| PART TWO: The Apostle's Creed Christ our
Truth
For about the first century and a half, the creeds, the
professions of faith probably did not always have the same
wording. But, as St. Paul tells us in Romans l0:9: "If with
your mouth you confess that Jesus is the Lord, and in your
heart you believe that God raised Him from the dead, you
will be saved." We need now to fill in an explanation: That
word saved has three meanings in Scripture:
1)rescue from temporal dangers,
2) entry into the Church,
3)reaching heaven.
The foolish mistake some fundamentalist Protestants make,
of saying "saved" means being infallibly sure of heaven as a
result of just once "taking Christ as your Savior" — this
has no scholarly backing at all. It is not found in
Scripture. Here in 10:9 saved means entry into the Church by
a profession of faith. The first evidence of the use of a
fixed formula comes in the questions a candidate for Baptism
at Rome was asked, in the early third century (cf.
Hippolytus, Tradition of the Apostles 21). With some
further fill-ins, this became the standardized wording for a
confession of faith in the western churches, the Apostles'
Creed. Even if the Apostles did not directly compose it, yet
it goes back to the basic truths they preached, in accord
with the commission given them by Jesus Himself (Mt 28.
19-20): "Go then and teach all nations, baptizing them in
the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded
you."
The Roman Catechism of Pope St. Pius V officially
explained this so that Pope John Paul II called the
Catechism "a work of the first rank as a summary of
Christian teaching.
Our belief in the truths of the Creed is not just an
opinion; no, it is a most firm acceptance of these things on
the authority of God Himself who has revealed them, so that
we will also have confidence in His promises, and obey His
commands (cf. St. Paul, Romans 1:5, "the obedience of
faith", i.e. the obedience that faith is). That is why
Vatican II (On Revelation # 5) tells us that in faith
"a person freely commits himself totally to God, giving the
full commitment of mind and will to God who reveals, and
voluntarily assenting to the revelation He has given."
We know what God has revealed by means of the teachings
of the Church Jesus founded, as we saw in part one. If
anyone thinks the words of Scripture are self-interpreting,
so that he does not need the Church, he has only to look at
the yellow pages in the telephone book, and see the
countless denominations, all of which claim they know the
"obvious" meaning of Scripture. But it was not to these
denominations, which did not even exist then, that Jesus
promised "He who hears you hears me" (Luke 10:16). They
appeared on the scene only centuries after Jesus. If His
promises could fail for centuries, we could not trust His
promises as all.
The basic revelation of the message of Jesus was
completed when the last Apostle died and the New Testament
was completed (Cf. Vatican II, On Divine Revelation
#4) Any revelation after that time is called "private" to
distinguish it. (The word private is used even for a
revelation addressed to the whole world, such as Fatima).
There is to be no new public revelation until the glorious
return of our Lord at the end of time.
His Church teaches in varied ways — at times by a solemn
definition, at times by less formal statements. The key
point to watch is whether or not the Church presents some
truth as to be held definitively. It can do this in rather
formal public utterances, or in the day to day teaching
given throughout the world, presenting things as definitive
(Cf. Vatican II, LG #25). All these teachings are
protected by the promises of Christ. At times too the Church
teaches in a way that is not definitive. Even then we should
not only keep from openly contradicting, but should accept
it in our minds, with the understanding that there could be
a far-out possibility of a slip. Yet the experience of
centuries shows that is much more remote than is our belief
that a dish of food we often eat out of a can, is free of
the deadly poison of Botulism, even though we do not send
all cans to a lab for checking. The divine protection Jesus
promised to the Church is so great that if the entire
Church, people as well as authorities, has ever accepted
something as revealed — even for one period of history —
that belief is infallible (Vatican II, LG # 12). If a
later generation falls away from that belief, what was once
infallibly guaranteed cannot become untrue. We find what God
has revealed in both Scripture and Tradition, which both
come from the same source, and tend to the same goal. Yet
they are not identical. Vatican II, On Divine Revelation
# 9, said: " The Church draws her certainty on what is
revealed not only from Sacred Scripture."
