Creeds of Christendom
- ️Michael H. Anderson
| Ancient | Baptist | Episcopal | Lutheran | Mennonite | Methodist | Orthodox | Pentecostal | Presbyterian | Puritan | Quaker | Reformed | Roman Catholic | Salvation Army | UCC | Miscellany
Ancient Symbols
- Creeds in the Bible
- Ireneaus Rule of Faith
- Hippolytus' account of the baptismal service
- The Apostle's Creed
- The Creed of
Nicaea
as approved by the Nicene Council (A.D. 325)
- The First Ecumenical council of Nicaea was called by emperor Constantine. The council met to deal with the schism created by Arianism. The Arians wished to avoid the heresy of Sabellius who believed in a divine monad which, by expansion, projected itself as Father, Son and Holy Spirit--a form of Modalism. The Arians separated the Son from God entirely so that they believed he was a creature having a beginning. "There was when he was not." The Son was but God's first creation, yet out of nothing and hence has preeminence over the rest of creation.
- The
symbol answers the question, "Who is Jesus Christ."
Its answer: God
- The Nicene Creed as approved by the Council of Constantinople (A.D. 381)
- --
The Nicene Creed -- Constantinopolitan Creed -- Creed of 150 Fathers
- Usually associated with the Council of Constantinople this symbol is an expansion and revision of the earlier Creed of Nicaea with which it is often confused. This is the creed recited in churches. The council met to refute Apollinarianism. Apollinarius taught that Jesus was a combination of the divine Logos spirit, a sensitive human soul and a human body. He taught that Jesus did not have a human spirit. His views were based on the platonic tripartite view of human nature. The council condemned this view in order to show that Christ, as truly human, could redeem the whole person.
- The symbol emphasizes the Trinitarian faith.
- The symbol is very suitable for liturgical use and was used as an early baptismal and eucharistic creed. It goes beyond the Creed of Nicaea in its affirmation of the full deity of the Spirit though it uses biblical rather than philosophical terms to do so. The filioque clause found in the Western version of this creed is one of the major disagreements between the Eastern and Western branches of Christianity. This clause was not accepted even by the Western Church until the turn of the first millennium.
- Further Notes on the Nicene Creed
- Notes on the Filioque Clause Controversy
- The Church in the Nicene Creed
- Other documents of the First Council of Constantinople
- Notes from the ecumenical councils
- The Council
of Sardica Canon
V (A.D. 343)
- The council of Sardica was the first synod, which in some sense asserted Roman primacy.
- Confession of Saint Patrick (A.D. 390-461)
- The Definition of Chalcedon
(A.D.
451)
- The council of Chalcedon met to resolve the Monophysite controversy in which Eutyches had refused to confess the existence of two natures in Christ both after the union as well as before. The definition summarizes the Church's teaching on the natures of Christ largely in negative terms.
- Canons of the Council of Orange
(A.D.
529)
- The Council of Orange was an outgrowth of the controversy between Augustine and Pelagius. This controversy had to do with degree to which a human being is responsible for his or her own salvation, and the role of the grace of God in bringing about salvation. The Pelagians held that human beings are born in a state of innocence, i.e., that there is no such thing as a sinful nature or original sin. As a result of this view, they held that a state of sinless perfection was achievable in this life. The Council of Orange dealt with the Semi-Pelagian doctrine that the human race, though fallen and possessed of a sinful nature, is still "good" enough to able to lay hold of the grace of God through an act of unredeemed human will. As you read the Canons of the Council of Orange, you will be able to see where John Calvin derived his views of the total depravity of the human race.
- Quicumque vult (Athanasian Creed) (ca. A.D. 500) (Encarta® article)
- The fullest statement of the Trinitarian faith in abstract metaphysical terms.
- Part
one: Augustinian definition of the Trinity
- Each persona of the Trinity is fully divine
- Each is unique to itself
- Each is within the other, in perpetual intercommunication and motion, coequal and coeternal.
- Damnatory clause for those who do not accept this teaching.
- Part
two: The doctrine of Christ
- Anti-
- Appollinarian
- Nestorian
- Eutychian
- Monophysite
- Reaffirms Ephesian and Chalcedonian council decisions.
- Damnatory clause for those who do not accept this teaching.
