Liturgia Sacra, 2024, R. 30, nr 1 (63)
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Pozycja Mszalne Wyznanie wiary: Credo. Jego geneza i wymowa teologicznaŻądło, Andrzej (Redakcja Wydawnictw Wydziału Teologicznego Uniwersytetu Opolskiego, 2024)For centuries, the Church has known the phrase lex orandi, lex credendi (the law of prayer is the law of faith). This phrase encapsulates the issue of the mutual and bidirectional dependence between liturgy and faith. Liturgy serves as the source for the faith that is studied and explained by theology. Simultaneously, the norms of faith, continuously examined and studied, influence the shape of the liturgy and our participation in it. The Church indeed prays as it believes, but it also believes as it prays. It is important that this dependence is experienced by the faithful during the liturgy and affirmed in their daily lives after the liturgy. This will happen if the contents of the faith are appropriately internalized by us, the participants in the liturgy, and translated into the language of life. This is what we should be mindful of when we recite or sing the Creed during Mass–originally formulated at Nicaea in 325, and later modified in Constantinople in 381. We recite it every Sunday, on solemnities, and other significant occasions to keep the fundamental truths of our faith in the Triune God, in the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church, as well as in the forgiveness of sins and eternal life, fresh in our minds. Through the weekly, and sometimes more frequent, recitation of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed during Mass, we feel increasingly anchored in the mysteries we believe in and more at peace when confronting the adversities and errors that assail us in various circumstances of life. It is worth reflecting on this as we approach the celebration of the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea in 2025. This council, in a time of threat from the then-spreading heresy of Arianism, provided the Church with a tool to defend the faith, which had been planted and sown in the soil of human hearts by the Apostles.