I’m fortunate in being a retired Anglican priest who spent most of my ministry as Industrial Chaplain, therefore slightly at arms length from the parochial ministry. Nowadays I conduct worship almost solely in the Methodist Church, which allows me a good deal of flexibility with regard to worship content. I also act as chaplain on cruise ships during the Christmas and Easter fortnights, so again I have (almost!) free rein with regard to content. This current discussion about creeds rings so many bells with me that I’m deafened! I’ve found a few alternatives which I use, because I can no longer say the creeds, since they no longer say what I think I believe. So for your interest, here are the ones I’ll be using next week round the Canary Islands!
This is from the United Church of Canada:
We are not alone,
we live in God’s world.
We believe in God:
who has created and is creating,
who has come in Jesus,
the Word made flesh,
to reconcile and make new,
who works in us and others
by the Spirit.
We trust in God.
We are called to be the Church:
to celebrate God’s presence,
to live with respect in Creation,
to love and serve others,
to seek justice and resist evil,
to proclaim Jesus, crucified and risen,
our judge and our hope.
In life, in death, in life beyond death,
God is with us.
We are not alone.
Thanks be to God.
I can’t remember where this one came from, but I’ve tweaked it a bit:
We believe in God,
creator of all that is,
of all that has been
and of all that ever will be,
from whom every family
in heaven and on earth is named.
We believe in the Christ of God,
the Word of God made flesh in Jesus,
who lives in our hearts by faith
and fills us with God’s love.
We believe in God’s Spirit,
who strengthens us with God’s power
and leads us in The Way
for all our days.
Lord, we believe: help us where faith falls short.
Another one from somewhere!
I trust in God, who is love,
and who has given the earth to all people.
I trust in Christ, who heals us and frees us
from all forms of oppression.
I trust in God’s Spirit, who works in us
and through all who turn towards truth.
I trust in the community of faith,
which is called to be at the service of all people.
I trust in God’s power to transform,
fulfilling the promise of a new heaven and a new earth
where justice and peace will flourish.
We commit ourselves to following Christ,
to one another as brothers and sisters,
and to the work of God in the world,
through the grace of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Lastly, one from a RC parish in France, translated:
We believe in God our Creator,
whose word upholds human life,
for God is life;
whose tenderness longs for the freedom of humanity,
for God is love.
We believe in Jesus, the Word made flesh,
who came to share our life
and to lighten our darkness.
Born among the poor, he showed us God’s love.
Freely accepting death, he destroyed death.
Rising again, he is the wellspring of life and hope.
We believe in God’s Spirit,
who brings us to birth in the life of God,
and floods us with strength and gladness
in the struggle to be faithful.
We believe in the Church, servant of all,
bringer of good news,
in whom we witness to God in the world.
We believe in eternal life.
We look for resurrection
in the hope of a new world
where all humanity will be one in union with God,
who is now, and is to come for ever.
Amen
I’ll be interested in your reactions to these. When I use them in worship in churches or on ships, I usually get favourable responses, mainly because the words are fresh and need thinking about. Which I think is what they’re for!