- Anti-
- Anathemas of the Second Council of Constantinople (A.D. 533)
- Creeds and Statements - from the Period after A.D. 600
- Later Creeds
Adventists
- 27 Fundamental Beliefs (not a formal creed)
- Seventh Day Adventist Church
- Seventh Day Adventists
Baptist & Anabaptist
- A Declaration of Several People Called Anabaptists... (1659)
- Keach's Catechism (1677) Bejamin Keach
- The London
Baptist Confessions
- The First London Baptist Confession (1644)
- Second Edition of 1646
- The
Second London Baptist Confession (1689)
Similar to the Philadelphia & Westminster Confessions
- The 1677/89 BCF Assistant
- Rewritten in modern English by Andrew Kerkham
- Midland Confession of Faith (1655)
- The New Hampshire Baptist Confession (1833)
- A Short Catechism About Baptism - John Tombes (1659)
- Reformed Baptist?
- Schleitheim Articles as adopted by the Swiss Bretheren Conference in 1527
- Seventh Day Baptists
- Spurgeon's Catechism (1855) Charles Haddon Spurgeon
- Spurgeon's Catechism
- Southern Baptist Convention (1963)
- Southern Baptist Theological Seminary - (1858) Abstract of Principles
- Waldensian Confessions of Faith (1120, 1544) - Reproduced from Jones Church History
Christian Church - Disciples of Christ
- We have "No Creed but Christ" yet . . . .
Evangelical Free Church of America
Episcopal/Anglican
- Affirmation of St. Louis (1977)
- Affirmation of St. Louis (1977)
- Catechism of the Episcopal Church
- The Catechism of the Episcopal Church in the United States (1972)
- The Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral (1886, 1888)
- Episcopal Church unofficial home page
- International Communion of the Charismatic Episcopal Church
- Porvoo Agreements with Lutherans
- Thirty Nine Articles (1571 with Latin Version)
- Thirty Nine Articles (1801)
Lutheran
- The Augsburg Confession of Faith (& a whole lot more) - Philip Melancthon (1530)
- The Book of Concord
The Book of Concord (Link 2) - The Lutheran Confessions from 1529-1580- The Augsburg Confession(1530,1540) - Philip Melanchthon
-
- Written on behalf of the Protestant territories of Northern Germany for presentation to emperor Charles V at the Diet of Augsburg. Melanchthon's twenty one original articles were composed as a response to John Eck's attack on the Protestants as guilty of being ancient heresies. Thus the articles attempt to show that the Protestant faith is in line with the ancient Church. Many, but not all, of the articles were acceptable to Rome. In 1540 Melancthon revised the confession to be acceptable to Calvin. The Lutherans rejected this revision and Melancthon himself. Melancthon's followers would then join the reformed camp.
- Appendix - Catalog of Testimonies
- Luther's Large Catechism
- Luther's Little Book
- The
Smalcald Articles of Martin Luther
- Written for Elector Frederick and the Smalcald League stipulating matters that could be discussed with Roman Catholics at a council they were invited to by Pope Paul III at Mantua. The Articles were written at a time when Luther felt death was near and hence they are a powerful expression of his personal faith.
- Treatise on
the Power and Primacy of the Pope - (1563) Melancthon
- When Luther's Smalcald Articles were added to the Book of Concord this small tract was attached to smooth over Luther's condemnation of the pope.
- 95 Theses - Martin Luther (1517)
- Doctrinal Position of the Missouri Synod (1932)
- Confession of Faith of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
- The Large Catechism
-
Martin Luther
- The Large Catechism is an expansion of the Short Catechism through a collection and revision of several of Luther's sermons. Both catechisms were incorporated into the Book of Concord.
- Luther's Small Catechism - Martin Luther
- Lutheran and other Christian resources on the net - OK it's not a creed but it's a good link!
- Porvoo Agreements with Anglicans
- Project Wittenberg - Everything Luther(an)
Mennonite/Anabaptist
- The Brethren Card (1887, 1923)
- Confession of Faith in Mennonite Perspective (1995)
- Mennonite Brethren Confession of Faith (1995)
- Mennonite Confession of Faith (Summary)
- Schleitheim Articles (1527)
Methodist/Arminian
- Methodist 25 Articles of Faith
- Calvinistic Methodists
- Church of God - Anderson, Indiana
- Church of the Nazarene
- The Korean Creed
- A Modern Affirmation
- Confession of Faith of the Evangelical United Brethren Church (1963)
- United Methodist Church Doctrine - (1992) - from The Book of Discipline
- Wesleyan Church Articles of Religion
Orthodox
- Confession of Dosithesus (1672)
- Orthodox Catechism
- An Exact Exposition of The Orthodox Faith
- The Orthodox Faith (1981)
- Oberlin Statement - regarding Christian Unity (1957)
Pentecostal
- Assemblies
of God
- Statement of Fundamental Truths
Statement of Fundamental Truths
- Beliefs - Association of Vineyard Churches
- Church of God (Cleveland, TN)
- Church of God in Christ
- International Church of the Foursquare Gospel - What we are
- International Pentecostal Church of Christ
- International Pentecostal Holiness Church
- Statement
of Fundamental and Essential Truths
- The Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada - Statement of Fundamental Truths
- United Pentecostal Church International, Doctrine of the
Puritan & Pilgrim
- Seven Articles of the Church of Leyden (1617)
- Two Short Catechisms - John Owen (1616-1683)
- Two Short Catechisms
Reformed
- Belgic Confession of Faith (1561)
- Calvinistic Methodists
- Canadian & American Reformed Churches
- The Canons of Dordt (1618-1619)
- Christian Reformed Church
- The Consensus Tigurinus
(1549) - John Calvin & Heinrich Bullinger
Original Latin
Henry Bevridge translation
Ian D. Bunting translation - Creed of the Korean-American Presbyterian Church (KAPC)
- Cumberland Presbyterian Church
- The Evangelical Covenant Church
- Evangelical Presbyterian Church
- The French Confession (1559) - John Calvin. Approved by Synod of Paris.
