DAVEH:
> If a creed compromises perceptions of truth,
> then couldn't it be a stepping stone on the path
> to doctrinal error?

It could be if the creed was accepted word for word in the same way that 
Scripture is accepted.  If we tentatively embrace it, however, and our goal 
is truth and not validation of the creed, then it hopefully is simply 
helpful in the process of getting to truth.

DAVEH:
> Isn't the Nicene Creed the glue that holds Protestantism
> together?  Once one departs that path, do they not achieve
> cult status?

No, not exactly.  The Nicene Creed is embraced also by Roman Catholicism and 
the Eastern Orthodox Churches.  Therefore, this creed does not identify 
Protestantism at all.

Part of the problem Protestants had with the Roman Catholic Church during 
the Reformation was their reliance upon creeds and teachings of the church 
fathers above that of the Scriptures.  This is the crux of what caused 
Protestants to rebel against Roman Catholicism.

Now there are large segments of Protestantism that really are simply 
separate institutions that look like miniature Roman Catholic Churches. 
They sometimes have their own "pope" so to speak (Episcopalians, Anglicans, 
etc.), and they consider any departure from embraced creeds to be a 
departure from orthodoxy and Christ.  This idea that departing from creeds 
is indicative of error is the identical view that Roman Catholics had toward 
Protestants like Martin Luther.

Protestants from the Reformed tradition would be examples of those 
Protestants who place a lot of importance upon creeds.  For example, the 
Westminster Confession would be an example of a creed that establishes 
Protestantism, and those who depart from it would be considered by Reformed 
Protestants to be going down the path to cult status.  This was the primary 
objection to James Arminius when he presented his perspective on 
predestination.  Many accused him of departing from the Westminster 
Confession of Faith, and therefore, he was supposedly departing from 
orthodoxy.  At this time, his views were considered such by his opponents, 
but the legacy he left makes it clear that he was not departing from the 
faith at all.

Peace be with you.
David Miller. 


----------
"Let your speech be always with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know 
how you ought to answer every man."  (Colossians 4:6) http://www.InnGlory.org

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