We believe! The Nicene Creed and Christian Unity | One Body

 — Oct. 3, 20253 oct. 2025

“We believe.” These are the first words of the original Nicene Creed, written 1,700 years ago at the Council of Nicaea. This ecumenical council in 325 AD produced a summary statement of Christian belief that has been professed by Christians around the world ever since. Both for its longevity and its universal appeal, the Nicene Creed stands apart from every other statement of Christian belief. It also has a profound ecumenical significance, which I explored in January’s One Body article, Do You Believe This?

At the end of November, Pope Leo XIV is expected to visit Nicaea with Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew. Each year, the pope and patriarch send delegations to the other to celebrate their patronal feasts of Sts. Peter and Paul in Rome on June 29 and St. Andrew in Constantinople (Istanbul) on November 30. This year, in the modern city of Iznik, where Nicaea once was, the two leaders will together commemorate the 1,700th anniversary of the first ecumenical council. They will also commend the church to continue in the dialogue of life and love begun at the end of the Second Vatican Council.

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The principal role of the Nicene Creed is in baptism. As the catechumen and the congregation profess the Creed, they do so together with the whole communion of saints, bound together in this apostolic faith and the waters of baptism. For Roman Catholics in Canada, the Nicene Creed is less familiar than in other countries, as we typically use the Apostles’ Creed at Mass, except perhaps at Easter. However, the Nicene text is still commonly used in baptismal liturgies of both Eastern and Western churches, and has been adapted to a question-and-answer format: “Do you believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth?” In the Roman Missal, the plural “we believe” has been changed to the singular “I believe,” but the plural is still in use in other churches and in ecumenical services.

The Early Creeds

There are earlier credal statements than Nicaea. Christians share with Judaism the ancient Shema, “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one” (Deuteronomy 6:4). The word here translated as “Lord” in most modern Bibles is YHWH, the personal and proper name of God. However, this name is not to be spoken aloud, and so Jewish practice is to substitute the word Adonai, which means “my Lord? or “the Lord.” The Shema is traditionally recited by Jews when they wake up and before sleep. For the earliest Christians, this practice would have been instinctive and would have continued even as they began to separate from the Synagogue.

The earliest professions of Christian faith are found in the New Testament. The basic kerygma (from Greek, meaning “proclamation” or “preaching”) is that “Jesus is Lord.” Repeated throughout the Acts of the Apostles (cf. 2:36, 10:36) and the letters of Paul (cf. Romans 10:9, 1 Corinthians 12:3, Philippians 2:11), this profession served as an identity marker for the infant church of the first century, but also set Christians in conflict with Imperial Rome. In the Roman Empire, peace was established by the subjugation of every land and people to Caesar as the Lord. To proclaim Jesus as Prince of Peace and Lord of Heaven and Earth relegated Caesar to just another worldly power. “…and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:11). For Christians, this profession summarises the conviction that to be a disciple, we must leave behind family and fortune to follow Christ. In Christian terms, it is the first of the Commandments to have no other gods before God.

When the bishops gathered at Nicaea in 325, the conflict with the Empire was ending. Constantine had ceased the persecutions of the past centuries, and Christianity would eventually become the official religion of Rome. Constantine hoped to use Christianity to unify the fragmenting Empire, but a conflict among the clergy and people of Alexandria had the potential to undermine that goal. So, he summoned the bishops to an imperial synod in Nicaea, a small provincial town not far from the new capital in Constantinople. Historical accounts differ as to whether Constantine actually convened the bishops or intervened in their discussions, but he clearly had vested interests in the outcome, and he was not shy about it.

The dispute between Arius and Athanasius over the divinity of Christ was described in my January post, so I won’t go further into this here except to remind us that the bishops taught that Christ is fully divine, sharing in one substance (homoousios) with the Father. At the conclusion of the Council’s work, they issued a series of anathemas (teachings that are condemned). Though no formal record exists from this first Council, by the time of the Council of Constantinople in 381, the Creed had become the standard of doctrine. It defined what is orthodox (right doctrine) and therefore what is heterodox (wrong doctrine, or heresy) by contrast.

At Constantinople, the dispute was about the divinity of the Holy Spirit. Adding crucial articles to the Nicene Creed, the bishops at Constantinople professed that “we believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father, who with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified…” The resulting Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed is the one that we still profess today. It was not, however, the end of the disputes.

