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The Nicene Creed and Luther’s Credal Hymn

Lutheran Quarterly
Absract: Next year will be a centennial of the Council of Nicea (325), which, together with the First Council of Constantinople (381), created what we know as the Nicene Creed. This year also marks the quincentennial of Martin Luther’s credal hymn “We All Believe in One True God.” Luther used the opening line and tune of a late medieval hymn ...
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Nicene Creed 325

2011
The Nicene Creed is the first official formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity by the universal Christian congregation, which identifies itself therein as “the Catholic and Apostolic Church.” The creed was codified in 325 by the Council of Nicaea, the Church's premier ecumenical—literally, “representing the entire inhabited world”—council, composed ...
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The Nicene Creed: A Turning Point

Scottish Journal of Theology, 1983
While the other lectures at this Conference have explored the deeper theological issues raised by the Nicene Creed, the aims of this lecture are primarily historical. I should like to tell you something of the origins of the creed, and how it came to be adopted — or at least used — at the First Council of Constantinople in October 381. Theology will of
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Nicene Creed

The Nicene Creed is the first official formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity by the universal Christian congregation, which identifies itself therein as “the Catholic and Apostolic Church.” The creed was codified in 325 by the Council of Nicaea, the Church’s premier ecumenical— literally, “representing the entire inhabited world”— council ...
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The Nicene Creed: A Round Table Discussion

Evangelical Quarterly, 2018
This article explores the relation between the NT writings and the Nicene Creed by means of an imaginary round table discussion involving the authors of the NT. This teases out the origins of the different clauses of the creed. The participants also point to four weak points of the creed: (1) its downplaying of the theme of Christ dying for our sins ...
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A Catechetical Address on the Nicene Creed?

Harvard Theological Review, 2011
The anonymous “Incipit fides Nicaena” is a unique, though much ignored, Latin text from the later fourth century. Its only critical edition, from a sole ninth century codex, was first prepared in 1913 by Cuthbert H. Turner, under the title of Commentarius in Symbolum Nicaeanum.1 Turner's version was reprinted in the first volume of the Patrologiae ...
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