But we look to the Church for the guaranteed
interpretation of both Scripture and Tradition. Vatican II
said, On Divine Revelation # 10: "The task of
authoritatively interpreting the word of God, whether
written or handed on [Scripture or Tradition] has been
entrusted exclusively to the living teaching office of the
Church, whose authority is exercised in the name of Jesus
Christ." So a theologian who would say he must ignore the
Church to find the truth is not a Catholic theologian, and
his search is apt to end in failure.
First Article of the Creed: "I believe in God the
Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth."
In this article we express our belief in the existence of
God. He is a pure spirit, that is, He has no matter at all,
and no parts.
We call Him Father, since He is the supreme source of
everything, the one "from whom all Fatherhood in heaven and
on earth takes its name" (Ephesians 3. 16).
We call Him the Creator, since He has made all things ,
not out of some previously existing material, but simply out
of nothing. Now to bring nothing up to any degree of being
is an infinite distance, and so we see He has infinite
power. By just willing it, He can do all things. So in
Genesis 1 He merely spoke and said, "Let light be." And
light came into existence. Really, He did not speak in our
sense of the word; He merely willed it, and it came into
being.
To describe Him we use the word attributes. These are the
perfections that He has, which we attribute to Him by
comparison with creatures. Some of His attributes belong to
Him by His very nature; others belong to Him in relation to
the world He made.
The chief attributes that are His by His very nature are
His unchangeability and eternity. He is unchangeable. Since
He has the fullness of being, He could not change into
anything higher or better, or acquire anything: "I, the
Lord, do not change", He said through the prophet Malachi
(3:6). We call Him eternal not in the sense that there
always was time, and in it He always was. No, since He is
unchangeable there is no past or future for Him: all is one
unchanging present. So when we say that He made the world —
a past expression — to His divine mind it registers as
present! "Before the mountains were born, before you brought
forth the earth and the world, from everlasting to
everlasting you are, O God" (Psalm 90:2). There are
attributes that follow upon God's relation to this world. He
is omnipotent or almighty because "nothing is impossible to
God" (Luke 1:37). The book of Sirach 23:20 says: "Before
they were made, all things were known to Him." So He is
all-knowing, or omniscient. We say He is present everywhere.
In Jeremiah 23:24 He said: "Do I not fill heaven and earth?"
Yet He is not present in the sense of taking up space, as we
do: we say a Spirit is present wherever it causes an effect.
He caused all things to come into being, and keeps them in
being. Since He rewards good and punishes evil we call Him
all-just. St. Paul wrote (Romans 2:6): "He will repay each
one according to his works." He guides and directs the paths
of all creatures, and hence the First Epistle of Peter 5:7
can say: "Cast all your care upon Him, for He takes care of
you". He is all-good since He is the author of everything
that is good, and wills eternal good to us. Psalm 136:1,
"Give thanks to the Lord for He is good."
Even though everything the Three Persons do outside the
Divine nature is done by all Three, yet it is suitable that
we attribute some works specially to one or the other
Person. So we speak of the Father especially as the power of
creation, of the Son as the wisdom of the Father, of the
Holy Spirit as goodness and sanctification.
2. The Holy Trinity
Perhaps the deepest, the most profound of all mysteries
is the fact that the Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy
Spirit is God, yet we do not speak of three Gods, but only
one God. They have the same nature, substance, and being.
We came to know this immense mystery because Christ
revealed it to us. Just before ascending He told them: "Go
teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (Matthew 28:19). We
know that these Three are not just different ways of looking
at one person. For at the Last Supper, Jesus told us: "I
came forth from the Father. So He is different from the
Father." But He also promised: "If I go, I will send Him
[the Paraclete] to you... He will guide you to all truth.
(John 16:28, 7, 13). So the Holy Spirit is also different.
Even though the Three Persons are One God, yet they are
distinct: for the Father has no origin, He came from no one.
