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Signs of the Apostasy
Early
Signs of the Apostasy
By Kent
P. Jackson
The New Testament both
prophesies and documents the first-century apostasy
Kent P.
Jackson, “Early Signs of the Apostasy,” Ensign, Dec. 1984, 8
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has proclaimed to the
world consistently since its beginning that there was an apostasy of the
church founded by Jesus during his Palestinian ministry and led by his
Apostles following his ascension.
1 This is a fundamental belief of the Latter-day Saints. If there
had not been an apostasy, there would have been no need for a
restoration.
Latter-day Saint theology asserts that the
church of the Savior and his Apostles in the Old World came to an end
within a century after its formation.
2 The doctrines which its inspired leaders taught were corrupted and
changed by others not of similar inspiration, the authority to act in
God’s name was taken from the earth, and none of the Christian systems
that existed after those developments, though they did some good things,
enjoyed divine endorsement as the Lord’s own church. (JS—H
1:19; D&C
1:30.)
Possibly the best single witness of the
apostasy of New Testament Christianity is the New Testament itself. The
New Testament writers prophesied that apostasy would take place in the
Church and that the Church in fact would be overcome by it. Just as
significantly, the New Testament actually records apostasy happening as
the book was being written. As time progressed, the heresies against
which the Apostles contended became increasingly virulent and
increasingly successful, as the record attests. Near the end of the
first century, the apostolic record came to a sudden close.
In this article, we will first look at
prophecies of the apostasy, then at the actual New Testament chronicle
of the apostasy itself.
Prophecies about
Apostasy
The New Testament contains several
statements made by Jesus and his Apostles about the future of their
work. Though the Apostles labored with great zeal to bring souls to the
Lord and establish the Church throughout the world, still their
prophetic utterances concerning the end result of their efforts foretold
tragedy. In short, they knew that the Church would fall into apostasy
shortly after their time, and they bore candid testimony of that fact,
as the following passages demonstrate.
In Matthew 24, Jesus prophesied of events
that would transpire in the near and distant future. Matthew 24:9–11
[Matt.
24:9–11] records a prophecy of great importance
concerning the future of the Church (and the Joseph Smith—Matthew
rendering of this passage places it clearly in the context of the latter
days of the early Church).
3
“Then shall they deliver you up to be
afflicted, and shall kill you: and ye shall be hated of all nations for
my name’s sake.
“And then shall many be offended, and
shall betray one another, and shall hate one another.
“And many false prophets shall rise, and
shall deceive many.”
Here we learn that the Apostles would be
afflicted, hated, and put to death for Christ’s sake. Yet the killing
of the Apostles was not the cause of the apostasy. Other references
clearly teach that Christianity died from an internal wound, the
rejection of true doctrine by the members of the Church. Still, the
death of those who alone held the authority to lead the Church could
only mean the death of the Church itself.
Verse 10 provides a valuable prophecy of
the rejection of truth by the Saints: “then shall many be offended.”
The Greek verb skandalízô in the passive voice, translated offended
in the King James Version, more accurately means, in a theological
sense, “to give up one’s faith” or “fall into sin.”
“Many,” the Savior foretells, will do it at that day.
Verse 11 records an additional
prophecy—that many false prophets would arise and would “deceive many”
(italics added). Recall that the historical context here is the last
days of the apostolic era, when the Apostles would be afflicted, hated,
and killed. Taking their places in the minds of many would be what the
Savior calls “many false prophets.”
4
To the elders of Ephesus, Paul made this
prophecy:
“For I know this, that after my departing
shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock.
“Also of your own selves shall men
arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.
“Therefore watch, and remember, that by
the space of three years I ceased not to warn every one night and day
with tears.” (Acts
20:29–31; italics added.)
With the wolf metaphor, Paul was probably
not describing physical attack or external persecution as much as he was
foreseeing the rise of evil forces within the church and their
gaining power over the Saints.
In the second Thessalonian letter, Paul
taught that the day of Christ’s coming would not take place until the
“falling away” and the revelation of the “man of sin,” “the
son of perdition.” (2
Thes. 2:3.)
The term “falling away” may give the
incorrect impression of a process of drifting or gradually losing
ground. The original Greek term, apostasía (from which we have
the English word “apostasy”), means something much more drastic.
Ancient sources use the term to describe political rebellion and
revolution.
