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November 753 A.D. Pirminius
& the Apostles’ Creed
The Apostles' Creed is a summary
of what Christians believe. No doubt
you have recited it many times.
I believe in
God the Father, Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth;
And in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord;
Who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of
the Virgin Mary;
Suffered under Pontius Pilate; was crucified,
dead and buried;
On the third day He rose again from the dead;
He ascended into heaven, and sitteth at the
right hand of God the Father Almighty;
From thence He shall come to judge the quick
and the dead:
I believe in
the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic* church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting.
Amen.
Both the Apostle's Creed and the
Nicene Creed were written and became popular before individuals had the
opportunity to own a copy of a Bible. The creeds summed up what
Christians believed. So if you couldn't read the Bible for yourself,
memorizing a creed gave you a foundation for what you believed. Until the
seventeenth century, it was thought that this fundamental statement of
Christian doctrine was written by the apostles themselves on the day of
Pentecost. Now it is known that the Pentecost tale was a fiction that appeared
in the sixth century. When was the creed written? Who wrote it? Can we trust
it?
We will probably never know who
wrote it. But we know that even in Bible times the church used a creed.
Converts had to respond to the gospel in repentance and faith—embracing Christ
as sovereign ruler of their lives—before they were baptized . Probably this
confession was in a standard form because Paul wrote about the "form of
doctrine" (Romans 6:17).
At any rate, a creed was firmly
established by the second century. Iraneaus and Tertullian-- the one writing in
Gaul (France) the other in North Africa-- quoted chunks of the creed. Their
versions agree closely with the Old Latin Text. A fourth century version
appeared in the Near East. All of these versions are shorter than the Apostles'
Creed that the church accepts today.
None of them say that Jesus
"descended into hell."
For all of this, the creed is
completely trustworthy. Every statement in it is based on the Bible. Even the
(sometimes included) most controversial line, that Jesus "descended into
hell," (which should read "Hades," the abode of the dead) can be
defended from Scripture.
We don't know when the exact
words we now use came into being. But we know they were in use by the seventh
century.
The oldest manuscript we now
have was written by an abbot named Pirminius. He lived during the time of
Charlemagne. In 711, he rebuilt an abbey in Switzerland that had been destroyed
in an invasion. Later he became the first abbot of a Benedictine monastery at
Reichenau (in modern Germany).
As an abbot, Pirminius wrote a
book to train the monks under him. This book, Scarapsus, is the
earliest writing known to contain the complete Latin version of the Apostles'
Creed as we know it, the "Received Form."
According to tradition, the man
who first recorded the Apostles' Creed died on this day,
November 3, ca. 753. Pirminius, merely doing his duty, probably never
thought of himself as a "first."
*NOTE:
The word "catholic" means "universal" and is not to be confused with the Roman Catholic Church. Therefore, all Christians—i.e., those who in repentance (Luke 24:47) and faith embrace Christ alone—can freely recite The Apostles' Creed in good conscience.
The word "catholic" means "universal" and is not to be confused with the Roman Catholic Church. Therefore, all Christians—i.e., those who in repentance (Luke 24:47) and faith embrace Christ alone—can freely recite The Apostles' Creed in good conscience.
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