- The Genevan
Catechism (1541)
- 1541
edition (Several people are looking for this. If you have
it could you EMail
or snail mail it to me and I'll up-link it here?)
- Keeping the Sabbath (Questions 168 - 186)
- 1545 edition
- 1541
edition (Several people are looking for this. If you have
it could you EMail
or snail mail it to me and I'll up-link it here?)
- The Genevan Confession (1536)
- The First
Helvetic Confession alias The Second Basel
Confession (1536)
- Confessio Helvetica prior - Latin
- Confessio Helvetica prior - German
- English translation by George Wishart published posthumously (c. 1548)
- The Heidelberg Catechism (1563)
- Indonesian Christian Church (GKI)
- Liturgy of the Reformed Churches
- The Negative Confession (Confessio Negativa,1581) - link defunct
- "A renunciation of Popery and Prelacy, was drafted by John Craig and later included in the National Covenant of 1638. It is sometimes called the King's Confession because it was commissioned and signed by King James VI." - J. Ligon Duncan III
- Orthodox Presbyterian Church
- Presbyterian Church in America
- Presbyterian Church of Canada
- Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
- with
links and notes on the Book of Confessions
- The Nicene Creed
- The Apostle's Creed
- The First Catechism - (1998)
- The Scots Confession
- The Heidelberg Catechism
- The Second Helvetic Confession
- The Westminster Confession of Faith
- The Shorter Catechism
- The Larger Catechism
- The Theological Declaration of Barmen
- The Confession of 1967
- A Brief Statement of Faith - Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
- Presbyterian Reformed Church - constitution & confessions
- Presbyterians of Wales
- Reformed Baptist?
- Reformed Church in America
- Reformed Churches of Australia
- Reformed Churches of New Zealand
- Reformed Creeds in a Windows Help File by Daric Bossman (refcon.exe)
- The Savoy Declaration
of Faith and Order (1658)
The Savoy Declaration is a modification of the Westminster Confession to suit the Congregational polity. We have included notes that point out the differences in the two documents.
Religious Society of Friends
Roman Catholic
- Baltimore Catechism
- Catechetics at EWTN
- Catechism of the Catholic Church
- Catechism of Pope Pius X
- Catholic Online
- Canons of Constantinople IV (869-870)
- Canons of the Fourth Lateran Council (1215)
- Council
of Trent (1542-1563)
- Council of Trent - Ed. and trans. J. Waterworth (London: Dolman, 1848)
- Vatican II (1962-1965) - The Vatican Council Documents
- Credo of the People of God - Paul VI (6/30/1968)
Independent Old Catholic Church
United Church of Christ
Miscellany
- Chicago Statement on Biblical
Inerrancy
- "An Evangelical & Orthodox Witness to the Divine authority of the Bible." - The Creeds of Christendom the
book by Philip Schaff
- Volume 1 - The History of Creeds
- Volume 2 - The Greek and Latin Creeds with Translations
- Volume
3 - The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches
(Under construction by Christian Classics Ethereal Library) - Purchase hard copy
- Creeds of the Churches
- Evangelical Celebration Document
- The Fundamentals
- The Kairos Document - South Africa
- The Lausanne Covenant - (July 1974)
- The Salvation Army
- Small Children's Catechism
- World Evangelical Alliance
- Young Communicant's Catechism by John Willison - (1680-1750)
This page remains continuously under construction. If you have additional links or corrections to links of denominational or Christian ecumenical creeds and confessions please EMail me . . .
Rev. Michael H. Anderson, MDiv.