its çom- to the trava. that Jmw was in effect the Son of the Spirit.
pmition, he madc use of a Tom which was familiar to Iiim in His solution" of &e problem was to suggest that Jesus is not
fis own churçh. EteralIy bom fiom the Holy Spirit : He js the Sori of (30d the
There is nothing to indicate diat, as arighiaily prnpounded, Fat heri bu t can be described & born from the Spirit, just as
tlie modificatiori was consciously anti-heretical ira tendency. we, wha af course are sons of G d by adoption and grace,
I'et that it had tlte object of çonveying a subtie doctrinal cani legitim;ately be describe:a a!?-boirn of water and the Holy
nuance and correctinq possible misunderstanding seems likely. Spirit.
It was evidently considered important to d i s t i n e h between Severa1 centuries aftenvards the nice distinction between rhe
the respective roles of thc Holy Spirit and the BIessed Virqin conception and the bifih was to equip the champions of artho-
in the incarnation. Thus, where R (in agrecment with M f . I , doxy ~ 4 t ha useful weapon against the heresies of their day. In
2 0 ) used the sjmple preposjtion FROM (@.r),most of its loca1 con reak of Adoptionisrn in the çlosing years of
variants preferred iwo prepositions, BY (de) to mark the opera- t he Alcuin made frequent appeal to the h r d ' s
tion of the Holy Spirit, and FROM to express the birth from our concçpliori vy c r i e doly Spirit as rhe clinching proof that, even
Lady. The addition we are examining carnes this tendency a as man, He was more than an adoptive Son (3;Iius adofitivus).
step further in harmony witli the emphasis on the conceptioii Since He had been actuall~çonceived by the Holy Spirit, it was
in Lk. r , 31 and 35. It has been prnposed that, if the original plain that He had never at any mornenf of Ris earthly existente
ChristoIogy of the creed was one irnplying the incarnation of hecn anything else than God, and so it was out of tlie question
For the tcxt, 9cc St,fcrome,Dial. ndu. Liicifer. 17 (P.L.23, r ~ o f . )and
, Hahn 166. Cf,H.J. Carpenter in J.T.S. xl, 1939,36.
De I&. ro. 20 IP.t. 1 0 . qr8). V o m m . tn qmb. awt.g (P.L. 2 I , 349).
a C f . , e . g . , D c ~ r u 2,94;
i. 10, 1 7 f f . ; ro,35 (P.L.
In,66; 956ff.; 371).
BncI1ir. 37-40 (P. L. 40, 15 r i.).
T H E COMMUNION DF SAINTS .'389
MS evidence that Nicetas, too, had TO ~ a LIFE e EVERLASTFNG IN THE HOLY GHURCH,
I I BLLlEVE I S THE REMISSIOY OF SINS
in his creed. Yet an independent, more positive cornplex of , COMMUNION O F SAIPrTS, TBE RESURRECTIOY OF TIIE FLESW,
i d e a w3s not SIOW in attaçhins itself to the clause. St Cyril of i LIFE EVEREXSTISC. ,411 01d .innenian creed qiioted by
JerilsaIem, for examplc, ~vhiledisposing of LIFE EVERLASTINC Caspari abo speaks of belief i11 I*HE I-ORGIVE>ESS OF siss IPS THE
quite briefly, did indicate that ir s t d for somethins more t han S S ~ U S T S .TOO
ROLY CHGRCH LYD THE C O A I ~ I U ~ T OOF ~ much un-
mere conúnuance of life : it pointed, he said, to " tlle real, çcrtainty, howetter7surrounds tlie originç of these ovo fornu-
veritablc life (tj 6 v w s ~ a a;q B W s ) " , which was God laries for us to be able to build much upon thern. But the pl.ir;ise
Himself. For S i c e LIFE EVERL.WG was life with Christ cropped up b e o n d any shadow of doubt, though its rneanin~
in heaven, eternal nnd blessed life, the fniít of faith and right is not entirelv clear, in the resoiutions of a GaIlican s-od held
conversation, a life which neither the pagan nor thc unhe- nF Sirnes in 394.: From now onwardç it wãs to enjoy a ~ o g r i e
lieving Jew could possess, 2311t which w;is resewed for tlic faithful in çrecds, but almost esclusivcly in South Gaul.
wlio lived chasteIy here on earth.2 Thus the emphaçis ~ 5 s This Sact 1s-ould seem to favour the inference that h'icetas
transferred from the idea of protracted existente to the blessed probahly bomowed COMMUNIOK OF s m s in the fim place from
quality of the Iife of the world to come. Lhus when the Pela- Gaul, with which Iic Iiad close personal tics as the friend of St
gians, anxious to justify their practice of baptizing children, Paulinus cif Xola, and which he visited Qn more than one
tried to draw a distinction hetweeii life everlasting or salvation ocçasion. Harnack, however, qziestioned this, and contcnded
(which sinful men of courue need) and the kingdom of heaven that the exchange was more likely to have been in the
(which was what they thought innocent babes rnight acquire revesse direction, Nicezas deriving the idea from St Cyril
in baptismj, they were met with an indignant protest from St of Jerusalern. But there is nothing to indicate that St Cyril
Augustine. It was a bIaspbemous nwelty, he urged,J to say had riny knowledge of coMMwNron OF SAINTS: the passaqes
that lirc everlasting differed in anv way from the kingdom of Harnack cited from the Cnterhetical Lectares ín support of his
lieaven. So, too, in thc rniddlc ages the stress in LIFE EVERLASTING theory are altogether too vapic.3 In any case, it is çin-gular
was on the positive state of lilessedncss enjoyed by the redeemed. that, on this assumption, St Gyril's example should apparently
As S t Thomas Aquinas put it, rhe first truth about eternal life have induced Xicetas and the West to adopt the clause while
is that a man these finds union w-ith God, FVho is the rewarci failiing altogether to persuade the East to do so.4 Dom klorin
and end of a11 our lahonrs. and crorm ali our deires..' çonstructed R more elaboratc argument, tracing the clause
back through S t Jerome to h e n i a , and so to Caesarea {St
Cyprian, who corresponded with Firmilian of Caeçarea, had
Finally, we come to an additiond cclause of' the Apostles' spoken of a "comrnunion of evil persons"-cmrnunio malorurn) ."
Creed whiiich has aroused irnrnense dlscwsion, TRE COMMUN~ON .h question like this is not rcally capable of solution, for rliert
OF S A I ~ S (sancbwm ~omrn~nionem). The h-st surviving creed to is very little evidence to go upon and zhe argurnents are fairly
attest its presence is the formulary çommented on by h'icetas evenly balanced. But i t must be pointed out that the main
of Remesiana. Before Nicetas, Iiowever, if Dom G. blorin's p e g on which Dom Morin's hypothesis hangs, St Jerorne's
conjecture can be accepted as çorrect, it wodd seem to have supposed authorship of the Fides Hieronymi and the date of
featured in the so-called "Faith of St Jerome3',J whiçli ends
1 See Q~tLlm11, II ; Hahn t38.
3 Cai. i8,28ff. (P.G.33, 1049 r.). 2 Cf.Hefele-Leclercq,Hirroire dts conn'ls 11, 93.
De symb. I z (Burn, 5 r . Cat. 18, 26,fin; 27; 10 ( P . C . 93, 1048 ff.).

4
i
Scrm. 294, z t (P.L.3 , 1336 R.).
Cf. &$OS. J@, symb. awt.n d j * . (Vol. 111 of 163p Paris editioii, I 33).
a
Cf. the remarks ofJ. Kostlin in Harick's K e a l ~ n ~ k1'l1,. 504.
Rm. d'hfsf. c t /i!#. rdig. ix, 1904, 3.
Cf. Anrcdota Marcd~aimnIII, i i i , igg i. Ep. 69, g vartel 1. 758).
exegesis whiçh S t Thomas Aquinas espoused in his short essay
I THE COMMUNION OV SAINYS

creed. Thus he and his followers argued that a reference to the


395

on the Apostles' CrcecZ.1 "Because a11 tbe faithful forni one sacraments was surely caled for in the oficial summary of the
body," he wrotc, '"he benefits belonging to one are cornmuni- Church's faith. Ka doubt there is force Iii this: nrid we rnay
cated to the otliers. Tliere is thiis a sliaring of Eienefits {com- I conjecture that it was the instinctive conçciousness of a lacuna
munio bonon~m)in the Churcli, and this is what we mean by in the formiilary which, among other factors, rnoved t he iheo-
smciorurn cammunio." Tlie goods shared, he went on to explain, lopians of later ages to read an allusion to the sacriiments inte
/
comprise everything worih svhile done on earth by the sajnts it- But it would be foolhardy to work on the assumption that
(sancli), hsit particularly the seven saçrarnents, which convey I
the criterion of what ouçht to have been embodied in tlie creed
to us the virtue of Christ's passion, He being thc head o€ tlie supplies the k q to what actually w;is embodied in it. Agaiil,
I
body. Acçording to most scholars, St Thomas took sonclomrn they placed great reliance on analogim draisn from Greek
here as neuter and as ptecisely equivalent to bonomm, i.e. usage, appeahg to the frequent presence of a sacramental
I
"benefits", but this seems most irnprobable. Such an interpre- reference in such w-ords as scorvwvCa and 7; &ia. But it must
tation consorts i11 with the stress on Sie faithful as donors and be pointed out that tsue parallcls to sancfomi?icomrnicnionen~are
recipients of the benefits. or with the explicit nerition of "a11 hardly to be found in Greek. and that in any c z e it is hazardous
the saints" further down in the chnpter, or 154th the indusion to assume that Greek and Latin linquistic usage necessariIy
of blesdnqs other than the Ch~uch'ssacraments amonq the overlapped. If hile 14 ZYia in Greek reqslarly meant the con-
benefits under discusrion. It should be e ~ i d e n tthat what St secrated elements of t h e Eucharist, there is no unarnbiguour;
Thomas açtually understood b!- the clause xvas "that sharing evidence unti1 very late that sancfa had the samc technical
or participation which the saints enjy". r i t the same time sense in Latin. In the Few absoIuteIy incontmvertible instantes
other medieval writcrs applied it çtrictly to the Church as a that c a n be collected of the ~vord'sbeing used in this ~ a p thc
,
corporate society. Arnalarius of Trkes {tcirca 8 I 6:), far example, rneanulg seems to be quite tmtechnical and general, and the
paraphrased it as tlie fellowship of the saints h-hich is held context placa the reference to the sacrarnents bevond an:-
itogether the Spirit,? while hIapus of Sens -pIained it as I
reasonahle doubt.1 The relevance and Iralue, moreover, of
rneaninq, "tliat iq, the ccingrcgation of all the faithful in paralIet from Greek Iin,quistic practice become ewn morc
I
Chrjst "-3 quesbonable if we are Llisposed to agree that the roots of conr-
Our review provides an Plluminatin~picture ofthe fluctuating m o r OF ~ s m are to be sousht in South GauI rather than
rneaning which were read into ~latartorumcommunio in the pa- I an y Greek-speaking envlronment.
tristic and medieval periods. Tet the inescapablt concluslon to For these reasons the oIder, traditional. understanding uf
which it points is that, so far as the creed is concerned, the the phrase seems much more tikely to be the original one. When
dominant conception, at any rate between the fifth and eightli later the sacramenta1 interpretatiori began to thnist itseIf to thc
centuries, was "fcllowship with holy persons ". The sacramental j fore, it may have been in some degree the response to the felt
exegesis carne later in time, and has a11 the air of being secon- need for some mention of the sacraments; and the growing
I
dary: even where it did occur, sanctomm itself was most often tendency to inçlude the sacrament of Penance under THE
understood in a rnnsculine sense. The strengtli of Th. Zahn's REMXSSION OF SINS may have helped to focus attcntion on thc
case was drawn from considcrations which were cither à priori gap. The term cornmzlnio itself, which was corning to be in-
or far rernoved in their bearing from the history of the Western creasingly appropriated as a teme descriptlon of the saçrament
Erpos. sul. y n b . ajosi. (VoI. 111 rif the 1634Paris edition, 1 3 2 ) . 1, Cf. St Augustinç, In Joh. e2Qltg. Irnct, 6, I 5 ; D c j d . e1 np. 8 (P.S. 35, 1439 : 40,
Efi. d~ C ~ X bapt.
. (IJ.L. 99, UgG). 202). In E$. 98, 5 (P.L. 33, 36)) sometimes citcd in thir conncction, sanctis
a Librll, dt my~l. bapt. i t i Mnrtlne's De anliqui~ccclainaritibw, Antwerp, I 736, I 70. probably niearis " 'sninls".
TEXTS APPROXIMATINC TO T 399
recognized ecclesiastical authors, and was designed to assist
him and his disciples in their rnissionary enterprises. Later he
fel1 into disfavo~irwith the local authorities, was expelled and
took refuge in Alsace, and after a further period of energetic
THE ORIGINS OF THE APOSTLES' labour ended his days in the abbey of Hornbach (near Zwei-
hrucken), another of his foundations, probably jn 753.
CREED
Príminius quoted the ApostIes' Creed in three separate con-
texts in his rnisçlonary manual. In the first of these (chap. TO)
he recounted the familiar stmy of hotv the Twelve, bcing filled
IT was made plnin at the beginning of the preceding chapter with the Hoiy Spint, composed a summay of beIief. T h e creed
that the formulary now knom in the 1Ves-t as the ApostIes' which results from pieciug together the tu~elvefedauses which
Creed carne into existence as one of many v a r i a m of the ancient he sited coincides e ~ a c d yrrlth T, except that it reads SAT
haptismal confssion of the Roman church. 'CVe have already (scdii) instead of m ( s e d ~ i )of Christ" ssession ar the Father's .
o b s e d how much more detailed and theologcdy mature it right hand. The thbd (chap. 28) consisk of a hortatory in-
is as a statement of belief than R, but nothing has so far been I stmction on fãith and rnorals, and reproduça the creed in a
said about thc complicated and diffiçult problem of its origin. 1 loose, inexaçt fashion. By far the most interestfng is the second
The issues which this raises are of great interest and importaice, I1, (çhap. 12), in wPiich St Primurius rernrnded his readers of the
and we shalF devote this chapter to a discussion of them. Dur solemn occasion of their olcm baptisrn.
fint task, it is dear, must be to summarize the elidence for thc
earliest appearance of T (=ie'*lirs receptrrr), and about this "Thus we recall to p u s merno~es,brothem," he wrote, " the pact
rw made with M in the baptistery itself: that is, how, R-hen we
there is no serious doubt. A text to ali iiitents and purpwes
m e severalEy asked by the priest our narnes and how we were called,
idedcal with it is found in the tract De singulis libris canoninj eithes you ourself awwered, if you were already of an age to
starapsus, writttn by St Prirniniuç, founder and h t abbot ofthe a m y r , or at aU events he who was undertaking thc vow for ).OU
famous monaster?. of Reichenau, near Lake Constance. St and lifted you up fiam the water ançwered and said, 'He is d l e d
Priminius (his name has usually been spelt Pirminius, but h t h J o h , ' or some 0 t h name. And the priest inquired, 'John, do you
pidology and the preponderanr MS tradition suppott our senriunce the d e d and ali his works and all his show?' You replied,
forml) was a notable Bmedictine missionary who arrived in 'I renounce, that Is, I despise and retinquish, all evil and diaboiic
the neighbourhood of Lake Constance about 724, establkiçhed works.' M t e ~that renunciation of the devi1 and all his works, vou
the abbey of Reichenau under the protection -and with the werc,- ,~d by the priest, 'Do you believc in God the Father
, ,,I
-1.-

