âPeople see the schools I attended and the degrees I earned and think thatâs who I am. Itâs not,â says , president of Hood Theological Seminary in Salisbury, North Carolina.
Aymer grew up on the Caribbean island of , surrounded by steeldrum and calypso music. But what formed him, he says, is worshiping alongside his parentsâan Anglican policeman and a Methodist seamstress, who knew 450 hymns by John and Charles Wesley.
âWhere I grew up, we used Cranmerâs liturgy every Sunday. We were following the seasons of the churchâs year from my infancy,â Aymer says. He learned to chant, not sing, the psalm for the day. The words and rhythms of ancient canticles, such as the , which follows the outlines of the Apostlesâ Creed, shaped him.
âIn worship we celebrate God with a host of angels and archangels. I can sense my grandmother and my mother and all the saints of God who have preceded me but who are still here surrounding me in an unbroken fellowship,â he says.
Aymer has a message for churches doing all they can to make worship relevant and contemporary. âRemember that worship transcends time and space,â he urges.
One of the best ways to do that is to use creeds in worship.
Saying who we are
Aymer says heâs encouraged by liturgical revisions that are intelligible and meaningful to worshipers, yet preserve our heritage as a worldwide âcommunion of the church celestial and the church terrestrial.â
âSaying the creeds in worship links us to the church of past ages and connects us to the worship of future ages. Only a narrow stream of death separates us from the saints now in heavenâand God spans that. Using creeds in worship gives the sense that Godâs future is already now,â Aymer says.
He has studied, pastored churches, and taught throughout the Caribbean and the Eastern United States. Heâs moved in Anglican, British Methodist, United Methodist, and, now, African Methodist Episcopal Zion circles. He often worships in Presbyterian and Lutheran churches.
âSaying creeds in worship makes me feel so at home among believers, no matter where I am,â Aymer says.
Enriching worship
Aymer explains that including historic creeds in worship adds theological depth and integrity to services. Creeds give biblical authority to worship because the creeds are based on the Bible.
Consider how people during Bible times identified themselves as part of Godâs family.
- âHear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is oneâ (Deuteronomy 6:4).
- âSimon Peter answered, âYou are the Christ, the Son of the living Godâ â (Matthew 16:16).
- âMay the God who gives endurance and encouragement give you a spirit of unity among yourselves as you follow Christ Jesus, so that with one heart and mouth you may glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christâ (Romans 15:6).
- âFor what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scripturesâ (1 Corinthians 15:3-4).
- âWho, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likenessâŚ.and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Fatherâ ().
Reciting biblical words aloud together, whether in prayers, creeds, or liturgies, often helps worshipers move from doubt to belief.
Remembering what matters
The biblical authority of creedsâreinforced by reciting them together in worshipââsafeguards thoughtful worshipers from being led astray by every wind of doctrine,â Aymer says.
Remembering what it means to be Christâs body on earth can infuse preachers with the courage to be prophetic.
âCalling people to justice. Calling people to mercy. Calling a nation to responsibility to how it uses its resources and how it spends the lives of its young people. That's the role of the prophet. If our worship is going to be biblically centered, we've got to remember that our role as pastors is a prophetic role,â Aymer says.
Likewise, he explains, reciting creeds together in worship helps focus on the essentials that unify Christians instead of the non-essentials that divide the church.
âMany of our churches are in hot debates between freedom of choice and freedom of life, between heterosexuality and homosexuality. These are not tenets of faith. These are not the real things that make us Christian.
âThe creeds help us focus on the bigger things that bind us together instead of focus on those news-catching things that weâre using to fight each other to death,â Aymer says.
Creeds help Christians explain what we believeâand why it matters
Dan Brownâs novel The DaVinci Code is a fascinating read. The film of the same name (opening May 19, 2006) promises to raise the same question among moviegoers that readers are already asking. That double-edged question is: Despite what the church has proclaimed, was Jesus really divine and are the Scriptures trustworthy?
And those unfamiliar with the ancient Nicene Creed may fall for The DaVinci Codeâs central claim about Christianity, that âalmost everything our fathers taught us about Christ is false.â
Brushing up on historic creeds will prepare you for conversations about what Christians believe and why.
Who uses creeds
The largest survey ever conducted among U.S. congregations examined creed use and other changes since 1945. As you might expect, nearly all acknowledged sacred scripture as a foundational source of religious authority.
But only a fifth of congregations always include creeds or statements of faith in worship. Most of these also have a strong commitment to denominational heritage. Episcopal, Lutheran, Orthodox, and ReformedChristians, as well as those from historically black denominations, tend to value creeds. The Roman Catholic for centuries has included the Nicene Creed, though the 2002 Roman Missal now also permits the Apostlesâ Creed in worship.