In 431, the bishops gathered at Ephesus to proclaim that the human and divine natures of Christ are joined in a hypostatic union, as the second person of the Holy Trinity. They also affirmed that the Virgin Mary is truly the Theotokos (“God-bearer” or Mother of God). Again in 451, the bishops at Chalcedon defined the humanity and divinity of Christ as two natures (ousia) in one person (hypostasis); however, these clarifications did not result in changes to the Creed.

The Nicene Creed has been used to profess orthodox doctrine ever since it was composed. In this sense, though more complicated than the early kerygma “Jesus is Lord,” it still serves the same function as an identity marker. Yet, it has also been a boundary keeper. It separates the sheep from the goats. It defines who is within and not within the Christian fold. Disputes over the particulars of Nicene dogma have resulted in divisions with the Nestorian or Assyrian Church, as well as with the Oriental Orthodox (Coptic, Ethiopian, Syrian, etc.), and eventually between the East and the West. The most famous of the continuing disputes is over the so-called filioque, an addition to the Creed by the Western Church, to profess that the Holy Spirit “proceeds from the Father and the Son.”

Medieval, Reformation, and Contemporary Creeds

Creeds continue to be used to define and teach Christian doctrine. Medieval eucharistic disputes led to “confessions” affirming key points (e.g. Berengarius of Tours, c. 999-1088) of disputed doctrine. During the Reformation, various “confessions” and “apologies” were drafted by the reforming churches, several of which remain the doctrinal standards of present-day churches (e.g. the Westminster Confession, Augsburg Confession, etc.). The importance of “confessional standards” has led, especially in Europe, to an understanding of the different divided churches as “confessions.” In North America, we are more likely to use the term “denominations,” from the Latin nominare, ‘to name.’ However, Catholics have resisted the terms “confessionalism” or “denominationalism” because these express an understanding of the fragmented church, in which the fullness of the Church is no longer found.

Calvinist or Reformed churches describe these Reformation confessions, as well as several more contemporary doctrinal texts, as “subordinate standards.” This is in keeping with their commitment to the authority and sufficiency of Scripture. Whether it be the 16th-century confessions, such as the Westminster Confession, or a modern statement like the Barmen Declaration (against the idolatrous nationalism of the German State under the Nazis), these texts are subordinate to Scripture. Their purpose is to illuminate and explicate particular teachings found in the Bible, not to correct, amend, or add to the truths revealed in the canon of inspired texts.

A modern Catholic example of a credal statement is Pope Paul VI’s Credo of the People of God, issued in 1968. Intended not as a dogmatic definition, the pope described it as “a solemn act to reaffirm the truth of the Catholic faith.” The Credo was issued just a month before the controversial Humanae Vitae, and suffered from the negative reception of the encyclical. Though some saw it as a firm stand against theological and moral relativism, others viewed it as a return to an older, more rigid form of papal authority and an attempt to stifle “the spirit of Vatican II.”

Some churches describe themselves as non-confessional or non-credal, particularly many of the pacifist or peace churches. By this, they don’t mean that they have no doctrine or that their only statement of Christian belief is the Biblical text itself. However, they will remind us that creeds and confessions have been used to persecute and punish those who differ. Instead of a Gospel proclamation of grace, these texts have been used as blunt instruments of coercion and control. The historical experience of the Inquisition bears this out, but even in the present day, doctrinal statements have been the cause of churches splintering over details that may seem inconsequential from the outside.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church provides an interesting insight into how doctrinal texts can assume an increasingly authoritative function. When first conceived and drafted during the papacy of Pope John Paul II, the Catechism was intended as a reference tool and catechetical resource. Each article in the Catechism is carefully cited from magisterial texts, which are themselves the source of the teaching authority. The Compendium of the Catechism was prepared to ensure that the source texts would be available to the general reader. However, over the years, the Catechism has been cited as a source and authority on doctrinal matters. This is not to question the authority of the teachings contained in the Catechism itself, but only to note that documents can take on an authority not originally envisioned for them.

What then are we to think of creeds and confessions? The church has a positive obligation to teach the faith to new generations. We are called to profess the faith in every time and place. Evangelisation, formation, and catechesis are not, however, the only purposes for these documents. Like the Nicene Creed, there are liturgical settings for many of these texts. The ancient axiom, lex orandi lex credendi (“the rule of faith is the rule of prayer”), reminds us that what we pray forms us as believers, and what we believe guides us in our prayer. When we profess the Nicene or Apostles’ Creed, we proclaim together with the whole church throughout the ages, “we believe!”