patrona,Fe oof Charles Martel, organized monastic institutions alrnighty, creator of heaven 2nd earth ? ' Sou replied, ' I beliwe."
in S.W. Germany general!y, and awakened a new religious and And again, 'Do you believe in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord,
Who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born fiom the Vitgin Mary,
scholarly life by the banks of the Upper Rhine. He wrote his suffered under Pontius Pilate, was cruçified, dead and buried, de-
Scorapsus2 at some date which cannot now be determined scended to hell, on the third day rose again from the dead, ascended
between 710 and 724. 1t is a kind of compendious handbook to heaven, sat at the right hand of God the Father nlmighty, thençe
of Chrjstian doctrinc, cornpiled out of Holy Scripture and "- wiF1 come to judge tbe living and the dead?' And you replied,
' On thc ~ i p c l l i nolhis
~ namc, and its irnplications for the quertion of Iiis bark- ~elieve.Vndthe priest asked a third time, 'Do you also believe
ground and oriõin, se G. Morin, Rtriuc Clrnrlrn~~pe i, 191 r , 2-4. he Holy Spirit, the holy Catholic Church, thc çommunion of
P.L. 89, i029 ff.By far t h t bcst edition of the text i r that printed in G.Jcckcr's
Dic Hrirnnt dtt hriiictn Pirmin, Munrier in Westf., 1g27. ts, the remission of sins, the resurrection oT the flesh, eterna1
398 life? ' Either you or your god-father Cor you replied, ' I believe.'
See what rnanner of pact and prornjse ar confwsion on your patt is (C) Yet a tliird creed crops up,' this time interrogatory in
bindinq tienveen you and God. And believing you werc baptized in fom, in the semice of baptism provided for Easter Even,
the name of the Father and of the Son and OS the Holy Spirit unto directly after the renunciation and before the irnmerçions.
rhe remission of a- 11 vour sins, and werc anciinted by the priest with
I Again it approximates closely to T, the main differences being
the chriqm of salvation ur to eternei1 life, anci your bosd y was çlothed that CoNclrrvED, BOIZN, etc. are expressed by participles in the
with a white ga rment, arid Chsist cIothed .your sou1 with heavenly
-.,m*I
grace, and a hol? aiisL*
*r .. -A
as assignLu 7uui quardian."z
+n*r,.
!vu
Li,
3 .,C lIr...*
accusative, that DEAD is lacking, that SAT replaces sr.ss. and
that ETERNAL LLFEis greatly elaborated. (D) Lastly, an isolated
This, we observed, is the first appearance of a creed prac- text of the creed figures in a collection of misceilaneous addenda
ticalIy identical with T:its only divergence Is SAT (sedif)for T's attached to the end of &e rnissal.Vt consists of a fragment
sm,and this is hardly s i ~ i f i c a n tin view of the popularity af attributing the severa1 c1au:es to their presumed apostolic
srrs in MFesterncreeds. Formularies alrnost as similar to T are authors, and exhibits a nirmber of peculiar divergentes from
to be iound in certain other roughly contemporary liturgical T.For example, it lacks CREATOR OF HEAVEN AND EARTH, it
docurnents. Onc of thesc is the seventh, or early eighth, century speaks of ~ r onLy
s soo ~ m GOD m n LORD, it has no C O N C E ~ D
missal sometimes caIled the Gallican Sacramentasy, but now- but reads instead BORN FROM THE VIWGIN MARP LHROUEH THE
adays more commonly designated the Missal of Bobbio2 (Cod. HOLY SPIRIT, it omitç DEAD, FROM 'I?IE DEAD and CATHDLIC, it
Lat. I 3246 in the Bibliothèque Nationalc at Paris). Rere the adds THROUGH HOLY B A F ~ Mto R E ~ S I O N OF SINS, and çlmes
creed puts in no fewer than four appcarances. ~ i t RESWRRECTIOX
h OF THE FLSSH TO ETEWAL LIFE. It has been
(A) O n the first occasion3 it is prefixed to the serrnon at the wrongly identified as a formular). for use in the hour offica.3
deliver). of the çreed, just after Sie cerernony of the " openinp h a rnatter of façt, though there would be nothing out of the
o£ the ears ",i-e. the ritual handing out to the candidates of the way in the presence of a cseed in the hour services at this date,
first words of eacli of the four gospels. While fairly close to the context of the passage, as welI as the attribution of the
T, it differs from it in severa1 particulars, notably in substi- articles to the twelve Apostles, suggests that the çornpiler's
tuting I BELIEVE for AND at the openinç of the second artiçle interest was in the main çãtechetical.4 The Latur of the fmt
and OYLY-BEGOTTEN EYERLASTING~ for T's O ~ Y in , emirting and third oF these variants of T (A and C), with all their
OLR LORD, in ~witingçoscErvm, BORN, C R U ~ E D ,DE= and careleçsnesseç of spelling and g r a m a r , is printed belaw :
BURIED as participles in the accusative, and in using the prist
BOBBIO A BOBBIO C
SAT for sm. The position of HOLY wit11 the Spirit also deserves
Cnedo in dcum patrem omnip:enwrn, Crcdis in dnim patrem omnipotmtem.
notice. (3)Another text çan be reconstructed out of the serrnon acatorem ccli et terra& çreatorcm ccli et tem?
which follows on immediately afterwards expounding thc Credo in lesu Christo filiurn eius uni- Crcdit et in Iesu Christo filiurn eius
clauses of the creed.5 Thougli allasive and not necessarily çom- genitum scrnpiternum, conceptum unicum, dorninurn nostrum, conccp-
$e Spiritu sancto, natum ex Maria tum dc Spiritu sancto, naturn ex
plete, it presapposes an aquaintance with ONLY and OUR LQRD, virgene, passus mb Poncio Pilato, Maria virgcne, passo aub Poncio
as well as with t h t reading w ~ wxso CONCE~-EB . . BORN .. . .. cnici6xum, mo-m
di-dit
et ~cpuIhim,
ad inferna, tercia die rc-
Pibto, cnicifunim et sepultum, dis-
cendit ad i d a , trrcia dic mur-
For a phorqraphlc r c p d r ~ c t i o nof the pziasxgc as containcd in Cod. Einsid-
Iensis, rqg, fol. 2-37 r. (late 8th w cadv 9th centurv: rhe k t oT tht t h m M S S of &t a mortuis, ascmdit ad cclus, rexit a rnonuk, ascrndit ia cclis,
.Scurap~w, see A. E. Hurn, Fmsrrnilrs o - ik Crcidj. Plate S H. Rradshaw S r ~ i c t v
I
x d i t ad dcxtcram dcí patris omni- &ir ad drxt- dei patris a&-
xxx\-1,lgogj. potmtis, inde venturus i u d i k X+OS potentis, inde vwturus iudimFivm
For i h c text. ~w H. Rradshaw Socitt)- LIII. $917 {a mrnplctc photqraphic ct morh10s. ac mortuos?
facsirnilr). and L\;lII. igzo (a complcte transcriprinnl.
H.13.Soc. LVTII, 56: in MS fol. 88 r. 2 H.B. Soc. LVIII. 74 f.: in MS folI. r I 7 v.-i 1.8 r.
Kattcnbusch (11,776 n. 28) snw the influente of the Te Dcum w, r n and i 5 P H.B. Soe* LVIIT, 181: in MS fol. 298 r. and v.
in this pcculiarity. 3 E.g. by Kattenbuech I, 5 ;11, 747 n. 34; 881 n. r+.
H. 13. Soc. LVTII, 56 f.: in MS foll. 88 v.- v, 4 See A. Wilrnart in H.B. 50c. LXI, rg23,43.
T'S REDAC.I'ION NOT ROMAX 409
from St Boniface. If the inçident ever took place (it js cdifyirigly evidence seems to point to the condusion that R was the creed
recounted, and St Bonifaçe's own r\,elI-informed bioeraphcrs which the British çhurch was persuaded to adopt. Bum's
are siIent about it), ir must havc bcen a pasing vizit as St further point that St Priminius himsdf followed Rome both
Boniface !%,asreturning to Slainz from the anointing of Pippin I in the position of the creed and in the forrn of the renunciation
as king of the Franks. The nnmc d St Priminius dom not crop cannot be t d e n seriously. It is not really posible to reconstruct
up in thc surviving corser;pondcnçe of St Boniface, in spite of the prccise order of cerernonics irom St Priminius's selective
their bclonging to the same Bencdictine Order, and whilt the çurnmriq-. So far as we çan, ho~vever,it is rnanifest that he is
two men must have been aware of eacli other's exiçtcncc, they referrjng? not to &c formal recitasion of the creed at nhe
appear to have kept out of each othcr's way. Thus, altbouqh rtddirio, as Brarn's argument presupposes, but to the interroga-
St Boniface was çomrnissioned by Pope Gxegory III in 738 as aions at the actual moment of baptism. The fact that the çredaE
his legate in both Bavaria and ,\lamamia, he seems to liave qucstions knoirri to St Priminius rvere cast in the fom of T is
studiously abstained from developinç his mission in Alamannia, 3 proof of the decidedly un-Roman charãcter oF his baptismal
no doubt so as to avoid intcríerjng wivjth the work of St PrE- rife. The guestions used at this point in the authentic Roman
minius. T h e assumption that they were friends and operated as service were aIwrãys much bricfer tliari T, as we know from the
as~ociatesor even colleagues is entirely without historical basis. Gclasian Sacramentary, as well as from the service as it js
Thus it involves more than one risky leap into the dark to performed to-day.
conclude that, since St Priminjus used T, St Boniface must like- Rurn was also guiIty of trying to squeeze too much out of his
wise have used it, with the implication in mind that St Roni- texts when he interpreted Amalarius as irnplying in his reply
face" usc of it suggests, in the light of his well-known devotion to CharIemagne that his crccd-form (again T)was Rornan as
to Roman practice, that T was a Rornan forrn. As a rnatter of wcll as the ceremonies hc used at baptism. The most that can
plain fact, not a trace oF thc creed which he employed for be deduced from the context of his letter is that he arranged for
baptismal purposes suzvives in St Bonifaçe's writings.2 In any tlie order of cerernonies to reprociuçe the Rornan scheme. Hc
case, it Is hazardous to take it for granted that kis creed-form was no more seferring to a speciftcally Rornan wcirding of the
must have been identicd with rhe Rernan one, for ivhiIe the crccd than he was irnpl?ing that the Holy See had a distinctive
Roman authorities undoubtcdly insisted on the main scheme of verrion af the Lord's Prayer, It is in any case dangerous, when
their baptismal o%ce 'being obsewed, there is nothing to show picking one's wa!- through FranklsIi liturgia of this perid, to
that they were particularlu conçerned about &e I\-ording of build too much on the dcscription of a rite as Roman. The
the çreed. Xf the mission of St Augustine of Canterbury to Carolin$ianc, especialIy Cyharlemagne hkmelf, were no doubt
Ençland more t h m a centu. earlier fufnishe any anaio-q,the de?ermiiied Rrirnanizers, and fosrered the adoption of the
inference would be tbat they were not. TR the reign of St Gseyo. Roman liturq- by every mcans within their power. Bur what
the Çreat the Reman chusch almost ç e r t d y emplyeed C as emerged as a result of their efrorts, and passed for "Rornan",
its baptismal creed, at any rate for dornestic purposes. St A u g s - was usuallu a trançparent conflation of Rornan with GalIican
tine, wc know, was a stickler for Roman precedent, and jn elemcnts. The general pIea that tlic Rome which decIined to
particular stipulated that " the miniçtry of baptism, by which accept the jfilioque fsorn Çharlemagne cannot be credited wi th
we are reborn to God, should be fulfilled according to the meek acq uiescence in the Gallican forrn of the baptismal creed
rnanner of the holy Roman and apostolic church."3 Yet a11 the can be disrnisscd out of hand. 1t is highiy improbalilc that
I
Leo 111's motives for repudiatir~gtlie jiioque had anything to
Un all this, see G. .Jeckcr, Dir H~imo!des h!. P i r m b , rq. do witli his concern for ançicnt texts as such, or even with the
Kattenbusch brought tliis out ([I, 8z r K.).
C€.&de, Hfst. ~ c l2., o (P.I,, 95, 83). disdain a Rornan pontifF might be supposed to feel for being
dictated to in Iiturgical matters by a Frankisb emperor. It is with Rome directly. The majority of them date from befare
not dificult to perceive that what deterred him was really the the middle of the eighth century. The significance of this is that
statesmrtnIikc instinct that he must on no account put himself it was not untiI after the middle of that century that that
and the Holy See in the wrong in the cyes of Eastern Orthodoxy. deliberate Rornanizing of che Gallican service-books which was
Relations between East and JYest were quite delicately enough such a feature oF Carolingian liturgical policy really got under
balanced as it was without &e Pope gratuicously placing trump way.
cards in thc hands of the Oriental bishops. As a matter of fact,
as we shall later observe, the tide of liturgical influence had
already begun to turn, and if in the eighth century che Roman If the theory that T originated in and emanated from Rome
rite was spreading throughout France and Germany, in the is discarded, its source must plainly be sought in one of the
ninth Rome itself was becoming the borrower. So far frorn the provincial centres. A useful method of approach to the probIem
HoIy See being too proud in the ninth çentury to be a debtor is to examine the differcnt types of local creed, so far as they
to the Gallican church, Gallican elements were beginning to can be ascertained, and compare them with T. Although it is
appear with incrcasing fiequency, with her free consent, in Izer obvious that creed-forms were not rigidfy fixed, it is equally
service-books. obvious that the texts used in diferent localities tended to be
So far these are rnainly negative considerations. If they suffice marked by distinctive trair. Thcre is prima facie much plausi-
to undermine the positive case advanced in favoux of T3 alIeged bility in the hypothesis that T must have taken its rise in the
Roman origin, they still Ieave the hypothesis of such an origin region where formularies closely approximating to it were
a possible one. The argument which has inclined most scholars current.
to reject it has still to be rnentioned : it divides into three parts. If this 5s the approach adopted, it becomes clear at once
First, there are strong grounds for supposing that, in so far as that certain regions can be decisively ruled out. No one, per-
a creed of this type was known and used at Rome before the liaps, is likely to propose Africa as the milieu in which T was
ninth century, it was R and not T. Leo the Great (t 461) and born, but it is interesting to note that such creeds as we can
Gregory the Great (t 604)~it has been shown,l while both identlfy as African diverge eemphatically from T. Lei us take
apparently Ignorant of T, both knew and avaiIed themselves the forrnulae quoted on pp. r75 f. as representative African
of R or a creed very similar to it. The appearance of R, and not creeds. Of the eleven provincialisrns 3isted in the first section
T, in the Codex Laudianus of Acts, a late sixth- or seventh- of Chapter XII onIy five appear in them-the word-order JESUS
century MS brought to England by Roman missionaries (pos- CHRIST, DEAD, THENCE, ÇATHOLIC and ETERNAL LIFE; and of
sibly by Theodore of Tarsus, 669-€1901, and in the FsaIter of these neither n m n nor CATHOIJC (only in St Augustioe) seems
Aethelstan (ninth century) points in the same dircction. to have secured a firm hold. At the same time, in striking con-
Seçondly, it is diEcuit to escape the impression, as was pointed trast to T, they have unusual features like KIYG OF THE AGES,
out in the previous chapter, that the Roman church used C EMMORTAL,and THRQUGH THE HOLY CHURCH. O n the other hand,
as its baptisrnal creed, for its own local purposes at any rate, it has occasionaIly been argued that T rnay be a North Itaf an
for some hundreds of years. Thirdly, it must have struck readers forrn, The presence of a closely similar text in the Bobbio Missal
of the lãst section that a11 the earliest documents testifying to has been Railed as proof of this, but (quite apart from the un-
T's existence or t o the existence of creeds akin to T are Gallican. likelihood of the Bobbio Missal being in f i c t a North Italian
Whaiever mysteries there may be about their precise proven- docurnent) the theory derives littIe or no support frorn the
ance, they cannot by any stretch of irnagination be associated creeds belonging to that region. They are, as tve saw on pp.
Ry Kattmhusch, 11, 807 ff. 173 f., much nearer to R than to T.
412 THE ORIGLNS OF THE APOSTLES' CREED