But the Son is begotten, He comes from the Father alone. The
Holy Spirit comes or proceeds from both the Father and the
Son. These different relations of origin tell us there are
three distinct Persons, who have one and the same divine
nature.
The First Epistle of John (4:8) says, "God is love." Now
to love is to will good to another for the other's sake. The
Father wills divinity to the Son; Father and Son together
will divinity to the Holy Spirit, who is the love of the
Father and the Son. This complete self-giving of the Three
Persons is the divine model for the love we should have.
It is strictly correct to say that God is love, since if
we said that He has love, there would be a duality, two. But
He is totally unity. He is identified with each of His
attributes. So He is mercy, He is justice, and therefore in
some way, mercy and justice are identified in Him. We can
see something of this when we notice that if someone goes on
sinning, He gradually loses his ability to see spiritual
truths: this is justice, but it is also mercy, for the more
one understands of the spiritual truths, the greater his
responsibility. Similarly, one who makes steady progress
spiritually, finds ever-increasing light to understand
spiritual things: in a sense this is something earned, is
justice; but more basically, it is mercy, for no creature by
its own power can generate a claim on God. All He gives is
unmerited mercy.
3. Creation and Divine Providence
To create is to make things out of nothing, with no
material at all being used. We cannot ask: why did God wait
so long before creating the world, because before creation,
there is no time. Time is a measure of change on a scale of
before and after (Aristotle, Physics 4:11). Therefore when —
if we may use that word at all in speaking of eternity —
there was no change, there was no time. Time began to be
when changing creatures came into being. Time is a restless
continuous set of changes. Ahead is a moment we call future
— it quickly changes into present — then quickly changes
into past. God could have created from all eternity, and the
world would have been eternal. For there is no point in
eternity (if we may use such a word) at which He did not
have the power to create. But Genesis 1:1 tells us, "In the
beginning, God created the heavens and the earth." And
Christ told His Father :"You loved me before the foundation
of the world" (John 17:24).
St. Irenaeus wrote: "In the beginning God formed Adam,
not because He was in need of humans, but so He might have
someone to receive His benefits" (Against Heresies 4.
14. 1). So we can say He always loved us, since He always
willed us the most basic good, existence. Beyond that, He
wills that, "all be saved and come to the knowledge of the
truth" (1 Timothy 2:4). If to will good to another is to
love, then this is really love. But when we love, we need a
starter, we need to see something good or fine in another.
But God began (if we may use that word) to love us when we
did not exist. His Son died for us when we were still
sinners (Romans 5:6).
When we say that He created for His own glory, we must
understand these words the way Vatican I meant them: He made
a creature that by its very nature would give glory to God,
even though God gains nothing by that glory. (We read this
in the acts and decrees of Vatican I, found in Collectio
Lacensis , VII. 116). Similarly, He wants us to obey
because all goodness says creatures should obey their
Creator, and because as St. Irenaeus said, He wanted to have
someone to whom to be generous in infinite goodness.
He keeps all things in existence by the same power by
which He brought them up out of nothing. "And how, if you
had not willed it, could anything continue in being if you
did not will it?" (Wisdom 11:25). Our dependence on Him for
continued existence is like that of the images on the movie
screen dependent on the projector.
His providence watches over and guides everything: "No
creature is invisible before Him: all are bare and uncovered
to His eyes" (Hebrews 4:13). His wisdom "extends from end to
end mightily and governs all well" (Wisdom 8:1).
As we saw from 1 Timothy 2:4, He "wills all to be saved".
That will to save us is so great that He did not spare His
only Son, but sent Him to a horrible death, to make eternal
life open for us (Rom 8:32). Thus He really, "proved His
love" (Rom 5:8). For the greater an obstacle the one who
loves can get over in trying to bring happiness and
well-being to the beloved, the greater the love must be. So
He gives His helps, His grace, most abundantly, since the
infinite price of redemption (cf. 1 Cor 6. 20; 7:23) paid
for an infinite treasury of forgiveness and grace for each
individual one, for "He loved me, and gave Himself for me"
(Galatians 2:20). This does not mean that someone could say:
Since I have so great an abundance going for me, I can sin
greatly most of my life, and pull up short at the end. No,
one who sins much becomes spiritually blind, incapable of
receiving the graces God so greatly wills to give him.
