In the Fall of 1993, WKU President Thomas C. Meredith appointed a committee of faculty, staff and students to develop a statement of values--a creed--for Western Kentucky University. Dean Howard Bailey, Mr. Joseph Boggs, Ms. Kathy Kanz, Ms. Patricia Lockett, Dr. John Long, Dr. Jim Wayne Miller (Poet Laureate fo the Commonwealth of Kentucky) Dr. David W. Parrott, and Ms. Holland Saltzman worked for several months to create a rough draft of the creed statement. The draft was presented to a number of student focus groups and refined to its final form.
yes it was
Matt Larsen
I may not be right, the ubisoft crew wrote it
The song "Live Your Creed" was written by Don Black.
Pierre de Coubertin
Rich Mullins and Beaker.
E.M. Tiffany wrote the FFA Creed. The FFA Creed was adopted at the 3rd National Convention of the FFA, and it was revised at the 38th Convention an the 63rd Convention.wrote the ffa creed
Mary Church Terrel
66 years old
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.
I assume you mean the Nicene Creed, it was not written by one person, but was a basic statements of beliefs that were agreed upon by the first council of Nicaea which involved a number of bishops which was convened by Emperor Constantine I in 325 AD
Exactly who wrote the creed is unknown. Many believe it was written by the 12 apostles themselves, but this is probably not true. The original creed developed from simpler texts and was perhaps merged with some phrases from the Bible itself. It underwent many alterations and versions by various authors before today's was settled on. The earliest copy of the modern creed is from between 710 and 714 BCE, in France (during Charlemagne's rule) and it is held that this version dates from around the latter 5th century, but no earlier.