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Reflections on Nicaea at 1700: A Forum on the Legacy of the Council and the Creed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 November 2025

Young Richard Kim*
Affiliation:
Department of Classics and Mediterranean Studies, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
Paul C. H. Lim
Affiliation:
Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA
George E. Demacopoulos
Affiliation:
Department of Theology, Fordham University, New York, NY, USA
Kyama Mugambi
Affiliation:
World Christianity, Yale Divinity School, New Haven, CT, USA
Nancy R. Heisey
Affiliation:
Theology and Religion Program, Eastern Mennonite University, Harrisonburg, VA, USA
Rebecca Lyman
Affiliation:
History, The Church Divinity School of the Pacific, Berkeley, CA, USA
Benjamin Keogh
Affiliation:
School of Divinity, St Mary’s College, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland
Christopher Boyd Brown
Affiliation:
School of Theology, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA
Mary K. Farag
Affiliation:
History and Ecumenics, Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, NJ, USA
Samuel Fernández
Affiliation:
Facultad de Teología, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
Mark S. Smith
Affiliation:
Clare College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
*
Corresponding author: Young Richard Kim; Email: ymrkim@uic.edu
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I Introduction

Summer 2025 marks the seventeen-hundredth anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, and on this momentous occasion, Andrea Sterk and the other editors of Church History invited me to imagine and organize a scholarly forum that would in some way capture and convey the lasting importance of Nicaea – the historical event and its most famous production, the Nicene Creed, and their reception – for readers, students, and scholars of the history of Christianity. One of the great joys of working as an editor is the opportunity to build a team of contributors and to collaborate on a project that in the end is stronger because each part adds to a greater whole. I have been fortunate in my professional life to have been involved in such projects, including the Cambridge Companion to the Council of Nicaea, and so I relished the prospect of serving as an editor again.Footnote 1 This time, however, I approached this opportunity with a different strategy and vision, one which I hope the reader will find insightful and thought-provoking. This forum presents reflections from ten different historians of Christianity who were asked to write about Nicaea from the vantage point of a particular Christian tradition – of which there are, of course, many more than can be represented here. Once I had gathered the essays, I made an editor’s decision to put them into pairs and encouraged each writer to reflect on the other’s work and respond with their reactions, surprises, and follow-up questions, with the ultimate goal of creating mini-dialogues that demonstrate the rich conversations and challenges that continue to result from that convocation of so many centuries ago.

II Wherefore the Council of Nicaea?

Most Christian traditions regard the Council of Nicaea to be the first (of seven) “ecumenical,” that is, “universal,” councils, each of which deliberated upon and confirmed specific beliefs and practices that Christians hold to be correct. The story of how we get to the Council of Nicaea is complicated and contested, and based on the sources we have extant, we know so much and yet so little at the same time.Footnote 2 In the year 324, after a dozen years or so of split rule over the Roman empire, Constantine defeated his rival Licinius to become the last man standing. In his administration of the western half of the empire, he had already had a bitter taste of Christians fighting amongst themselves, which required some intervention on his own part. However, once he became the sole emperor, the eastern half he had added to his portfolio was already embroiled in a theological dispute that had the potential of going truly viral. It seems that some years before, a cleric in Egypt by the name of Arius, in his own genuine desire to worship the Christian God and to understand the nature of the relationship between God the Father and his son, Jesus Christ, came to the conclusion that the singular oneness, the eternal nature, the uncreatedness of God necessitated that even the only-begotten had to be finite, had to have a beginning, had to be counted among the created order. There had to be a time when the Son was not.

Arius began sharing his ideas and attracted a following, so much so that the archbishop of Alexandria, Alexander by name, grew alarmed and began preaching against Arius’s ideas and circulated letters to his suffragan bishops, warning against the teachings of this upstart. The dispute spread, as each “side” grew in size and other churchmen and theologians in the eastern Mediterranean world began to weigh in on the issue with their own views. It was in this context that Constantine decided to intervene by convening a gathering of these church leaders to work out what he thought was a relatively trivial disagreement. The Council of Nicaea met in late May through July in 325, with the emperor present at the opening. There were over the course of the weeks the council met, as we might expect, all manner of backroom negotiations, political intrigues, and open disputes, which in the end saw Arius’s ideas condemned, three theologians including Arius exiled, and a series of resolutions passed. The piéce de résistance was an agreed-upon statement of faith, a creed that was intended to unify Christians across the empire.

In the immediate aftermath of this momentous event, however, ambiguity and confusion reigned. Theologians representing opposing perspectives could each interpret the creed in a way that suited their convictions and write home to their congregations with clear consciences. The participants must also have experienced some degree of shock and perhaps even terror at the presence and involvement of the emperor Constantine himself. Many of the attendees had memories of the suffering perpetrated by the empire against Christians just two decades before, and some even bore the scars to prove it. One might argue, then, that the fear of displeasing no less than the ruler of the Roman world, with all of the power and force of arms at his disposal, was a motivator for coming to some kind of consensus. Constantine had convened this gathering with an expected result: the unification of the Christian church. The word that was meant to resolve the debate about the nature of the relationship between the Father and the Son, homoousios, “same substance,” or “consubstantial,” did anything but. As we also now know well, the ensuing decades following 325 were hardly unified, and the middle years of the fourth century were truly an era of experimentation in council gathering, creed making, and word dividing. The irony of what Christians today understand to be the first ecumenical council is that for the twenty or so years after its gathering, theologians and churchmen essentially chose to ignore it.

The key figure in bringing Nicaea back was Athanasius of Alexandria, who had succeeded Alexander as archbishop of Alexandria in 328. It is important to remember that for much of his administration until his death in 373, his theological view, the correlative divinity of the Father and the Son, what is called the pro-Nicene perspective, was in the minority in the eastern half of the Roman world. Furthermore, he clashed regularly with other bishops who held to a subordinating theology of Father and Son, and he won himself the enmity in particular of Emperor Constantius II. Athanasius was exiled on five different occasions while archbishop. But despite the odds and through much debate and dispute, his theology “won the day,” especially through the philosophical and theological contributions of the Cappadocian Fathers.Footnote 3 Athanasius would not live long enough to see his side prevail, but the Council of Constantinople in 381, acknowledged by most Christian traditions as the second ecumenical council, affirmed the Nicene Creed as orthodox but added to it additional theological statements about the correlative divinity of the Holy Spirit. In fact, the Nicene Creed that is confessed in many Christian church traditions today is what we call the Niceno-Constantinopolitan creed, which is generally regarded as a statement and confession of faith that affirms the doctrine of the Trinity, held by most Christian traditions as a foundational belief.Footnote 4

III The Forum

Each contributor was asked to reflect on Nicaea and its legacy with two guiding questions in mind. First, how has the particular tradition understood and received Nicaea, and second, what impact does Nicaea continue to have on it? Some of the contributors to this forum offer perspectives from within the specific tradition they write about, while others put down their thoughts as observers from the outside, but all bring to their respective pieces insight born from their areas of scholarly expertise. All of the essays presented below are thoughtful and profound, and some questions resulting from the interactions between the writers remain open-ended and unanswered. But they will hopefully stimulate the reader’s own thoughts toward reflection and further exploration. The ordering of the pairs (listed below) was simply intended to encourage scholarly interchange from the perspective of different traditions, so the reader should not take their placement to have any implications for comparative importance. As mentioned above, the varied expressions and traditions of Christianity are numerous, so in the end there was simply no way of representing each and every one, but the reflections included in this forum provide enough of a range of perspectives to demonstrate the lasting relevance and complexity of Nicaea and its legacy. All of the voices here are equally valuable, thoughtful, and insightful. May you find joy and surprise hearing from them. The paired essays are:

  • “Reflections on the Nicene Creed from a Reformed Perspective” by Paul C. H. Lim and “The Significance of Nicaea for the Orthodox Christian Tradition” by George E. Demacopoulos

  • “Pentecostals and Nicaea” by Kyambi Mugambi and “One Mennonite’s Reflection on the Council of Nicaea” by Nancy R. Heisey

  • “Methodism and the Nicene Creed” by Rebecca Lyman and “Nicaea at 1700 and the Latter-day Saints at 195” by Benjamin Keogh

  • “Lutherans and the Council of Nicaea” by Christopher Boyd Brown and “The Reception of the Council of Nicaea and Its Creed in the Coptic Orthodox Church” by Mary K. Farag

  • “Nicaea from the Catholic Perspective” by Samuel Fernández and “The Council of Nicaea and Its Creed in the Anglican Tradition” by Mark S. Smith

Our forum begins with a reflection by Dr. Paul Lim on Nicaea through the lens of the Reformed tradition, while Dr. George Demacopoulos writes about how the Orthodox Church regards Nicaea and its legacy.

Reflections on the Nicene Creed from a Reformed Perspective

I Introduction

Recently, I was in a worship service at a Presbyterian church where we recited the Nicene Creed as part of the liturgy. While the fact that an ancient creedal document was used as a congregational confession of faith at a Reformed Presbyterian church itself should surprise no one, considering that the average age of the congregants hovered no higher than thirty (my best guess), judging from the modern worship music (and not the Te Deum or the Oxyrhynchus hymn), and noticing the designer sneakers worn by the hipster preacher, I was pleasantly surprised to find out that the Nicene Creed is expressed regularly. As I spoke with the pastor afterward, he quipped that it is important to recognize the “catholicity of the great Christian tradition” by recognizing that these councils, starting with one in Jerusalem – as in Acts 15 – all the way to Vatican II serve as signs of Christian solidarity in an age of virulent New Atheism. I found the conversation exceptionally illuminating. The one question I wanted to ask but did not, lest I burst his hyper-ecumenical bubble, was what he thought of the anathema issued by one of these authoritative Councils, the Council of Trent (1545–1563), upon his co-religionists, Protestant and Calvinist. As such, this is a great place to begin this historical investigative exercise of my religious tradition with two vectors: sixteenth-century Geneva and twenty-first century Nashville.Footnote 5 A tale of two cities, it is.

II Part I: Geneva

As a counter-factual historical thought experiment: would John Calvin’s views on councils as sites of dogmatic determination and declaration have looked differently if the “ecumenical” Council of Trent, which deemed his version of Christianity heretical, never took place? As the delegates met to stamp out the heresies propagated by these theological-cum-ecclesial renegades, led by the three-headed monster of Luther, Zwingli, and Calvin, its final decrees made it unequivocally clear about those who deviated from the conciliar decrees on ecclesiology – obedience to the Church – and soteriology – that, “If anyone says that the sinner is justified by faith alone, meaning thereby that no other co-operation is required for him to obtain the grace of justification, and that in no sense is it necessary for him to make preparation and be disposed by a movement of his own will” – they were unquestionably anathematized (Canon 9).Footnote 6 Expressing it bluntly, if Calvin had been born in 1409 rather than 1509, how would he have formulated his perspectives on conciliar authorities?

What did Calvin say about the nature, role, and function of ecclesiastical councils? Inter alia, his Institutes of the Christian Religion offers a clear position on “Councils and Their Authority,” which has long influenced Reformed Protestants’ view on the matter. Starting with a half-apology, Calvin mentioned, “[t]hat I shall be more rigid here does not mean that I make the ancient councils out to be less than they should be. For I venerate them from my heart, and desire that they be honored by all.”Footnote 7 Since Christ alone had the “right to preside over all councils,” this dominical presiding could only obtain when councils are “governed by his word and Spirit.” This last phrase offered a sort of “extra-Calvinisticum” in that all the veneration from his heart notwithstanding, councils did not have autonomous authority. They had to conform to Christ’s word and Spirit, and for Calvin, “Christ’s word” was found in Scripture alone, and dare I say, “Scripture according to Calvin’s own interpretation alone.” As uncharitable as this may sound, such was precisely the Catholic caricature and portrayal of the hermeneutical chaos unfurled by individuating the locus of interpretive authority on Scripture by vernacularizing the Word, and letting the laity have equal measure of authority as did the clergy. Consequently, it should come as no surprise that a key decree at Trent was meant to bolster the authority of sola Vulgata to prevent the lay encroachment on scriptural hermeneutics.

After acknowledging the presence of the men endowed with the Holy Spirit – Athanasius, Basil, and Cyril of Alexandria – Calvin was quick to enjoin that “not every age” had such “vindicators,” and followed with examples of councils which interpreted Scripture irresponsibly and incorrectly. Calvin’s conclusion on the authority of ecumenical councils was, ultimately, selective and based on his interpretation of how Scripture ought to be interpreted on matters such as “purgatory, of intercession of saints, of auricular confession, and the like,” none of which Calvin regarded as derivable from scripture.Footnote 8 Thus, any council that propped up its validity for Christian faith and praxis was, as a consequence of his nearly-circular reasoning, inauthentic. His conclusion was as pithy as it was poignant, establishing a longue durée interpretive trajectory for those who would identify with Calvin’s theological perspectives and religious sensibilities:

Thus, we willingly embrace and revere as sacrosanct the early councils, such as those of Nicaea, Constantinople, Ephesus I, Chalcedon, and the like…For they contain nothing but the pure and native interpretation of Scripture, which the holy fathers, with spiritual prudence, accommodated to break the enemies of religion who had then emerged…But as things usually tend to deteriorate, it is clear from the more recent councils how much the church has gradually degenerated from the purity of that golden age.Footnote 9

In this tantalizing passage, Calvin leaves certain matters unanswered: “Which, in particular, are the “more recent councils” where the purity of the church degenerated? This issue will haunt the less radical type of Protestants who do not wish to sever ties tout court with all church councils, as had the variety of the Anabaptists. For this, it helps to take a quick look at the Westminster Confession of Faith of 1646, regarded as the key confessional document in the anglophone Reformed communion. Chapter XXXI dealt with “Of Synods and Councels. After acknowledging that it “belongeth to Synods and Councels” to determine “Controversies of Faith” and provided that their determinations were “consonant to the Word of God” were to be “received with reverence,”Footnote 10 the divines at Westminster noted that all “Synods or Councels, since the Apostles times, whether general, or particular, may erre; and, many have erred. Therefore, they are not to be made the Rule of Faith, or practice; but to be used as an Help in both.”Footnote 11 In so doing, they might have gone past the boundaries of the first four councils that Calvin had specified – without making it a regulative principle – as having codified right Christological perspectives. The Westminster divines were more reticent in naming any one council in particular. This opacity – perhaps intentional – is quite revealing. By noting that all councils “may err” and have indeed fallen into error sounds like a semi-death knell for conciliar authorities in the seventeenth-century British Protestant imagination.

