In the post modern church a creed or confession is frowned upon. "Give me
the Bible, that is all I need" is a common response to the mention of
creeds. Funny as that statement may sound, it in itself is a creedal statement.
Another reply might be "I do not want to bind anyone's
conscience." But these and similar reactions do not take into account the
role of the creed or confession. They dismiss the creed as a tool that fights
against Scripture or attempts to replace Scripture.
Creeds and confessions have not always had this stigma assigned to it, in the
past centuries these documents served invaluable to the struggling and growing
church. We should not be so quick to reject their voice or their vital role,
nor should we reject their current role.
A creed or confession at its basic level is a simple doctrinal statement. When
someone says, "I have no creed but the Bible," they are making a
doctrinal statement and thus have just formulated a creed. It does not matter
if the creed is several pages long or only a sentence in length. When one makes
a doctrinal statement or position known, they have given life to the use of
confessions. Herein we have the nature a purpose of all Christian creeds and
confessions. They are explicitly designed and intended to establish, assert,
and preserve a belief. They accomplish this with greater or lesser precision
and to a fuller or lesser degree. They tell us what the church believes and
conversely what the church does not believe.
There are many that will claim we are to believe the whole Bible and not just
parts of it. They are correct and creeds and confession do not undermine that
truth nor attempt to replace Scripture. The easiest way to see what a creed or
confession is, is to use the example of the Reader's Digest. They take
books and condense them, giving the reader a quick insight and understanding
into the authors book. The main points and events are kept by some of the
connecting materials are left out for the sake of brevity. The new summary does
not replace the original, nor is it a "perfect" representation,
only a representation for the sake of a quick understanding of the
author's book. This is exactly what a creed does, it represents in a
quick and easy to understand format. And it is done for the sake of the church
and the ability to quickly come to terms as to what is taught and believed.
What is important to remember when using a creed, confession or even a doctrinal statement; at no time does that creed or confession replace or gain authority over Scriputre. Scripture is always the rule for faith and practice. So, we may use creeds and confessions to help us understand what Scripture teaches but we cannot use them in replace of what Scripture teachers or even use them in addition to Scripture. They are only tools to help us understand.