If we follow up the most basic comparison used by Our
Lord Himself in the Gospel we would say: God is our Father.
As such, He wants all His children to turn out well. But if
someone then throws aside His graces to such an extent that
he cannot be saved — becoming blind — then with sorrow the
Father must let him be lost. But otherwise, He will save us,
not because we earned it, but because He, like any good
Father, wants all His children to turn out well. So St. Paul
speaks of sinners as not being able to "inherit the kingdom"
(1 Cor 6:10; Eph 5:5). When we inherit from our parents, we
do not say we earned it: we get it because they are good,
not that we are good. But we could have earned to lose that
inheritance by being evil. So Paul said in Romans 6:23: "The
wages of sin [what we earn] is death; the free gift of God
[unearned] is eternal life." As a student once said: "As to
salvation, you cannot earn it, but you can blow it." If we
live with this attitude and realization, we fulfill what Our
Lord called for: "If you do not change and become like
little children, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven"
(Matthew 18:3).
The very first grace is normally the grace to pray. Other
things then follow. St. Augustine wrote well: "See these
things, Lord, mercifully, and free us who now call on you.
Free also those who do not yet call on you, so that they may
call on you, and you may free them" (Confessions
1:9).
When God decided to create the human race, it was
inevitable to give them free will — otherwise it would be
something other than the human race. He saw this would give
an opening to great evils, but also to very great goods. He
decided to as it were buy the package. There is so much evil
in the world. Why? Physical evils result from the frailty of
creatures, made out of nothing. To stop all of these, God
would need to multiply miracles very frequently — but then
He would contradict Himself, constantly going beyond the
laws of nature which He Himself had established. Moral evils
come from the fact that He gave us free will — opening the
way, as we said, to great good, and great evil. Again, to
prevent these would take miracles of grace constantly, which
would be out of order. And it would reduce human freedom
also. However, He can and does draw much good out of evil,
e.g., evils provide the material for the patience of the
just; physical evils give opportunity for much charity.
4. Angels, Good and Bad
An angel is a pure spirit, that is, an angel has no
matter, no body. They are of a nature higher than ours. They
are often sent by God for certain duties on this earth, in
fact, the word angel means "one who is sent" or "messenger."
The oldest references to angels in the Old Testament might
leave us wondering if angels are separate beings — or does
the phrase "messenger of God" merely means God? (cf. Judges,
chapter 6). But in the later part of the Old Testament and
in the New Testament it becomes entirely clear that they are
distinct creatures. We see this by many references to them
in Scripture, e.g., Psalms 148:2; 103: 20-21; Matthew 22:30;
Luke 1:26; 2 Peter 2:4; Revelation/Apocalypse 5:11. Each
angel is a person, and has a mind and a will like ours.
The angels were not created in heaven, that is, with the
vision of God. If they had had that, sin would have been
impossible. But God gave the angels some sort of command —
we do not know what — and some obeyed, some did not. Those
who disobeyed were fixed in evil, and became devils. When we
sin, our intelligence is limited by the material part of our
intellect, the brain in our heads. For a material brain is
much less powerful than the spiritual intelligence our souls
have. This means that we seldom see things as fully as
possible at once. But an angel has no such limit, and hence
sees everything as fully as possible at once. So he cannot
go back on his decision, and say: "I see it differently now;
I wish I had not done that". The fallen angels, the devils,
still keep the great powers natural to a pure spirit. So
they can do things that seem like miracles to us.
The good angels are sent to guide and protect us. They
too have great powers. Each of us has a guardian angel. This
is implied in Scripture and is found in the constant
Tradition of the Church. After Peter was delivered from
prison by angel, the disciples said in astonishment: "It was
his angel" (Acts 12:15).