5 In verses 3 and 4, Paul asserted that the rebellion would supplant
God from his position in the Church. The chief feature of this time of
rebellion would be the triumph of the “man of sin … who opposeth and
exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so
that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is
God.” (2
Thes. 2:3–4.)
6
The “man of sin,” generally equated
with Satan,
7 would exalt himself over all that is divine and assume the place
of God in the Church. Of historical and theological significance is the
fact that in Paul’s prophecy the church structure survives. But God is
not at its head, making that church—following the appearance in it of
Satan—no longer the church of God.
To say that Satan sits in the place of God
in Christianity after the time of the Apostles is not to say that all
that is in it is satanic. Indeed, Latter-day Saints should rejoice—as
the heavens undoubtedly do—at the great works of righteousness and
faith, and the leavening influence on the world, of those whose lives
are touched in any degree by Him whose gospel the Saints enjoy in its
fulness. Still, “the power of God unto salvation” (Rom.
1:16) is absent from all but the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, which the Lord himself has proclaimed to be “the
only true and living church upon the face of the whole earth” (D&C
1:30). Satan’s goal of hindering many of God’s children
from returning to their Father’s glory is thus realized. How
appropriate, therefore, is Paul’s description of him sitting in the
place of God in the church of the apostasía.
In Paul’s first letter to Timothy, he
prophesied concerning the departure of some of the Saints from the
faith:
“Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that
in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to
seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils.” (1
Tim. 4:1.)
8
A few decades after Paul foretold the
departure of some from the faith in the “latter times,” Jude wrote
of “certain men [who had] crept in unawares” (Jude
1:4), reminding readers that the Apostles had warned earlier
that “there should be mockers in the last time who should walk
after their own ungodly lusts.” (Jude
1:17–19.) Similarly, John expressed to the readers of his
first letter the certainty of the fact that they themselves were in
“the last time” (eschátê hôra—see 1
Jn. 2:18–19). Clearly John and Jude knew that they were not
in the final era of the world, but their words reveal the fact that they
knew that they were in the final day of the Christian church, when the
night of apostasy was beginning.
9 While many of the signs of apostasy they spoke of apply readily to
the “latter days” preceding the second coming of Jesus Christ, it
appears that their primary focus was on the apostasy in process in the
first century A.D.
As we have seen in other prophecies
examined so far, the departure from the faith would be a defection from
true principles of doctrine. What Paul saw was not an abandonment of
religion but a shifting of loyalties from the true faith to a false
faith.
Paul’s final prophecy of the abandonment
of true religion is found in the last chapter of 2 Timothy, where he
talks about men replacing “sound doctrine” with “fables.” Again,
Paul saw a willful rejection of true doctrine and its replacement by
doctrines that were untrue but more to the liking of the hearers. Notice
that the people involved, although unwilling to put up with correct
teachings, desired teachings nonetheless. Having “itching ears”—a
desire to hear religion—they would acquire teachers whose doctrines
were acceptable to them. [2
Tim. 2:3–4]
Paul was not alone among the Apostles in
prophesying doom for early Christianity. In 2 Peter, the chief Apostle
foretold the introduction of false teachers into the Church:
“But there were false prophets also among
the people [of old], even as there shall be false teachers among you,
who privily [i.e., secretly] shall bring in damnable heresies, even
denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift
destruction.
“And many shall follow their pernicious
ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of.” (2
Pet. 2:1–2.)
In Revelation 13 we read John’s vision of
the victory of the forces of Satan over the Saints of the Lord. In his
vision, John saw the appearance of a beast, which was an agent of the
devil. “And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and
to overcome them: and power was given him over all kindreds, and
tongues, and nations.” (Rev.
13:7, italics added.)
The Prophet Joseph Smith said that this
beast was “in the likeness of the kingdoms of the earth.” (JST, Rev.
13:1.) Kingdom, in a scriptural context, can mean any kind
of institution, movement, force, or power—religious, political, or
otherwise. In viewing John’s beast in the light of its context in
Revelation 13 and other prophetic statements concerning the fall of the
Church, we can identify it as the institutions or forces that prevailed
over (or, more accurately, corrupted) true Christianity, leaving an
apostate Christianity in its place.