The survey found that churches founded before 1945 are more likely to recite creeds in worship than those founded after 1945. Researchers noted an inverse proportion between always using creeds or statements of faith in worship and always using electronic instruments.
A 2002 Barna study on differences between pastorsâ and parishionersâ worship views discovered that while 38 percent of laypeople said reciting creeds is important, only 14 percent of pastors agreed.
Many groups affirm whatâs expressed in the Apostlesâ and Nicene Creeds but choose not to use creeds in worship, stating they have âno creed but Christ.â Some Baptists, Disciples of Christ (Christian Church), and Mennonites explain that creeds contradict the Bible by adding to or subtracting from its words. They also say that confessing faith in Jesus is enough to join the churchâso thereâs no need to use creeds or doctrinal statements as tests of church membership.
Apostlesâ and Nicene Creeds
Of Christendomâs many creeds, the best known and most used are the Apostlesâ Creed and the Nicene Creed. Both say what things Christians believe as true without explaining how they are true.
Though the apostles did not write it, the Apostlesâ Creed evolved as a way for the early church to hand on the basic structure of biblical faith. Roman Christians used a question-and-answer form of the creed to prepare converts who wanted to be baptized and join the church.
âFaith was not something one reached out independently to take possession of, but something given as a gift to the one who came to the community in search of it,â Ronald Byars explains in
Many churches still use the Apostlesâ Creed for baptism. Byars says that this baptismal creed reminds believers that joining Christâs body, the church, âmarks the inauguration of a lifelong formation, not separate from but within the community of faith.â
A council of fourth century bishops wrote the Nicene Creed to refute the heresy that Jesus is human but not fully God. Catholics and many Protestant denominations often sing or recite the Nicene Creed in communion liturgies. The Orthodox Church also uses the Nicene Creed in communionâbut says that the Holy Spirit âproceeds from the Fatherâ instead of âproceeds from the Father and the Son.â
Saying or singing the creed is not an argumentative or theological exercise. Itâs a âcelebration of a faith that rests ultimately in the triune God, whom the church identifies and proclaims by means of these fragile, yet bold, words,â Byars says.
Saying the creed is countercultural
Choosing to celebrate faith by reciting or singing creeds in worship has become a quietly dramatic behavior, actually countercultural, says , in The Creed: What Christians Believe and Why It Matters.
In a world that values individuality, novelty, situational ethics, and consumerism, creed-reciting Christians âare actually doing something together,â pledging themselves âto a set of convictions and thereby to each other,â Johnson says.
Creeds move the focus from my to our. Byars says, âWhen the church is summoned to rise and profess its common faith, it does so not in a cacophony of simultaneous personal testimonies, but in words that belong to the community of saints, including both the living and the dead.â
Though Baptists don't often use creeds in worship, two Dallas Baptist University student groupsâa worship formation program and âhave begun using creeds in worship. And itâs been remarkably well-received, according to philosophy professor .
âMany of our students and faculty are hungry for a sense of heritage and communion. Creeds articulate what our forefathers and foremothers in the faith believed and have passed down the ages to us. Creeds connect us to a Christian past, helping us realize we belong to something much greater than just whatâs happening now,â Naugle says.
Learn More
Read , then discuss it with a group.
to a radio broadcast about creeds, featuring Jaroslav Pelikan, author of .
Organize an adult education series around , a Study Guide on the Nicene Creed.
Consider reviewing one of these books for your church newsletter, then donating the book to your church library:
- by John Leith
- by Luke Timothy Johnson
- by Roger Van Harn
Browse related stories on Dallas Baptist University campus worship, making congregational prayers , Trinitarian themes in contemporary worship music, and what two denominations have in common.
Start a Discussion
- How often and in what ways does your congregation use a creed or statement of faith in public worship? Would you like to change anything about this practice?
- Which elements of worship help your congregation see itself as the gathered body of Christ, rather than a group of separate individuals, each worshiping God in the same room?
- Whatâs the difference between using words handed down through the ages to express the content of your faithâand choosing words that reflect your own experience, history, and personality?
- , author of A Generous Orthodoxy and other books on the emerging church, says he âtotally affirms the importance of our ancient creeds,â but notes the creeds say nothing about Christâs ministry and teaching. How do your worship services reflect what Jesus taught about his new kingdom?
Share Your Wisdom
What is the best way youâve found to use the creeds in worship?
- Have you used a question-and-answer system to help new members or young people learn a creedâand then made this part of the worship service welcoming them into the fellowship?
- Did you develop a system to educate worshipers about the connections among the Bible, the Nicene Creed, and the Christian year?
- Have you tried any creed-related worship changes that didnât go over very well? Looking back, what went wrong? Please share this lesson with us.
- Which resourcesâdrama, music, art, dance, or otherâhave helped your church intensify worshipersâ understanding of and appreciation for what creeds mean?