Credo: Truths That Shape a Christian Life

+ About Our Series

FROM THE RECTOR (Jan. 19, 2020)

Like vines climbing a latticework, our lives are supported and shaped by a few deep truths we cling to. It may be the wisdom of our parents, ideas of a beloved teacher, or the values of a popular ideology we hold to. More common today, we may simply believe in ourselves. Whether we realize it or not, we all live by a creed—some assortment of beliefs that shape the quality and direction of our lives.

Christians face squarely this dynamic between belief (faith) and life. From their earliest days they knew following Jesus meant reshaping life around a new creed. One enduring example of this is the ancient Apostles’ Creed, a succinct articulation of the truest truths according to Jesus Christ. Still recited worldwide, the Creed boldly begins, Credo in Deum (I believe in God).

In our sermon series over the next six weeks, Credo: Truths That Shape a Christian Life, we consider some essential doctrines (truths) of the faith as expressed in the Apostles' Creed (and Nicene Creed, CLICK HERE) by looking at how they arise from Scripture. Whether hearing these truths for the first or thousandth time, please join me these next weeks in asking two questions: What creed am I currently living by? What might life look like if I wholeheartedly believed the truest truths of Christianity?

I Believe in…

  • The Doctrine of God (Jan. 19)
  • The Doctrine of the Son (Jan. 26)
  • The Doctrine of Humanity (Feb. 2)
  • The Doctrine of the Cross (Feb. 9)
  • The Doctrine of Final Things (Feb. 16)
  • The Doctrine of the Spirit and the Church (Feb. 23)

+ On the Doctrine of Humanity (Introduction)

FROM THE RECTOR (Feb. 2, 2020)

What is man that you are mindful of him?" -Ps. 8:4

Inscribed across the ancient Greek portico of Apollo’s Temple at Delphi, a timeless maxim reads, "Know thyself." Long before the insights of psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, we humans knew we were a knot in need of untangling. And for good reason! Answering who we are is important not only for meeting the woman or man in the mirror, it’s essential for knowing how we should act, interact, hope, love and ultimately find fulfillment.

As we continue our sermon series, Credo: Truths That Shape a Christian Life, we take up the Doctrine of Humanity, asking with Psalm 8, “What is man…?” Christianity requires a biblical view of being human. Scripture opens with God making humanity in His image (Gen 1:26–27) and for our redemption, as the Creed attests, our Lord “came down from heaven … and was made man” (Nicene Creed). Christianity sets forth a story that begins with man’s grandeur, plunges into his misery, then points to his future glory—all under the watchful eye of our Creator. Careful reflection upon the biblical view of humanity has never been more important in this age of confusion.

The modern Western self finds herself stripped of a creator, dislocated from any story with eternal purpose and meaning, and burdened with an unbearable weight of self-actualization. “Know thyself” has morphed into “create thyself.” Issues as far-ranging as justice, sexuality, gender, fulfillment, and hope are now held, not in the wise hands of God, but feeble fingers of man. The Church invites wandering Homo sapiens back home, where the question is not "Who am I?" but "Whose am I?" May The Falls Church Anglican be a place where the Doctrine of Humanity is reclaimed, rearticulated, and esteemed as the good news it is.