III Part II: Nashville

Popularly known as “Music City, USA,” Nashville also happens to be home to over 2,200 churches and religious organizations, including the primary offices of the United Methodist Church, and the headquarters of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in America, thereby making it a virtual “Protestant Mecca.” A notably growing trend among Protestants in the area is a curious juxtaposition of theological particularity and liturgical centrism. My near two-decade long experience speaking in various churches – Catholic, Episcopal, Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, non-denominational Protestant – in greater Nashville has made me realize how a number of younger Christians desire deeper connections with the history of the church than the forty years since the founding of their local churches. Many of us have heard of “on the Canterbury Trail,” “coming home to Rome,” or “Finding the Orthodox Jesus, tearing up thanks to the smoke of the incense,” or cognate realities of patterns of religious migration. However, in my experience, that is an incomplete narrative.

There are those who have managed an “internal migration” without actually leaving their ecclesial homes. Among those are certain number of Reformed pastors who have either stuck with the tendencies, trajectories, and teachings of Calvin, refracted through the lens of the Westminster traditions. In my attendance of a number of such congregations, while there were recitations of the Apostles’ Creed, which has a quasi-canonical status, there was hardly any Sunday service wherein the Nicene Creed was used. The internal migration of this group of Christians and reformed pastors was merely chronological: moving from either sixteenth-century Geneva or seventeenth-century Westminster. Yet there is the second group of Reformed-leaning Christians who have adopted and appropriated a number of “Catholic” sensibilities, whether in pastoral garb or liturgical accoutrements. In such congregations, I have found a more frequent use of the Nicene Creed as part of their Sunday liturgy, including the pastor whom I mentioned above. As paradoxical as this must sound to the ears the Reformed Christians of John Calvin’s or Samuel Rutherford’s type, some members of this second group appeared nonchalant, at best, about the complicated nature of embracing the authority – however secondary or in name only – of these ecumenical councils which, mutatis mutandis, by including those of the Council of Trent, ends up invalidating the very worship experience in this Presbyterian church within which the conciliar decrees of Nicaea in 325 are jubilantly affirmed. Perhaps Calvin’s questions are yet to be resolved. Maranatha (מרנאתא)!

The Significance of Nicaea for the Orthodox Christian Tradition

For Orthodox Christians, the Council of Nicaea is the most significant post-biblicalevent. This is true not only because of its advancement of a particular theological vision (i.e., that Jesus Christ is God) but because Nicaea enshrined an ecclesial administrative structure that remains largely intact seventeen hundred years later. Perhaps even more than these historical connections, Nicaea functions for Orthodox Christians as a powerful symbol of how believers think about orthodoxy, synodality, and the necessity of conforming to the traditions of the early Church.

While historians of Christianity are well aware that Nicaea was one just one moment in a long process of theological reflection, the average Orthodox Christian tends to collapse the multi-century history of Trinitarian and Christological reflection into that singular, providential moment in the year 325. That the institutional Church and the faithful consistently refer to the Creed of the Council of Constantinople in 381 as the “Nicaean Creed” offers only the most obvious evidence of this sort of transcribing “Nicaea” onto the totality of Orthodox theological teaching. And, even if the original articulations of orthodox teaching at Nicaea were somewhat tentative and unrefined by later standards, Nicaea did, for the first time, express the centrality of the Incarnation to Christian teaching as well as the claim of Christ’s divinity as constitutive aspects of the one, universal, and apostolic faith.

Perhaps just as important as the actual Trinitarian claims, the Council of Nicaea was equally significant because it established the model by which subsequent generations of Orthodox Christians would seek to resolve theological disputes and questions. Even if we now know that most of the Ecumenical Councils were engineered by imperial forces seeking theological unity, the Orthodox Church quickly embraced the idea that all major theological decisions required a conciliar model in which all bishops in apostolic lineage were invited to participate. It is noteworthy that this notion of episcopal conciliarity developed before the need to justify it with claims of apostolicity or the later notions of Petrine and Andrean primacy. In the modern world, the Orthodox Church’s episcopal/conciliar model is frequently advanced as a distinguishing characteristic that differentiates it from the Roman Catholic and Protestant traditions.

Because Orthodox Christianity is, first and foremost, a ritualized, liturgical tradition, we can look to the church’s liturgical practice for evidence of its Nicaean character. The Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed (of 381) was introduced to the Constantinopolitan liturgy in the early sixth century, and it has remained a fixed element of the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom since that time. Equally important is the fact that the Eastern Christian tradition liturgically commemorates the fathers of the First Ecumenical Council (i.e., the Council of Nicaea) on the seventh Sunday of Easter, which is the Sunday before Pentecost. This positioning is significant, because it occurs on the only Sunday between the commemoration of Christ’s ascension and Pentecost, thereby bridging a celebration of Christ’s divinity with the sending of the Holy Spirit.

While most scholars tend to emphasize the Arian controversies or the role of Constantine in the historic gathering at Nicaea, one of the most impactful outcomes of the gathering was the establishment of a common date for the celebration of Easter. Because the modern Christian world fails to maintain this universal celebration, it is often forgotten that all mainline Christian traditions actually follow the exact formula established at Nicaea. Indeed, Christians of both East and West celebrate Easter on the first Sunday after the first full moon, after the first day of Spring. The difference today is that Christians cannot seem to agree on when the first day of Spring actually is. At the time of the Council of Nicaea, the Roman government adhered to a calendar now known as the Julian calendar, which employed a 365-day year arranged according to twelve months; and it understood the need for a leap year every fourth year. But the Julian calendar was flawed; the precise problem lays in its calculation of leap-year. Scientifically speaking, it takes the earth 365.2422 days to travel around the sun, not the crisp 365.25 days the Julian calendar prescribes. That slight difference amounts to 11 minutes a year and in the 1700 years since the Council of Nicaea, this discrepancy has led to a 13-day difference. The net result is that, according to the Julian calendar, the Spring solstice no longer occurs on March 21 as it did at the time of the Council of Nicaea. It now occurs on April 3. So, if one calculates the date of Easter according to the Julian calendar, it begins with the latter and not the former. Although there are many calls from within the Orthodox Church to join Western Christians and use the more astronomically-accurate Gregorian calendar, those calls have not yet been successful. Thus, it remains the case that even though the Orthodox Church technically adheres to the Nicaean formula, they do not celebrate Easter on the same day as other Christians.

Finally, when one considers the legacy of the Council of Nicaea and the Orthodox Christian tradition, one cannot help but reflect on Nicaea as a key step in the integration of church and state that occurred for the Christians of the Eastern Roman (i.e., Byzantine) Empire in late antiquity. As is well known, Eusebius provides the best surviving source on what transpired at Nicaea, but the majority of his account is little more than an encomium of Constantine’s support and guidance. Given the general perception of Eastern Christianity as a tradition that not only embraced church/state integration but also one that now celebrates several Byzantine emperors as saints of the church, it might be surprising to learn that this is largely a post-Byzantine phenomenon. Constantine was the only emperor regarded as a saint by the Byzantines, and there is no real evidence of a Constantinian cult until the tenth century, when it was actively promoted by the Macedonian dynasty as a way to advance its own dynastic interests. Nevertheless, it was very much the case that the Byzantines understood Constantine’s role at Nicaea to be providential and as evidence that the imperial office was a sacred one, even if individual emperors were not. Thus, Nicaea and Constantine stood as important symbols within Eastern Christianity for a common political presumption about the suitability of empire as a productive Christian polity. This model was influential not only for the Byzantines but also for the medieval and early-modern Slavic kingdoms. It continues to be a political force through Eastern Europe today, even if many in the Church are now beginning to highlight the ways in which medieval and modern rulers alike have exploited Orthodox Christian teaching and piety for their own purposes.

I Dr. Lim’s Response to Dr. Demacopoulos

Firstly, I was struck by the lucidity and clarity of Professor Demacopoulos’s exposition of what the Council of Nicaea means for the worldwide Orthodox traditions. As I had been mostly aware of and interested in patristic theology as a historian of Christianity – who works a good deal on the reception history of the writers from c. 150–550 – from an academic and intellectual standpoint, this article opened my vista to a wider angle of inquiry and appreciation. However, I do have some questions and comments set forth below as a way of extending the conversation between a Greek Orthodox historian and a Reformed Protestant intellectual historian of Christian theology.

Professor Demacopoulos’s first sentence grabbed my attention as a question which had been on my mind and re-emerged quickly. As he maintained that the Council of Nicaea is the “most significant post-biblical-event,” I wondered if this means that the Orthodox tradition thinks that the doctrine of the Trinity was not present in Scriptures but gradually became revealed from c. 35–325 AD, culminating with the first Council of Nicaea?

The second question stems from his identification of the “episcopal/conciliar model” as the differentiating aspect of the Orthodox Church vis-à-vis the Roman Catholic and Protestant traditions. Is the differentiation from the Roman Catholic tradition mainly that of the priority – if not superiority – of conciliar authority sans the Roman Curia, thus ultramontanism?

The reminder that Orthodox Christianity is firstly a “ritualized, liturgical tradition” is a salutary one. Consequently, it made me wonder how Reformed Protestantism views itself? At the risk of caricature, does it see itself as primarily “Logocentric,” stripped of icons, stained glasses, and altars. Seen from that angle, the “hyper-metaphysical” language of homoousia seems to fit my tradition quite well also.

What I found most different from the way I think of the legacy of Nicene piety, liturgy, and theology is from that of Professor Demacopoulos’s presentation of the way Orthodox Christianity sees what I would call the calendrical positioning of the commemoration of the Council of Nicaea falling on the seventh Sunday of Easter, as it is the Sunday before Pentecost. By positioning the Sunday of celebrating the legacy of Nicaea between Ascension and Pentecost, the Orthodox tradition reminds us of the providential guidance of the Triune God in leading the Church to Himself not only by the Ascension of Christ and the coming of the Holy Spirit as Paraclete (παράκλητος), something the Reformed tradition would never deny, but does not practice self-consciously.

My final question is as follows: Given the political realities in the Greek and Russian speaking worlds today, how is the symbiotic relationship between Nicaea and Constantine, viz., Ekklesia versus Empire, to be understood? I appreciate Demacopoulos’s expression here, and it begs a crucial question: “Thus Nicaea and Constantine stood as important symbols within Eastern Christianity for a common political presumption about the suitability of empire as a productive Christian polity.” Then, how does the contemporary Orthodox tradition cooperate or resist the endeavors of the State which might seek to subvert or supplant the authority of the Orthodox tradition, or other ecclesial traditions that might acknowledge the significance of Nicene Christianity without being Orthodox?

II Dr. Demacopoulos’s Response to Reading Dr. Lim’s Contribution

Let me begin by thanking Dr. Young Kim and the editorial board of Church History for creating such an imaginative and generative exercise. I am especially thankful to have been paired with Dr. Lim, not only because I learned so much from his short exposition because it had been so long since I had dealt in any serious way with Calvin’s thought. Indeed, I do not think I’ve read or taught him since I was a doctoral student in the late 1990s. I especially enjoyed Dr. Lim’s pairing of the sixteenth-century Calvin with his twenty-first century Reformed successors in Nashville, TN. Maybe it’s because I am myself from Tennessee and attended many Protestant services in my youth, but I can easily picture the diversity of lived religious expressions that Dr. Lim glosses.

As to my specific observations and questions, I was first struck by Dr. Lim’s title which emphasizes the Creed of Nicaea, rather than event of Nicaea. I do not know if it is because of Orthodoxy or because I’m a trained historian, but I tend to think of the Creed as something of an afterthought to the Council (Eusebius certainly does not dwell on it), something that only becomes important later, after it was refined in 381 and added to the Liturgy. I read Dr. Lim’s careful juxtaposition of Calvin’s thoughts about early councils to the contemporary use of the Nicene creed in the Reformed tradition to indicate that the reception of Nicaea is, now, almost entirely about the content of belief in the Reformed Church. I wonder if I am right about this.

Perhaps the element of Dr. Lim’s exposition that I found most surprising was the extent to which Nicaea (whether the Creed or the Council, I’m not sure) seems to function in the Reformed tradition as a stand-in for all Church councils, and not just the ancient ones. Indeed, there was arguably more reflection in this short essay about the Council of Trent and its implications for the Reformed tradition, than there was about the historic Nicaea. That was both a surprise and a curiosity. I can understand, I suppose, why a reflection on Nicaea would lead straight to the Council of Constantinople in 381, or even the Council of Chalcedon in 451, but why does it necessitate a connection to Trent in the imagination of those who belong to the Reformed tradition? For the Orthodox, Trent would never enter the imagination when thinking about the Councils as a whole and certainly not Nicaea. This is because Trent is simply a non-event in our tradition, even though it did cement a few items that further estranged the Catholic Church from the Orthodox and which have proven difficult to dislodge in ecumenical conversations.

Finally, I wonder whether scholars working within the Reformed tradition share Calvin’s approach to Scripture and the Councils, by which I mean his standard for whether or not a council was viable or whether or not it adhered to his particular reading of Scripture. In my scholarly circle, there are very few who might think that there is a single way to interpret the Scriptures or that any of the ancient and medieval councils unambiguously did so correctly or incorrectly. Dr. Lim’s concise summary of Calvin’s evaluation of Councils made me wonder whether such a hermeneutic of evaluation of the Councils still operates.

The next pairing brings together Dr. Kyama Mugambi, who reflects on what Nicaea means to the Pentecostal tradition, and Dr. Nancy Heisey, writing about the Mennonite perspective.

Pentecostals and Nicaea

Nicaea set the theological and doctrinal preconditions for the development of Protestantism in general and Pentecostalism in particular. Pentecostals here refer to a diverse, indigenously inspired, internationally linked expression of Christianity that emphasizes the work of the Holy Spirit in the believer.Footnote 12 While “movements of the spirit” have been present throughout Christian history, the twentieth- and twenty-first-century Pentecostals discussed here articulate elements of their practice in ways that differ from historical precedents. One notable feature is the emphasis on a post-conversion religious encounter responsible for supernatural experiences inspired by the Holy Spirit. These transcendent experiences include glossolalia, faith healing, exorcism, and prophetic utterances.Footnote 13 Pentecostals tend toward a literal application of Biblical narratives and are fervently committed to evangelism. Their diverse histories and theologies implicitly undermine any attempt to fit them into narrow categories. My interest in Pentecostals stems from over a decade of research into the movements, as well as years of close contact as an “insider” having served as a director of missions and worship in charismatic churches in Nairobi.