Evidence of Early
Apostasy in the New Testament
The foregoing passages demonstrate that
Jesus and his Apostles knew that the Church which they headed would come
to an end shortly after their generation. But perhaps even more striking
than the prophecies of apostasy is the evidence of apostasy actually
taking place as the New Testament was being written. In the writings of
the Apostles we have ample evidence that as the Christian church grew so
also did the cancerous elements within it that finally led to its death.
The New Testament not only foretold the death of the Church, but it also
recorded it as it happened. In fact, the end of the New Testament
essentially heralds the end of the Church.
In order to demonstrate that fact, let us
examine in chronological order several issues from the New Testament
epistles. It will become apparent that as the first century progressed,
the doctrinal and behavioral problems against which the Apostles
struggled became increasingly severe. In the earliest letters, written
midway through the first century, the Apostles had to contend with
relatively harmless issues of doctrinal misunderstanding. But by the
time the last letters were written at the end of the century, the
heresies were so malignant that the Apostles could no longer hold back
the tide of apostasy.
1 and 2 Thessalonians (ca. A.D.
50–51)
In the Thessalonian letters, the doctrinal
problems to which Paul had to address himself were corrected fairly
easily. In both letters, misunderstandings concerning Jesus’ second
coming are evident. In 1 Thessalonians, the problem was the belief that
those who were alive when the second coming took place would have an
advantage over those who had died previously. (See 1
Thes. 4:13–17.) In the second letter, Paul refuted the idea
that the “day of Christ” was “at hand” (2
Thes. 2:2) by prophesying of the apostasy that would precede
that day (see 2
Thes. 2:3–4).
We can assume that a belief such as that
which Paul countered in 2 Thessalonians could have grave implications
for the Church. Without examining the hypothetical possibilities, we
could conclude that without Paul’s corrective letter the Thessalonian
Saints may have developed greater problems. The Church was fortunate
that Paul, by virtue of his apostolic priesthood authority and divinely
endowed spiritual gifts, could speak the Lord’s word to ensure the
integrity of the Church. One might ask, what happens to the Church when
such men are no longer in it?
In the letter of James, it is clear that
the Apostle was contending against incorrect ideas concerning the nature
of faith in relation to Christian works. His corrective words include
“For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is
dead also.” (James
2:26.) An underemphasis of the works of the gospel is perhaps
not the kind of problem that would bring all of Christianity to ruin,
and James gave us no hint that he expected wholesale apostasy because of
it. Yet those who were guilty of disregarding the importance of works
had a “dead” religion, to use James’s word, and a “dead”
religion certainly has no power to save. Perhaps without James’s
letter more serious problems could have developed.
1 Corinthians (ca. A.D.
56)
If 1 Corinthians is a realistic indicator,
the church at Corinth developed serious problems in doctrine and
behavior not long after it was founded. In chapters 1 to 4
[1
Cor. 1–4], for example, Paul wrote concerning
factions or divisions that had developed in the Corinthian church around
various authorities. The mere thought that some may have been focusing
their allegiance on him rather than on Christ was so offensive to Paul
that he considered himself fortunate that he had not baptized more of
them into the Church, “lest any should say that I had baptized in my
own name.” (See 1
Cor. 1:10–16.) It can be argued that giving allegiance to
one church leader over others is, in lesser degrees, not the stuff from
which apostasy immediately develops. It is clear, however, that if left
uncorrected it could bring more serious problems of allegiance and
doctrine into the Church.
In chapter 5, Paul reprimanded the
Corinthian Saints in the strongest of terms for allowing a case of
incest to go uncorrected. He commanded in the name of the Lord that the
guilty party be excommunicated. Paul said, “Know ye not that a little
leaven leaveneth the whole lump?” (1
Cor. 5:6), speaking of the damaging potential of allowing a
moral problem as serious as incest to remain unpurged. It should be
recalled that a few years later Paul prophesied that the abandonment of
true religion would be accompanied by the acceptance of degenerate
standards of moral behavior. (See 2
Tim. 3:1–4.)
First Corinthians deals with doctrinal
heresies as well, among which were the misuse of the sacrament (1
Cor. 11) and a distorted understanding of spiritual gifts (1
Cor. 12–14). Yet perhaps the most revealing doctrinal
problem at Corinth was the belief of some that there is no resurrection.
In chapter 15 Paul established the validity of the doctrine that Jesus
rose from the dead and that all people would do likewise, pointing out
that Christianity is meaningless if there is no resurrection. (See 1
Cor. 15:14, 17–19.)
