The first mention of the title of the Apostles' Creed appeared in a letter written around 390 CE, but the Creed itself may date back to the late second century. Some believe that the Apostles's Creed was inspired by parts of the New Testament, including Ephesians 4:9, which would certainly rule out any involvement by the apostles (including Paul) in writing it.
There is no proof they did. It's first mention was in 390 ad.
5th century.
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825 AD
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Of course you may. Many protestant sects recite the Apostle's Creed.
No. The Apostle's Creed is what is used.
Yes
The NICENE Creed
The Apostle's Creed is a short version of the Nicene Creed. If someone asks you, "What do Catholicsbelieve in?", you could tell them the Apostle's Creed if you just want to summarize it or the Nicene Creed if you want to give them exactly what you believe in. But the Christian church's creed is the Nicene Creed.
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The Apostle's Creed
the apostle's creed
The Apostle's Creed doesn't appear within the scriptural text of any authorized version of the Bible, Old or New Testament. It is part of some versions of Catholic Bibles. Check in Wikipedia under "The Apostle's Creed". This Creed is not part of the Inspired Bible Canon.
There is no credible evidence that any Apostle wrote any particular lines of the Apostle's Creed. The creed itself is considered to have been written around 140 AD and so, although ancient, it was not written when any of the Apostles were still alive. What it most certainly does embody is the details of the faith which the Apostles believed and which Christians today still follow. In that sense it is worthy of its name.
Creed comes into English from Latin. "credo" means I believe. One of the common Christian creeds is the Apostle's creed which begins "I beleive..."