The Apostles' Creed?

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_Nomomo
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The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _Nomomo »

I would be among the last to defend Trump for anything. But, seriously who gives a flying “F” about The Apostles' Creed? It's total BS to include and expect people to repeat such idiotic nonsense at a funeral anyway. No matter how much I might respect someone, I certainly would not feel obligated to recite the fairy tale nonsense of the Apostles' Creed at their funeral.
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_Jersey Girl
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _Jersey Girl »

Nomomo wrote:I would be among the last to defend Trump for anything. But, seriously who gives a flying “F” about The Apostles' Creed? It's total BS to include and expect people to repeat such idiotic nonsense at a funeral anyway. No matter how much I might respect someone, I certainly would not feel obligated to recite the fairy tale nonsense of the Apostles' Creed at their funeral.



I don't know why I didn't know he was expected to do that. I don't see how it matters either.

Not for the same reasons as you. I just don't know why that matters.
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_Nomomo
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _Nomomo »

Trump didn’t say the Apostles' Creed at Bush’s funeral. As a liberal evangelical, I say good for him.
December 06, 2018

At the funeral of former president George H.W. Bush, President Trump and first lady Melania Trump did not read the Apostles’ Creed along with the congregation. Cameras rolled; public criticism and mockery erupted.

Bad reaction, in my opinion.

I am an evangelical Christian and a liberal Democrat (yes, we exist). I am also a “recorded minister,” as we call them, in the Religious Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers. I spent some years as a professor of religious studies and the history of Christianity.

From those vantage points, I wish to defend the president and his spouse. (Those are words I thought I’d never write.)

The Apostles' Creed is not just a prayer one can or should recite out of courtesy for the sake of show, good manners or good taste.

The Creed — or any Christian creed — is a statement of belief and a public commitment to very specific, carefully enumerated theological doctrines. It is not a bland, generic greeting-card prayer addressing an impersonal creator, a “force,” “the universe” or “the spirit of goodness” that could conceivably be uttered by anybody of any religious perspective or none at all.

I admit entirely that the Trump's' abstention could well have been motivated by cluelessness, inattention, bad taste, bad manners, unfamiliarity, distraction or any number of other things. But the bottom line is that they abstained from reciting aloud, in public, a personal commitment to the truth of very specific, classic, ancient Christian doctrines.

The president participated in a public ceremony in his capacity as head of state, not as a Presbyterian (which is how he has identified himself). As such, he has no obligation to declare those theological truths, or any others, aloud in public. In fact, I’d suggest, he has an obligation not to do so if he disagrees with any of them, or all of them, or doesn’t especially care, or isn’t sure, or doesn’t understand — or just thinks the president should be theologically neutral in public.

Sincere abstention is more meaningful than insincere participation.

Americans should not judge this president (or any president) for the theological doctrines he is willing or unwilling to profess in a public liturgy — provided he does not publicly profess doctrines that put him in conflict with his constitutional obligations or the legal rights of other Americans.

The Constitution makes it clear that public officials are not to be subject to religious tests. While that applies legally only to the government imposing such tests, I suggest the public and the Fourth Estate should hew to the same standard.

Had a Jewish or Hindu president done the same thing at the Bush service, would the public have criticized him or her the same way? I object to public officials being judged on what they say or don’t say at religious services — in particular statements of faith or prayers.

Surely, criticize him for prejudice against certain religions. Criticize him for packing his Cabinet with only a narrow demographic and religious range of officers, or for coddling religious extremists, or for denigrating religions of which he is not a member. But not for keeping silent during recitation of a creed.

Further, in Christian history there is a minority streak of objection to the public profession of creeds, even when one agrees wholly with their contents. My own religious tradition, the Quakers, is but one example. Quakers, in fact, were excluded from universities in Britain until the early 19th century because of their refusal to submit to any creedal test, even though they would have agreed entirely with the contents of the Apostles’ or Nicene Creeds (though not the Thirty-Nine Articles, the standard definition of Anglican doctrine). Baptists also had a long tradition of refusing creeds. It’s complicated, but in a nutshell they wanted worship to be less scripted, or they wanted more doctrinal freedom.

The Stone-Campbell tradition (Disciples of Christ, Churches of Christ, etc.) had a motto: “No creed but Christ, no book but the Bible.” They refused, and mostly still refuse, to recite creeds. I agree with nearly every word in those creeds but would never recite them in public because I am a Quaker, and we have theological and ethical reasons for not doing so. Even at the funeral of a president.

There are mountains of offenses for which the current president deserves resounding criticism. On this point, however, the criticism is religiously tone deaf and blurs the boundaries between church and state. Even if the Trump's abstained from reading the Apostles' Creed because they are moronic or rude rather than religiously principled, I believe the public and press need to leave them to their foolishness, bad manners or their principle on this point.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2018/12/06/trump-didnt-say-apostles-creed-bushs-funeral-liberal-evangelical-i-say-good-him/
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_subgenius
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _subgenius »

It just further illustrates what certain media members were focused on...such shallow observations during that type of event are par for the course with an otherwise immature amd commoditized media.
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_Jersey Girl
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _Jersey Girl »

Nomomo wrote:
Trump didn’t say the Apostles' Creed at Bush’s funeral. As a liberal evangelical, I say good for him.
December 06, 2018

At the funeral of former president George H.W. Bush, President Trump and first lady Melania Trump did not read the Apostles’ Creed along with the congregation. Cameras rolled; public criticism and mockery erupted.

Bad reaction, in my opinion.

I am an evangelical Christian and a liberal Democrat (yes, we exist). I am also a “recorded minister,” as we call them, in the Religious Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers. I spent some years as a professor of religious studies and the history of Christianity.

From those vantage points, I wish to defend the president and his spouse. (Those are words I thought I’d never write.)