The çlairn of the Spanish churches must be rated much reads OF THINGS VISIBLE AND INVXSIBLE), DESCENDED to HELL,
higher. Spain seems to have possessed a fairly stabIe version of ! and COMMUNiON OF S A ~ S . '
the creed frorn the tirncs of St Martin of Braga (f. 580) d o m I t remains an indisputable fact, however, that çrceds prac-
to the eighth century, atid this agrecd with T in a host of ticdly identical with T began to appear in SoutIi Gaul, and
pasticulars. Naturally all Spanish creedç of this period had thc particdarly in Provence, from the fifth century onwards. The
word-order JESUS CHRIST. But in addition the clauses SLTFERED, creed of St Faustus of Riez, we may recall, alscady contained
D ~ C E N D E DTO MELL, GOD TAE FATHER ALMIGHTY in the passage the characteristicwording CONCEIVED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT, BORS
about the Session, CATHOLIC and ELEMAL LFFE ali had a place FROM THE VIIEGW ~ R Y and , could also boast of thc çlause
in them.1 Lhe kiozarabic l i t u r u could even boast comrrnrox cowilrç.~~ow OF s m , in the middle of the fifth century.2 1 - e r y
OF s m . Yet it must he noticed that, notwlthstanding thc use important is the creed recently identified by Dom G, *tforinas
of the Constantinopolitan Creed at mass in Spain sincc $9, that of St Caesxius of Arles (f 542) - 3 This contained CREATOR
the words MAKER OF IIEAVEN A X D E4R??I W e i T ~llfomilylackh~. OF HEAVEN km E~RTR, the distinction coscErvEw su . . .
55,too, was the important distinction C O S C E ~ D RP . . . BOR': BORN EROM .
. ., the clauses SWFFERED, DEAD, D E S C E ~ E DTO
FROM .... AELL! FATFKER . . . ALMIGHTY, THENCE, and C011%CLFiiQS OF
A creed of some interest in determiriiag T's provenance is S M ~ T Sand,
, of course, p r - s crrrrrsl, chmotrc and E'STRXAL
necessarily the late fourth-centuy fornula of Sicetas of Re- LITE. It W ~ distiapished
S from T only by a few minor pcculiari-
rnesiana, in what is notv çalled Yugoslavia.Vhe text which ties-the use of om-BEGOTLZY for OSLY, zhe omission of om
can be extracted from his De gmbolu age= with T extra- toar, and the insertion of ETERVAL after OFILY-BEGOTTES, the
ordinarily closelv. Beyond any shadow of doubt Sicetas was jnsertion of an additional I EELIEVE at the o p e n i n ~of the second
familiar with the variant f o m s JESVS e m , SCFFERED, DEAD, wticle, and &e inverted word-order sanctum Spin'lum. St Cae-
ÇATHOLTC, and ETEKVAL LIFE, and spoke of Christ as sitting on sarius's disciple and younger contemprav St Cprian of
the right hand oc T E F A T ~ R(omitting .-z~mc~-rr). ídthough Toulon had a fomulary closely resembIing rhis. The sunriving
sljghtl!. I a s certain, it is hiçhly probable that he kneiv CREATQR framcnts do not show CREATOR OF HEAYE-I AND EARLR (any
OF HEAVEN AND EARTH. A most striking feature of his çreed was, more than St Caesarius's creed does in the body of his
ofçousçe, its inçlusion of COMMUNIO': OF SANTS. The chief points expository sermon), or DEAD, OT ALMIGRN in the clame about
of divergeme between it and T were its failure to mention Christ's seçsioa, but t h q - add OUR LORD and leave ETERNAL out
CONCEIVED BY and DESCENDED TO WELL. I t is worth recalling after O Y L Y - B E G O ~ N . At
~ the same time, as we saw earlier in
that Nicetas's a-gmernents with T do not stand alone, for we this cIiapter, there are çertain liturycal documents, notably the
can point to other ~vell-known creeds deriving from the 3,lissal of Bobbio and the Missale GalEicanum Vetus, as well
Eastern distriçts of the Western empire and rhc neighbouring as the slightly later Sacramentary of Gellone, which testify to
provinces of the Eastern ernpire which have similar points of forrns hardly diEering from T, and wlrich are alrnost certainIy
contact tvjtli T. The Fourth Creed of Sirmium and the to be connected with Gaul.
related creed of h'icé 130th contained DEAD and D E s c E m E e
TO AELL. The so-called " Faith nf St Jerome", whatever its
! The evidence thus çtrongly suggests that T's place of origin is
to be sought in South Gaul. O n the whole, scholars have been
actuãl relation to the snint, combined Nicene eIements with i inclined to look to Eurgundy because of the apparent connection
elements drawn from local crecds (possibly from Pannonian I Cf.G. Morin, Amcdota Maredsolom I II, iii, 199f.
creed-hrms current arouncl Stridon), and revealed an ac- 1
See above p. I 79.
a See above p. 179. This is the crccd tvhich appcara in Missale Gallicanuin
quaintance with CREATOR OF HEAVEN AND EARTH (tlie text Vetus, foi. no v.
See abovc, pp, 1 7 7 f. Sec aboyt, p. i 74 f. a Sec above p. I 79.
Dom Xiorin had beeii much occupied in reconstihiting t h e patriotic than 1veU groimded) that it must have been Mels-
homiletical works of St Caesarius. He was Ied by tEiese studies I
broeçk, formerIy 31eItburch, near Brussels. His guess was ren-
to observe, with ever-growing conviction, how dose were the dered possiblc, though hardly plausible, by his insistence on
bonds of union between the old G d i c a n sacramcntarj and the
liturgy preçupposed by St Caesarius in kis serrnons, and par-
! rcading, againrt the evidence of ull the best MSS, Meltis for
hielcis.1 O n the whole scholarçhip has come down decidedIy in
ticuIarly in his bibIical catechetiçal instrucbons preparatory to favour of identif:+ng Castellum hielcis ~ 4 t h *tfeaux.~
. Certainly
the Easter baptisms.1 It really seems that the solution he pro- \ this is on general grounds the most likely t h e o in
~ view of the
posed has çleared up the age-long riddle of the place of erigin ancient eccledastical tradition that St Prirninius was once
of the Missal of Bobbio.
A further fact which makes the picture which is now taking
shape more convincing is the appearance of a çreed virtually
1 bishop of Meaux. It is therefore possible that the presence of
a creed identicaI with T (the creed, be i t remembered, o€ St
Prirniniusj in the Sacramentay of Gellone is in some way a
identical 14th T in rhe Sacramentwium Gellonense. Liturpjcal relic of the influence which the Benedictine refugee from Xar-
authorities are ageed that the MS containing this was written bonne must have ~Yreldedthere during his stay mo or three
in the closing years of the eighth century, and the probability I generations previously. The MS, it should be noted, has a
is that it was written for some relgious house in the neighbour- number of other Spanish traits.
hood of Meaw (not far from Paris, to thc East). Its most recent The hypothesis that T originated in S.W. France, in the
editor, Dom P. Ptlniet, as rvas remarked above, has arped for region once k n o ~ mas Septimania, and that it attahed its
Gellone itself, in the neighbourhd of 3iontpelIier in S. Frmçc, I
present shape there in the seventh century, is ane which deserves
as its birthplace, but his caçe is not likely to conkince everyone. serious consideration. Its. superiority to the Burpndian hypo-
The abbey of St Guilhem-du-Désert at GeIlone was not thesis scarcdy needs to be emphasized : diere is no connecting
faunded untir 804, which is rather a late date for the MS; and li& between St Frirninius and Burguiidy, and the association
one cannot overlook the repeated mentions in the rnartyrology, of the relet-ant liturgical MSS ~ 4 t hBurgundy is purdy açci-
in the original hand, of the abbey of Rcbais (in the dioçese of dental. So far from being an objection to it. the appearance of
Meaux). Dom A. \\'ilmart's discovery' tliat the same hand that i similar creeds in the Latin Balkans comparatively early, e.g.
wrote rhe Sacranientary worktd on another eighth-century in &e wsitings of Nicetas of Remesiana, supplies it 4 t h useful
MS beIonging t o the chapter a t Cambrai, while not impiying confirmation. There were close ties between the Eastern dis-
that the Sacramentary was made for Carnbrai, strengthens the tricts of the Western empire on the one hand and Gaul and
case for its connection with North France. From our point of Spain on the other. To take an exnmple, St Martin of Touis
view the interesting thing iç that tradition has linked S t Priminius (f 397) was not only born in Pannonia (at Szombathely, in
with Meaux, -4ccording to his biographer,3 the Benedichc Rungary), but w-orkcd there for a long period. St h i I h of
missionary did not go straight to Illarnannia. He took refuge Braga (i580) was dso a Pannonian. T h e Visigoths, who after
first, probably, in Aquitania, and then travelled on to Austrasia, 419 subdued S, Gaul and then Spain, and about 470 infected
I
wiiere " he exercised a pastoral episcopate blarndessly" for a a seçtion of the Burgundians with Arianism, had settled for a
spell at a place called Castellurn Melcls. There has been some considerable time in DacW and its neighbourhwd. The Ostro-
controversy ox7er the situation of t h i s mysterious place. Dom
G. tiforin conjectured (for reasons, Tt must be feared, more
R. Bén. ilvi, 1934, 187.
See R. Bh.xlii, r ggo, 210-222 : the MS conccrntd is No,grxi in the municipal
librarv at Cambrai.
. ct mirac. S. Pinnin. r (Mm. Crrm. Hist., Script.XV, o i f.).
~ f Vit.
i gotb, who mled Provence for more than a generation d t e r
5m0,carne from Pannonia. Hence a certain borrowing of çrodai
CT. R. Bh. xxix, i g i z , 262-173.
* SW B. Krusch, &um Archiu mix, r g t 4, 550 ff., and GCHhgar flrachr. Pliil-
Hzsl. AI.. rgr6, 23 r R. See ntao i\'. Lrvkon, .jwri Archi;. uxl;i.iii. 1913,35 r f.
C H A R L E M A G X A S D THE CREED 421
clauses is easily accounted for. Relatims were equaliy close ici theis reaIms, rnarked as it was at the time by çhaotic diversity,
between Xreland and both Spain and Gaul, and iFIrish mission- into some kind of order b a s d on harmony with current Roman
aries streamed over Europe in the train of St Colurnhan, Ii-dand
practice. Rernan inffuences werc dready at work (e.%. m i s -
in its turn wãs indehted to Western Etzrope for n g ~ o ddeal of
sicinaríes ti ere indelCntigabIe Romanizers), but
its culture and liturgical art. Thus the acquaintance of Irish
thley must powerfu I impulse when Pippin set
churchmen with T can also be explained. --- L-r- . --J-l.
Rrirric ucrurr: Irrc Liçrgy as a riiuuci and endeavoured to supply
liimself witli Roman Iiturgiçal books.1 There is some question
4- Chorlcniagne aad iha Creed whether Pippin" seforms extended fieyond ithe insduction of
\Irliatever may be the final mrdict on thc claims of S.W. thc Roman chant of the antiphonary and responsary.2 IVhat-
ever mau kie t houglit of t his iI question, there can be no
France to be thc birthplace of the fe.rtits rtcepiu of the Apostles'
Creed, very few wi1I be likely ta deny that its osigin is to tx doubt thalt Charli :rnagne caUy continued the samc
Rc~rnanizin IE: ideal j(nthe çe 1 of mass and the adrninis-
sought sornewhcre north of the Alps at some date in the late -- --
sixth or seventli century. Having estahlished this fixed point, tration of tlie sacramenrs gcncrally. In a11 t hjs he received sub-
--Au

