Yesterday, while on break during my fortnightly
24-hour R. R. Donnelley weekend, I started ruminating on the so-called
"Apostles' Creed." This creed, for me, has served as a handy summary
of the Christian faith ever since my childhood, when reciting it was a regular
part of our weekly worship at Grace Chapel in Havertown, Pennsylvania. When I
got to the third article, I stopped at the confession, "I believe ... in
the holy catholic church."
This
is the received English translation of the Latin “Credo … sanctam ecclesiam
catholicam” and the Greek Pisteύw ... ἁgίan kaqolikὴn ἐkklhsίan. The passage of time has softened somewhat the
initial shock and discomfort I experienced when I first realized this back in
the 1970s when reciting the creed at Tenth Presbyterian Church in
Philadelphia. You see, the form of the
creed I had been taught had substituted the word “Christian” for the term “catholic.” The reason for this, of course, was that
Grace Chapel was a card-carrying member of the IFCA, a loosely-structured
organization whose initials stand for “Independent Fundamental Churches of
America” (not, as I have been known sarcastically to say, only partly in jest,
“I fight Christians anywhere”). If you
know one thing about the IFCA, it is this: to them, the only church more
suspect than the non-fundamentalist Protestant bodies is the Roman Catholic
Church—which, to them, didn’t even qualify to be a church at all. Even my learned and more moderate father,
whose understanding of “true churches” extended beyond the typical independent
and Baptist assemblies to include conservative Presbyterians, Missouri Synod
Lutherans, and the odd Anglican (always British, certainly not the American
Episcopalian) churches, drew the line at the Catholic Church.
With this background, one can understand my confusion
with the apparently novel form of the creed recited at Tenth Church. Years later, when I taught theology at an
independent, conservative evangelical Bible College, I got the feeling of déjà vu when a student asked me about
the local PCA church, where the creed likewise is used: “Is this a Catholic
church?”
First, a little history. The “Apostles’ Creed” is not
so-called because its form is the
workmanship of the apostles (though, until the 17th century, such
was commonly believed to be the case, the erudite Erasmus and Calvin being
lonely dissenters in the 16th century). The received Greek and Latin forms derive
from about the sixth century, though they are the culmination of organic
development from primitive baptismal confessions to the later “Rule of Faith”
as formulated especially in Rome. The
first, apparently, to refer to the symbol as the “Apostles’ Creed” was Rufinus
of Aquileia (ca. 404 CE) who, in his Commentary on the Apostles’ Creed, noted
several differences between the forms used by his church and those in Rome.
The earliest instance of the adjective catholicam being used to modify sanctam ecclesiam in the creed is found
in the form used by St. Nicetas in 450 CE.
This, however, is probably due to the influence of the Nicene Creed
which, in 381 CE, spoke of the “unam,
sanctam, catholicam et apostolicam ecclesiam” (“one, holy, catholic, and
apostolic church”). But the origin of
the notion goes back to the earliest of post-apostolic days, to Ignatius, who
in 108 CE wrote to the church at Smyrna on the way to his martyrdom, “…
[W]herever Jesus Christ is, there is the catholic church” (ὃpou ἄn ᾖ Ἰhsoῦς Cristός, ἐkeῖ ἡ kaqolikὴ ἐkklhsίa) (Ep.Smyrn. 8:2).
This earliest usage helps us understand what the creed
is meant to affirm. The Greek adjective kaqolikός simply means “universal” or “general” (BDAG, 493;
hence the New Testament’s so-called “catholic epistles” are those written
without a specific indication of the location of the addressees). Belief in the holy “catholic” church is thus
confession of the reality of what others, drawing from the ideas of the Apostle
Paul, have termed “the church universal.”
Alister McGrath
(p. 155) helpfully quotes Cyril of Jerusalem (ca. 348 CE) to explain the catholicity of the church:
The
church is thus called “catholic because it is spread throughout the entire
inhabited world, from one end to the other; and because it teaches in its
totality [katholikos] and without
leaving anything out every doctrine which people need to know relating to
things both visible and invisible, whether in heaven or on earth. It is also called “catholic” because it
brings to obedience every sort of person—whether rulers or their subjects, the
educated and the unlearned. It also
makes available a universal [katholikos]
remedy and cure for every kind of sin (Catecheses18:23).
Ignatius, despite writing to ensure his readers’
submission to the cities’ bishops and the churches’ presbyters (elders),
certainly did not write at a time when there was a unified, universal
ecclesiastical structure, let alone one where the Bishop of Rome was primus inter pares. “Catholicity,”
in other words, was (and is) emphatically not
institutional. It is rather a quality intrinsic to the very identity of the universal church
as the people of God. As St.
Paul writes, likely quoting a traditional confession, “There is one body and
one Spirit … one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who
is over all and through all and in all” (Eph 4:4-6).
There is one gospel, directed universally to Jews
and Gentiles alike, that proclaims the Lordship of the crucified and
resurrected Jesus. The one “body” of
this Jesus (cf. Col 1:17) thus consists of all
who believe this gospel and stake their identity on it, as Paul says in Romans
10:9-10: “if you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your
heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”
Herein lies one problem with the fundamentalism in
which I was raised. It in effect defined
the church as the community of people who “have their theology right.” Because the Roman Catholics, for instance,
were wrong (and possibly idolatrous) in their beliefs about the Eucharist,
misunderstood the doctrine of justification, and held to unbiblical notions
about Mary, purgatory, and the bishop of Rome, they were (for the most part)
“out.”
Indeed, I agree that the Roman Catholic Church is
gravely mistaken in many areas of theology.
For this reason I myself could never submit to the authority of the
bishop of Rome or accept the teachings of the Roman magisterium. But
who, I might ask, is without the log in their eye in this regard? The older I get, the more I realize that the
certainties of old-fashioned American fundamentalism are based less on the
exegesis of Scripture and sophisticated theological reflection than they are on
unexamined readings of the text which they, in their cultural naiveté, consider
“normal” and, hence, normative. They are
nothing of the sort, however. Indeed, as
I have increasingly come to believe, fundamentalism is every bit the manifestation
of cultural “modernism” as the liberal theology they so despise.
The fact of the matter, as N. T. (Tom) Wright has
repeatedly emphasized, is that people are not “justified”—declared to be righteous,
and hence acquitted members of God’s covenant people—by believing in the
doctrine of justification by faith. They are justified, as the Apostle Paul
says, by faith (an aside: I have heard many people feign shock, like Captain
Renault in Casablanca, when they hear Wright say this, defensively accusing him
of creating a straw man. But their
objection is, from my own experience, quite hollow indeed, as empty as the cranial cavities of any number of pop
culture celebrities). What this means is that all who exercise
such faith, confessing the crucified and risen Jesus as Lord, are members of
the people of God, and thus are member of the “holy, catholic church,” no
matter how inchoate, deficient, or errant their theological belief system is. And that, I might add, is a very good
thing. The question we who claim the
name of Christ must ask ourselves is this: What are we going to do to
acknowledge this catholicity, and start to act upon it? The future of Christian mission, at least in
the Western world, may well depend on it.
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