Though the early creeds are largely absent from their regular worship, Pentecostals resonate with the ancient doctrinal statements through their profound appreciation for the person of Christ and the concrete role of the Holy Spirit in people’s lives. Pentecostals reach back to narratives in Acts as a primary source of inspiration, doctrine, and practice. Despite this New Testament emphasis, the Nicene and other councils seldom feature in Pentecostal discourses. Thus, on the face of it, Nicaea 325 seems ancillary to Pentecostal commitment to the early church. In this reflection, I examine ways in which Pentecostals affirm aspects of Nicene orthodoxy long resident in mainstream Christianity. I also consider appraisals of contemporary Pentecostal practice from a Nicene perspective.

I Nicaea, Conciliarity, and Pentecostals

I begin with a note about Nicaea in relation to Pentecostals’ diverse, often factional legacy. Nicaea’s conciliarity falls within a long tradition of ecumenical gatherings aimed at offering precedent and doctrinal guidance for subsequent generations. Though one among many early gatherings in Africa and the Near East, Nicaea’s broad scope of participation and state sponsorship offered the first successful ecumenical framework to guide the interpretation of what was to become normative Christian orthodoxy of the day. Successive councils met, debated, and ultimately preserved Nicaea’s heritage as the church grew and institutionalized in the following centuries. Pentecostal detachment from, and perhaps suspicion of, this legacy may well be the reason for Nicaea’s absence in Pentecostal discourses. Drawing from the Christian experiences of the day, Nicaea’s guidance on ecclesial matters tried to regulate ritual and provide the beginnings of standardized liturgical practices, a feature of Christian history that Pentecostals have been wary of.

II Christ and the Holy Spirit

As the first major ecumenical gathering, the tone and form of discourse on ecclesial matters at Nicaea would carry forward into the Middle Ages and the Reformation period. In particular, the theological arguments for the supremacy of Christ and the divine status of the Holy Spirit informed much of the discourse in the years before the Reformation. Among a myriad of concerns, the Reformation sought to recover Nicaea’s vision of the authority of Christ in a church thought to have inordinately elevated tradition. Despite their relative silence about it in their worship, Pentecostals are in many ways part of this theological heritage. To Reformed teaching about the centrality of Christ, Pentecostals added copious instruction on the vitality of Holy Spirit-imbued lives.Footnote 14

Impassioned devotional movements of the Holy Spirit inspired many nonconformist practices, as a result of which Pentecostals found themselves often excluded from mainstream Christian discourse. However, Nicaea asserted what the Reformation seemed to have sidelined and yet was most central to Pentecostal doctrine and practice. Nicaea and Pentecostals acknowledge the critical place of the person of the Holy Spirit in Christian life with the affirmation, “We believe in the Holy Spirit.” This emphasis on God’s immanence through the Holy Spirit upholds the notion of God’s participatory presence in the human experience, as emphasized in Pentecostal worship.

With their vivacious music and fervent prayer, Pentecostals try to enact the lived experience of the Holy Spirit in Christian worship. They might argue that theirs is an oral liturgy consistent with the claims about the Holy Spirit offered in the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed of 381. Here, Christians together affirm, “We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son. With the Father and the Son, He is worshiped and glorified. He has spoken through the prophets.” A stronger ancient credal statement is hard to find that sustains this Pentecostal emphasis on the significance of the Holy Spirit. This posture toward the Spirit in worship offers the possibility for broad diversity in worship, which moves in a different direction from Nicaea’s pursuit of uniformity and liturgical control (Canon 20). Energized by their understanding of the practices of the New Testament church, Pentecostals engage in a continuous quest for the palpable presence of the Holy Spirit and its work in their lives.

III Order, Worship, and the Holy Spirit

For Pentecostals, worship is that sacred space where God meets with His people. Nicaea offers the Eucharist as the moment of ultimate communion with God (Canon 18). In this act, God becomes an immanent, perhaps material, presence in the community. For Pentecostals, ultimate communion is not found in the Eucharist but in those times when the Holy Spirit is actively present in places of worship and in private life as Christians appropriate the gifts of the Spirit.Footnote 15 The individualized yet corporate outworkings of this perspective produce what might come across as chaotic worship gatherings, seemingly antithetical to the orderliness and uniformity in ritual practice envisioned by Nicaea and subsequent gatherings.Footnote 16

Nicaea’s directions to stand during prayers between Easter and Pentecost, for instance, were opportunities for the early Fathers to commemorate Jesus’s resurrection and celebrate the joy of Christians’ own resurrection prospects. The New Testament mentions Paul kneeling in prayer, as seen in Acts 20:36 and Acts 21:5. Pentecostals hesitate at such restrictions on worship. Their deportment in worship strives to reflect the freedom they see in the sacred texts. Such liberty from constraints provides fertile ground for multiple liturgical forms and physical postures that incorporate the involvement of the whole being in worship. In this way, Pentecostals’ celebration of the immanence of God reflects an understanding of order and propriety that expands Nicaea’s vision of worship. Such broad construal of liturgical comportment have allowed for the proliferation of Pentecostalism in places otherwise unfamiliar with early Mediterranean and medieval European understandings of ritual postures of worship.

IV Leadership and the Holy Spirit

In my view, it is in church polity that Nicaea critiques Pentecostal practice the most. Nicaea’s pursuit of order extended beyond worship to include church polity (Canon 18). Pentecostals see church leadership as a visible outworking of the gifts of the Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the Prime Mover in the life of the individual, particularly the one called into leadership. In many instances, the call to leadership and worship among Pentecostals appears as a vocation unilaterally acknowledged that awaits endorsement by willing clergy.

In contrast, Nicaea highlighted the calling into leadership as a communal exercise through the practice of apostolic succession and conversation within leadership communities (Canon 4). The call of a bishop was to be confirmed through ordination in the presence of at least three members of senior church leadership from within the region and with the blessing of the broader community of leaders. This practice offers insight into Nicaea’s collective, conciliar approach to the call and the work of the Holy Spirit in leadership. Pentecostal individualist discernment of calling has raised concerns about impropriety and lack of accountability in some quarters.Footnote 17

The unilaterality of the call among Pentecostals has also led to increased instances of young, inexperienced ministers. Nicaea urged restraint and patience in the development of leadership, affirming Pauline leadership principles found in the epistles. Nicaea instructed churches to avoid consecrating novices who had recently been baptized as Christians into senior leadership (Canon 2, 12). If applied in contemporary times, these injunctions from Nicaea offer valuable remedial insights for contemporary Pentecostal practice.

Nicaea’s conciliarity anticipated harmony and consensus within the community. The council’s proscription of the migration of priests from one bishopric to another aimed to foster this harmony (Canon 16). The council sought to preserve the strength of the church through pious leaders, ensuring that those who had been subject to discipline in one place did not move to perpetuate their error elsewhere. This helpful insight addresses the schismatic tendencies among Pentecostals in areas where the church is rapidly growing. Nicene emphasis on consensus and community also called for regular meetings for the community of leaders up to twice a year (Canon 5). Such a commitment to fellowship and companionship in leadership is a growth area among Pentecostals.

It is in these ways, then, that Nicaea, though not mainstream in Pentecostal discourse, affirms Pentecostal practice but also critiques it. Nicaea speaks from the past to offer correctives for contemporary Pentecostal leadership practices. Nicaea and Pentecostals agree on the immanence of God in worship and lived experiences, which affirm the essential role of the Holy Spirit in people’s faith.

One Mennonite’s Reflection on the Council of Nicaea

“Mennonites are not credal.” This assertion has been repeated in my circles in the more than half-century I have spent within Mennonite church institutions. “We have confessions, which speak to how we discern Christian faithfulness for particular contexts.”Footnote 18 As a scholar, I had come to a reasonably nuanced view on the theological and historical questions surrounding the fourth century of the early Christian movement. Yet now I turned “homeward” to reflect on how my faith community might consider the anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. In response to my search for “creeds” in the Global Anabaptist-Mennonite Encyclopedia Online, GAMEO replied with this helpful question: “Did you mean creeks?”

A quick glance over the entries that included “creeks” revealed that the question is not out of place. Agrarian Euro-American Mennonite settlers, beginning in the eighteenth century, situated themselves near creeks. Thus entries about their history provide names such as these for their communities: Black Creek (British Columbia), Deer Creek (Oklahoma), Pequea Creek (Pennsylvania), Twenty Mile Creek (Ontario), Walnut Creek (Ohio), and Yellow Creek (Indiana). Indeed, my own Swiss-German Anabaptist ancestors first settled near the Pequea Creek.

A more specific GAMEO search, for “Nicaea,” brought up two links. The first, “Michael Servetus,” profiles the sixteenth-century Spanish theologian, burned at the stake in Calvin’s Geneva for his arguments against the Trinity. The article notes that Dutch Anabaptist David Joris entered “a plea for the accused during the trial.”Footnote 19 The second entry, “Christology,” includes a 2018 overview, a 1990 survey of Mennonite approaches, and a 1957 entry on the “Incarnation of Christ.”Footnote 20 This last article surveyed sixteenth-century Christological debates, including Menno Simons’s adherence to “celestial flesh” Christology,Footnote 21 an embarrassment that most modern Mennonite theologians have downplayed or tried to explain away.

Considering the more ancient story, Mennonites have spelled out two fundamental problems with Nicaea: the role of Emperor Constantine in the making of the creed, and the creed’s seeming omission of references to Jesus’s life and teachings. Many theologians and seminarians under their guidance have tried to find a path forward by claiming that “a theological ethics which understands Jesus’ life and teachings as definitive of what it means to live a human life will be … ‘more radically Nicene and Chalcedonian than other views.’”Footnote 22 A few were intrigued by Leithart’s Defending Constantine. Footnote 23 Yet the apparently missing ethics in Nicene and Constantinopolitan creeds continues to worry Mennonite thinkers, even in 2025.Footnote 24

Perhaps anecdotal entry into the Mennonite-Nicaea question could help. I searched my memory of the 2006 meeting of the Mennonite World Conference (MWC) General Council, over which I presided together with my colleague, Bishop Danisa Ndlovu of Zimbabwe. At that meeting MWC adopted a Statement of Shared Convictions to guide our life together, as well as our participation among the Christian World Communions. The statement had been ten years in the drafting, including collecting the particular confessions of member bodies, exchanging myriads of drafts, and a series of debates in previous General Council gatherings. The minutes of the meeting report that I offered an opening meditation on the importance of “gathering in council,” which I likened to New Testament, fourth-century, and the sixteenth-century Anabaptist communities.

The Shared Convictions statement opens: “As part of the one body of Christ at all times and places, we hold the following to be central to our belief and practice.” This phrasing clearly grew out of the MWC’s several ecumenical dialogues, including that with Roman Catholics from 1998 to 2003. The minutes of the 2006 gathering, however, disappointed. In my memory the most vigorous debate before our adoption of the statement was over the second conviction: “Jesus is the Son of God.” The minutes, however, simply state that after discussion the statement was adopted. I remember, though, that in the midst of that spirited discussion I declared to the delegates: “We are discussing the most important question that Christians have debated throughout the centuries.”

Turning in another direction also offers insight. It is commonly claimed among Mennonites that we sing our theology. Already in the sixteenth century, a hymn in the Anabaptist collection, the Ausbund, “provided the faithful … with the opportunity to rehearse the creeds.” The hymn quotes from both the Apostles and the Nicene Creeds, including “the description of Christ as ‘begotten, not made’ and ‘of one substance with the Father.’”Footnote 25 A scan of more recent hymn collections, from the 1822 Harmonia Sacra through the 2021 Voices Together, show consistent inclusion of hymn texts and tunes referencing the Trinity. The vibrant Christmas hymn “O Come All Ye Faithful/Adeste Fideles,” with its own complicated textual history, appears in hymnals from the Harmonia Sacra forward. However, the most Nicene of its stanzas, “True God of True God…” is omitted in several editions. The powerful nineteenth-century Trinitarian hymn, “Holy, Holy, Holy,” matched with the tune name “NICAEA” composed specifically for that text, is present in Mennonite hymnals from the beginning of the twentieth century.

The Mennonite-Anabaptist family, small among the families of Christian World Communions, now has many more members in Africa, Asia, and Latin America than in Europe and North America. Without doing any kind of survey, I confidently assert that neither the Council of Nicaea nor the creed that emerged in fourth-century Asia Minor plays a regular formal and audible role in the liturgy or practice of our worldwide family. Nevertheless, in 2016, the MWC Courier review of the Statement of Shared Convictions included an article by Zimbabwean Bekitembe Dube. In “Songs of the Trinity and Shalom,” Dube declared: “Our hymns in [the church in Zimbabwe] affirm belief in the Trinitarian God. These are sung with a fervency of affirmation.”Footnote 26 Could it be that this form of remembering, during the 1700th anniversary year of the Council of Nicaea, and going forward, offers the gifts that are needed, for our churches now, as well as for the church in all times and places?

I Dr. Mugambi Responds First to Dr. Heisey’s Contribution

If the Nicene creed is the most widespread articulation of Christians’ shared faith, how might we think of unity with those communities that do not have the creed at the center of their worship? Through history, credal formulations intensified contentions that eventually sparked schism. In those times, focus on the common elements of the faith was overshadowed by the conflicts.

In reflecting on Pentecostal and Mennonite traditions’ reticence about the creeds, it occurred to me that we may construe the viability of Christian communion differently. What if the strength of Christian accord lay in the Spirit (and spirit) of shared belief proclaimed in the Creed? While different traditions understand the elements of the creed differently, the lived faith that attends the history of the creeds offers a foundation upon which communion – however fragile – might be imaginable.