we sliould now he in a posi tiori to taçklc the equalIy important stantial aid froin the puse Gregorian sacrarnentary which, in
and no less troublesome problem of its canoniza~ionas the sole aiis\ver to his request, was sent to him in 785 or 786 by Pope
baptismal çreed of the JtresternChurch. H o ~ vdiid T comie to be Hadrian X bv the hands of abbot John of Ravenna."~ djs-
ser I F'rankish territofies, the copies made
~ U the
seIectd for this exalted role, and hy what s t e1s ~ did it obtain
an e n t q into the Roman l i t u r . ~ TIVO
? separate discussicins will OT were inl erpolated with Iatish modificabons
r---
d e s ~ ~ ~LVl t prcvçrir
u i r riuin clnshing too violently with local
A !L

be necessary, for i t rvould scem that T first became the author-


ized version of the creed in France and Gerrnany, and then usage. So far as the baptismal office was concerned, we have no
workecl its way to supremacy at Rome itself. IC may as well be reason to suppose that the pdicy had any drastic effect on the
admitted at the outset that we cannot hope to reconstitute with text of the creed. In view of the reluctance which Charlemagne
precise detail the s t a p by which these goals we rc reachc:d. The and his adviser Alicuin showed to i~psettingestabIished usagc
mi>re than necessary, we cain appreciate thar they would not be
scanty evidence available does not allow us to p lot out a t h c o l
in terms of concrete happeriings and hard-and-fast dates.
.
t l i ~ ~ u a cLU f -&L-- -- * L - T"--
-u. uciliruIic -r
rnt: I - L ~ P C VI baptismal creed in favour
XevertheIess, though the coui~tsy we shdI be exploring is of t he fom C still employed in t he Roman r i t e ar the tradition
tfiiickly veiled in mist, it is possible to discern clirnIy the kind and the reddition. But it is at least cEear tliat the spirit which
ofdeveloprnerit that must have taken pIace, ând tlius to recoii- was in the air must have been Eiostile ta the persistente of
struct it in broacl outline. re!+na1 id iosyncrasy, and imust harre encauraqed t hc develop-
A fact which stands out with unrnistakable claríty is that mirrit of urkiform, O flicially recognizied texts,
J-
circumstances wcre uniquely favourablc in the Frankish ernpire, In the !a o n d Iilace, alurigxiue ---.i
their general conccrn for
in thê late eighth and early ninth centuries, to the selection and uniforrnity of sites, the FranI;ish rulers laid gi-eat stres, as a
d t ' i a t e enthronernent of a singIe test of the baptisrnat creed. matter o[ state policy, on the learning oF the creed and the
In the first place, the Srankish d e r s , and Charlemagne in T,ord's P r a ~ e r . In tlie dqlorable breakdolvn of eduçation,
particular, deliberately gave liturgical uniformi ty a high place 1 Sre Ri. Netztr, Iniruúwtim de h ~ S I C
r-I~C m Ftmc raw lu G r ~ l V i f l ~ m ,
Paris, 1910,30 ff ; E. &mar, Pippin wd dic Romisch Kirckle, Rerlin, 19i4, tz-53 ;
in their pragramrne af cultural restoration. It was their con- 'I'ri. Klauser, Ri*!.3drbilch liii, I 953,169 R.
sistent aim, after the pact of mutual support sealed between rio, e.g., S. Raumer, Gc~chichkdar Brsuiers, Freiburg, 1895,228 ff. But cr. Th.
Klauser, I f i ~ tJ. ~ l h r b l ~liii,
h 1933, 171.
Pippin and Pope Stepheii 11 iri 754, to hring liturgical usage PCJF the Pn~r'rIctfpr, cf. .!h . Hist., EM. TlI, 696.
Cfrm.
CHARLEMAGNE AND T H L CREED 423
cdture, moral$; and reli -igion rvith which they found thernseIves Prayer.1 We &o possess a list of itemi of knowledge which "a11
confronted, th ey s e mL to have seized upon thcse texts as ecçlesiastical persons are bidden to learn", which includes thc
admirablv adapren Cror --
imposing at least a rninírnum standard
_&__k
Catholic faith oF St Athanasius, the ALpostles" Creed, and the
of knowledge. Thus Carlonan, in 142, sanctioning thc decisions Lord's Pra.er.?
of a counci1 presided @ver by St Boniface, took the step af At the same time a seria of parde1 ordinances made the
ordaintng that e v e 9 year in Lent bishops should examine their study of these basic texrs obligatory on a11 the laip. T o pick but
parjsh c1erg)- on the functions of their ministry, and chiefly on two examples out of rnany, a Ietter of Charlemagne's has come
the cerernonles rir baptism, on the prayers and ritual of the down to us addressed to a bishop Garibaldus (Gerbald of Liilge,
mass, md on the Catholic faith.qWhat was contempIated, no 784-8 r a), and giving expression to his solicitude for &e religious
doubt, was an investigation into the priest's grasp of the instruction of the faithful.3No one is qualified to be a godfather
essentials o£ Chcistian teaching, but both contemporary usage or godmother, he insists, unless he knows by heart and can
and the general ipporance of the clergy at the time suggest repeat the Lord's Prayer and the creed. In thc same way, in
that the exarninarion included the text ofthe creed.2 Osiginally a prog-iamrne of questions draum up for the benefit of Charle-
applicable only to the territory under Carloman's sway, Aus- magne's missi, it is laid down that ali Christians are expected
trasia, this ordinance was accepted by Pippin ar the council of to know the Lord's Prayer ãnd the creed, and to be able to
Soissons in 7qq for &ustria,3 w7as a h e d by the general teach them to others.4 Decrees of thiç pattem c o d d be multi-
councii ofthe Franks in 74/,4 and "as repromulgated by Charle- plied indefinitely. Their impliçation would seem to h that the
m a p e for ali his dominions in 769.6 The immense irnportance creed, like the Lord's Prayer, was a recognizable, officia1
he attaçhed to teaching the m e faith carne out forciblv in the instmment ; and if thiç was so, it is obxious thar a Iarge number
Admonitio Gmtrnlis%which he published on 2:j ar& 789, not hlave been tolerated for long.
of variant texts c01~ t d
and severa1 of its capitula (e.g. 32, 8 2 ) almost 1-ead like para- A turnirig-point in the developrnent of a single officialversian
phsases of the Apostles' Creed. Charlernagne ne:ver weairied of of the cret:d may :ilmost cr:rtainly be discemed behind an jm-
reiterating that what he wanted was instructed priests, rneaning portant rneasure which Charlemagne took in 8 r 1-8 r 3. It was
by that men with an exact knowledge of their liturgical func- probably about that time that he wrote to a11 the rnetropoIitans
tions, of baptism and mass in particular, and able io educate in his realms demanding detailed information about the bap-
the peopIe by sound commentaries on the Lord's Prayer and tismal rttes practised and the baptismal creed used in thçir
the çreed.7 Lolcal- counlcils gave practical force to his wishes by dioceses. In his letter to Odilbert of hlilan he said : 5
ratifyinp his pt-opammie of eccIesiastica1 studies. We possess an
Thus ive desire to learn, either by letter from you or by n-ord of
interesting quesrionnaire drafted, probabIy, for the use of a
rnouth, in whas mamer you and your suffraqans teach and instruct
m i s m at some date betrveen 803 and 813, which opens with the priests of God and the people committed to vour charge reprd-
a brusque inquiv addressed to the clergv, whether t h q ing the çacrament of baptism, that is, \vhy a child is firçt made a
know by heart and understand the çreed and the Lord's catechumm, and what a catechumen is. -4fter that, what you te11
a CCI. A. Boretius, CupiPitrrlariaRcpm Framrrm (Mon. Gcrm. Hist., h ~ e11)
. I. them a b u t the other parts d the semice in order-as r w d s t h t
95 INo. 3)- scrutiny, what the scrutiny is ;as regards the symbol, what the term
' Cf. E.Vykoukal, R.H.E. xiv, rg13, F. 1 A. Borct ius, Op. cit. 234. C f.slso C.De Clercq, h l.!~isloiion rclfgkwc Fromqut,
Mm. Gmm. Hiri., C h l . 11, 35 (No.iv).
M o n . Cem, Htst., Cantil. 11, 47. Lwvain and Fsris, 1936,251.
A. Boretius, Up,cir. 45 (No.8). ' A. Borctius, Op.ti!. 235.
A. Borctius, 0t1.n'!, 52 ff. A. 13risetius, Op. &i. 241.Cf.C. De CEercq, O$. cit. 2 2 2 f.
CF. the rnatcrial conveniently assemblcd by M. Andrieu, Lrs rrrdincs rmani A. norctius, Op. cit. rog L
du hmt mpycn dgc, Louvain, I93 1, I, 476 ff. 8 A. Borctius, 09. m t . 246 E. Cf. also C. De Clcrcq, 0p. cit. 216.
CHARLEMAGNE AND THE CRELD 425
424 THE ORIGINS OF THE APOSTLES' CBEED I
I Ar: any rate it was abeut the beginning of the ninth century
means according to the Latins ; as regards belief (de wedulitut~),after
what fashion they are supposed to bbelieve in God the Father that T hegan to enjoy a practical monopoly in 'SVestern Europe.
almighty, and in Jesus Christ His Son, Who was borii aiid suffered, We notiçed above that the form of creed which AmaIarius of
and in the Holy Spirit, thp: . - .. Catholic Church, and the other
hnlv
-. - Trèves sent to Charlemagne in answer to his questionnaire was
items w:hich follow in the same crt:ed; as regards the renunciation
of Satan and a11 his works and shovvs, what the renunciation is, and
..,L-+
v r i l a L uii3 the works and
-v' -
.
.,
e
S ~ C I W ~
*c
"
1