Some resources for further reflection

Journey through the Nicene Creed. The World Council of Churches (WCC) Commission on Faith and Order is offering an online course, “Introduction to Nicaea – The 1700th Anniversary of the Nicene Creed,” that invites deeper study of the Nicene Creed and the Ecumenical Council of Nicaea. Complete it at your own pace. To access it, send an email to the coordinator, Henco Van Der Westhuizen, whose email is at the bottom of the course description available on the WCC site.

From 325 to 2025 – The Council of Nicaea and Jewish-Christian Relations Today. What has been the Nicene Creed’s impact on Jewish-Christian relations, dialogue, and understanding? Can the Creed be understood or received as anything other than a milestone of boundary-marking and exclusion on the long road leading to the parting of the ways between the church and synagogue? In this anniversary year, what opportunities exist for deeper theological engagement between our traditions?

This webinar was planned by the International Council of Christians and Jews (ICCJ) in conjunction with the Christian Jewish Dialogue of Canada. Watch the recording here.

Sixth World Conference on Faith & Order. Where Now for Visible Unity? The World Council of Churches is convening a conference to mark the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea and the development of the Nicene Creed. This significant gathering in the history of the ecumenical movement will take place near Alexandria, Egypt, from October 24 to 28.

Though most of us will not be able to attend in person, there will be a livestream. Due to the time difference between Egypt and Canada, a team is working to develop “watch parties” for the following plenary sessions. To register, click here. Contact the Prairie Centre for Ecumenism for further details.

The schedule will include:

  • Opening plenary, Fri, Oct. 24 at 12 pm Eastern
  • Where now for visible unity?, Fri. Oct. 24 at 4 pm Eastern
  • Faith in the Middle East, Fri. Oct. 24 at 6 pm Eastern
  • Triune God and the Identity of the Church, Sat. Oct. 25 at 12 pm Eastern
  • Unpacking Apostolic Faith: Living the Nicene Creed in Context, Sat. Oct. 25 4 pm Eastern
  • The Church in and for the World, Mon. Oct. 27 at 12 pm Eastern
  • Mission: Common witness and Apostolic discipleship, Mon. Oct. 27 at 4 pm Eastern
  • Unity: Living and Visible?, Tues. Oct. 28 at 12 pm Eastern
  • Living Visible Unity, Tues. Oct. 28 at 4 pm Eastern
  • Ecumenical Future, Tues. Oct. 28 at 6 pm Eastern

More information about the World Conference is available at www.oikoumene.org/events/nicaea-2025.

A Webinar on Ecumenical Perspectives on Nicaea, on Thursday, September 25 at 8:00 AM ET. (It will be recorded.) It features some of the people who will also be presenting at the World Conference on Faith & Order in October 2025. To register, go to www.oikoumene.org/events/ecumenical-perspectives-on-nicaea-and-its-legacy.


Nicholas Jesson is the ecumenical officer for the Archdiocese of Regina. He is currently a member of the Anglican-Roman Catholic Dialogue in Canada and of the Canadian Council of Churches’ Commission on Faith & Witness, editor of the Margaret O’Gara Ecumenical Dialogues Collection, and editor of the Anglican-Roman Catholic Dialogue archive IARCCUM.org. He was ecumenical officer for the Diocese of Saskatoon (1994-99 & 2008-17), executive director of the Prairie Centre for Ecumenism (1994-99), and member of the Roman Catholic-United Church of Canada Dialogue (2012-20).

Posted: Oct. 3, 2025 • Permanent link: ecumenism.net/?p=14650
Categories: One Body, OpinionIn this article: Nicaea, Nicaea 2025, Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, WCC Commission on Faith and Order
Transmis : 3 oct. 2025 • Lien permanente : ecumenism.net/?p=14650
Catégorie : One Body, OpinionDans cet article : Nicaea, Nicaea 2025, Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, WCC Commission on Faith and Order


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Spotlight on Catholic-Mennonite Dialogue | One Body

 — Aug. 28, 202528 aoüt 2025

A number of years ago, at a local dialogue meeting of Catholics and Mennonites in Edmonton, we considered together that section of the Catechism of the Catholic Church that pertains specifically to the “one-ness” of the Church (#811-822).