Another look at Mennonites or Pentecostals’ internal quests for theological coherence might be useful. Understood within their context, their gatherings and histories reveal an unconventional, even radical search for the Triune God, Jesus, the work of the Holy Spirit, the power of the Cross, the Resurrection, the remission of sins and the Church, core affirmations of the Creed. Such an understanding of these communities, once marginal to established Christianity, might present ways to imagine a common bond through their lived faith.

It also strikes me that the proponents of Nicaea were working in a context where Christian belief was in ascendancy in Africa. The 1700th anniversary of Nicaea finds us at a time when the continent with the largest number of Mennonites, and the largest number of Pentecostals is Africa, which is also home to the largest number of Christians in any continent. It remains to be seen whether the Nicene Creed will find its way into African Mennonite or Pentecostal liturgies. Yet these communities share in Nicaea’s search for fidelity to the truths of the Christian faith.

Echoes of the Creed in the life of these communities foster unwitting yet refreshing dimensions of communion with the Holy Catholic and Apostolic church. In my view this is especially pronounced in the communities’ affirmations of the Triune God through the Spirit at work in the believer and their community. Seen this way, a viable pathway might still be open to bring together these and other diverse expressions of Christianity, through a shared understanding of the substance – if not the precise wording – of the Creed.

II Dr. Heisey Responds In Turn

The creed that emerged from the Council of Nicaea, as Dr. Mugambi rightly underlines, articulates clearly the place of the Holy Spirit in the Divine economy. Thus Pentecostal awareness of the Holy Spirit’s presence that grounds “faith healing, exorcism…a literal application of Biblical narratives and [fervent] evangelism,” immediately links Pentecostal churches with the ancient council. Especially outside Europe and North America, many Mennonite churches likewise worship and witness with Spirit-led practices, so much so that one delegate to the 2006 gathering of the Mennonite World Conference General Council declared, “most Mennonites are Pentecostals.”

For Mennonite churches in the global north, where such practices are less evident, wistful desires for the spiritual energy of sisters and brothers in the global south are frequently heard. The liturgical realities that Dr. Mugambi outlines as interacting with Pentecostal witness today likewise invite consideration by Mennonites. Both Mennonites and Pentecostals could profit from recognizing, as did Methodist theologians Ondina and Justo González, that some of our liturgical moves echo those of the ancient churches: “Many of my Pentecostal friends were saying and doing much of what the Latin Mass and the Book of Prayer said and did, except that they were doing it “in Spanish” – in Spanish, not only in the sense that they did it in the vernacular, but also in the sense that they did it in ways that affirmed them and their culture.”Footnote 27

Both North Americans and Mennonites in many other parts of the world could also benefit from reaching toward “Nicaea’s conciliarity [that] anticipated harmony and consensus within the community.” It may be that third-century bishops assumed such harmony could be achieved through imperial force and favor. Today, a reinvigorated turning to the Trinitarian heart of Nicaea may offer Mennonites (and Pentecostals?) around the world a way through polarization and conflict.

The third pairing includes Dr. Rebecca Lyman, who writes about the Methodist reception and engagement with Nicaea, while Benjamin Keogh reflects on what Nicaea might and might not mean for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Methodism and the Nicene Creed

When I was growing up in midcentury Michigan in the United Methodist churches led by my dad, we would regularly recite from the 1964 Hymnal the “historic confessions” of the Apostle’s Creed and the Nicene Creed as well as a “modern” affirmation and a missionary statement called the “Korean Creed.” In a worship filled with changing responsive readings as well as extemporaneous prayers, these collective “Affirmations of Faith” by clergy and people together stood out in form and consistency. We stood in a broad stream of faithfulness. In the church and parsonage we focused on a moral and spiritual perfection through a living Christ, and social justice undergirded by God’s great mercy for all. Doctrine was everywhere assumed, but rarely expounded. When as a teenager I discovered my father’s fine Neo-Orthodox library and devotion to the Trinity, I was astonished. I am beginning this essay with my own “lived religion,” that is, the reception of religious language and practice among ordinary people in specific contexts, because I think this best reveals the persisting force of John and Charles Wesley’s movement from a revival of the Church of England to numerous populist denominations in the United States.

As an Anglican priest John Wesley inherited and continued a non-dogmatic stream of scripture and tradition focused on Christian life and practice as well as his own attachment to the first three centuries as “primitive Christianity.” The “primitive Fathers” preserved for him evidence of intense faith and disciplines which inspired his own work in the Church of England.Footnote 28 Yet, references to ancient creeds are few and scattered in his prolific writings. Instead, Wesley focused on soteriological and therapeutic themes against Calvinism and quietism to confirm a transforming personal and palpable religious experience of divine grace and love available to all, whose veracity was confirmed by the observable behavior and emotions of the Christian.Footnote 29 Creeds occur in his arguments against mere conformity or the uselessness of speculative theology:

A man may assent to three or three-and-twenty creeds; he may assent to all the Old and New Testament…and yet have no faith at all…In its more particular notion, it is a divine evidence or conviction wrought in my heart that God is reconciled to me through his Son, inseparably joined with a confidence in him as a gracious reconciled Father…To believe…is then to walk in the light of eternity and to have a clear sight of, and confidence in the Most High, reconciled to me through the Son of his love.Footnote 30

This “internal evidence” of Christianity was so compelling, plain, and intimate that “a peasant, a woman, a child may feel all its force.”Footnote 31 This force he saw in the “primitive Fathers,” who in spite of their often weak arguments, “I reverence their writings because they describe true, genuine Christianity and direct us to the strongest evidence of the Christian doctrine.”Footnote 32 Echoing Paul to the Corinthians on the priority of love of God, he wrote provocatively, “…that orthodoxy, or right opinions, is at best but a very slender part of religion, if it can be allowed to be any part of it at all.” Footnote 33 Not surprisingly, the era of the councils with their technical debates and bitter divisions seemed to him to evince mainly ecclesial power and imperial favor. He also defended the spirituality of Pelagius, Donatists, and the Montanists. Thus, Wesley declared that his “Collection of Hymns” contained “all the important truths of our most holy religion, whether speculative or practical….a little body of experimental and practical divinity” (73–74).Footnote 34

These prolific and eloquent encouragements through hymnody, letters, and sermons for an experiential love of God were rooted in the currents of early eighteenth-century Christianity and contemporary lived religion. The moral intensity of “Holy Living” by Jeremy Taylor, the rebuttal of Calvinism by the Caroline divines, and contemporary debates about the reality of miracles were electrified into a life changing conversion of Wesley through Pietism with its demand for individual assurance through an experience of the Spirit and the empirical spirit of the English Enlightenment which lent observation and verification to the supernatural movements and transformation of the soul.Footnote 35 For Wesley as an Anglican revivalist this reality of direct interior spiritual experience answered both active skeptics and the indifference of mere conformity which were more destructive to the interior realities of true religion than diversity of practice or opinion. As he urged in “Catholic Spirit,” “Though we can’t think alike, may we not love alike? May we not be of one heart, though we are not of one opinion?”Footnote 36 His focus on a “religion of the heart” resulted in a theology as “…a moving vortex, fueled by scripture and divine love, shaped by experience, reason, and tradition, and moving dynamically toward the holiness of Christian perfection. Any model that lacks dynamic movement toward holiness and its growth within individuals and its dissemination throughout the world is clearly inadequate.”Footnote 37 While Wesley certainly assumed and affirmed traditional doctrine, he was alert to the variety and limits of human opinion and the lack of love in Christian divisions and debates.Footnote 38 When he abridged the 39 articles for the American Methodists, he left out Article 6 which included the Nicene Creed. Creeds were necessary, but not sufficient for the realization and practice of divine love in Christian living.

As Methodism grew into a separate church in North America, the issues of lived religion shifted from a revitalization of traditional forms toward individual conversion which embraced lay participation and ecstatic speech in the controversial and successful camp meetings.Footnote 39 Democratization of culture and religion changed Methodist theology toward more individualism, free will, social activism, and a relentless optimism.Footnote 40 Methodism divided several times over slavery or practices of holiness but not over biblical criticism or modernism as in other mainline denominations.

In the later twentieth century growing political divides in the United States between liberals and conservatives spurred religious conflicts on biblical authority with regard to race, feminism, sexuality, and liberation theology, including among United Methodists. Like the issue of slavery a century before, this crisis of justice and faithfulness challenged conventional doctrine and practices in deeper ways beyond proof texting scripture or the writings of Wesley. The Nicene Creed featured in the internecine conflict as part of a conservative retrieval of ancient doctrine to restore and enforce standards. Not surprisingly, Wesley in his extensive occasional writings, could be quoted on all sides with regard to doctrine, even as his focus remained on scripture and vital religion.Footnote 41 A petition to the General Conference of 2016 to include the Nicene Creed in The Book of Discipline was soundly defeated since both conservatives and liberals were hesitant to change Wesley’s original exclusion. When the eventual break came in 2022, the new conservative Global Methodist Church included the Nicene Creed in The Transitional Book of Doctrines and Disciplines. This addition of the Nicene Creed recalls its inclusion into the liturgy for the first time in the sixth century as a means of proving superior orthodoxy.

Ecumenism in the twentieth century has fostered a prominent acceptance of the Nicene creed, even in evangelical circles, yet a critical history of ancient Christianity echoes some of the instincts of Wesley. The original Nicene Creed was a compromise document to end a theological debate among fourth-century bishops. The creative shifts in theological thinking which finally led to its broader acceptance are not evident in the text itself nor can it rule on contemporary questions such as inclusive language or human sexuality. Wesley preferred the first three centuries precisely because he saw them as focused on Christian living rather than elite theological debate. Reading or singing the Wesleys is more akin to Gregory of Nyssa’s Life of Moses: doctrines of divine power and incarnation are the beginning of a transformative journey into mystery. Dogmatic apologetics tends to assure us that lex orandi, lex credendi (the law of prayer is the law of belief) covers all sins of abstraction or competition. Ironically, Wesley fostered this principle so fiercely in his trust of dynamic divine action that he was led into radical positions such as the criticism of orthodoxy, the acceptance of lay and women preachers, and the ordination of sacramental leaders for mission in America. Wesleyan lived religion has always been potentially disruptive. As Henry Chadwick said about Origen, we begin by evaluating his orthodoxy and we end by having to interrogate the definition of orthodoxy itself.

Nicaea at 1700 and the Latter-day Saints at 195

Latter-day Saints have repeatedly and emphatically rejected the Creed of Nicaea. In their General Conferences, Latter-day Saint leaders have dismissed it as “man-made”Footnote 42 at best and “aided” by “Lucifer”Footnote 43 at worst. While direct mention of Nicaea in this setting is infrequent – 14 times since 1850 – a uniformly shallow interaction accompanies its uniformly negative reception. This includes mistakes in facts of history and inaccuracies in representations of Trinitarian dogma. Always it is embedded into a narrative that sets it in opposition to the teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, with these teachings presented as an authoritative correction. Central to this correction is the Latter-day Saint assertion that God the Father has “a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man’s.”Footnote 44

Missing from this correction, however, is any hint that Latter-day Saint conceptions of God have developed. Despite its tracing today to the First Vision of founding prophet Joseph Smith in 1820, he did not articulate a notion of the Father’s physical body until 1841, when he declared, “That which is without body or parts is nothing. There is no other God in heaven but that God who has flesh and bones.”Footnote 45 Smith’s most recent and best biographer, Richard Bushman, suggests that 1841 completes a shift from Smith’s “traditional Christian belief in God as pure spirit to a belief in his corporeality.”Footnote 46 That it is a shift is underlined in an 1840 tract by Apostle Parley Pratt: “Whoever reads our books, or hears us preach, knows that we believe in the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, as one God,” that “the Son has flesh and bones” and “the Father is a spirit.” Whoever suggests otherwise, Pratt was clear, “has entirely misrepresented us.” While it was the case, according to Pratt, that Latter-day Saints at that time understood the Father to be “a personage of spirit” in “organized formation” with “its eyes, mouth, ears, &C.,”Footnote 47 he was also clear that (1) this does not divide the one God, (2) the Son is “the express image” of the Father, with humanity “created in their image,”Footnote 48 and (3) the Holy Ghost “proceeds from the Father and the Son.”Footnote 49 For many Christians then and now, it remains a mistake to attribute even a spirit body to the Father. Such an assertion, however, need not take one beyond Nicaea’s minimal orthodoxy. Neither, albeit more controversially, need later Latter-day Saint attribution of a physical body to the Father.Footnote 50

Allied to this, Latter-day Saints profess belief in God the Eternal Father, his Son, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost. They baptize in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. They pray to the Father through the Son in the Spirit. They invoke Father, Son, and Spirit in administering the Eucharist, which they call the Sacrament. Their keystone scripture, the Book of Mormon, declares as its central purpose, “the convincing of the Jew and Gentile that Jesus is the Christ, the Eternal God,”Footnote 51 and, in its pages, the “one God” is explicitly defined as the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost in doxological contexts.Footnote 52 Furthermore, as demonstrated in the table below, the first published statement of Latter-day Saint belief overlaps significantly with Nicaea’s final Constantinopolitan form.

Written in conjunction with the organisation of the Church in 1830, the Articles and Covenants of the Church of the Christ – what is now Doctrine and Covenants 20 – was read and accepted at the Church’s first conference on June 9, 1830.Footnote 53 Sandwiched between brief accounts of the Church’s founding and the appearance of the Book of Mormon on one side and various statements of Church procedural matters on the other is a 307-word statement of nascent Latter-day Saint belief. Following the order of the Latter-day Saint document the relevant excerpt from the Nicene-Constantinopolitan symbol is set comparatively side-by-side below.

While space prohibits a detailed exposition, one comment is necessary. Smith’s Articles and Covenants do not contain Nicaea’s language of consubstantiality. For some, this may be enough to indicate the Latter-day Saints’ anti-Nicene position. However, this overlooks the structure of Smith’s statement. There an introductory word on God is followed successively by statements on the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost before concluding by returning to the introductory word to make clear that the one infinite and eternal, everlastingly unchangeable God is Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Distinct, yet undivided. It appears difficult to make adequate sense of this formula without some notion of consubstantiality.