We observe that the empcror I-iere spec


+ L , devil. etc.
~11e

çreed. His object plainly was to secure u


mentions the
y in the bap-
i either T or sornething very dose to it.1 It would be interesting
If we couId discover what part, if any, was played in the develop-
ment by the court schoob at Aachen and Tours. An unsolved
question i s the authorship of the Bistutatio buerorurn which tra-
dition ascribes to Alcuin.2 In chapter r I of this interesting little
tismal service on t2ie basis of the- nnuIriari Lype. The bishops'
-
..
A_

work the creed is quoted twice over, in the form of questions


replies, a number of which have come down to us, must have and answers, and both times it is the text of our Apostles' Creed.
revealed an appalling state of diversity, and we must assume The Disputatio survives in a Salzburg MS (No. 67) of the end
that his worst suspicions were confirrned. Thus the councils of the niath çentury: the other works written out aIong with
held un der his E~uspices.in 813 irisisted anew that the Roman
rite mu:it he the standartI, and th~ a the
t bishops should instruct
the cler!=y along those liries. The ideal of uniformity was being
eagerly pushed forward, and it is interesting for us to observe
that the text ofthe baptismal creed was among the items about
whlch the ernperor was most concerned.
-
The results to which this survey points may not at first !;cem
I
i
I

1
\
it there belong indisputably to AIcuin. Froben, the editor of
AIcuin's oollected works, accepted it as genuine, declaring that
its styIe and manner corresponded exactIy with Alcuin's, but
scholarship has not pronounced a final verdict. If the tract i5
really by AIcuin, it wouId constitute a rernarkable iIIustration
of T'8 adoption as the official text of the baptismal creed by
Charlemagnc" lleading theologans. As it is, there is nowhere
very exciting. But if we have no~wherecome acrr3ss any L:lear else any trace o£ T in Alcuin's wrirings, although he alludes to
sign of a monopoly bein:g grante,d to T, we shoul d at lear;t be both the Constantinopolitan Creed (which was for him the
in a position to appreciate how very propitious the atmosphere creed par excellenc~)and the "ApostIes' Creed ". Almost a11 the
was to thc ernergençe o f a single official creed and the elimina- other ninth-çentury writers are equally siIent about the text of
tion of idiosyncrasy. It need not accasion surprise shat the the creed they knew and used. But there is one notable excep-
choice fel1 upon T. It must be rerneabered that T was unusually tion, Hsabanus Maurus. He was, it should be observed, a pupiI
favourably placed for attaining pre-eminence. Originally a of.Alcuin's at Tours, and it is a façt that he quotes the creed, in
native of Septimania in S.W. France, it was in current use a t t h(: authentic form T, severa1 times in his works.3
ArIes on the other side of the Rhône ; and through the rnission- -4nother illustration of the special status which T wrts now
ary wanderíngs of St Prirninius it had become domiciled both in acquiring is provided by its appearance in psãlters. It was about
northern France and in parts of Gerrnany. The abbey of this period, or a little earlier, that the creed began to be written
Reichenau whiçh its pztron had established was a vigorous out in psalters along wirh other kindred formularies, such as the
centre of liturgical influente. It was onIy to be expecred that Te nd the Quicunquie Vult. I't is a remarkable fact tha4
when the po1icy of liturgical uniformity pursued by the Carolin- wh he ApostlesTreed appear.s in ninth-centur y psalter:j,
gians, the eIevation of rhe baptismal creed into an eduçational
instrurnent, and the special solicitude of Charlemape for the
baptismal sewice, combined to hasten the adoption of a com-
mon form, that chosen form would be one which had aIready
i
e
the ~ e x r1s the one we are scuuyirig.-1..-
.-1 .-1.
Probably the i:arliest c)F
these service-books is thc Vienna Psalter (No. 1861 in the
See above, p. 406: cf- P.L.99, 896.

arhievcd a wide measiire of diffiision nnd populnrity. I 3


For the text, 8ee P.L. ror, 1099ff.
Cf.esp. H m . r3 and De eccl. discip. 2 (P.L. I 10, 27; 112,I225 f.).
THE ACCEPTAXCE OF L AT ROHE 427
KationaIbibliothek at Vienna), which accerding to tradition g e n e d y in the eleventh and twezfth centuries. St Ivo of
was ordered by Charlemagne From the copyist DaguIf for pse- Chartres (t I r i 7), for example, wrote a serrnon on the Apostleç'
sentation to Pope Hadrian I. This wouId place it earIier than Creed, and it is certain that thc text he had before him was T,
795,Kaftcnbusch wns inclined to doubt this very early dating, despite the fact that he passed over DEscENDEn TO HELL without
pointing out that the ITarolus and Hadrianus referred to by the mention.1 50 too Joslenus, or Gosienus, who was bishop of
original scribe might equally well indicate Charleç the Bald Soissons in thc first half of the twelfth century (t r 1521, pre-
and Pope Hadrian II ; but there is probably more to bc said, supposed T in his exposition of the creed.2 The late twelftfrh-
on palaeographical as welI as other grounds, for the mditional century Spanish priest and monk of Leon, St Martinus Legion-
date.1 Here we have 'Ir in a service-book produced to tlle orders ensis (iIZZI), aho used T as Iiis standard,3 as did Abelasd
of the king hirnself. T also features in the famous Utrecht (f. I 142) almost a century btfirc him.4 What is more interesting,
'
Psatter, now in the library of the Univcrsity of Utrecht, which however, is the fact that, from the twelfth century onwards at
goes back to the first decades of the ninth ~ e n t u r y Again
.~ it any xate, T was the official text of the creed at Rome itself. A
rnakes an appearance (foi. 167 r,) in the PsaIter oT Charles the useful jllustration of this is iprovided by Pope Innocent I11
Bald (Cod. Lat. r 152 of the BibEothèque Xationale, Paris1.3 (+ r 216) in bis treatise on the Blessed Sacrament,5 Discussiiig
This was made for the king hirnself during &e Iifetirne of Quem the singing oE the c r e d ãt rnass, he quoted both the Apostles'
Hermentrude (842-8693.Mre know that Charlemape tzras con- and the Constantinopolitan Creeds, thc fomer in the shape of
cerned, in harrnony with his insistence on proprieiy in other T. From this time onwards trivial varfations in the text dis-
rnatters liturgical, that the c1erg-y should be supplied with appear, and it is pIainly T which is everywhere regarded as the
corrected psalters.4 T must have had sornething of the status Aposrles' Creed. Thus, when St Thomas Aquinas wrote his ex-
and prestige of an official form if it was selected for incfuçion position 5f it, he adopted T as his basis as a matter of course.fi
in psaIters prepared for the royai house. Its presence in them, Thc question wlizich must now be faccd is when and how a
and probabIu in the corrected psalterr: used by the clergv, must version of R which, as we have seen, in a11 probability reached
be reçkoned as one of the explanatioris of its rapid diffusion in its final development in France, carne to be adopted at Rome.
the ninth century, for the saying and singing of the psatms, as It wil1 be recalled that the crecd used for declaratory purposes
a method of intercession and for other purposes, became a in the Roman baptismal rite since the sixth century had, almost
devotiori of tvidespread popularity arnong clergy and laity in certainty, been C. Tke questionnaire addresscd to the çandidate
Caralingian times. at the rnoment of baptism continued, of course, to bbe an abbrevi-
ãtion d R : precise- the same curtailed version is eaplayed
3. Tht Acreptance of 7af Rome at the same point in the sen-ice to-day. Rut both the Gelasian
The preccding section has attempied to assemble, it is to be Sacramentary and Mabillon's Osdo Rornanus VI1 depict thc
feared in a ratlier selective and haphazard fashion, material candidate or his sponsors as making tl-ieir psofession of faith in
throwiny light on the proccss by whiçh the Apostles'Creed in the wards, I BELIEVE IN Q N E GOD, etc. There is nothing to show
ihe f o m or ?r beçame current coin throughout the Frankish that this practice had become obsolete, much less that T had
dorninions. li-e are not in the Ieast susprised to observe that it taken the p'lace of C! at tke beginning of the ninth century ;
was treated as the ãuthoritative version of the crecd in the West Snm. 23 (P.L. rk,604 F.).
e Exps. i a symb. (F.L. 186, 1479 E.).
Cf.H. hclcrcq, D.A.L.C. iíi, 703 L Scrm. (P.L. 208. tsa6 R.).
E CC. H. Leclcrcq, D.A.L.C. xi, r344 ff.
a CF.H.Leclercq, i3.rI.L.C. iii, 843 ff.
A , ,
Dc sacr. nltar. m y i . 2; 50 ( P . L . ' ~r7, 827 L).
Cf.,.ldmoniiio Gmcrali~,capp. 70 .ind 7s (A. Boretius, Op.cit. 59 f.). ' ErMr. s u p r w b . *i. [Vol I11 of the 1634 Paris edirioii uf iiis worh).
TBE ACCEPTANGE OF T A T ROME 429
indeed the evidence that does exist suggcsts that thc catecheti- the tiinth hour, as he is about to biess the font, as the custoin is,
cal use of C was in full swing at that time.' pronounces the Lord's Prayer, Pnkr ?tos.kr, etc., Credo irz deum, etc.
The two earliest allegedly Rornan documerits whiçh testify
to T> acceptance at Rome are (a) the Ordo Rornanus antiquus, In Codex Sessorianus 52 thc creed T appears in two separate
I places. The first of these is on folI. r 14v. and r r5 r., where the
edited by Melçhior Hittorp in r568 as the first part of his De
divinis catholicae ecclesiae oficiir, a ~ i d( b ) the Codex Sessorianus 52
(now Codex 2096 in the Biblioteca Nazionale a t Rome). The
Corrner of these, described by tlie seventeenth-century Cardinal
'1
C
braditio vrnboli is described after the model of Mabillan's Ordo
Rornanus VII, but with certain significant changes. The chief
of these are two, ( a ) that there is now no suggestion that the
catechumen speaks Greek, and (b) that the text of the creed
Tommasi as "a hotchpotch of diverse rites according to various
customs", has been traced by recent students to the middle of which the acoIyte recites is no longer C but T. It is worth
che tenth century.2 It is one of the principal documerrts Iying observing, however, that it is C which is recited at the redditio
symboli on Holy Saturday. The second appearance of T is in
behind the "'Romano-German Pontifical" of the tenth century
which it has been the noteworthy achievement of M,MicheI
Andrieu to disinter."The Codex Sessoriaxius 52 is also a com-
i
T*
the sermon expounding the creed which begins on foE. 161 v.
and ends on fol. 163 r. Here the names of the apodes con-
posite document, including preces of the late eleventh and sidered responsible for each clause are written in the margin.
twelflfth centuries.4 Of thc four çegments of which it is made up The reconstituted çreed coincides exactly with T, except for the
-103 and foll. 178-190 are, for the most part, of the omission of BORN FROM THE VIRGIN MARY, which must have
I century, while foll. r 04-177 and £011. r 91-205 belong
j been Ieft out by an oversight. There are other creed-texts in
LU crie end of the eleventli century. The whole seems to have
the MS as well as T: for example, on fol. r63 r. another ex-
been written beyond any doubt in Italy. The MS was the position of the creed is given, and this yieIds a text (the preacher
property in the thirteenth century (such is the irnplication of quota it in full in his exordium) çlosely resembling R.
a note jotted down on the v m o of the Zase page) of the abbey The Ordo Rornanzu antêquus, as we saw, was probably not
- - - .
- isituated r o km.t o the
of Nor:iantola, - nosrth-east of Mode:na. cornpiled until the middle of the tenth century. Moreover,
The occurrence of T in botli these i rngortant source!; calIs C; much of the material ernbodied in it is patently Gallican, and
for a rnore pre cise and detailecI description. Maany frag rnents not Roman at all, Ii: is doubtful in consequence whether, jn
.. . r . spite of its narne, it can be adduced as a witness to Roman
Irom the baptismal nre are t o be founa çnaotica1ly
1 .
and excerprs i

