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IMO, there's a lot of misunderstanding about creeds.... and maybe just dishonesty.
Some modern American Baptists and/or Evangelical may SAY "I believe in no creed but the Bible." But of course, they just proclaimed a creed. A creed is a statement of what is belived... this person believes the Bible is a statement of personal faith. That's a creed. They may SAY "Jesus is Lord" or "Jesus is the Savior" or "Jesus is the Son of God" "The Bible is what I'm holding" - all creeds.
Some modern American Baptist and/or Evangelical may say, "Creeds aren't authoritative, the Bible is!" Well, then, they just used a creed authoritatively! They are affirming that a BOOK, a corpus of written material, is "THE BIBLE" (and they MAY also mean it is the verbally inspired, inerrant, normative words of God). There's nothing in the Bible that states what the Bible is, that identifies what is and is not "The Bible" (in fact that word never appears in it). The Baptist holds up his floppy, leather-bound, Scofield shorted KJV (the edition with a bunch of books removed) and says "THIS (pointed to his floppy book" IS THE BIBLE! Quite a creed! One made NO WHERE in the Bible. Indeed, his creed (this floppy, leather-bound, Millienialistic Scofield, stripped King James book) is the Bible and the Authority IS both a creed AND it is being used normatively, it is being used ABOVE the Bible itself.... Bible actually is subjected to his creed, the Bible is given authority solely by another authority - himself.
Until recently, Christians were honest and truthful enough to admit we DO have beliefs (creeds), including the one that holds that there's a corpus of written material we hold to be divinely inspired, inerrant and normative. And SOME of those creeds ARE historic and ecumenical (in constrast to zillions are that just personal, individual, quite new relatively speaking) and SOME are used normatively, at least for certain things (one must hold to some in order to be a professor of theology at a denomination's seminary.... one must hold that there is a Bible (and it's that shorted KJV book grandma gave me when I was 8) in order to be a Baptist preacher.... one most hold that prayer exists in order to lead the prayer ministry group at Calvary Baptist (both General and Particular) Church, all cases of where a CREED is made NORMATIVE - required to be accepted.
"I believe in no creed but the Bible" may be a popular creed among modern, radically relativistic Christians. But it is a creed and thus (according to them) must be rejected, and the Bible they claim is actually the result of their own creed used normatively; their creed ("this is the Bible") is used normatively to require we accept THAT corpus of material. No one is fooled. It just makes them sound.... silly or dishonest.
Creed are not wrong (they are ALL OVER the Bible, ALL Christians use HUNDREDS of them). And every Christian uses some authoritatively/normatively (athough some lie about that).
.
Some modern American Baptists and/or Evangelical may SAY "I believe in no creed but the Bible." But of course, they just proclaimed a creed. A creed is a statement of what is belived... this person believes the Bible is a statement of personal faith. That's a creed. They may SAY "Jesus is Lord" or "Jesus is the Savior" or "Jesus is the Son of God" "The Bible is what I'm holding" - all creeds.
Some modern American Baptist and/or Evangelical may say, "Creeds aren't authoritative, the Bible is!" Well, then, they just used a creed authoritatively! They are affirming that a BOOK, a corpus of written material, is "THE BIBLE" (and they MAY also mean it is the verbally inspired, inerrant, normative words of God). There's nothing in the Bible that states what the Bible is, that identifies what is and is not "The Bible" (in fact that word never appears in it). The Baptist holds up his floppy, leather-bound, Scofield shorted KJV (the edition with a bunch of books removed) and says "THIS (pointed to his floppy book" IS THE BIBLE! Quite a creed! One made NO WHERE in the Bible. Indeed, his creed (this floppy, leather-bound, Millienialistic Scofield, stripped King James book) is the Bible and the Authority IS both a creed AND it is being used normatively, it is being used ABOVE the Bible itself.... Bible actually is subjected to his creed, the Bible is given authority solely by another authority - himself.
Until recently, Christians were honest and truthful enough to admit we DO have beliefs (creeds), including the one that holds that there's a corpus of written material we hold to be divinely inspired, inerrant and normative. And SOME of those creeds ARE historic and ecumenical (in constrast to zillions are that just personal, individual, quite new relatively speaking) and SOME are used normatively, at least for certain things (one must hold to some in order to be a professor of theology at a denomination's seminary.... one must hold that there is a Bible (and it's that shorted KJV book grandma gave me when I was 8) in order to be a Baptist preacher.... one most hold that prayer exists in order to lead the prayer ministry group at Calvary Baptist (both General and Particular) Church, all cases of where a CREED is made NORMATIVE - required to be accepted.
"I believe in no creed but the Bible" may be a popular creed among modern, radically relativistic Christians. But it is a creed and thus (according to them) must be rejected, and the Bible they claim is actually the result of their own creed used normatively; their creed ("this is the Bible") is used normatively to require we accept THAT corpus of material. No one is fooled. It just makes them sound.... silly or dishonest.
Creed are not wrong (they are ALL OVER the Bible, ALL Christians use HUNDREDS of them). And every Christian uses some authoritatively/normatively (athough some lie about that).
.
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