Athanasian Creed Section One – Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity

Encore Post: Saint Athanasius was bishop and patriarch of Alexandria, Egypt (under Roman control) from 328-373 AD.  He attended the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD as secretary to his predecessor, Alexander.  Athanasius was ordained as bishop and patriarch after Alexander’s death.  In his 48 years presiding over the region, he was exiled five times, by four different Roman emperors, for a total of 17 years, over theological controversies in North Africa.

Each of the three sections of the creed begins with similar language.   The Nicene and Apostles’ Creeds start with “I believe…” But, the Athanasian Creed takes a different approach.   Rather than solely confessing together with one voice.   Here, we also exhort one another, “Whoever desires to be saved must, above all, hold the catholic faith.”  Then, in each section, we confess the catholic faith.

We Lutherans need not fear the word “catholic.”  The term catholic does not refer to the modern Roman Catholic Church, but rather to the universal, invisible, orthodox, faithful church of Christ on earth.   We retain the use of the term “catholic” in the Athanasian Creed in opposition to the papal church of Rome.   “Catholic” simply means “universal,” and as such, we boldly confess it from our Lutheran identity.

The first section addresses the unity of our Triune God.  He is uncreated, infinite, and eternal, “not three Gods, but one God.”  This language rejects Subordinationism, that the Son and the Spirit are less God than that Father is God.  Rather, God is of one substance.  Subordinationism was in part an over correction for the error of modalism.  Subordinationists were seeking to clarify the distinctness of person within the Trinity.  Their over correction created a theological position that hedged upon tritheism.  In an attempt to protect our understanding from merging God into just one thing of only one sort, they created an understanding where God can easily be three things of three sorts.  And these three, loosely connected God characters, have a hierarchy within their pantheon.  This is an error.

The modalist error is also addressed by the second section of the Creed.  This serves to remind us that the opposite of an error isn’t always a truth.  Sometimes the opposite of an error can simply be an error, in the opposite direction.

“But the Godhead of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit is one: the glory equal, the majesty coeternal.”  The God-ness of the Trinity is whole and one.  The attributes of God in His unity are shared and are one: uncreated, infinite, eternal, and almighty.  But, these are not a dozen attributes, four of each, unique to each person.  There are four attributes that each person possesses as one.  There are not three gods, but one God.  There are not three lords, but one Lord.  There are not three eternals, but one Eternal.  We worship one God in Trinity and Trinity in Unity. 

Don’t let yourself be dismayed or discouraged by these complicated understandings. They were intense struggles for the early church and remain intellectual difficulties for us today. The big takeaway from the Athanasian Creed is that we can never fully understand the Trinity. We can, with the help of the fathers of the faith before us, identify those things that are outside the proper understanding.

Dear Baptized, let us celebrate the Trinity in Unity and the Unity in Trinity!         

            Thanks be to God!

Read section two of the Athanasian Creed next.

Rev. Jason M. Kaspar
Sole Pastor
Mt. Calvary Lutheran Church & Preschool
La Grange, TX
and
Mission planting pastoral team:
Epiphany Lutheran Church
Bastrop, TX

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