Some thoughts for you this morning, Sorry, but I see the church as "We", not "I", so that is how you'll hear it from me. (I can give you an earful on the "We", if you ask.)
“We believe in God.” So states the creed. I am occasionally asked if I believe in God. My usual answer is no. I go on to explain. Why would I start by saying “no?” I begin with a “no” as if to say, “God? You mean like a supernatural Santa Claus in the sky? Or a great big humungous deity to be feared who requires sacrifice and blood and all that stuff? Or like the gods who dwell on Olympus with their tempers and lusts and that sort of thing? No, gave up believing in them a long time ago.” And I have. If you are a follower of Jesus, so have you.
However, if by God you mean something else, something completely ‘Other’ then yes, I do believe.
The Creed likewise does not begin “
We believe that God…exists.” Our faith is not in our theology, nor is it in propositions about God. Our faith is “in” God. That is, as I explained in an earlier post, we trust our God. Who is this God we trust? This is the question the Creed answers. We are not those who need ever spend any time making apologies for the trust we have placed in God. The three opening words of the Creed (in English) are a confession of the character of our God.
“We believe in, we trust in.”
Who is this God we trust? The Creed does a strange thing. It begins by saying
“We believe in one God, Abba, Pantokrator, Creator of heaven and earth.” It does not stop there though. It continues
“And in Jesus Christ”, “And in the Holy Spirit.” The noun God is being given redefinition, or as I said in an earlier post, the noun God, for the Christian, creates a math problem.
The Creed does not begin with “We believe that God is…(fill in the blank)” where we fill in the blank space with a cascading catena of nouns and adjectives (holy, just, righteous, eternal, etc). Rather, the Creed begins by describing for us the extraordinary character of the source of all life. The first thing it affirms about God is three-fold; there will be more, but the first three characterizations give a starting point that blows out of the water our misconceptions. These are: parenting skills, infinite possibilities and creativity.
“We believe in one God, the Abba…” Our God is first characterized by Jesus’ favorite way of speaking of God. God is a nurturing parental presence. This God does not treat children abusively giving stones instead of daily bread, or poisonous creatures or calamitous events instead of nourishment. This God is a parent who loves children deeply as a healthy parent loves their children. To this God we are of infinite worth (if God loves the little sparrows, how much more does God love us!). To this God we are beloved, cared for (your heavenly Abba knows your needs before you even ask) and precious. We are royal children (“It has pleased the Abba to reign over you, with you, under you and in you”

. Our God is our Abba and we are the children of God’s reign.
“We believe in one God the Abba Almighty…” Our Abba has no competition from ‘other gods.’ Nor does our Abba have a dark side. There is nothing in the Creed (or in Jesus’ view of God) that God is Janus-faced or has a ‘shadow of turning.’ The Greek term used in the Creed is ‘pantokrator’ which is a pretty powerful designation meaning something like the one who holds all authority. A pantokrator’s decisions are final. No one can match their power. When they say something is a certain way, it is that way, period. So the one we call Abba, who has (in Jesus and by the Spirit) made us royal children and has authorized us to be so (John 1:13), has not changed her/his mind about us. If, in many patriarchal homes, the father has the last word, and that last word is usually spoken with a fist hammered on a table to give it authority, and often that last word is a threat, in the case of our Abba, this is not so. The authority of our God is a nurturing authority; God has all power to say to the universe, “These are my children, my beloved children, whom I love.”
In Latin, the word “omnipotentem” has transliterated and from which we derive that crazy theological word ‘omnipotent’ by which we usually mean “all-powerful.” We hear this word “all-powerful” and think of a king in the sky who can do anything he pleases just because he is king. If we import this kind of human metaphor into the word ‘omnipotentem’ we are not allowing the character of the Abba to redefine it for us. Our Abba is not like earthly rulers, who lord it over others. We know this because we see Jesus as a servant of all. Our Abba is ‘omnipotentem’ in a beautiful way. Omni = all and potens = power or potential. Our Abba is the one of all potential, of endless possibility.
With our Abba, all things are possible. When we look at the universe we speak of ‘natural law’ and assume that somehow things are fixed or permanently set. Did you know that measurements of the speed of light fluctuate? The one supposed great constant in the universe of physics changes! Imagine that. Can you imagine a physical universe that is open to infinite possibilities and that is not static? Quantum physicists can and do! Our Abba is a God of incredible possibilities. But there is more.
“We believe in one God, Abba, Almighty, Creator of all that is.” Our Abba is not just full of infinite possibility, but of creative infinite possibility. Our Abba is not just an arbitrary deity who can do anything he/she wants because after all, he/she is God. No, our Abba is a God whose possibilities are creative or life oriented. Creation is alive, full of life, robustly manifesting life. Our Abba is a life-giver. Our Abba calls light out of chaos, out of darkness. Our Abba brings life to the grave. Our Abba transforms the decaying, dying cosmos into new creation all the time. Our Abba is full of life-giving possibility.
We believe in a God who is about life, not death, about restoring joy and honor, not about bringing misery and denigration. The very first thing we say about God is a good thing, it
reflects Jesus’ view of God and it reflects the view of the God of ‘evangel’ of Gospel. Our Abba is beautiful.