![o come all ye faithful o come all ye faithful](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0458/1418/6134/products/O-Come-All-Ye-Faithful_grande.gif)
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Though Christ was God, He “abhors not the Virgin’s womb” (Stanza 2). What we believe about Jesus affects our attitude towards Him.
![o come all ye faithful o come all ye faithful](https://triumphantpraise.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/O-Come-All-Ye.png)
#O come all ye faithful full#
It underlines His full divinity and inspires us to worship Him for who He is. This hymn provides a doctrinally sound and biblically accurate portrayal of Jesus Christ. It is important to recognise that what we believe about Jesus affects our attitude towards Him and the way we relate to Him. Some of the phrases in the Creed are echoed by the hymn: “God of God, light of light” and “Very God, begotten, not created” (Stanza 2). In the Creed, we find these words concerning Christ: The 318 bishops who gathered at the Council of Nicaea in AD 325 condemned Arius’ view and, to make clear the faith of the church, produced the Nicene Creed (which was further expanded later in the century). Christ, he claimed, was only the most perfect of God’s creation, but was not equal to God. Arius, an Alexandrian heretic, was spreading a dangerous view that called into question the divinity of Christ. The Creed arose as a result of false teachings about God and Christ. This creed has been embraced ever since by all major branches of the Christian church. It borrows phrases from the Nicene Creed, which was a declaration of faith by the church in the fourth century AD. This child is nothing less than the King of heaven.