Our guardian angels are able to put good thoughts into
our minds, and to protect us. Psalm 91:11 says: "He will
command His angels about you, to guard you in all your
ways." In time of temptation they can give us both light and
strength. They never stop praying for us, and they present
our prayers before God.
Clearly, it is only good sense to venerate our guardian
angel, to cultivate their friendship, to thank them, to ask
their help. So God said in Exodus 23:20-21: "Behold, I am
sending an angel ahead of you, to guard you and bring you to
the place I have prepared. Listen to his voice, and do not
rebel against him, for my name is in Him, and he will not
forgive."
Because of their disobedience, the wicked angels were
condemned to eternal punishment. St. Peter, using poetic
language, says: "When the angels sinned, God did not spare
them, but consigned them to the pit of hell to be kept for
the judgment" (2 Peter 2:4).
As we said, the will of the devil is fixed in evil, and
so he tries to seduce people, to harm them spiritually, and
even to bring them to hell. He wants to lead us from the
faithful service of God. First Peter 5:8-9 advises: "Be calm
and watch, for your enemy the devil goes about seeking whom
he may devour. Resist him, strong in faith, knowing that
your brothers all over the world have the same trial."
God permits the devil to do this as a result of His
decision to create spiritual beings, having free will. To
thwart that regularly would be to contradict His own natural
laws. He does draw good out of evil: temptation gives us the
opportunity to show our faith and to trust in Him; it give
us the chance to grow in virtue by the struggle. And He has
given us a powerful counterforce in our Guardian Angels, and
the Blessed Mother, and ordinary Saints.
5. Nature and Origin of the Human Race
We are creatures made up of spirit and matter, body and
soul. Our spirit is the immaterial soul, which our senses
cannot feel. But our faith tells us it is there. So by way
of our soul, we have some share in the nature of the angels.
We can see that we have a spiritual soul in this way.
Each of us has a concept or idea of dog in general. Our
mental dog is not high or low, long or short, sharp-nosed or
pug-nosed. If we hired the very best artist, offered him any
sum and his choice of mediums: oil paints, carving, casting
etc., to make an image of our dog, we would get nothing. For
no material can hold this concept. So that in us which holds
it is not material, but spiritual. This is all the more
obvious in our concepts of goodness, truth, justice etc.
Our soul can exist apart from the body. It will never
die, because being spiritual, it has no parts, and so cannot
come apart. It will live forever in happiness beyond what we
can imagine, or in the reverse, eternal damnation. The Book
of Wisdom 3:1-4 says: "The souls of the just are in the hand
of God, and no torment will touch them. They seemed to die,
to the eyes of foolish people, and their departure was
considered evil... but they are in peace. Their hope is full
of immortality."
Each human soul is directly created by God Himself, it is
not produced by or derived from the parents. The parents
produce only the human body, and do even that, only with the
help of God's power. The uniting of the soul with the body
is called infusion. Modern biology knows that at the moment
of conception, when the 23 chromosomes from each parent
join, the complete genetic pattern of a unique being is
already present. So abortion is gravely sinful.
6. Original sin
God had given to our first parents three levels of
gifts:
1) basic humanity, consisting of a body and soul,
with mind and will. Each
has within it certain natural drives and needs. No
one of these is evil in
itself, but without the help of some added gift to
coordinate them, they tend
to get out of order, to rebel.
2)God gave to our first parents an added gift, which is
just such a
coordinating gift, which made it easy to keep each
drive in its place. (It is
sometimes called the gift of integrity). When Adam
and Eve sinned, the
lower flesh began to get out of line, to rebel. Hence
Adam felt the need of
cover; before the fall, he did not feel that, for the
flesh was easily docile.
God gave them also exemption from physical death,
which otherwise
would be natural to a being composed of parts, body
and soul, which can
come apart, and so die.
3) He gave them the life of grace, which made the soul
basically capable of
the vision of God in the life to come.
