성경 연구
The Nicene Creed: How the Church Defined the God It Worships
The Nicene Creed is the closest thing Christianity has to a universal statement of faith. Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox Christians, and the vast majority of Protestant traditions all confess it. But most people who recite it on Sunday morning have little sense of what was at stake when it was written — and why every word in it matters.
The Crisis That Prompted Nicaea
In the early fourth century, a priest from Alexandria named Arius (c. 256–336) began teaching something that was, on its surface, theologically tidy: the Son of God had a beginning. “There was a time when he was not,” Arius said. In his view, the Son was the highest of all created beings — exalted beyond measure, yes, but still a creature.
The controversy spread rapidly. Constantine, eager to maintain imperial unity, convened the first ecumenical council at Nicaea in 325 AD.
The theological dispute came down to a single Greek word.
The Battle of the Iota
The debate centered on two almost identical terms:
- Homoousios (ὁμοούσιος) — “of the same substance” as the Father
- Homoiousios (ὁμοιούσιος) — “of similar substance” as the Father
One iota of difference, in what historians sometimes call “the battle of the iota.” The council chose homoousios and condemned the Arian position as heresy.
Athanasius of Alexandria (c. 296–373) was the creed’s most tenacious defender. His argument was fundamentally about salvation: if the Son is not fully God, then what he accomplished in the incarnation and resurrection cannot fully save us. A creature cannot redeem creatures. Only God can do what the Son did.
Athanasius would spend the rest of his life being exiled and recalled by successive emperors — five times in all — for refusing to compromise on this point. His stubbornness gave us the phrase Athanasius contra mundum — Athanasius against the world.
Constantinople 381: The Spirit Joins the Creed
The council at Nicaea settled the question of the Son. But a generation later, similar debates arose about the Holy Spirit. A group sometimes called the Pneumatomachi (“Spirit fighters”) argued that the Spirit was subordinate to the Father and Son — a kind of heavenly assistant.
The Cappadocian Fathers — Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of Nazianzus — responded with a fully articulated theology of the Spirit’s divinity. The Council of Constantinople in 381 completed what Nicaea began, adding the clauses about the Spirit that we now confess:
“…the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father, who with the Father and the Son is worshiped and glorified, who has spoken through the prophets.”
The full document is technically called the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed, though “the Nicene Creed” has stuck.
Reading the Creed’s Key Phrases
A few phrases deserve close attention:
“Eternally begotten of the Father” — The Son was not created at a point in time. He was “begotten” (generated) within the eternal life of God before time began. This directly counters Arius’s claim that there was a time when the Son did not exist.
“Begotten, not made” — The Greek distinguishes gennao (to beget) from poieo (to make). The Son’s relationship to the Father is generative, not constructive. He is not a product but a person within the Godhead.
“Of one Being with the Father” — The creed’s decisive word: homoousios. Father and Son share the same divine nature. This is the line that ended the Arian controversy — at least officially.
“Who proceeds from the Father” — This phrase about the Spirit would itself become a source of controversy.
The Filioque: A Thousand-Year Dispute
The Filioque addition spread gradually through Latin Christianity in the West, appearing in various regional usages before being formally adopted in Rome. The Western version of the clause now reads “proceeds from the Father and the Son” (et Filio in Latin, giving the controversy its name).
The Eastern Orthodox church objected — and still does — on two grounds:
- Authority: No regional church has the right to alter the text of an ecumenical council unilaterally.
- Theology: If the Spirit proceeds from two sources (Father and Son), this compromises the Father’s unique role as the single source (arche) of the Godhead.
The Filioque was one of the official causes of the Great Schism of 1054 between Rome and Constantinople. Full agreement has never been reached.
Why It Matters for Preaching
The Nicene Creed gives preachers something precious: the church’s settled answer to the question of who Jesus actually is. When preaching on the prologue of John, the Christ hymn in Colossians 1, or the opening of Hebrews, the creed provides the theological coordinates.
It also models a posture worth passing on to congregations: that what the church believes about God has consequences. Arius’s view wasn’t condemned because it was impolite — it was condemned because a God who is not fully God cannot save us. Doctrine and salvation are connected.
When the congregation stands to recite the Nicene Creed on Sunday, they’re joining their voices to every Christian community in every century that has made the same confession. That’s a remarkable thing to do together.
Didymus Lab supports deep study of the biblical texts that ground Trinitarian theology — including the prologue of John (1:1–18), the Christ hymns of Colossians 1:15–20 and Philippians 2:6–11, and Hebrews 1:1–4 — with full original-language analysis.
댓글
댓글 남기기
작성한 댓글은 검토 후 공개됩니다. 이름과 댓글 내용만 저장되며 개인정보는 수집하지 않습니다.
댓글을 불러오는 중...