The Creed
After the Homily, on Sundays and Solemnities, comes the Creed or Profession of Faith. Typically, this is the Nicene Creed, called such because it was adopted by the First Council of Nicaea, coincidently held in the city of Nicaea in 325. The more succinct Apostles’ Creed may be used; in particular it is suggested that we use it in the liturgical season of Lent and Easter, since it is closer to the profession of faith made at baptism. I admit that I have not often taken this option.
Years ago, I read an article in a Catholic publication that proposed that the creed should be eliminated from the Sunday Mass because, “We don’t have to say the pledge of allegiance every time we gather on Sunday.” This is an erroneous view of what the Creed is and what it does at Sunday Mass. The Creed is, like the homily, a response to the scriptures we have heard. Having heard the scriptures proclaimed, we proclaim our faith in the Trinitarian God and His work in the world, beginning with Creation through Redemption to final fulfillment.
I see the Creed as another reminder that we believe that God continues to speak to us through Sacred Tradition.
The Creed, composed in A.D. 325, was an assembling of the beliefs the Church held from the beginning, but filtered through a new understanding in new terms. The Church of A.D. 50 might not have worried about words like “consubstantial,” but they held the same belief that the word affirms, that Jesus and God the Father were both God. The Creed reflects the classic definition of theology—faith seeking understanding—in action.
Bishop Baron called the Creed “fighting words.” He comments:
Having heard the Word of God in the readings and the homily, the people, through the Creed, state their faith; they declare what they stand for and, in principle, what they are willing to die for.
Also, the words of the creed were fought over. Each of the words were chosen with care and precision to express the faith that had been handed down (which is the literal meaning of Tradition, in Latin traditio means “the action of handing over”) and was being challenged by various heresies. The Council declared in the Creed that “what we believe is this ” in order also to say at the same time, “we do not believe that.”
My hope is that we consider the words that we proclaim in the Creed and proclaim them not like reading a shopping list, but with gusto and investment. If you want an in-depth understanding of the words, The Catechism of the Catholic Church begins by unpacking the meaning of each of the phrases from the Creed.
I do draw your attention to one particular phrase and action. When we state, “and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary, and became man,” we are asked each time to make a profound bow to honor the incarnation, God becoming man. On the two great feasts of this mystery, Christmas and The Annunciation—when Mary said, “Yes” to the angel Gabriel (March 25—if we do the math it is 9 months before Christmas!)—we go beyond bowing and genuflect at those words.