If this is the case, the source of Latter-day Saint antipathy to Nicaea is not immediately obvious, nor does it appear necessary. While the reasons for its development are various and complex, one is suggested by the only reference to “creeds” in the Doctrine and Covenants, in what is now section 123 from what was originally a letter written by Smith from the jail at Liberty, Missouri, in March 1839. While Smith was in prison, the Latter-day Saints were being forcibly expelled from the state of Missouri, suffering all the indignities and indecencies that entailed. As well as asking God for redress, Smith’s letter suggested they should gather up and “publish to all the world…the whole concatenation of diabolical rascality and nefarious and murderous impositions that have been practised upon this people.” Insisting this was their “imperative duty,” Smith described the same spirit that “supported and urged on and upheld” the “hand of murder, tyranny, and oppression” as “strongly rivet[ing] the creeds of the fathers.”Footnote 54

Amid persecution, Smith’s opposition to creeds solidified, and he found language to describe them that buttressed the development of his increasingly speculative and materialistic later theology. In writing that “creeds set up stakes and say hitherto shalt thou come and no further,” Smith was clear: this “I cannot subscribe to.”Footnote 55 Smith, it seems, came to understand creeds as the end of divine conversation – a human full-stop on the possibility of God’s continued communication. His commitment to the reality of its continuance meant this was theologically unacceptable, and his associating creeds with the experience of brutal maltreatment rendered them morally bankrupt.Footnote 56 Regardless of the accuracy of Smith’s assessment, it remains the case that Latter-day Saint scripture, worship practices, and fundamental beliefs about God can sit within the bounds of Nicene orthodoxy.

May the God who communicates bless the continued conversation constructively on all sides.

I Dr. Lyman and Benjamin Keogh Respond to Each Other’s Contributions

RL: Having only a general knowledge of the Church of the Latter-day Saints, I found your article extremely interesting and illuminating. On one hand the “orthodoxy” of the baptismal practices and the outline of faith seemed to follow certain Protestant reframing of the Trinity (a simplified creed with traditional formulas in practice), yet the contrast to the developing material theology was striking. In some sense this outline of faith within his (Joseph Smith’s) revelation gives some authority to Nicaea, that is, that he follows the outline of the creed so closely.

I was also struck that in the early fourth century debates the “body” and “materiality” of God was part of the energy around defining the relation of the Father and the Son – Arius cited homoousios from the Manichees, who were often labeled as “materialists.” The delay in the acceptance of homoousios was precisely because of these fears. The traditional defense of Nicene theology also includes that this is a defense of the incarnation: the Son as wholly God becomes wholly human. The materiality of “bodies” is shifted to the Son as the means of revelation and divinization. I wonder how or if this might relate to the context and development of material themes in the nineteenth century.

BK: I think you are right that because the Articles and Covenants follow Nicaea so closely it can legitimately be read as giving some authority to Nicaea. At the same time, it’s also striking that Joseph Smith never directly references Nicaea. It’s also striking that the reading I’ve offered, as plain as the parallel seems, would not be obvious to the average Latter-day Saint, who has an institutionally inherited anti-creedalism and has never engaged Nicaea because it has been institutionally inherited. In fact, it’s not a reading I’ve come across before, which at this point seems kind of wild. What I’m attempting to push is the notion that this rejection is not a necessary entailment of Latter-day Saint belief, and therefore, whatever the reasons for its rejection, they are historically and contextually contingent.

As for the fourth century debates about the “body” and “materiality,” they did not play any role in Smith’s developing materiality. There is a sense, I guess, that he is replaying them without being aware of them. I think he comes to a position that God is corporeal via the cultural contexts that formed him in the nineteenth century and his own developing theological confidence and assurance. He is, as far as I can tell, entirely unfamiliar with the technical language of trinitarianism, the history of trinitarian debates, and the development of trinitarian doctrine.

Thanks for such a rich and thought-provoking piece. I did not know Wesley had omitted the Nicene Creed when he abridged the Articles, and I found your framing of creeds as “necessary but not sufficient” particularly illuminating. It captures nicely the tension between doctrinal inheritance and lived transformation. It made me wonder, though, what his omission of the creed may have signified. Was it some kind of pragmatic adaptation to new ecclesial realities? Or might it be understood as representing some kind of theological protest? Not against doctrine per se, but against the way creedal formulations can harden into instruments of exclusion, impeding the Spirit’s work in real lives?

Similarly, with your noting of Wesley’s sympathy for figures on the theological margins (Pelagius, Montanists, Donatists), might this suggest, again, that he was more wary of how “orthodoxy” might be marshalled to guard boundaries than of heterodoxy itself? Read this way, the omission might signal a refusal to let doctrinal formulation take precedence over the radical availability of grace. In both these ways, the suggestion is that the creed, or at least a certain way of interacting with it, becomes rigid and prevents the community from navigating its very real tensions with those on the margins in sufficiently loving ways that remain open to the radical possibilities of grace. If that’s the case, then Wesleyan religion, as you point out, is disruptive, and that disruption is not a threat to orthodoxy but a sign that orthodoxy remains alive, tested by love and open to the Spirit’s work and grace – that the test of a creed’s usefulness is not its doctrinal or metaphysical precision but its capacity to sustain a community’s journey into holiness.

Is part of the gift Wesley offers modern Methodism, then, precisely this capacity to engage with creeds as means rather than ends, provisional even poetic markers of a church in via, rather than enclosures in which a finished theology rests? And what, then, might it mean for Methodists today to receive Wesley’s omission as a theological prompt that invites continual discernment as to how creeds may serve rather than steer the work of grace?

Our next pair of reflections come from Dr. Christopher Boyd Brown, sharing the Lutheran view and Dr. Mary K. Farag, writing about the Coptic perspective and reception of Nicaea.

Lutherans and the Council of Nicaea

The Augsburg Confession of 1530, which is the common confession of faith which still unites all Lutheran churches around the globe, begins in its first article with the declaration that “The churches among us teach with complete unanimity that the decree of the Council of Nicaea concerning the unity of the divine essence and concerning the three persons is true and to be believed without any doubt.”Footnote 57 The Book of Concord of 1584 includes the Nicene Creed alongside the Apostles’ and Athanasian Creeds as one of the “three [ancient] Creeds” to which the churches and schools of the Augsburg Confession are committed.Footnote 58

Lutherans have known and appealed to the text of the Nicene Creed in its standard Niceano-Constantinopolitan form of 381 (or 451), with the Western addition of the filioque – not merely by historical accident, but with deliberate reflection, as when Jacob Andreae and other Tübingen theologians in the late sixteenth century engaged in an extended Scriptural and patristic defense of the theological and soteriological significance of the double procession of the Spirit in dialogue with Patriarch Jeremias II of Constantinople.Footnote 59 (In 2024, however, the Lutheran World Federation issued a joint statement with the Eastern Orthodox Church “suggest[ing]” use of the Creed without the filioque in translation from the Greek original.)

But Lutherans have appealed not only to the theological text and substance of Nicaea but also to the history of the Council of Nicaea itself, as known through the church historians – for sixteenth-century Lutherans, chiefly the Latin Tripartite History compiled from the Greek works of Socrates Scholasticus, Sozomen, and Theodoret.

Luther pointed out in his 1520 Address to the Christian Nobility that “even the Council of Nicaea, the most famous of all councils, was neither called nor confirmed by the bishop of Rome, but by the emperor Constantine.”Footnote 60 Constantine’s intervention in the Arian controversy at Nicaea in order to maintain peace in the Empire became a paradigm for Lutheran princes reforming the church in their own territories. Melanchthon wrote to the Elector John in the Instruction for the Visitors: “While His Electoral grace is not obligated to teach and to rule in spiritual affairs, he is obligated as temporal sovereign to so order things that strife, rioting, and rebellion do not arise among his subjects; even as the Emperor Constantine summoned the bishops to Nicaea since he did not want to tolerate the dissension which Arius had stirred up among the Christians in the empire, and constrained them to preserve unity in teaching and faith.”Footnote 61

The corollary to this emphasis on the role of the emperor at Nicaea was the absence of the pope. Luther pointed out in his thirteenth thesis for the 1519 Leipzig Disputation that the Council of Nicaea stood against more recent papal claims to supremacy.Footnote 62 Positively, the Council of Nicaea stood as an example that matters of faith must be decided on the basis of Scripture alone. As Luther said in his extensive discussion of Nicaea in his 1539 treatise On the Councils and the Church: “The Historia Tripartita also says in Book V, chapter 29, ‘At Nicaea the faith was grounded on the writings of the apostles’.”Footnote 63

Nicaea also served Lutherans in their defense of clerical marriage. Some of the church historians recounted the story of the bishop Paphnutius, a confessor tortured during the Great Persecution, who stood up against all the other bishops at the council when they sought to introduce celibacy as a rule for the clergy, and argued that faithful married life was equal to monastic celibacy. Paphnutius’s example was irresistible to Lutherans not only as a refutation of Pope Gregory VII’s imposition of celibacy on all Western clergy but also as a proof that one bishop (or theologian) might be in the right against all others, even at the “most sacred of councils.”Footnote 64

Indeed, Lutherans could be critical of the disciplinary canons of Nicaea; certainly, the canons were not founded on Scripture in the same way that the decree about the divinity of Christ was.Footnote 65 It was “permissible to convoke a council to regulate fasting and prayer, vestments,” and the like. But such matters were not binding. The decision of Nicaea about Jesus’s divinity was authoritative not because the council had made it but because it was founded on Scripture.Footnote 66

One decision made at Nicaea that still retained practical significance was its decree setting the date of Easter. Luther was aware that, in his day, the astronomical observations no longer matched the calendar assumed by the council, but he called on the “exalted majesties, emperors and kings” to issue an order, in parallel with Constantine, to resolve the discrepancy, or else the church should keep “wobbling along” with things as the fathers had established them.Footnote 67 When in 1582 Pope Gregory XIII introduced his new calendar to make such a change, Lutheran states (along with most Protestant and Orthodox Christians) refused to follow, maintaining “Old Style” Julian dating for centuries (or down to the present day for liturgical purposes in many Orthodox churches).

In addition to being affirmed in the Lutheran Confessions, the creed of Nicaea, with its confession of the Son as consubstantial with the Father, was maintained by Luther and his followers in the weekly liturgy of the Lord’s Supper, often sung in a hymn setting composed by Luther himself.Footnote 68 Early in his campaign against Scholastic theology and its jargon, Luther could, to be sure, express reservations about the “new, non-Scriptural word” homoousios: “Even if my soul hated this word, homoousion, and I refused to use it, still I would not be a heretic. For who compels me to use the word, providing I hold to the fact defined by the council on the basis of Scripture?”Footnote 69 But for most of the rest of his career, Luther vigorously defended both the word and the doctrine:

It is certainly true that one should teach nothing outside of Scripture pertaining to divine matters, as St. Hilary writes…which means only that one should teach nothing that is at variance with Scripture. But that one should not use more or other words than those contained in Scripture—this cannot be adhered to, especially in a controversy and when heretics want to falsify things with trickery and distort the words of Scripture. It thus became necessary to condense the meaning of Scripture, comprised of so many passages, into a short and comprehensive word, and to ask whether they regarded Christ as homo[o]usius, which was the meaning of all the words of Scripture that they had distorted with false interpretations.Footnote 70

Indeed, in the Christian theological tradition, there have been few theologians who have emphasized the theology of the homoousios – understood in the doubled form of the Chalcedonian Definition or, for Lutherans, the Athansian Creed, the context in which the Nicene Creed was always understood: “consubstantial with the Father according to His divinity, consubstantial with us according to His humanity” – more strongly than did Luther. In particular, Luther insisted that the consubstantiality of the Son with the Father was in no way diminished by the Incarnation: that Jesus Christ is God without qualification or remainder. As the hymn A Mighty Fortress puts it: “Ask ye, who is this? Jesus Christ it is,/Of Sabaoth Lord/And there’s none other God.”

Luther’s 1540 Disputation on the Divinity and Humanity of Christ is an extended and penetrating reflection on this double consubstantiality, centered on the conclusion that it is possible, indeed necessary, to assert that “this God suffered, died, was buried.”Footnote 71 As Luther strikingly put it in On the Councils and the Church: “If it cannot be said that God died for us, but only a man, then we are lost; but if God’s death and a dead God lie in the balance, his side goes down and ours goes up like a light and empty scale…But he could not sit on the scale unless he had become a man like us, so that it could be called God’s dying, God’s martyrdom, God’s blood, and God’s death. For God in his own nature cannot die; but now that God and man are united in one person, it is called God’s death when the man dies who is one substance or one person with God.”Footnote 72

For Luther, as for Athanasius (and for Cyril of Alexandria after him) this was the central significance of the Nicene confession, founded in Scripture and repeated at subsequent councils and in the Church of every age and place: that the One who had become incarnate of the Virgin, suffered, and rose again, “for us human beings and our salvation,” was none other than true God.

The Reception of the Council of Nicaea and Its Creed in the Coptic Orthodox Church

The term “Coptic” can mean many things: a people, an ethnicity, a language, a period of time, and/or a Christian confession. In the latter sense, “Coptic” refers specifically to the Christians of Egypt of the Miaphysite faith, who adhere to the one-nature Christological formulations and expressions of God’s suffering (Theopaschite formulae) preferred by Pope Cyril of Alexandria. In the fifth century, they challenged the two-nature Christological formulations promulgated by Pope Leo of Rome and the Council of Chalcedon. They criticized the latter council’s failure to adopt a Theopaschite formula. Miaphysite Christians of Egypt, whether living in Egypt or in the diaspora, together constitute what is known today as the “Coptic Orthodox Church.”

The significance of the Nicene Creed to the Coptic Orthodox Church cannot be underestimated. However, the church rarely refers to the creed as “Nicene.” Instead, the church usually refers to the creed simply as, “The Faith,” “The Orthodox Faith,” or “The Canon/Rule of Faith.” The church considers herself the rightful guardian and heir of this faith from the time of the dispute between Pope Alexander of Alexandria and the presbyter Arius, through Pope Athanasius of Alexandria’s defense of Nicene faith to the present. The Nicene Creed has been the succinct expression of the faith for the church. Two moments of poignant reception have to do with the church’s ecumenical relations: schism in the fifth century and theological agreement in dialogues of the 1990s.

