913I. RECENT CONFESSIONAL DECLARATIONS.
During the last fifty years a strong impulse has been manifested within parts of
Protestant Christendom to formulate new creeds or so to modify the creeds of the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as to give adequate recognition to the love
and fatherhood of God and the duty to carry on Christian missions, to restate
such doctrines as the divine predestination, to properly emphasize the duties of
human brotherhood, and also to erase polemic statements directed against
Christian bodies. The impulse has been the product of modern studies of the New
Testament and a reconsideration of the biblical system of doctrine, of historic
research, and above all of an irenic spirit which has to a large extent
displaced the habit of controversy and polemics among Christians on the matters
that have divided them. The Eastern Orthodox Churches are pledged to a strict
adherence to the Nicene Creed and ecclesiastical tradition as fixed by the seven
councils which they accept as œcumenical: the Roman Church to the primitive
creeds, tradition, and also the papal declarations so far as they bear on faith
and morals. On the other hand, it is quite consistent with Protestant principles
and the XXXIX Articles, the Westminster Confession, XXXI, 4, and other formulas
of the sixteenth century for Protestants to modify and revise their creeds, if
found necessary in the interest of truth and Christian fellowship and
co-operation in the effort to spread the Gospel.
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