I remember in particular a great discussion that ensued around CCC #815. It delineates the “bonds of communion” which, for Catholics, mark and hold Christians in unity with one another within the Body of Christ. That paragraph reads:

What are these bonds of unity? Above all, charity “binds everything together in perfect harmony.” But the unity of the pilgrim Church is also assured by visible bonds of communion:

  • profession of one faith received from the Apostles;
  • common celebration of divine worship, especially the sacraments;
  • apostolic succession through the sacrament of Holy Orders, maintaining the fraternal concord of God’s family.

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Roman Catholic–United Church (RC-UC) Dialogue | One Body

 — July 15, 202515 juil. 2025

This year, 2025, marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of The United Church of Canada (UCC). It is a uniquely Canadian church, formed in part in response to the desire to minister effectively to the many small Christian communities scattered across the sparsely populated prairie provinces. The UCC has been committed to the search for Christian unity from the time of its foundation, something it has clearly expressed in its fifty year dialogue with the Canadian Roman Catholic Church.

Following an exchange of correspondence between the UCC General Council and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) in the fall of 1974, the Roman Catholic/United Church Dialogue held its first meeting in November 1975. Appointed by the UCC’s Inter-Church and Inter-Faith Relations Committee and the CCCB’s Episcopal Commission for Ecumenism, dialogue participants are committed to improving relationships between the two churches, and to countering misinformation, stereotypes, and prejudices. It explores pastoral, theological, and ethical issues, including those that have traditionally prevented full unity.  In consultation with its two sponsoring bodies, the group determines its agenda, reports periodically on the dialogue and seeks ways of communicating what it has learned from the dialogue.
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The Sixth World Conference on Faith and Order will be convened in Wadi El Natrun, near Alexandria, Egypt from 24-28 October with the theme 'Where now for visible unity?'

Preparatory meeting convenes in lead-up to WCC Sixth World Conference on Faith and Order

 — July 1, 20251 juil. 2025

A planning meeting for the World Council of Churches (WCC) Sixth World Conference on Faith and Order and the Global Ecumenical Theological Institute 2025 (GETI) was convened in St Bishoy Monastery in Egypt, 28-29 June. The hybrid gathering focused on logistics, a stewards programme, communications, church and cultural visits, and budget.

The cohost for the conference is the Coptic Orthodox Church, marking the first time such a conference is hosted by an Oriental Orthodox church.

The Sixth World Conference for Faith and Order, being hosted at the invitation of His Holiness Pope Tawadros II, will be held in Wadi El Natrun, Egypt, from 24-28 October with the theme “Where now for visible unity?”

This will be the sixth such conference in a century, with previous gatherings held in 1927 (Lausanne, Switzerland), 1937 (Edinburgh, Scotland), 1952 (Lund, Sweden), 1963 (Montreal, Canada),1993 (Santiago, Spain) and 2025 (Wadi El Natrun, Egypt).
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Following his surprise election, the Anglican Church of Canada's Primate-elect Shane Parker walks to St. Paul's Cathedral accompanied by other members of the House of Bishops to greet General Synod

Bishop Shane Parker elected 15th Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada

 — June 26, 202526 juin 2025

The Rt. Rev. Shane Parker, Bishop of Ottawa, was elected the 15th Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada on June 26, 2025, at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, Ontario, during the 44th session of the General Synod.

Primate-elect Parker has served as the Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Ottawa since 2020. Prior to that, he was dean of the Diocese of Ottawa and rector of Christ Church Cathedral in Ottawa for two decades. He has a master’s degree in sociology from Carleton University, as well as an honorary doctorate from Saint Paul University, where he has served as a part-time professor of pastoral ministry and chairs its Anglican Studies Advisory Committee.
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Joe Elkerton (left) will replace Bert Adema (right) as director of the Indigenous Christian Fellowship in Regina, Saskatchewan

Joe Elkerton appointed Director of Indigenous Christian Fellowship

 — June 25, 202525 juin 2025

The Christian Reformed Church’s Indigenous Christian Fellowship (ICF) in Regina, Sask., is pleased to announce the appointment of Joe Elkerton as its new director, effective July 21, 2025. Elkerton will replace Bert Adema, who is retiring after 32 years of service.