During the Christological controversies of the fifth and sixth centuries, what would become known as the “Coptic Orthodox Church” insisted on keeping the faith of St. Athanasius the Apostolic. For example, the sixth-century head of the Pachomian federation of monasteries in Egypt, St. Abraham of Farshut, is remembered for resisting Emperor Justinian’s pressures to adopt the faith of Chalcedon by underscoring his adherence to the faith of St. Athanasius.Footnote 73 Athanasius became such a prominent saint in the church that he is regularly depicted iconographically on the walls of churches. A sixth-century church in the Fayyum oasis of Egypt associates him with the foundation of Christianity by situating him and St. Mark, the evangelist to Alexandria, flanking the Virgin Mother and the Christ Child.Footnote 74 In fact, in every celebration of the Eucharist, the Coptic Orthodox Church twice names St. Athanasius alongside St. Mark for his evangelism to Egypt, as well as Miaphysite teachers of the faith, St. Dioscorus of Alexandria (the Alexandrian pope deposed at the Council of Chalcedon in 451) and St. Severus of Antioch (the bishop of Antioch exiled to Egypt in the sixth century), plus “the 318 assembled at Nicaea, the 150 at Constantinople, and the 200 at Ephesus.” First, this set of saints is invoked in a prayer requesting the absolution of the ministers and all participants of the Eucharistic liturgy, and then they are named a second time in a prayer commemorating the saints.

The Coptic Orthodox Church makes extensive liturgical use of the creed, which is prescribed for recitation at every communal gathering of the faithful and even in personal daily prayers. It is the creed of the baptismal liturgy, the first hour of the daily office, the evening raising of incense, the morning raising of incense, all Eucharistic liturgies, the marriage liturgy, the funeral liturgy, and many more. A nineteenth-century manuscript presenting the daily office as practiced by the Monastery of St. Antony at the Red Sea introduces the creed with the following words: “This is the exposition of the faith arranged by the three councils, which is said at every divine liturgy [i.e., celebration of the Eucharist] and at the end of every prayer.”Footnote 75 The “three councils” refers to the same three named in the Eucharistic prayers (Nicaea, Constantinople, and Ephesus). The faithful repeat the creed so many times that it is likely rare to find a Coptic Orthodox church-goer who does not know the creed by heart. It begins in the first-person plural, “We believe,” and is typically chanted, with only the final line sung, “We look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come. Amen.”

The reception of the creed in the liturgical services occurred in the period that led to the church’s alienation from Christians adhering to the Council of Chalcedon’s Definition of Faith in 451. Already in earlier decades of the fifth century, Pope Cyril had accused Bishop Nestorius of Constantinople of failing to understand the Nicene creed, a dispute which became the touchstone of all future Christological debate.Footnote 76 The Nicene creed begins its article on the Son with a unitary subject, “one Lord Jesus Christ,” to whom are ascribed actions of both the pre-existent Logos (“begotten, not made,” “by whom all things were made”) and the human Jesus (“was incarnate,” “crucified for our sake”). Nestorius, St. Cyril argued, divided this unitary subject, professing instead “two Sons.” This accusation of failure to uphold the faith of Nicaea echoed throughout the Christological controversies of the fifth and sixth centuries and left an indelible imprint on the faith and liturgies of the Coptic Orthodox Church.

A late fifth-century bishop of Antioch in Roman Syria known as Peter the Fuller was one of the major Miaphysite figures who consolidated opposition to the Council of Chalcedon. He is credited with introducing two liturgical changes that remain hallmarks of Coptic Orthodox communal prayer life. First, to mark Miaphysite communities as the true upholders of Nicene faith, he introduced the chanting of the Nicene creed as part of the divine liturgy.Footnote 77 Second, to mark the importance of the Theopaschite formula, he introduced a developed trisagion that not only interpreted the hymn, “Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us,” Christologically, but also elaborated it to include an explicitly Theopaschite formula: “Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, who was crucified for our sake, have mercy on us.”Footnote 78 Like the creed, the developed trisagion holds an equally ubiquitous presence in the prayer life of Coptic Orthodox Christians.

While the centuries before and after the Council of Chalcedon in 451 may have seen the most intensive engagement with Nicene theology, the creed remained of great significance to the Coptic Orthodox Church. Once Arabic became the living language of the tradition, many original compositions would convey the Nicene faith in Arabic, both to ensure its transmission and to continue apologetics defending Miaphysites as guardians and heirs of Nicene faith.

In the 1990s, dialogues were held between the Oriental Orthodox Churches (of which the Coptic Orthodox Church is a member) and the Eastern Orthodox Churches. These dialogues resulted in theological agreement among the churches on the reception of the Nicene faith, which have in turn paved the way for many pastoral agreements. For example, in 2001, Pope Shenouda III (of the Coptic Orthodox Church) and Patriarch Petros VII (of the “Greek Orthodox,” that is, Chalcedonian, Church in Egypt) agreed to allow marriage between members of their respective communions.Footnote 79

At the turn of the third millennium, the same Pope Shenouda III, who served as the Coptic Orthodox pope from 1971 to 2012, published a book called The Creed, which offers a phrase-by-phrase detailed exposition of the Nicene creed.Footnote 80 The introduction names a wide-ranging intended readership among seminary students in Egypt and the diaspora, in Sunday School meetings, and in youth gatherings. I can attest to the dissemination of the book in the latter context, as I received a copy as a participant in the East Coast Coptic Youth Convention, a spiritual retreat convened for Coptic Orthodox high school youth residing in the northeast United States.

While the Nicene creed is the only creed of the Coptic Orthodox Church, the first hour of the daily office contains another Trinitarian confession of faith. It does not begin with the credal formula, “We believe.” Instead, a reading of Ephesians 4:1–15 segues directly into a Trinitarian confession:

I, therefore, the prisoner of the Lord beseech you to lead a life worthy of the calling with which you have been called, with all lowliness and gentleness, with long-suffering, bearing with one another in love, endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism (Ephesians 4:1–5). One is God, the Father of all. One is His Son, who became man, died and rose from the dead on the third day, and raised us up with Him. One is the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, and the same in nature, who proceeds from the Father, and sanctifies the whole creation, teaching us to worship the Holy Trinity in one divinity, one nature. We praise Him, and we bless Him forever. Amen.Footnote 81

Over time, the Nicene Creed supplanted many other creeds that had previously existed, but here may be a short creed that, perhaps like the Apostles’ Creed in the West, somehow avoided oblivion or entered into the prayer-life of the church despite the stature of the Nicene Creed.

The Coptic Orthodox Church breathes the Nicene Creed daily, weekly – in every sacred rhythm of the spiritual life. Received through Saints Athanasius, Cyril, Dioscorus, Severus, and other luminaries, the church continues to transmit the Nicene Creed through regular recitation as well as doctrinal instruction of the faithful.

I Dr. Brown’s Response to Dr. Farag’s Contribution

The fascinating convergence between Coptic and Lutheran understandings of Nicaea and its implications is their common emphasis on Theopaschite formulations and theology. Luther and Cyril share the conviction that God’s suffering in his own flesh is the center of human salvation and Christian faith. Carl Beckwith points to passages that could have been written by either theologian: “By faith in whom, then, are we justified? Is it not in him who suffered death according to the flesh for our sake? Is it not in one Lord Jesus Christ? Have we not been redeemed by proclaiming his death and confessing his resurrection?…But if we believe that he who ‘suffered in the flesh’ is God…we have not erred in any way.”Footnote 82 Although Luther upheld Chalcedon, understood in a Cyrillian sense, he was accused by his opponents of being non-Chalcedonian.Footnote 83 In the Lutheran Confessions as a whole, St. Cyril is the Father second most cited (after St. Augustine).

There is one direct connection between Luther and the Oriental Orthodox churches: a 1534 meeting in Wittenberg between Luther and Melanchthon and a deacon of the Ethiopian Orthodox church named Michael who was traveling through Europe. Michael stayed in Wittenberg for more than a month, and the Wittenbergers discussed theology with him, using an interpreter for Michael’s Italian. At the conclusion of his visit, Luther and Melanchthon wrote him a letter of commendation, stating that they had found that they were agreed together in the Creed and the Trinity, and noting Michael’s opinion that the liturgy of the Lord’s Supper celebrated in Wittenberg was in accord with his own Church. They reported Michael’s judgment – which they shared – that “although the Eastern Church observes some divergent ceremonies…this difference does not undermine the unity of the Church nor conflict with faith, because the Kingdom of Christ is spiritual righteousness of heart, fear of God, and trust through Christ.”Footnote 84 For Luther (famous for withholding fellowship from Zwingli), the unqualified endorsement of Michael’s faith was a remarkably ecumenical affirmation.Footnote 85

Reflecting on Lutheran and Coptic affirmations of Nicaea today, it remains a dividing line that, despite recent Coptic recognitions of Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic (2001 and 2017, respectively) baptisms, the shared Nicene (-Constantinopolitan) confession of “one Baptism” is not an ecumenical reality with respect to Lutheran baptisms.

II Dr. Farag Reflects on the Essay by Dr. Brown

The decades between the Council of Nicaea in 325 and the Council of Constantinople in 381 witnessed intense scrutiny of the Nicene Creed and its non-scriptural term homoousion. The Nicene Creed did not immediately become a ubiquitous expression of faith. Instead, alternative creeds and counter-creeds proliferated. Yet, even about 1200 years later, when Luther would test the Nicene Creed for its harmony with the scriptures, he would affirm the creed’s succinct expression of scriptural faith, noting the necessity of the term homoousion for preventing false interpretation of the scriptures. As contested as the creed was in its own century, it has withstood the test of time. But that is not the most remarkable thing. The creed has not only endured but also remains the foundation of faith for most churches today. The creed may have divided, but today it unites. Perhaps this teaches us something about how the Holy Spirit works among the churches. What in the fourth century seemed like an unlikely candidate for Christian unity has in the long stretch of centuries become the foundation for Christian unity. The Nicene Creed also started out its life as a “bishop’s creed.” It tested the orthodoxy of bishops and, therefore, whether they could retain their ministry or not. It did not replace baptismal creeds or become a creed of the faithful at large. Then, Peter the Fuller came along in the late-fifth century and began to use the creed liturgically to mark non-Chalcedonian liturgy as faithful. If this is true, then the liturgical use of the Nicene creed also began divisively. Yet, the liturgical proclamation of the creed spread, and quickly in the East. The West later accepted it reluctantly, protesting at first that creeds were for heretical suspects not the orthodox. By Luther’s day, the creed had long been set to music. Just as the creed’s initial formulation seemed divisive, so too did its liturgical debut. But perhaps the Holy Spirit again was implementing a long-term vision. What in the fifth century meant to divide liturgical practices has now become a decidedly uniting element of Christian worship.

And so this leaves me with hope that Christopher Brown’s wish may one day come true. What divides today may unite tomorrow, if the Spirit wills.

The final pair brings together Dr. Samuel Fernández, writing about the Roman Catholic perspective on Nicaea, and Dr. Mark S. Smith, who offers a view from the Anglican.

Nicaea from the Catholic Perspective

What can we learn from Nicaea today from a Catholic perspective? Of course, many of the lessons of Nicaea are common to all Christian traditions. For this forum, however, I have chosen a few lessons – among many others – that are related to the Roman Catholic tradition.

1. The outbreak of the so-called Arian crisis is linked to the relationship between episcopal teaching and theological discourse, that is, the relationship between the Magisterium and theology. The evidence indicates that Alexander taught some topics of Trinitarian theology in public (Arius, Letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia [FNS 6.2]).Footnote 86 Arius, in turn, reacted and publicly accused the bishop (Alexander of Alexandria, Letter to Alexander [FNS 8.9]). According to Constantine, the conflict broke out because some “philosophical questions” were asked “in public meetings” (Constantine, Letter to Alexander and Arius [FNS 24.6–8]). How should we interpret this evidence?

After reaching its zenith in the time of Origen, the didaskaleion (the theological school of Alexandria), gradually lost its autonomy from the episcopate, and its cultural influence diminished. Conversely, the episcopate grew stronger and gained greater control over the school. Naturally, this process was not without conflict. According to Origen, the apostles stated that “the Son was begotten of the Father before all ages” (De principiis 1 praef. 3); however, they did not explain how this occurred. The ministry of the bishop was to teach the apostolic preaching, whereas the task of the theologian was to offer a theological explanation of it. Yet, it seems that Bishop Alexander, at some point, struggled to explain in church how the Son was begotten – a topic that belonged to the scholastic setting. In Arius’s view, Alexander failed to respect the distinction between the bishop’s preaching in church and the exploratory discourse of the teacher in the school. Did the bishop present his own theological views to the church as part of the apostolic preaching, or was he simply making explicit the content of the apostolic kerygma? For present purposes, it is not necessary to answer this question.

Two issues were at stake: the distinction between the episcopal Magisterium and theological discourse, on the one hand, and the extent of the minimum content of the faith, on the other. These two aspects are interconnected. A healthy distinction between the episcopal Magisterium and theological discourse guarantees both the doctrinal unity of the Church and the appropriate space for theological pluralism. A theologian should not present his or her personal theological view as Magisterium, and the Magisterium must allow room for theological diversity. However, the problem is complex, because it is not always clear what belongs to the apostolic faith and what pertains to exploratory theological discourse. For the Nicene assembly, for example, the creed presented by Eusebius of Caesarea was not sufficient; the bishops requested specific additions: the homoousios and “from the ousia of the Father.” Catholic theology values both the doctrinal unity of the Church and the free exercise of theological reason. But holding these two elements together requires maintaining the distinction between the episcopal Magisterium and theological discourse and clarifying the minimal content of the Christian faith. The sufficiency of the Nicene Creed, or any other creed, was a matter of debate in the decades after the great Council. These issues, of course, have significant ecumenical implications.

2. The second lesson reminds us that even the most solemn magisterial texts were written in a historical setting and, therefore, require historical interpretation. The historical-critical method was not welcomed in Catholic biblical studies until the mid-twentieth century. Only after a long and arduous process did Catholic theology come to acknowledge that biblical texts must be interpreted using historical and philological methods. However, this awareness is less integrated into the study of the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.