The Apostles' Creed is not just a prayer one can or should recite out of courtesy for the sake of show, good manners or good taste.

The Creed — or any Christian creed — is a statement of belief and a public commitment to very specific, carefully enumerated theological doctrines. It is not a bland, generic greeting-card prayer addressing an impersonal creator, a “force,” “the universe” or “the spirit of goodness” that could conceivably be uttered by anybody of any religious perspective or none at all.

I admit entirely that the Trump's' abstention could well have been motivated by cluelessness, inattention, bad taste, bad manners, unfamiliarity, distraction or any number of other things. But the bottom line is that they abstained from reciting aloud, in public, a personal commitment to the truth of very specific, classic, ancient Christian doctrines.

The president participated in a public ceremony in his capacity as head of state, not as a Presbyterian (which is how he has identified himself). As such, he has no obligation to declare those theological truths, or any others, aloud in public. In fact, I’d suggest, he has an obligation not to do so if he disagrees with any of them, or all of them, or doesn’t especially care, or isn’t sure, or doesn’t understand — or just thinks the president should be theologically neutral in public.

Sincere abstention is more meaningful than insincere participation.

Americans should not judge this president (or any president) for the theological doctrines he is willing or unwilling to profess in a public liturgy — provided he does not publicly profess doctrines that put him in conflict with his constitutional obligations or the legal rights of other Americans.

The Constitution makes it clear that public officials are not to be subject to religious tests. While that applies legally only to the government imposing such tests, I suggest the public and the Fourth Estate should hew to the same standard.

Had a Jewish or Hindu president done the same thing at the Bush service, would the public have criticized him or her the same way? I object to public officials being judged on what they say or don’t say at religious services — in particular statements of faith or prayers.

Surely, criticize him for prejudice against certain religions. Criticize him for packing his Cabinet with only a narrow demographic and religious range of officers, or for coddling religious extremists, or for denigrating religions of which he is not a member. But not for keeping silent during recitation of a creed.

Further, in Christian history there is a minority streak of objection to the public profession of creeds, even when one agrees wholly with their contents. My own religious tradition, the Quakers, is but one example. Quakers, in fact, were excluded from universities in Britain until the early 19th century because of their refusal to submit to any creedal test, even though they would have agreed entirely with the contents of the Apostles’ or Nicene Creeds (though not the Thirty-Nine Articles, the standard definition of Anglican doctrine). Baptists also had a long tradition of refusing creeds. It’s complicated, but in a nutshell they wanted worship to be less scripted, or they wanted more doctrinal freedom.

The Stone-Campbell tradition (Disciples of Christ, Churches of Christ, etc.) had a motto: “No creed but Christ, no book but the Bible.” They refused, and mostly still refuse, to recite creeds. I agree with nearly every word in those creeds but would never recite them in public because I am a Quaker, and we have theological and ethical reasons for not doing so. Even at the funeral of a president.

There are mountains of offenses for which the current president deserves resounding criticism. On this point, however, the criticism is religiously tone deaf and blurs the boundaries between church and state. Even if the Trump's abstained from reading the Apostles' Creed because they are moronic or rude rather than religiously principled, I believe the public and press need to leave them to their foolishness, bad manners or their principle on this point.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2018/12/06/trump-didnt-say-apostles-creed-bushs-funeral-liberal-evangelical-i-say-good-him/


Okay, I see what happened now. I came across it online but didn't really read anything about it.

I haven't seen that part of the funeral. I don't know which version they used.

But, just for the record, I don't say it either. Not when it's part of a Catholic service and I've been to plenty.

It's nobody's damn business what he does or doesn't do with his faith, his lack of faith, what he says or doesn't say in church.
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_Jersey Girl
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _Jersey Girl »

And another thing. (See? I'm not done yet). The only thing controversial about this is that some news outlets or whatthehellever is stirring up controversy over a funeral service.

How low does it get. It's no less classless than most folks thing Trump is.
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_MeDotOrg
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _MeDotOrg »

Nomomo wrote:I would be among the last to defend Trump for anything. But, seriously who gives a flying “F” about The Apostles' Creed? It's total BS to include and expect people to repeat such idiotic nonsense at a funeral anyway. No matter how much I might respect someone, I certainly would not feel obligated to recite the fairy tale nonsense of the Apostles' Creed at their funeral.


Donald Trump has the right to say or not say the Apostles' Creed. Possible explanations:

a. After careful consideration, the President decided that he was not in agreement with all aspects of the creed. Because of his high personal standards of integrity, as well as respect and consideration for the traditions of the Church, he felt that he could not betray his highest moral conscience, and therefore painfully but stoically declined to take part in the Creed's recitation.

b. Even though he went to those oldest Presbyterian Church in the United States, he couldn't be bothered to learn his own creed.

c. He thought the Apostles' Creed was a part of the latest film in the Rocky Franchise, Creed II.
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_moksha
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _moksha »

Would Trump's religious supporters even care if he flipped off the Apostles Creed? Don't they really care more about his political agenda?
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_huckelberry
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _huckelberry »

I can understand the right a person has to decline to recite the Apostles Creed because they do not believe it . I can understand that a president like other Americans is under no legal obligation to believe the statements in the Apostles Creed.

Trump being generally of the antichrist persuasion naturally found the creed irrelevant.
_Chap
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Re: The Apostles' Creed?

Post by _Chap »

Two points:

(a) Trump has a perfect right not to take part in part of any religious observance he may attend, so long as he conducts himself in a respectful manner.

(b) Having said that, I doubt very much whether he could recite the Apostle's Creed without a script in front of him, even if he wanted to. In fact, given his sheer dumb ignorance, I doubt whether he could even recite the Lord's Prayer if his life depended on it.
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