The Nicene Creed was created to
exclude. This goes against the grain of
our modern secular society, where the word “inclusive” has become a magic word,
conjuring up warm feelings of virtue, righteousness, and goodness. To be inclusive is to be good; to exclude is
to be bad. The magic is, I think, rooted
in the American Civil Rights Movement, where certain people were unjustly
excluded from certain things (such as employment opportunities or even sitting
in the front part of a bus) based on the colour of their skin. Such exclusions were plainly arbitrary,
morally indefensible, and more than a little bit crazy, and this bequeathed a
legacy of unacceptability to the very word “exclusion”, with a corresponding
happy feel to the word “inclusion”.
But
in this, as in many things, context is everything. Exclusion is not always wrong. Take the early part of the fourth century,
for instance. Then the heresy of
Arianism was spreading over the Christian world like a raging roaring disease. This was the heresy that denied that Jesus was
truly divine, and asserted instead that he was a creature, created by the one
true God in the same way as the angels were created. Jesus of Nazareth therefore was not God,
according to the Arians, though they allowed that He was very, very important,
a heavenly celebrity of sorts, but not God in any real sense. That is, He could be admired and praised, but
not actually worshipped with the same worship with which the Church worshipped
the Father. This last bit was very
important too, for salvation consists of worshipping Jesus, in falling down
before Him as did Thomas and crying to Him, “My Lord and my God!” Given the popularity of Arianism, something
had to be done.
Something
was done, and what was done we now call “the First Ecumenical Council of
Nicea”. Bishops then came from all over
to the town of Nicea in 325 A.D. to thrash the whole thing out. It didn’t take them long to conclude that
Jesus was divine, and that Arius’ teaching was simply wrong. But how to declare this? Arius was a slippery fellow, and there seemed
to be no kind of Biblical formula or title for Christ that he could not twist
and redefine for his own purposes. The
Fathers therefore decided to do something radical and unprecedented—namely, to
use non-biblical phrases to describe who Christ was. They took the baptismal creed, the statement
with which all catechumens had to agree in order to be baptized and be
considered Christians, and inserted several phrases, phrases so clear that even
someone as slippery as Arius couldn’t wriggle out of them. Jesus was not only “the only-begotten Son of
God”, He was also “light from light, true God from true God, begotten not made,
of the same essence as the Father, from whom [i.e. Jesus] all things were
made”. These phrases stated the divinity
of Christ so clearly that not even Arius could say the words without choking.
That
was, of course, the point: the Creedal
statement was constructed with such precision as to exclude people like Arius. In one sense the Creed was inclusive: any person anywhere, regardless of race,
language, ethnicity, or colour could confess it, be that person slave or free,
rich or poor. But it was also exclusive: any person who did not believe the full and
perfect divinity of Jesus of Nazareth could not
confess it, and thus could not be a member of the Church.
Why
this insistence on exclusion? The
Fathers of Nicea wanted to exclude heresy from the Church for the same reason
that a doctor wants to exclude cancer from the body of his patient—because if
he includes the cancer in the patient’s body, the result will be the death of
the patient. Cancer kills, and so does
heresy. Heresy is not simply incorrect
opinion, akin to getting a numerical sum wrong.
Heresy is stubbornly refusing to accept the truth, in exactly the same
way as someone who has been poisoned might stubbornly refuse to accept
swallowing the antidote. A person who
has been poisoned will die. And the good
intentions of the heretic notwithstanding (for who knowingly accepts error?),
the person who refuses God’s provided remedy of Christ will also die. Heresy will kill the soul, just as surely as
cancer will kill the body. Salvation
consists of exclusion—the cancer must be excluded from the body, and heresy
must be excluded from the soul. The
Fathers of Nicea were not narrow-minded men, working mean-spiritedly in their
ivory towers. They were physicians of
the soul, working as pastors in the front-line, concerned to save the souls of
the children of men. They knew that only
as men fell down before Christ as God and offered their lives to Him could they
find salvation. They therefore excluded
the Arian error which insisted on omitting this saving spiritual prostration. They knew they lived in a world of dying
men. Only by falling down before the
divine Christ could those men find eternal life.
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