According to Athanasius, the bishops at Nicaea proposed several biblical expressions to declare that the Son is like the Father in all things. The “Arians,” however, interpreted all these biblical verses to mean that “like” was common to both us and the Son. The Hellenistic cultural setting required a new language to faithfully express the meaning of Scripture. In other words, the Nicene faith had to express in Greek terms the relationship of the Son to the Father – the same relationship narrated in the Gospels. Faced with this challenge, the bishops could not find a biblical expression capable of excluding the “Arian” interpretation of the relationship between the Son and the Father. In these circumstances, the bishops were compelled to συναγαγεῖν – that is, to gather, harvest, identify, summarize, and compile the thought of the Scriptures – through the term homoousios (Athanasius, De decretis 20.1–3). This non-biblical term was intended to serve as a formula to express the Son’s divine identity univocally.

However, according to Eusebius of Caesarea, precisely when the homoousios was introduced into the Creed, it was necessary to explain its meaning: “The homoousios should not be said according to bodily passion, nor in reference to division, nor to any cutting of the Father’s subsistence. For it is not possible for the immaterial, intellectual, and incorporeal nature to be subject to any bodily passion; instead, it is appropriate to understand such things with divine and ineffable thoughts” (Eusebius of Caesarea, Letter to His Church [FNS 37.7]). In other words, from the very moment the homoousios was introduced into the Nicene Creed, it required interpretation.

The use of the expression ὁμοούσιος τῷ πατρί (“consubstatial to the Father”) in the Creed and the discussions about its interpretation, as attested by Eusebius, demonstrate that both Nicene and anti-Nicene authors employed philosophical elements to articulate and express their doctrine of the Christian God. Human thinking can be anti-philosophical, but never a-philosophical. Consequently, the proceedings of Nicaea remind us that not only Scripture but also the Magisterium must be interpreted using appropriate scholarly methods. The documents of Nicaea, Trent, and Vatican II were written within specific cultural contexts and, accordingly, with specific cultural languages. Therefore, they must be read and analyzed using critical and historical methods. In short, although the bishops struggled to produce a univocal formula, the key expression of the Nicene Creed – possibly the most solemn statement of ecclesiastical doctrine – is, like all human language, not exempt from the risk of interpretation.

3. A third lesson drawn from contemporary sources – one related to Catholic theology, but not exclusively – is the relational character of the expression “the Son is homoousios to the Father.” From the very beginning of Nicaea’s reception, the term homoousios has often been isolated from its grammatical context. It is essential to focus on the expression rather than the isolated term. The phrase “the Son is homoousios to the Father” (ὁμοούσιος τῷ πατρί) is constructed with the dative case – specifically, the dativus sociativus or associative dative – which implies two entities, one in relation to the other. Thus, the expression itself denotes a relationship between two distinct realities. This remark contradicts a Sabellian understanding of the formula, as it affirms the natural and, therefore, eternal correlativity of the Father and the Son. In addition, this understanding of “the Son is homoousios to the Father” sheds light on the intense twentieth-century debate concerning the relationship between the economic and the immanent Trinity – a debate in which Schoonenberg, Rahner, and Lafont, among others, took part. The eternal, natural relational character of the Father and the Son implies that Fatherhood and Sonship do not depend on the divine economy but on divine being.

In summary, after 1,700 years, the Council of Nicaea (325) still sheds light on the life and theology of the churches. I have tried to show that not only the doctrinal outcomes of Nicaea but also its procedures offer lessons for today. The process of cultural translation carried out by the Council – from biblical to philosophical language – was a major achievement for the fourth century and remains a lasting paradigm and stimulus for discovering the new languages required by every new cultural context.

The Council of Nicaea and Its Creed in the Anglican Tradition

Is Nicaea a shining star, or a muddy puddle? The fiery Reformer Richard Cox, later to become Bishop of Ely, notoriously contrasted the “lively fountains of the word of God” with the dreary “puddle of the fathers and councils.”Footnote 87 Yet, only a few years later, Bishop John Jewel could enthusiastically invoke Nicaea and the fathers as guiding lights, sure authorities: “I am only a finger: these are clear and bright stars.”Footnote 88 These divergent evaluations reflect abiding ambiguities within Anglicanism’s own self-identity, as a Church both Catholic and Reformed. This short piece will examine how Nicaea has acted as a catalyst for these tensions in the past and suggest how it might aid their (at least partial) resolution in the present.

The English Reformers’ decisive reassertion of the unique authority of Scripture was often expressed by a sharply negative attitude toward anything that savoured of ecclesial tradition, including Nicaea. Article VIII of the Church of England’s XXXIX Articles (its official statement of doctrine) retained a place for the Nicene Creed as one of three Creeds that were to be “received and believed” – but only insofar as its content could “be proved by most certain warrants of Holy Scripture.” This was partly a response to a Roman polemic that argued for the acceptance of contentious doctrines based on their conciliar promulgation. But it was also rooted in a deep conviction regarding the corruption of man’s nature by the Fall. Thus Article XXI states bluntly that councils “may err, and sometimes have erred, even in things pertaining unto God; wherefore things ordained by them as necessary to salvation have neither strength nor authority, unless it be declared that they be taken out of holy Scripture.” In this way, the Anglican affirmation of Scripture as the norma normans non normata injected a note of intrinsic provisionality and contingency into any merely ecclesial statement, even the Nicene Creed. We might characterise this as a “confessional” rather than “conciliar” reception of the Nicene faith, in which the doctrines of Nicaea were affirmed as compatible with Scripture, but Nicaea possessed no intrinsic authority of its own.

Centuries later, it was precisely this robust Protestant perspective on Nicaea that threatened to derail the first Lambeth Conference of 1867. As Anglicanism itself was redefined as a family of diverse churches spread across the world (rather than being an expression of Christianity uniquely tailored to the English people and their history), it encouraged the articulation of a more “conciliar” form of governance and ecclesial self-expression – and what better model could there be for such a renewed identity than the great ecumenical councils? However, in the tempestuous opening session of the Conference, sustained pushback from evangelical bishops succeeded in having a more “catholic” statement of the authority of patristic councils entirely removed and replaced by a reassertion of the traditional theology of the Articles. This victory was, arguably, short-lived, for the 1888 Lambeth Conference would come to adopt the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral, a new summary of Anglican doctrine which singled out the Nicene Creed as the all-sufficient statement of the Christian faith. This was something of a double-edged sword: from this point onwards, the Nicene Creed had a new and abiding centrality in Anglican self-identity (and ecumenical outreach), but the particular Protestant context within which the Creed had been received was lost.

A further distinctively Anglican reception of the Nicene Creed was through its liturgy, as the Creed was retained by Thomas Cranmer in his new Prayer Book. It had been virtually unknown to English congregations before the Reformation: not only was the whole service in Latin, but the common practice had been for the laity to say the Apostles’ Creed in English, while the priest recited the Latin text of the Nicene Creed.Footnote 89 In this sense, the Church of England’s liturgy radically democratized the Creed. Tellingly, Cranmer placed it immediately after the readings from Scripture, and immediately before the sermon, as a kind of “measuring rod” to help the congregation determine whether the preacher’s message was orthodox. The Creed was also rendered in the first person singular rather than plural, partly to harmonize with the Apostles’ Creed but also to emphasize the importance of genuine personal assent over merely corporate acknowledgement. The English Reformers also undertook a significant amount of patristic research to recover the authentic text of the Nicene Creed, in case its transmission had been affected by Roman corruption. Ironically, this resulted in a major textual error, which remains in the Prayer Book to this day: the removal of “holy” from the “one holy catholic and apostolic church.” It is a salutary reminder that the latest “scholarly” discovery should not always be adopted as superior!

Nicaea, then, was doctrinally demoted but liturgically embraced; it also proved very convenient as a badge of Anglican ecclesial respectability, a sign of commitment to the great historic verities of orthodoxy. A posture of Nicene fidelity increasingly became part of the Church of England’s claim to represent the recovery of the old learning of the primitive church, before the dastardly influence of Rome had obscured and corrupted the true faith. Similarly, the Roman charge of heresy could be answered by the Anglican divines’ hearty re-condemnation of all the heretics anathematized by the early councils. In this way, Nicaea was also useful as a means to exclude anabaptists and other radical religious opinions, who could thus be portrayed as dangerous anarchists, disruptive trouble-makers who fell outside the boundaries of venerable orthodox dogma.

Indeed, it is notable that despite the provocative adoption of sola scriptura, the actual understanding of the role of Nicaea that the Church of England promoted was still the basic patristic and medieval model of the unchanging faith being reaffirmed against new heresies. George Bull’s massive Defensio Fidei Nicaenae (1685) could acknowledge that the ante-Nicene fathers had used different words and modes of expression than the bishops of 325, but it still labored to demonstrate a fundamental continuity of belief that stretched from the New Testament to Athanasius. Nicaea, on this account, had not really said anything new, and Justin Martyr or Irenaeus or Tertullian would surely have affirmed the homoousion if they had just stopped to think about it. It was precisely this kind of perspective that stimulated John Henry Newman to write a fresh account of Nicaea that was, as he put it, no longer the work of mere “antiquarians and doctrinists,” but of the true “ecclesiastical historian.”Footnote 90 Newman’s Arians of the Fourth Century (1833) destabilized the received Anglican assumption of a static patristic past, by demonstrating that the Arian crisis had forced a genuine development of doctrine at Nicaea. In this way, Newman encouraged a renewed attentiveness to the complexity and untidiness of the history of the early church and helpfully recovered something of Nicaea’s provocative strangeness. However, Newman’s attempt to establish objective criteria for doctrinal development led him (as his critics had feared) to argue for the necessity of the teaching office of Rome to arbitrate orthodoxy, which ultimately led him away from Anglicanism altogether.

As the Protestant openness to questioning received traditions had in some sense legitimized Newman’s reinterpretation of Nicaea, it also opened up a trajectory of reception of the Creed that departed not only from Anglicanism but from the Christian faith altogether. It was painstaking scholarship into the ante-Nicene fathers and into the texts of the earliest creeds that led men like William Whiston, Newton’s successor as the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, to argue for the antiquity and validity of Arianism as the authentic biblical faith cruelly snuffed out by the unbiblical innovations of Nicaea. Whiston was subsequently expelled from his professorship precisely for his failure to subscribe to the creeds. It is an irony of history that those individuals most eager to assert that they hold to “No Creed but the Bible” have often been the quickest to fall away into sub-biblical error. In the twentieth century, it was this same radical reinterpretation of the patristic past that led Anglicans like John Robinson, Don Cupitt, and Maurice Wiles to commend a form of Christianity free of Nicene dogmatic commitments entirely.

The varied and complex reception of Nicaea in the Anglican tradition reflects the ambiguities of Anglicanism’s own ecclesial self-identity. Nicaea is to be demoted, but not disregarded, valued, but not venerated. For the Anglican Reformers, an undue emphasis on Nicene traditionalism might have threatened to obscure and occlude the gospel; today, the most potent threats to that same gospel might best be guarded by a Creed that so robustly enshrines biblical truths. The Anglican reception of Nicaea encourages us to take history seriously – not as an impediment to doctrinal clarity or ecclesial stability but rather as the arena of God’s purposes. The purpose of remembering Nicaea is not so much to reassure us of old certainties or the errors of familiar foes, but to draw us deeper into the good news of Jesus Christ. So, on this 1700th anniversary, we rightly behold the Creed but only so that we might better behold the Man.

I Dr. Smith Responds First to Dr. Fernández’s Contribution

Dr. Fernández’s rich and stimulating paper reveals the significant overlap of contemporary Roman Catholic and Anglican perspectives on Nicaea. Both ecclesial traditions seek to be attentive to the complexities of history, regard Nicaea’s reception as an ongoing process of ecclesial interpretation, and recognize the need, in every generation, for the “cultural translation” of the gospel. I was reminded of Newman’s famous image of the role of Tradition, which is that of the Virgin Mary treasuring up the redemptive acts of God toward her, and pondering them in her heart (Luke 2:19). The Church, in other words, is to be engaged in a constant act of generative remembrance, as we ponder God’s saving words to us afresh. I have two questions arising from Dr. Fernandez’s paper.

First, Dr. Fernández construes the Magisterium in terms of episcopal teaching authority. Might the process of dogmatic reception, not least that of Nicaea, also be shaped and conditioned by the voice of the laity, as they, over time, come to affirm or reject the decisions and doctrines of episcopal councils?

SF: Yes, you are right! Although the official Magisterium in the hands of bishops, laity and all the members of the Church as a whole – as a matter of fact – have the ability to receive or to neglect official decisions to some extent. This aspect is salient in the canons of Nicaea: all were officially proclaimed, yet some of them were not observed.

MS: Secondly, I was intrigued by Dr. Fernandez’s comment that historical-critical awareness remains “less integrated into the study of the Magisterium.” If no ecclesial pronouncement is “exempt from the risk of interpretation,” is it possible that the Roman Catholic understanding of the Magisterium might itself need to be exposed to critique, renewal, and “cultural translation”?

SF: Good question! Theologians who are aware of this issue understand the need for a historical reading of the ecclesial Magisterium. However, the problem lies outside educated academic circles. In the practical pastoral life of the Church, however, some adopt an approach to the Magisterium that resembles fundamentalism.

II Dr. Fernandez’s Response to Dr. Smith’s Essay

SF: Dr. Smith affirms that “the Anglican reception of Nicaea encourages us to take history seriously.” This is, indeed, a notion that challenges all Christian traditions. We rightly speak of ours as a “historical faith” for two reasons: not only because God revealed himself in history – in the life of Jesus of Nazareth – but also because the Christian faith is continually lived and professed within history. The “divergent evaluations” of Nicaea in Anglican tradition and the tension between Scripture and the Magisterium in the Roman Catholic Church reflect the same problem, namely, the difficult relationship between the stability of faith and the contingency of history. The unchanging faith is actualized through changing forms. Certainly, human history is still “the arena of God’s purposes.” My question to Dr. Smith is the following: how do divergent evaluations of the value of Nicaea impact theological faculties and the formation of ministers in the Anglican Church?

MS: This is a very good question! I am only able to answer with respect to the Church of England; the wider Anglican Communion is hugely diverse, and beyond my expertise. In England, the theological education institutions each have distinctive ecclesial and theological emphases (evangelical, liberal, Anglo-Catholic) through which the reception of the Nicene faith is inevitably refracted. There is not a common syllabus imposed on these seminaries by the central church, and so my concern is less that Nicaea is taught badly, than that it is often not taught at all. Of course, priests in training need to understand Trinitarian dogmatics, and the use of the creeds in liturgy, but these traditional loci are now often drowned out by a host of other contemporary theological themes. The anniversary of Nicaea has, however, led to a very encouraging resurgence of interest, and I hope that this continues. It seems to me that the three Creeds that the Church of England formally recognizes (Apostles’, Nicene, Athanasian) could very effectively form the basis for solid doctrinal formation in the seminaries.