scattered up and d o m the Ordo Rufiaaaus antiquw. In a11 of them, practice at aI1. The special irnportance which, in the eyes of
with a single exception, the creed presupposed is C. In this one
1 rf
students, attaches to the Codex Sessorianus 52, depends on thc
exception, however, which is printed on p. 73 of the 1568 possibility that it may give us a precious glimpse into Roman
edirion, T is quoted as a declaratory creed, with the prefatory liturgical habits in thc middle of the ninth century os a Little
rubric : later. As Dom Morin pointed out long ago, certain formulae
I which occur in much thc same iporzion of the codex as the
When the litany at the font is finished, a11 the clergy and people baptismal rite seem to be directly çonnected with this date. On
standing in a circle round the font, silence is made and the Pope at
fol. r 26 r. are to be found certain solemn acclamations to be
See above pp. 346 R. recited at papal masses on great festivals in honour of the Pope
Cf. R. Msndiemeier, Amalar uon Metz, 1893, 140; S. Biurner, Die Ku;/wlili and the emperor. The names mentioned are Nicholas (domno
i, 18Bs, 626.
a CF. h o o d i i w ~@sommiidil hnut moym &e, Louvain, 1991, and Le pona$tal rnmaiii nosiro Nickolao) and Louis (domno raostro Hludouico). Tt seems
nu myoi-&e (Stridi e Testi LXXXYI, r 938). natural to infer that the pcrsons indicated must be Pope
a The MS has been described by C . Mmin, R. Bin. xiv, 1897, 481--$O; P.
Grisar, Anulerta Romana 1, 214-116.Cf.M.Andrieu, 0p. cit. 287 ff. Nicholas I (858-867) and the emperor Louis 11 (85a-875).The
4.3 2 THE ORXGINS OF THE APOSTLES' CREED THE ACCEPTANCE OF T AT ROME 433
the close points of çontact between it and the Roniano-German
pontific a1 compiled probably in Mainz about t hc rniddle of
the tenih century. It inclines to the opin.ion that the codex, or
the model on which it was based, must have seen the light only
1i
1'
0 efforts to resuscitate sound liturgicd usage resulted in a drasric
GaIIicanization of the Rornan rite. A step which must have
contributed largely to this was taken by Pope Gregciry V in 998.
O n 2 2 April of that year, apparently, on the intervention of
a short whle before the definitive adoption of the pontifica1 at Otto III, he accorded special priviIeges to the abbey of
Rorne, i.e. ia the latter part of the tenth century. So far as its I
Reichenau, including that of having its abbot consecrated by
contents are çoncerncd, it is clearly an amalgam of material the Rornan pontiff himself, but in return imposed on it the
derived from many sources, Frãnkish and Roman alike. duty of sending to the HoIy See, on each occasion of the con-
If the ultimate bearing of considerations like these is not secration of an abbot, one sacramentary, om episde-book, one
altogether clear, they do at least emphasizc v e r - forcibly the gospel-book and two white horses.1 This curious çharge throws
danger of building too much on thc occurrence of our received an iIluminating ray of light on the shocking leve1 of cultural
text of the creed in Codex Sessorianus 52. Quite a number of life in central ItaIy at the time, if the Pope could not rely on
possibilities necd to be weighed which did not enter into t h e 4 loca1 sme$toria to produce the service-books that he needd.
purview of Dom Morin and Kattenbusch, and one would Ilke At the same time it conveys a vivid irnpression of rhe liturgical
to defer decisions until a properly noted edition of the codex is subjection of Rome, and illustrates one of the ways in which
available. In the meantime, confidente in the theory that T the Franko-German rites penetrated beyond the Alps. The
supplanted C in the Roman baptisrnal service as early as the rnissals and sacramentaries which the mortks af R.eichenau
ninth century is seriously undermined. It may well have done despatched periodicalIy to the Lateran palai:e must naturally
. .
so, but the evidence usualIy marshalled with a view to proving have conformed to the pattern of usage cnrrent at the time

