The Christian church has always had a confession or a creed. There are creeds in Scripture itself, e.g., Deuteronomy 6:4, “Hear O Israel, Yahweh our God, Yahweh is one.” This was recited in the synagogue as a confession of faith and it was recited in the apostolic-era Jewish-Christian congregations (James 2:19). 1 Timothy 3:16 has the hallmarks of a confession of faith:
Manifested in the flesh,
Vindicated by the Spirit,
Seen by angels,
Proclaimed among the nations,
Believed on in the world,
Taken up in glory.
This is a recitation of the history of our Lord’s incarnation, resurrection, ascension, and ministry in the world through the apostles, in the Holy Spirit.
Almost immediately after the apostles, the early post-Apostolic church began to speak of a “Rule of Faith” (regula fidei). We see the rule, in substance, in the epistles of Ignatius of Antioch very early in the second century. We also see it explicitly named and recited twice the work of Irenaeus in the late second century and again by Tertullian in the early third century. The Rule of Faith became what became known as the Apostles’ Creed. The Church also confessed a creed at Nicea (AD 325), which was expanded by the 1st Council of Constantinople in AD 381. In AD 451 at Chalcedon, the church again confessed the faith, and these ancient creeds were summarized by the Athanasian Creed perhaps as early as the late fifth century.
Christians were not allowed to dissent from these catholic (universal), ecumenical (universal) Christian creeds of the church.
In the Reformation, the the Protestant churches (Lutheran and Reformed) confessed their faith in a series of confessions. From the beginning of Reformation, the Reformed churches produced confessions in which the churches confessed to each other and to the watching world 1) how they understood the holy Scriptures; 2) how they understood the ecumenical creeds.
Early in the history of the Reformed churches it was expected that both ministers and people would confess, without exception, what the Reformed churches confessed. As the churches faced challenges from within, ministers were made to subscribe them, i.e., to write their names underneath the confessions as to say that the confession of the churches was their confession. The confessions were subscribed because they were biblical.
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a certain degree of distance was allowed, in some places, between what the churches confessed and what ministers and others were required to subscribe. In this system, the confessions were subscribed insofar as (quatenus) they are biblical.
In the modern period most of the debate has been over the degree to which one can push insofar as and still be regarded as a subscriber of the confession.
Table of Contents
Bibliography
- R. Scott Clark, Recovering the Reformed Confession
- David Hall, ed., The Practice of Confessional Subscription
Articles and Quotations
- Josh Christoffels, A Centered-Set Or A Confessional Church?
- J0sh Christoffels, What it Means to be Confessional
- R. Scott Clark, A Case For Confessional Subscription
- R. Scott Clark, When Subscription Isn’t
- R. Scott Clark, From “Insofar As” To “Good Faith:” The Slope To The Mainline
- R. Scott Clark, On Arminius, Confessional Subscription, and the Limits of Tolerance
- R. Scott Clark, Measuring The Health Of A Church
- R. Scott Clark, Is It “Fundamentalist” To Forbid The Teaching Of Exceptions To The Standards?
- R. Scott Clark, Even More On Bible and Confession
- R. Scott Clark, Good Guys, Bad Guys, and a Missing Category
- R. Scott Clark, Is The Confession of the Substance of Our Faith?
- R. Scott Clark, What Does It Mean To Be “Confessional” (E.g., In The PCA)?
- R. Scott Clark, The Use Of Images Is An Indicator Of The Functional Authority Of The Standards In The PCA
- R. Scott Clark, The Confession Must Not Be A Lost Language For Reformed Pastors
- R. Scott Clark, More Thoughts About The PCA: Liberal v Conservative Is The Wrong Paradigm
- W. Robert Godfrey, Subscription in the Dutch Reformed Tradition
- Charles Hodge, Hodge Vs. Reader Reception On Confessional Subscription
- Tricia Howerzyl, Peace And Purity Provided By Authority: John Thomson’s Defense Of Presbyterian Church Polity (Part 12): Confessional Subscription And Doctrinal Purity
- Matthew Lee, Exceptionalism In the PCA
- Samuel Miller, Exacting Subscription Opposed By Latitudinarians And Heretics
- David Strain, Good Faith Subscription? (pt 2)
- The Synod Of Dort Required Ministers To Subscribe The Catechism, The Confession, And The Acts Of Synod (Including The Canons) As A Standard Of Orthodoxy
- United Reformed Churches, Report on the Level of Doctrinal Commitment Necessary for Membership in URCNA Congregations (2012)
- Scheuers, Timothy R. Consciences and the Reformation: Scruples over Oaths and Confessions in the Era of Calvin and His Contemporaries. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2023.
- A Bibliography Of Confessions And Catechisms
Podcasts and Audio
- Heidelcast: On Being “Relevant” And Why The Focus On The Confessions? | June 19, 2022
- Heidelcast: Confessions, Covid-19, Chick-fil-a etc | March 21, 2020
- Heidelcast: Christ, Culture, and Confession | September 22, 2013
- Heidelcast: Planting A Confessional Church | September 15, 2013
- Heidelcast: Why The Focus On The Confessions? | 2009
- Heidelcast: Reforming Worship, Confession, and Marriage | 2009
- Heidelcast: Is Confessional Reformed Theology Antinomian?
- Heidelminicast: Q&A: On Taking Back The Mainline, Which Translation Of The Three Forms, and What About A New Reformed Confession?
- Heidelminicast: Q&A: What About Lutherans Considering The Reformed Confession?
- Presbycast | Confessional Concerns and Conflict in the PCA | June, 2021
- Saints & Sinners Unplugged | On the YRR movement, confessions, & more part 1| Sep, 2019
- Mike Abendroth/No Compromise Radio | On the Reformed Confessions | November 16, 2017
- The Daily Brew | Church History and Confessions (April 28, 2017)
- Keystone Heights Presbyterian | On Recovering the Reformed Confession (April 13, 2017)
- Covenant Radio | The Federal Vision and Recovering the Reformed Confession (2009)
- The Reformed Cast Interview (with Scott Oakland) on Recovering the Reformed Confession (November, 2010).
- With Christ the Center on Recovering the Reformed Confession (2008).
- Recovering the Reformed Confession (Ponte Vedra PCA, 2008)
- R. Scott Clark | It’s a Wonderful Life: The Joy of Being Confessional
RESOURCES
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- The Heidelblog Resource Page
- Heidelmedia Resources
- The Ecumenical Creeds
- The Reformed Confessions
- The Heidelberg Catechism
- Recovering the Reformed Confession (Phillipsburg: P&R Publishing, 2008)
- Why I Am A Christian
- What Must A Christian Believe?
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