III Editor’s Conclusion

After 1700 years, we might think of the Council of Nicaea as a datable historical event which we can analyze and assess in its late ancient context. But what I hope these essays and responses have shown is that it was not just any moment among many in the history of Christianity. It was and is, monumental. Furthermore, the contributions in this forum demonstrate the continuing recognition of and reckoning with Nicaea and its legacy, primarily in the form of its creed, which serves as both a foundation for shared beliefs among most Christian traditions, but also a pivot point, a conversation starter, a launchpad for a whole range of discussions and debates about the manifold beliefs and practices within the Christian faith. Yes, there are traditions that do not receive Nicaea, yet over the centuries to the present day, the Nicene faith continues to inspire deep reflection on the issues and the questions relating to the person of Jesus Christ and his relationship to God the Father. The Council of Nicaea thus represents simultaneously the seeming paradox of fixity and fluidity. It remains to be seen to what extent ecumenical movements toward greater Christian unity will lead to its realization, but it seems clear that Nicaea will continue to vivify them.

Footnotes

1 Young Richard Kim Kim, , ed., The Cambridge Companion to the Council of Nicaea (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021).

2 The details and debates about the Council and its context are well-rehearsed in modern scholarship. For recent assessments, see the essays in Kim, The Cambridge Companion.

3 Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nazianzus, and Gregory of Nyssa.

4 The classic study is Hanson, Richard P. C., The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God: The Arian Controversy, 318–381 (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1988), but more recently, Ayres, Lewis, Nicaea and its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century Trinitarian Theology (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004); Behr, John, The Nicene Faith, Formation of Christian Theology 2 (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2004); Anatolios, Khaled, Retrieving Nicaea: The Development and Meaning of Trinitarian Doctrine (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2011).

5 For the past eighteen years, Nashville was my home, as I taught at Vanderbilt University (2006–24) and served at Christ Presbyterian Church (2015–24), an evangelical Presbyterian congregation in the suburbs of Nashville.

6 Council of Trent, “Session 6. 13 January 1547. Decree on Justification,” in Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, ed. Noman Tanner, S.J., 2 vols. (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1990), 2: 678–79.

7 Calvin, Institutes, 4.9.1 (translation mine).

8 Calvin, Institutes 4.9.14.

9 Calvin, Institutes 4.9.8 (emphasis mine).

10 The Humble Advice of the Assembly of Divines, Now by Authority of Parliament sitting at Westminster, Concerning a Confession of Faith, Presented by them lately to both Houses of Parliament (1646), 51.

11 Westminster Confession of Faith 31.4.

12 Hollenweger, Walter J., Pentecostalism: Origins and Developments Worldwide (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1997).

13 Kalu, Ogbu, African Pentecostalism: An Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008); Ma, Wonsuk, Karkkainen, Veli-Matti, and Asamoah-Gyadu, J. Kwabena, eds., Pentecostal Mission and Global Christianity, Regnum Edingburgh Centenary Series 20 (Oxford: Regnum Books, 2014).

14 Asamoah-Gyadu, J. Kwabena, Sighs and Signs of the Spirit: Ghanaian Perspectives on Pentecostalism and Renewal in Africa (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2015); Alexander, Estrelda Y., Black Fire: One Hundred Years of African American Pentecostalism (Lisle, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2011).

15 Yong, Amos, The Spirit Poured Out on All Flesh: Pentecostalism and the Possibility of Global Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2005).

16 Wariboko, Nimi, The Pentecostal Hypothesis: Christ Talks, They Decide (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2020).

17 Gifford, Paul, Christianity, Development and Modernity in Africa (London: C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd, 2015).

18 Matthew Swora, “Of Creeds and Confessions,” Anabaptist World, April 24, 2019, https://anabaptistworld.org/of-creeds-and-confessions/. Swora spells out this discourse and his response to it.

19 Roland H. Bainton, “Servetus, Michael (1511–1553),” Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 2 April 2025, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Servetus,_Michael_(1511-1553)&oldid=146240.

20 J. Denny Weaver, “Christology,” Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 2 April 2025, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Christology&oldid=162875.

21 This view, “widespread among early Dutch Anabaptists,” stated that “Mary did not furnish the flesh of the Saviour, but merely His nourishment.” See note 18, above. Holmes argues that accusing Menno of this Christology is inaccurate. Holmes, Stephen R., “Evaluating a Neglected Tradition of (Ana)Baptist Christology,” Scottish Journal of Theology 77, no. 1 (2024): 1633 .

22 Epp-Weaver, Alain, “Missionary Christology: John Howard Yoder and the Creeds,” The Mennonite Quarterly Review 74, no. 3 (2000): 423–39.

23 Charles, J. Daryl, “Purifying Our Political Theology--Second Thoughts on the Received Wisdom behind ‘Constantinianism’,” Journal of Church and State 56, no. 1 (2014): 189206 .

24 Andrew G. Suderman, “Das Nizänische Glaubensbekenntnis: eine mennonitische Perspektive,” in Ökumenische Rundschau, 1/2025, 8398.

26 Bekitembe Dube, “Songs of the Trinity and Shalom,” Courier, October 2016, 13.

27 González, Ondina and González, Justo, Nuestra Fe (Nashville, TN: Abingdon, 2014), 182–85.

28 Campbell, Ted, John Wesley and Christian Antiquity (Nashville, TN: Kingswood Books, 1991), 78  f.

29 Maddox, Randy, “Opinion, Religion and ‘The Catholic Spirit’: John Wesley on Theological Integrity,” Asbury Theological Journal 47, no. 1 (1992): 7376 ; idem, “Theology of John and Charles Wesley,” in T&T Clark Companion to Methodism, ed. Charles Yrigoyen Jr. (London: Bloomsbury, 2010), 20–25.

30 A Plain Account of Genuine Christianity (1753), 2.5–7.

31 Ibid., 3.2.

32 Ibid., 3.12.

33 A Plain Account of People Called Methodists (1748), 1.2.

34 Quoted in Hempton, David, Methodism: Empire of the Spirit (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2005), 69 .

35 Maddox, “Theology of John and Charles Wesley,” 20–35.

36 “Catholic Spirit” (1750), 4.

37 Hempton, Methodism, 57.

38 Maddox, “Opinion.” 62–87.

39 Hatch, Nathan, The Democratization of American Christianity (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1989), 4956 .

40 Hempton, Methodism, 84.

41 On Wesley’s complex use of “opinion,” see Maddox, “Opinion,” 63–64. Maddox, Randy, “Vital Orthodoxy. A Wesleyan Dynamic for 21st Century Christianity,” Methodist History 42, no. 1 (2003): 319 .

42 Petersen, Mark E., “Salvation comes through the Church,” Ensign, 3, no. 7 (1973), 109 ; Hinckley, Gordon B., “The Things of Which I Know,” Ensign, 37, no. 5 (2007), 83 .

43 McConkie, Bruce R., “The Morning Breaks; The Shadows Flee,” Ensign, 8, no. 5 (1978), 12 .

44 Doctrine and Covenants 130:22.

45 Smith’s statement occurs during a meeting in Nauvoo, Illinois, on January 5, 1841; see Account of Meeting and Discourse, 5 January 1841, as Published in Clayton, Revelations, p. 9, The Joseph Smith Papers, accessed April 14, 2025, https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/account-of-meeting-and-discourse-5-january-1841-as-published-in-clayton-revelations/2#facts.

46 Bushman, Richard L., Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005), 40 .

47 Pratt, Parley P., An Answer to Mr. William Hewitt’s Tract Against the Latter-day Saints (Manchester: W.R. Thomas, 1840), 9 .

48 Pratt, An Answer, 5.

49 Pratt, An Answer, 6.

50 For a minimal articulation of Trinitarianism’s core theological claims as articulated in the Nicene-Constantinopolitan symbol, see Crisp, Oliver D., Analyzing Doctrine: Toward a Systematic Theology (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2019), 4041 . For a non-Latter-day Saint attempt to think through a material Trinity, see Webb, Stephen H., Jesus Christ, Eternal God: Heavenly Flesh and the Metaphysics of Matter (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).

51 Book of Mormon, Title Page.

52 2 Nephi 31:21; Mormon 7:7.

53 Like the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, which contains many of Joseph Smith’s revelations, is accepted by Latter-day Saints as Scripture.

54 All quotations from Doctrine and Covenants 123:5–7.

55 Joseph Smith, “Discourse, 15 October 1843, as Reported by Willard Richards,” p. 128–129, The Joseph Smith Papers, accessed April 4, 2025, https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/discourse-15-october-1843-as-reported-by-willard-richards/1 (spelling and grammar standardized).

56 Of Joseph Smith’s twenty two unambiguous references to creeds, twenty one are from his time in Liberty’s jail or later, most, directly or indirectly, linked in the text to some context of persecution.

57 Kolb, Robert and Wengert, Timothy, eds., The Book of Concord (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 2000), 3637 .

58 Kolb and Wengert, The Book of Concord, 15, 21–25.

59 See Mastrantonis, George, Augsburg and Constantinople (Brookline, MA: Holy Cross, 2005), 117–20, 223–43.

60 Luther’s Works, ed. Jaroslav Pelikan, Helmut T. Lehmann, Christopher Boyd Brown, and Benjamin T. G. Mayes, 74+ vols (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress/St. Louis, MO: Concordia, 1955–); LW 44: 137.

61 LW 40: 273.

62 LW 31: 318.

63 LW 41: 59.

64 On the Councils and the Church (1539), LW 41: 43; Lectures on Titus (1527), LW 29:19; Against the Roman Papacy (1545), LW 41: 318; Lectures on Galatians (1531), LW 26: 113.

65 On the Councils and the Church (1539), LW 41: 59–61; Melanchthon, Loci Communes (1521), LCC 19: 64–69. Cf. Pierre Fraenkel, Testimonia Patrum (Geneva: Droz, 1961), 35, 91, 149.

66 Sermons on John 6–8 (1530–32), LW 23: 287.

67 On the Councils and the Church (1539), LW 41: 61–63.

68 Wir glauben all (1524), LW 53: 82–83. See Order of Mass and Communion (1523), LW 53:25; German Mass (1526), LW 53:78.

69 Against Latomus (1521), LW 32: 244. On Luther and Melanchthon’s engagement with the Nicene Creed, see Jennifer Wasmuth, »Wyr gleuben all an eynen Gott« (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2024).

70 On the Councils and the Church (1539), LW 41: 83; cf. Bondage of the Will (1525), LW 33: 224; Disputation on the Mystery of the Holy Trinity and the Incarnation of the Son (1544), LW 73: 488–89.

71 LW 73: 254.

72 LW 41: 103–104.

73 Goehring, James E., Politics, Monasticism, and Miracles in Sixth Century Upper Egypt (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2012), 104–5.

74 Eastern apse of the Church of the Archangel Gabriel of Dayr al-Naqlun in the Fayyum Oasis. Ewa Parandowska, “Preservation of the Wall Paintings in the Church of the Archangel Gabriel at Naqlun,” in Christianity and Monasticism in the Fayoum Oasis, ed. Gawdat Gabra (Cairo: American University in Cairo Press, 2005), 279–88, at 280.

75 This manuscript belonged to a relative of Archdeacon Habib Guirguis and remains in the private possession of the family.

76 Third Letter of Cyril to Nestorius 2.

77 Taft, Robert F., The Great Entrance: A History of the Transfer of Gifts and other Pre-anaphoral Rites of the Liturgy of St John Chrysostom (Rome: Pont. Institutum Studiorum Orientalium, 1975), 398402 .

78 Aloys Grillmeier with Theresia Hainthaler, Christ in Christian Tradition, vol. 2, pt. 2, trans. Pauline Allen and John Cawte (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1995), 256–59.

79 FitzGerald, Thomas and Gratsias, Emmanuel, eds., Restoring the Unity in Faith: The Orthodox-Oriental Orthodox Theological Dialogue, An Introduction with Texts (Brookline, MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2007), 7980 .

80 His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, The Creed, trans. Wedad Abbas, 2nd ed. (Cairo: Coptic Orthodox Patriarchate, 2003).

81 Agpia: The Prayer Book of the Seven Canonical Hours (Sydney: Coptic Orthodox Publication and Translation, 2006), 6–7.

82 See Beckwith, Carl L., “Martin Luther’s Christological Sources in the Fathers,” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Martin Luther, ed. Hinlicky, Paul R. and Nelson, Derek R. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), quoting Cyril, Against Nestorius 3.2 (expanded).

83 Luther, On the Councils and the Church (1539), LW 41:105.

84 Paulau, Stanislau, “An Ethiopian Orthodox Monk in the Cradle of the Reformation: Abba Mikaʾel, Martin Luther, and the Unity of the Church,” in Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity in a Global Context, ed. Stanislau Paulau and Martin Tamcke (Leiden: Brill, 2022), pp. 81109 . Original text of July 4, 1534 in D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, ed. J. K. F. Knaake et al. 112 volumes in 136 (Weimar: H. Böhlau, 1883–2009), Briefwechsel 7:86.

85 Daniels, David, “Luther and Ethiopian Christianity,” in Reformation in the Context of World Christianity. Theological, Political and Social Interactions Between Africa, Asia, the Americas and Europe, ed. Ludwig, Frieder et al. (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2019), 2132 .

86 FNS is the abbreviation of Samuel Fernández, ed., Fontes Nicaenae Synodi: The Contemporary Sources for the Study of the Council of Nicaea (304–337), Contexts of Ancient and Medieval Anthropology 10 (Leiden: Brill, 2024).

87 A. Marten, The Common Places of the Most Famous and Renowned Divine Doctor Peter Martyr (1583): 249.

88 J. Jewel, Two Treatises: I. On the Holy Scriptures. II. On the Sacraments (1840): 142.

89 T. Simmons, The Lay Folks’ Mass Book (1879): 19–22.

90 The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, II, 371.