I
it is far from satisfactory. On the other hand, it is possible to in Alamannia and in the Frankish empire generally.
propose an alternative date which has considerabIe intrinsic It must be admitted that no echo ofthe baptismal creed, no
likeIihood. This is the period when, as a result of political cir- whisper hinting at its vwying fortunes, can be overheard in this
curnstances and its own disastrous interna1 weakness, the Iengthy span of centuries. The change-over from the use of C
Roman church succumbed without resistance to Franko- to the use of T may have been carried through at any one of
German influente and, in particuIar, permitted its liturgy to several possibIe dates. One thinks, for example, of the essay at
undergo virtual transformation. This period lasted roughly liturgical reform tried out in the second quarter of the tenth
from the restoration of the empire under Otte I in 962 to the century by AIberic, Pnfricim Romnorum, with the assistance of
opening of tbe reign of Pope Gregory VI1 (1073).During &e St Odo, the venerable abbot of Cluny.2 T his resuIted in the
whole of this century and more, as Pope Gregory hirnself ob- blending of the Roman liturgy inherited from St Gregory and
scrved, " Teutonicis concessum clst regimen nodrae ecclesiae. "1 Every- pontiffs more ancient still with a number of important Gallican
thing goes to show that the cundition of the Church in Italy, elements. Again, the suspicion cannot be avoided that the
and not least in the koly city, was deplorable in t h e tenth Benedictine mo& at Reichenau may have played their part.
century. Ignorance and corruption were rife, and liturgicaI The baptismal orders which travelied south to the papal paIace
science and practice had fallen into pitiful decay. The emperor from their sc@toriurn certainIy contained the creed T which
Otto I, who made the rehabiIitation of ecclesiastical standards had descended to thtm from their refugee founder.
one of the rnain planks of his policy, made severa] protracted 1 See A. Brackmann, Ecrmania Pm1i~%& (h Reg& Ponfi- Romanorum} 11,
stays in Italy, and swarms of Geman ecclesiastics crossed the Pt. I,152,nr. 12. It was not a dead letter in 1083: cf. M. Anddeu, h or&ms
AJps in his train. It is no matter for wonderment that their romni, 516.
I ir 2 m.M. Andrieu, ies ordim romani, 5 r 2 R., and RRV,des sciencc~rtlk. v, r 925,
Cf,G.Mnrin, Arwcdota Muredmbma 11, i, 460.
Arnid much that is obscure and baffling, however, one broad
coriclusion stands out ; and it remains equaIly true whether the
earlier or the Iater date for the transformation of Rome's
baptismal rite is preferred. The adoption of T inro the Rornan INDEX
liturgy rnay be regarded as a by-product, srnall in itself but
fraught with lasting significance, of the large-scale pesmeation Aachen, 353,365: 425 ;Councilof (79B), 281,282, 292; Council of (m),
of the Rornan service-books with German infiuençe after the 955; Council of ( ~ I o 365 ) , 306, 320,335
Abclard, 3931 42 7 Apollinarians ; Apolinarianism, 303,
beginning of the ninth century. The claim has been made' Acaciuri of Caesarea, 290,292 306, 333, 334,335,336, 337
that "it was the Franko-German church which, at this critica1 Achamoth, 245 A~Ilinarius,z99,333,334,335~ 33%382
Acta Iuslini, 8 I n. Apostles, Compo~ítionof creed by, 1-6,
epoch, saved the Reman liturgy for Rome and the Western Acbs @Si Z;harniu, 379
world". If the argument of this chapter is welI founded, these Admomfio Gmrnlis, 42zr 426 n.
Adoptionists ; Adoptiomsm, 128, r 29,
words rnay be appfied in a special sense to the Aposties' Creed. 130, r47i 3559 356,364, 377
In persuading Rome to accept a new baptismal confession, the Ado Viennensis, 363 n.
Aeneas of Paris, 354
church beyond the Alps was rnerely handing back to her, Aetius (the Anomacan), 283, 287 172, 1 9 j 9 3 i 4
enriched and improved, that same venerable rule of faith Aetius (of Constantinople), ng7 F, 318 Appthgmata ~ M m r i i r, go
whicli she herself had compiled in the second century as an AFrican Church, 36, a, 54, 85,88, 93, Aquinas, St Thomas, 3, 388, 394,427
114, I 16, 175 f. Arians ; Arianism, 109, 188, 206, 208,
epitome of t h e everlasting gospel. Agathon, Pope, 360
Alamannia, 408, 414~4.33
AIberic, Patri~sRomomrtm, 433
1 So Th. Klauser in Hist. J&rbwli liii, I 933, I 89.
Alcuin, 353, 355, 35% 37'3 377, 392,
4211 425
AI&, A.D7.,2 15 n.
Alexander, St, 188, igo, 191, 2 ~ 6 , 2 r o ,
132, 233 n, 234 n, 233, 240, 242,
246 n, 25" 252, 253 f, 262, 344 Aristotle, 243, 244
Alexander of Byzantium, 206,210,252 Arius, r89f, 206,210,21 I , 216, ngk34,
AIexandria, 92, 188f, 322; Synod of 236,237,240,242, 249,251 f, 2585
(362j, ,241, 2789 2849 332s 340; 96r,262,2F5,270, 277,283, 339
Council of (378),335 Arles, 415 f, 424; Council of ( g r p ) , 57,
Amalarius of Metz, 353, 356, 371 60,206; Council of (3559,284
Arnalarius o f Trhes, 394,406, qog, 425 hnobius, 56, 58
Ambrose, St, I, 2,36 f, 105 f, 168,172 f, Asdepas of Gaza, 277
249, 253, 337,958, 370,396 Asaemanus, J. A,, 122 n.
Arnmianus Marcellinus, 263 Asterius the Sophist,qr n, 5-32?271,273
Anaatasius (Chronicler), 366 Athanagild, 52
Anastasius I, Emperor, 349 Athamíius, &,51 n, I 1 0 n, 169,181 n,
A n a t h o IFsous, I 5 206n, P i a , 213, 215, 220, 223,
Anatolius oT Constantinopie, 3r 7,318 232 n, 233, 235, 236, 237, 239,
Ancoratus (St Epiphanius), i92 n, prg n, 241, 243, 230, 25T, 2539 25% 2649
227 3043 3'0, 3 ' k o i 327 f, 331 265, 267, 270 % 271, 272 f, 274,
Ancyra, 14, 109; Synod of (358),238, 275,276,277,278 ff, 282,3I 1,335,
288 339 f, 342, 343 ; attitude towards
Andrieu, M.,422 R, 428,43r n, 433 n- N, 257 f, 259, 260 f, 284 f.
Ancmoeans, 240,283, 287 f, 294, 295, Athenagoras, St, 154 n, 244
3 6 340 Augustine, St, 32, 36, 39, 55, 57, 61,
Antioch, 34, 189-6, 197, 207, 279, 106, 125, 134f, 138, 168,169, 17'2,
328; Counc~loF (P#), 101, 207, 175 fn 233 261, 358 f, 370, 3733
"7
238 f, 247; Council of (325),208 f, 376 f,980,381 n, 384, 387 f, 395 "i
21I , 224, 239; Dedication Council 397
of (3411, I 10, 208, 262, 253-74, Augvstint o f Canterbury, St, 408
438 INDEX INDEX 439
Crccds (cmiinwd) :- C r c d (coniimd) :- CmdP. Clauses from:- Crccds, Clauses fmm (coniumd) :-
43i, 432, 33 ' and Apollinari- Nestorius, 187, 3-24?345 Almi&, I 1 2, I 32-4. 136-9, 3 ;* Si& a i thc ri&! hmrd af t h Faihcr, 151,
a n i m , 3 3 3 3 ; baptismalureof,3 t3, Sicaea (h7, I*, 196, 20542, 263- A rcmdcd info tlic h-, I5I 303
344-8, 35% 41% 429, 432; Com- 295, 296Qo1, 336 f, 319, 320 f, Brgoitm mf m d , z I 8, ~ 2 237 7 f.~ To.ytIicr m f i i p p c d and gMficd, 342
parison xmith X, 301-5 ;conncction 3'231, 332, 333. 3389 339, 313, Burtrl, 150-i~ 303,378,385 Trvr GodJrom lrtl~God,21 8, 327,236
M ith Council of Constantinoplc 344, 3451 346s 349,350 f, 362, 3 f W Cuthlir, I g5,370, 384-6, 412 LTnndrrPonhw Piloir, 93. I 15, I 49 f,
($I), 303-10. 313-32;ronnrction 375; c o m p a h n ivith CMS., 2 I 7 - Chriri J r m , t Ij,125, 1 3 ~ 4 137+ , 195, 2% 3037 370
w ~ t h.]erusalrrn, g~c+rz. 314f. 120; ~ i t h C, 301-5; draíline of, Communtm of S&b, 175, 3 70, 38% Wiir !OF man), i y j
32 j ; Holv Spirit in, 3'4, 331t?-44; n11-p; Eusebius on, 2 - i i 4 ; 97, 4'2, 413 I S ' k t H c L c i l l ~ ~115-~8,1ji
,
in Eucharisi, 34&57,41z7 427: rc- mcaning and use of, 23.1-9: nor Gnrcircd.. . bom.. ., 370, ~ 7 1 6 ~Il'hos@krihmqhIbhFpr~kfuir,3~~
Iationship ro 'i,2S~&p5, 32%3t; I Wd ar baptism, 255, ~56,324 r, C r m . F. S.. z& n.
teachinc and histow of, 322-67; ~ 5351; , text of, z r j r. Cnun, 15.. E.,88
tradinin~i a h u t , rg6-301, 3 i i j - 2 2 Siç*, I C n,~ 291 f, 294. 378. 41 2 Cullrnann, O., I 3 n, 25 f.
Constanzinople. CFuncil oF %i, 8 'íicraas of Remeiana, 174 i, .+r? Çzprian aF Canhage, St. 46 f, j g , 56,
293 f~ 29% 3 i 8 O l d R o m !R),jr,84,91,92, 100- $3, %V 3 3 5 ~ 3 i 9n-
C O ~ Iiiiirgy,
I ~ C 122 166, $67, I ~ T 172-81,
, 192, 19+, 4'274í3 Cypr1aII of Toulon, Sr, 178,389,413
Çypnan of Tnulon, Sr. 416 ~ $ f, 5 197, 198, mo, 201 f, 203, Eirmd L ij ,i q , I ro, 175, 176, 185, Cyril or.-Uexandria, St, 300, 309, 38 7,
Damasua, 360 33 j i 37;78.384.409 f, 41 1 F datr 196,3;0,3868,389, -+ot,41%+r3 322,323,324
Datrd Crced oC Sirmium: I ~ CSir- of, I 27-30 : daughttr-çmeds ol', h r h r r , 104, 108. r 10. 116. 1 9 2 6 . Cysil of Jerusalem, S t , gg r, 39, 134,
rnium, Fourth Creed, 1 72-8 1 ; evidente for, I o w i o+ : 137, r41: 151,'68, I j r , 183,255f,
Dcdicaiion Council:sce.4ntioch (34r 1. ori~inalIanyage of. I i 1-13 ; rc- 3 1 1 1 314 fi 333,338 t 385v 388 r-
DZr Balyzeh Papym, 8+,88 f, r z 1 f, lationship to T, 369, 370 f, 404;
188, 195, 203 n. ieaching of, 131-66;text, 102 íT, Ar & rnm a n d f i r
our salvalion, tgq DaillC, J., 168
Eastcrn, 107, i Gn, I 7 1 , i8i-204, 229, Origcn, 92 f. h n i th H0-y Spirit and th Virgin Damasus, Popc, 306, 3 ~336,344 )
26g! 268, 33gr 372, 375, 379, 31(5
L7Ctlrrsz~Mncrosttchus, 276 n, 2 7 9
Palestine, 2~8,227,nr8
Philippopolis, 279
!
Mory, go, 93, 94, 118, 146-9,q g ,
P., 3 1 1 , 32 1, 324, 326, 335 f,
Darnian, St Perer,
De Clercq, C., 423 n.
$8
Ii~yptian,18891, 2 0 0 Prilycarp, St, 7 0 J3b f, 377 13e dcsrdfs N i c m a e synodi, 21 2 n, 2 15,
Epidn.ri.~, S t Irnaeus's, 77-81, 97, ' I'risciIIian, 177, 178,375 Frwrn the substatue of Ilic Falhar, ri rg, 220 n, 232 n, 235 n, 236 11, 239 v ,
rzli, 127, 195, 203 n, 204 Ravcnna, t39, r73, 174 9 18, 2 2 7 , 235 f, 238,250,30zi3m4, 242, 258,260
Epiphnnius, Sr, First (Ep. I), 192, Hicz, r?& 5 375, 376, 4 13 337 r. Dcdication Council : sec Antioch.
2rgnj227,304,310.312,315,318, Rimini,Orthodor;fomulaof,~i6 Godfrrmi Cod,302 Dt incarmiionc (St Athan.}, 257
3t9, 320, 327, ~ 2 531 8 ~; Second Ruspe, 176 God the F n t h AImighy, 1 3 2 3 , 375 DCmytcriis (St .4mbrox), 3 7