God clearly intended they should pass on all thee gifts
to their children, including us. But they lost all but the
basic humanity by sin. Hence they transmit to us only that
basic humanity, without the other gifts.
The new baby arrives without the grace God willed it
should have. An adult who sins mortally also lacks that
grace: hence both can be said to be in the "state of sin",
they lack the grace they should have, except that the adult
is that way by his own fault, the baby without any fault.
John Paul II explained, in a General Audience of October 1,
1986: "... it is evident that original sin in Adam's
descendants has not the character of personal guilt. It is
the privation of sanctifying grace... ." Privation means the
lack of what ought to be there. So when we speak of
transmission of original sin, it would be more accurate to
speak of non-transmission of sanctifying grace.
When we say or hear that our mind is darkened and will
weakened, we mean this only in comparison to what it might
have been. Hence John Paul II also said in a General
Audience of October 8, 1986: "According to the Church's
teaching it is a case of a relative and not an absolute
deterioration, not intrinsic to the human faculties... not
of a loss of their essential capacities even in relation to
the knowledge and love of God." In other words, original sin
took our race down only to the essential level, the first
level we described. It did not make it positively corrupt,
surely not totally corrupt as Martin Luther thought.
Many today think that the human body evolved from lower
beings. If they say that this happened without any help from
God, it is atheistic evolution. Not only theology rejects
that foolish idea, even mere reason rejects it: it supposes
that matter could lift itself up and up higher by its
shoelaces, as it were, with no outside source for the new
higher or added being that turns up each time it rises to
become a higher kind of a being.
Pius XII in Humani generis in 1950 told us we may
consider as a possible — not as something proved — that God
established some natural laws that would bring about this
evolution from lower to higher. Even so, He would need to
supply the higher being at each point where it would appear,
especially the human soul. We would call this theistic
evolution, that is evolution involving the power of God at
so many points. The scientific evidence for bodily evolution
is almost non-existent. "Research News" in Science,
November 21, 1980, reported that the majority of 160
scientists at a conference at the Field Museum in Chicago
said Darwin was wrong in supposing there had been many
intermediate forms between species, e.g., between fish and
birds. The fossils do not give one clear case of that. So
the scientists decided on "Punctuated equilibria", the
theory that a species might stay the same for millions of
years, and then suddenly by a fluke leap up into something
higher. No solid proof was reported as offered at the
meeting.
As we mentioned briefly earlier, Science News,
August 13, 1983, reported that Allan Wilson, of the
University of California, Berkeley, said his study of
specimens of mitochrondrial DNA from all over the world,
showed all existing humans come from one mother, who lived
350,000 years ago. More recent studies by many scientists
agree that there was only one mother, but lower the age to
200,000 years (cf. Newsweek, January 11, 1988).
Through the narrative of the forbidden fruit, the Sacred
author tells us that God gave our first parents some kind of
command, whether it was about a tree or something else.
Whatever it was, they violated His orders, and fell from His
favor, losing sanctifying grace. (Here we need to keep in
mind what is said in the chapter on Scripture in general on
genre, patterns of writing).
As we said, since our first parents sinned, they did not
transmit sanctifying grace to us. There is, of course, the
exception of Jesus and Mary, who were conceived with that
grace. Without it, the soul is not capable of the vision of
God in heaven.
Right after the fall, God promised to send a Redeemer.
God said to the serpent in Genesis 3:15: "I will put enmity
between you and the woman, between her descendants and
yours. He will strike at your head, you will strike at his
heel." About this text Vatican II said (LG # 55): "These
early documents [meaning chiefly Genesis 3:15, and Isaiah
7:14), as they are read in the Church, and understood in the
light of later and full revelation, gradually bring to light
the figure of the woman the Mother of the Redeemer." We
notice the careful language. The council said the Church now
sees Our Lady in this text, but only with the help of later
revelation, which gradually made it clear. It did not want
to say that the original human writer of Genesis saw all
this — we do not know if he did |