“This appointment marks a pivotal moment for the Indigenous Christian Fellowship,” said Albert Postma, the CRCNA’s executive director-Canada. “Joe’s diverse background and his clear sense of calling to this specific role truly excite us. We believe his leadership will bring vibrant new energy and direction as we continue to grow and serve the community in Regina.”
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The United Nations Office in Geneva, Switzerland, housed at the historic Palais des Nations

WCC supports efforts to reform and strengthen United Nations

 — June 24, 202524 juin 2025

In a statement, the World Council of Churches (WCC) central committee commemorated 80 years of the United Nations, particularly its founding principle of multilateral cooperation.

“The Pact for the Future, adopted by the UN General Assembly in September 2024, lays out some important directions and needed reforms,” notes the statement. “But even deeper and more fundamental reform will be required, including of the Security Council itself, in order to restore the organization’s credibility and to address the historic exclusion of nations still under colonial domination at the time of the 1945 San Francisco Conference.”
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500 Years of the Anabaptist Movement: The Courage to Love

“The courage to love,” the miracle of ecumenical reconciliation

 — June 20, 202520 juin 2025

Long-time Bridgefolk participants remember the booming voice of the late Ivan Kauffman celebrating historic moments that have marked the development of closer relationships between Mennonites, Roman Catholics, and other divided Christians: “It’s a miracle!

Kauffman would almost shout it. But he had a solidly empirical definition for miracles to match his exuberance: “Things that everybody agreed could not happen, but that happened anyway.”

If Kauffman could have been in Zurich, Switzerland on 29 May 2025, we would surely have heard his booming voice again. Commemorating the 500th anniversary of the Anabaptist movement that began in January of 1525, its spiritual descendants in Mennonite, Amish, Hutterite, and related churches gathered at the city’s Grossmünster cathedral there at the invitation of Mennonite World Conference (MWC).
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Wycliffe College in Toronto

Theological schools hit by international student rules intended for diploma mills, larger institutions

 — June 12, 202512 juin 2025

Between 2014 and 2024, the proportion of students of European descent at Montreal Diocesan Theological College (often abbreviated as Dio) went from about 60 per cent to 25 per cent, says the Rev. Jesse Zink, the school’s principal.

“We have been moving in a direction that’s much more diverse along lines of immigration status, country of origin, racial, and ethnic identity. And I would just say, I think this is wonderful,” he says. “I was teaching a three-hour class last week. We took a break, and I noticed that students were having little side conversations during our break, and there was one that was happening in English, and there was one that was happening in French, and there was one that was happening in Swahili.”
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Reflecting on a Century of Ecumenical Work and Witness in The United Church of Canada | One Body

 — June 7, 20257 juin 2025

June 10, 2025 marks 100 years since 8,000 people gathered in the Mutual Street Arena in Toronto to formally inaugurate, with declarations and worship, The United Church of Canada. Members of the United Church today will easily acknowledge that its history is an ecumenical history, and they remember and celebrate its important contributions to the ongoing search for Christian unity and interfaith cooperation. Reflecting on this history in today’s world of increasingly violent division, fear, and distrust of difference, celebrations also bring questions: what is the continuing ecumenical call to a church committed to “Deep Spirituality, Bold Discipleship, and Daring Justice?”

I offer here a review of that ecumenical history: the beginnings and subsequent life and witness of the United Church, an overview of the church’s ecumenical witness today, and some questions and challenges arising as the church enters the next phase of its life in the world.
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Pope Leo XIV greets participants of a symposium in Rome

At Ecumenical Symposium, Pope Leo XIV Says Catholic Church Open to Universal Easter Date

 — June 7, 20257 juin 2025

“Several concrete solutions have been proposed that, while respecting the principle of Nicaea, would allow Christians to celebrate together the ‘Feast of Feasts,’” the Holy Father said.

Pope Leo XIV on Saturday said the Catholic Church is open to establishing a common date of Easter among all Christian churches, echoing one of the aims of the Council of Nicaea that met 1,700 years ago.

The Pope spoke to participants of the symposium “Nicaea and the Church of the Third Millennium: Towards Catholic-Orthodox Unity,” which took place this week at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome.

The Holy Father called the 325 Council of Nicaea “foundational for the common journey that Catholics and Orthodox have undertaken together since the Second Vatican Council.”
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