(Ep. III, 192, P r g , jrg,328, 339, Scrdica, 277, 278, 283 Hob Chrch, 47, 82, 84, 85, 07, r 37- Der Udyzeh Pap>rus, 84, 88 f, i 2 I f,
33 7 S i m i m , F k t , 281,288; Ljccond, t76,3!P 189, 195,203 R.
Epúida ApOrBlorlmr, I 18,153, 283-;; Third, 2 8 8 ; Fowth HolySpirit,tj2-5,2rg,383f,416 Dtsncr~mmirs(St~lmbmsc),361~
tj;, 160, i 6 1 , 193 ("Dated"), 18-2, 294, 378, 41 2 Jesus Chrrrt, 1 3 ~ 4 1374
, Dcxcnt to Hell, 5, 290, 378-383, 413,
"Fatth o f S ! Jrrom," 3#f, 412 I Smyma, Prub??en of, 82, 193 Llyc-.e~fr, 9 1 413
Gillt~,I 78-80, 378, 383, 403- 4 9 , Spanish, T ij, I 77 f, 378, 38j, 412 b i a , r 1618. 120, 124. 125, 141, Dc srn& Piorqsii, 258,260
qro Smixn. r-, 218, zz;, 379, 382 1-13 f, 3 4 1 DrS?rr~tzswQ (St Basil), 342, 343
Gallican MiswE, 4 ~ 3 413 : n. 416 TrrruIlian, 82-8: g5,g;, r rg-18, i24. r%fak<roJ bmnm mid rnrth, 65 f, 202, DCf riilitak (&udix%th;i~l.i, 321
Cklasian Sacramentay, 37 f. 107, '39, 137, 160, :;o 303 Iliklius, >i.,20 n.
122,346. +og, 427 Tt~twrrirtm Bmini, E)O f, 195 ,Wal.rr of dl !hRgs ;xn61e md inciriblr, W l d u h r , 3, 42, 66
I L i i d m l i l l , 379
Hippo, t76
Hippolytus,
.. St, qo-1, iw, 107, 1tJ- I
119, 122, 534; 129, 133, 141, 153,
Toulon, 178ff; 416
TtIrirY, 173, 174
lt"estcrn, i o l , i67-81: iqg-no+, 373,
I 195~119-
Of w b ~ kingdmn
3033 338, 339
r lkm rhuilbr rn d , 1 Didx rnus thr Blínd.. ~ 1 1
I Ilietcrich, h.,jg n.
16% i95 375~385,394 Onc I.od. I 16, 132, 195, 202 Uiodorç of Tarsus, 3 1 2 , 3 1 j
lpatius, St, 68 ff, 126 C&, .4nti-heretical bias of, 6, 6+ f, On ilu ihird dv rose agirili, I 5 1 1 3 1 n ~ ~ nolCyzicus,
es 299,32I , 326,333
Irrnntus,St, iW2. Set&oEfiidh*u S i , 85f, 97:, 127, ~ 5 5 ,349, 166; O n r b a f i l h i m ! u ~ m i s s i o n o f ~ i n r , 1 6 0 ~ .Uionysius of .-ZIexandria, St, 47, 193.
Icrusalern [ S t G d :.I), 160n, 187 f, b a p t i d - s c e Baptiarnal Crrcds; Prowdrng Jrom I h Fnflier, 341, 358, 24 1 246, 247
r93,227in55,31r;3~41339 - caicchctical setting of. 45-52 ; COD- 3f.X Dionysius ofRome, St, 239,21t,"47 r.
Justiii, St, 70-6, 81, 119, 1 3 6 ~195, ciliar, I ~ P205-1 , 1 , 255 i, 263-95 ; P r o c r r d f n ~ f r m ~ h F u t h r a i i d t f i c S o n , Dis~plrnao~cani,3z,gj,4g,6a,8~,1~1,
202, 203 n, 204 declaratory, Ch. I1 passim, 63, 64, 301, 354, 355, 3 5 M 7 16í!-71
Lucian t hc Martyr, r 92 88, 89, roof, 193; in Eucharrst, Rents~ionoJnnr, 82, 84,94, I 15, t 1 7, Disputotiopiicrwum, 392, 425
Macatlus, St, igo f, 195 348-57, 412, 427 ; in thc nlficts, it8,izif,!6*3,185,q6~384 Díx,G.,45n,go,ginigzn,g~n,~8n~
Miian, 107, 1721 1739 1742 179, 375 368, f, 401 ; iepcndary com- Rmrrrtiwn of Ih Jesh, 87, 97, 1 2 1, Doçetists, 16, 65, 70, 80, 97, I 27, 145~
Mopsucstia, gq, 187$ 256,323 positi of, 1-0, 29, 53, 54, 1 0 1 , i 6 3 d t 3 8 7 i 401 149,383
Mozarabic Iiturgy, I 77 f, 352, 4i 2, I 05, 399, 401 ; tests of orthodo~y, Ratcagafr~oniiiethirdday,112, 186, Dodd,C.H.,gn, r 1
.I t6 205-1 i 195 Dòlger, F. J., 16 n, q j 11.
11
I '
Donatisli, 390, 391 Feine, P., r I Gregory 111, Pope, 405, 408 Homoío&s (Óorokrw~ = "like in
Ducheme, L., 32 n, 417, 430 n. Felk of Urge[, 354,355, 356, 364 Gregory V, Pope, 433 substancc"}, 216, 257 f, 280, 286,
Filioque clause, 301, 354 f, 358-67, 407, Grcgory VII, Pope, 432 288, 2 9 ~ , 2 9 2
-Emter, Baptisrn at, 33,401,418 409 f. Grcgory of Elrira, 328 n, 416 Homoousims, 2&4,291 f, 294, 295
Ecthesis MurvstiJi~~, 276 n, 279 Firmicus Maternu, 56,58 Gregory o f Hunting on, 407 Homoousios (Ópo&mr = "of the
E ~ v p t i a nChurch, 122, 195, glo Firmilian of Caesarea, 47,56,59 f, 93, Grrgory of Nazianzus, St, 39 n, 307, same substance"), I T I , 183, zra,
~&nhofer, L., 32 n. 193 326,337,343 213, 214, 116, 217, 218,221-3,
Elbogen, I., 27 n. Fish, Syrnbol of, 16 n. Gregory o l Nyssa, St, 39 n, 359
Flavian, of Constantinup1e, 308, 5'0 225 f, 23.5, 236, 238, ~ 4 - 5 4 , 2.55,
Eleusis, Ritea of, 56 Fregory Thaumahirgus, St, I 45 257-62, 266, 271, 273 E, 283, 286,
Eleusius of Cyzicus, g+ r , 343, 344 Fltskamp, M. J,, 4r j n. Gregory of Tours, St, 416
Flora, h i t e r to, 245 290, 29% 295~332fi340, 341-4
EI-Hurr, 415 Grisar, P., 428 n. Hmnbach, A b b q d,399
Elipandus of Toledo, 364 Florence, Councrl of (r439 E),4 Gummms, J., 287 Horner, G . W., 122 n.
Ephesus, Counul of ($34, tB5, 308, Florentius of Adrianopolis, 290 Gunthor, Anselm, 321 n. Hort, F. J. A., 2r7fY 220r 222, 227,
316 f, 32~,323,324, a g ; Robber Forbcs, C. H., 403 n. Gvintkin, H. M., 287 ri.
8
S y o d Y 'of ( ~ 9 130,
Epidams (St Irenaeus), 52, 77-81: 97,
Frankfwt-on-Main, Synod of (7941,364
Frãnkish Church,430;-Empire, 366,
235 "9 30% 3043 305 "i 310 fi 3133
3'5,318,328.330 f-
Hadrian I, Pope, 356 f, 364,421,426 Hrabanus M a m s , 353,392,425
- 126, 127, 1 9 5 , 2 0 3 n i 2 0 4 4 14,420~42 I , 430;-litur~y, 355 fi
Hahn, C. L., r 79,405, Hunter, A. M., IQ n.
Epiphanius, St, 108, I 10, 192, 206, 409,430 f. Hardouin, J., 4 n. Hypwtases, Dcctriine ofthree, 214,223,
304,310,3'2i318fj 327,331,335 fi Froben, J., 425 Harnack, A. von, 6, I I n, 30 n, 69 n, 23 ,24',246,z4gg, 254,259,270 f,
337,341 nr 359 Fructuosus, St, 370 ~ 7 280,2Q % ~ ~
Fulgentius @ Ruspe, St, 38 n, g j n, 12c-6, 147, I53 n, ' 8 2 "9 '92, '96,
Epistuta Apostalurum, 82, I I 8, I 22, I 53, H @ o s t w ~(wámaa~r, 223, 241,244,
1 i 5 f, 384
Funk, F. X, 170 n.
201,208, 217,220, 222, 227, 228,
229, 2 5 2 % 2779 3022 304 ni 305 ni
3 0 7 , 3 ' ) 9 , 3 ' 3 , 3 ' 4 , 5 ~ 8 , 3 3 ~332
~ fi
6
24.5, ?48,250, 2 7, l i 8 f, 2913 302
H p s t a s i s , One, 277 f, 291 f.
346,343 n, 3897 396 Hypoppses (Theognostus), 236
Ethiopian eunuch, 16, $, e, @ Harris, J. Kendel, 76 n.
Euckarist, 18, 64, 66, 69, 72, 88 f, GalEican liturgy, 35, 39 f, 366,409,410, Harrison, P. N., 163n. Ignatius, St, 3, 65, 68-70, 126, 142.
~ I 93,
Y 168, 205, 296, 3539 358, 4II Hatfield, Synod af (6801, 360, 362 '4.4, '45, '49, 15% 7 5 % 379% 385
366,367,393, 395,421,422; ccfeed Gallican Sacrarnentary : se8 Bobbiu, Ildefonsus of Toledo, St, 1 7 7 n; 384,
Missal of Hauler, E.,go n.
m, 296,3457 3 4 s 5 7 i 427 Iiauret, C., 260 n. 386,415
Eunornius Ithe h o r n c e a n l , 281, 287 Garibaldus (Gerbald oF Liege), 423 I-Iausslciter, J., 25, 65 n, I I I n, 128 Innocent 111, Pope, 427
Eunornius of Nicornedia, ;i5, 298 Gaul, 353, 413, 416, 417; Church of, Instantius, r 77
Euphration, 237 n. 3,579 3903 39' f i 397, 4'0 f. ffmoticon, 300, 34.4, 349, 350
H e n v 11, Ernvror, 357, 367 Ireland, 353,430
Eusebius of Camama, 47 n, 51, 128, Gelasiaii hacramentary, 37 f, 107, 122,
Heradeon, 245 Ircnaws, St, 2,51 f i 7-2,95, 9% 97,
EZ~, 169, 181-3, 19311,208, 211, 346, 409, 427 Hermas, Shephsrd of, 67, 154, 155, 158, r18,rzg,125f, 127, r33, 136. 137.
212, ar3fJ 2r7,218,228,237,240, Gelasius of C y z ~ c a 262
, n.
&iione, Sacramentarj of, 346, 404, IFF,38; 14" 143, 144, 145, '48, 149, 1549
241, 242, 243* 24.5, 249, 250, 264, Hermentrude. a26 155, 156, 158, 159 f, 16 f, 170,
271%274, 385 n; letter of, 213- 4'3? 4t83 4'9 Herrnogenes, o ; 199i20492455 375, 37% 321
216, 217, ZP&, 229, 246,250 Gennadius of Marseilles, I 74 Irish Church, 352 f; rnissionrtries, 41 7 ,
Eusebius of Doryheum, 185, zgg Gentile Christíans, 25 f, 27 Hess, H., 274 n, 275 n.
Eusebius of Nicornedia, 213, 2 r6, 233, GenriEly, Councii of (76T}, 363 Hilary of Poitiers, St, 32 n, 248, 258, 420
George of Laodicea, 292 268,282,284,286,358,376 f, 397 Isaac the Great (Sahak), 324
234 n, 236, 240, 246, 249, 253, Isidow of Seville, St, 3 n, 415
254,258,262,264 German Cbmch, 357, 366, 403, 432 ~ i p p o I ~ t uSt,s , 3.545 f, 82 89, go+,
GeminIus,_285 97, 99, 111, 112, 113f, 116, 119, Italy, 172-4, 363, 365,428, 43'i 432 f.
Eusebrus of Vercelli, 284 Ivo oT Chartres, St, ~ 8 393,4 ~427
Eustathius of Antioch, St, 129,212,249, Gibson, E. C. S., 314 n. 1221 1241 1279 128fi 133, I39iI47i
Gnostics; Gnmtiusm, 76, 8r, 87, 98, 148, 149n, 1 3, 160,162, 167, 170,
254 james, M. R., 407
Eustathius of Sebaste, 340 100, r 18, 127, 142, 143, 14.5 fr 164,
'Trudition.
.
195, 206, 381 See ulso Apo~folic Jecker, G., 398 n, 408 n, 415n.
EutYches, 299, 308i 309,3339 336 2451 "7,373 -
Hittorp, Melchoir, 368 f, 428 ,lerorne, St, I , 292 f, 360, 376, 389,
EurjEhianism, 336, 337,362 Goar, F. J., 31 n, 40 n.
Euzoius, 189,262,270 God, Fathmhood of, t n , 25, r7f, 97, Holl, K., IZA, 147, 148,319 392 n.
Holy Spirit, 3, 12, n l f, ng f, 28,42,66, Jemalem, 183 f, 192, 199, IZO, 227,
Evagr:ius, 3rw n, 345 n. 111, 132-6, 139, 141, 195, 218,
232, 233, 236, 252, z S ~ 276,
, 278, 8j-7i96,14s7 196,277, 28% ~ O f, Q 31' fi 374,379,328,339, 3451 368
borclsm, 14,16,1g, 30 f, 64,75,95,205 "Jesus is Lord," 6, I 4 f, 23, 2 7
Exoukontians, 240 202,285,3591 372,374 "Jesus is the Chrkt," 16, 27
Erplumtio fomboli ad Vlatiuttdos,3,55 n , q 2 GwbeI of Peter, 38 t John, St, 3 i 9 i '423 1.56
Eyndt, D. van den, 3 n, 76 n, 83 n. Greetings, Epistolary, 14, n r John,Abbot of Biclaro,. 350 n, 352
Gregorian Sacramentary, 4 2 I :]ohn, Abp. of Constantinnple, 349
Fabricius, C., 28 n. Gregory the Great, Pope, 36n, 381 n, John oi Ravenna, 42 i
Faustus of Riez, St, I E r, 152, 178, 372, 40% 410,433 ,John the Deacon, 36
3753 37% 381 3% 391 Gregory 11, Pope, 406 .lnn=,rl, H. M.,nr,qn.
INDEX
Verona Fragnieiit, gu Westcott, B. F., g n.
Victor, Popc, 130 \Cilmart, R . , 401 n, 404 n, 41 7 , 418
Viciorinua, Mariua, 36, s 13 r i , o A j M'ilson, H.A-, 38 n. 346 n.
Victricius nf Koi~cn,St, gqti \Yord : srr Logos.
t'ig~lantius,392, 396 b
Vipilius, Popc, 346
ViSipoth9351, 3 5 2 , 4 t ~ ,
Vitalis, 336 Zahn, Th., 6% 390 n, 394
Voss, G.J., 5, 3 t o Zeiller, J., 274 n.
Vykwkal, E.,422 n. Zeno, Empespr. 3mi 3 ~ 349,350
,
tl'alafrid Strabo, 354,555,356
.
Zeno the Stoic." "s8a
Zephyrinus, %pe, go, 128, 129, 148
l+'a~ner,6.F., 352 n. 1 Zivingli, H., 358

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