To deal with each of these issues at
Corinth, Paul wrote decisively and firmly. We have no way of knowing to
what degree his letter motivated the Corinthians to reject the false
ideas circulating among them, but the issues involved were serious and
potentially very damaging.
2 Corinthians (ca. A.D.
57)
In 2 Corinthians Paul reveals much of
himself, his problems, and his actions. Among the Corinthians were some
who had attacked Paul’s doctrine and his dedication to the work of the
Lord. Paul felt the situation was serious enough to warrant a frank
defense. And so, in a manner not usually characteristic of Paul, he
spoke of his sacrifices in behalf of the gospel—his whippings,
imprisonments, stonings, shipwrecks, pain, hunger, and thirst—and of
his visions and revelations. (See 2
Cor. 11:23–27; 2
Cor. 12:1–12.) Paul said he was speaking foolishly in doing
so (see 2
Cor. 11:21, 23), yet as a representative of the Lord he had
an obligation to defend his own integrity and that of his message. If
the Corinthian Saints rejected Paul, the messenger who brought them the
gospel, what would prevent them from rejecting the message as well?
In the letter to the Galatians, Paul
responded to a movement within the Church that countered his teachings
with a Judaized Christianity and attacked him personally. Among the
Jewish converts in the Church were those who held that members must
observe certain Jewish practices to be saved. It appears from the letter
that the success of the anti-Pauline Judaizers was high, which caused
Paul a great deal of concern. Paul accused the Saints of turning to what
he called “another gospel” under the influence of those who would
“pervert the gospel of Christ.” (Gal.
1:6–7.) Among other things, he accused them of looking back
to the Law of Moses for salvation (Gal.
3:1–5), observing Jewish holidays (Gal.
4:10), and accepting circumcision again (Gal.
5:2–4). So emphatic was he with regard to the apostolic
authority of his message and its divine origin that he punctuated his
rebuke by saying that even if “an angel from heaven” came teaching
doctrine different from what he had taught, it should be rejected! (Gal.
1:6–12.)
In Paul’s epistle to the Colossians, we
find the earliest evidence for gnosticism in the early Christian Church.
10 Gnosticism was a false philosophy that had at its focus a belief
that spirit was perfect and holy but that matter, and all that was
created of it, was entirely evil. This idea held that God was a being of
pure spirit and could have nothing to do with man, a creature of matter
(and therefore evil); so instead of worshipping God, gnostics revered an
extensive hierarchy of lower deities. It is probable that in his letter
to the Saints of Colossae, Paul attacked just such a heresy by
denouncing what he called the “worshipping of angels.” (Col.
2:18.)
One problem Christian gnostics faced was
that Christians believed Jesus Christ to have been both God and man.
Because Jesus had a body of matter, his position in the heavenly
hierarchies was problematic for gnostics. Paul responded forcefully to
this ambivalence regarding the role of Jesus when he emphasized in
Colossians 1:16–17 and 2:9–10 [Col.
1:16–17; Col.
2:9–10] His preeminence over all.
11 Note the power of his words as he defined Jesus’ position:
“For by him were all things created, that
are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether
they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things
were created by him, and for him.” (Col.
1:16.)
Paul proclaimed the Savior to be “the
head of all principality and power.” (Col.
2:10.) He warned the Colossians to “beware lest any man
spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of
men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.” (Col.
2:8.) Gnosticism and related heresies were a serious problem
for the Church. Such beliefs were so antithetical to the doctrines of
Jesus and the Apostles that attempts to merge and reconcile them
contributed to the corruption of the original faith. Extra-biblical
sources tell us that gnosticism played an important role in the first
centuries of Christian history.
12 Whereas the religion of the Apostles did not continue, its
gnosticized counterpart did.
1 Timothy and Titus (ca. A.D.
63)
The pastoral epistles give additional
evidence that apostate doctrines were widespread in Christianity even
while Paul was still alive. A major source of heretical teaching was
gnosticism.
The term gnosticism comes from the
Greek noun gnôsis, which means “knowledge.” Gnostics
believed that they had secret “knowledge” that had been passed on to
them by Jesus or the Apostles. They held that it was through this gnôsis
that one was saved, for it enabled him to rise above the evil
physical world. Paul may have been warning Timothy to beware of such
false “knowledge” when he wrote: “O Timothy, keep that which is
committed to thy trust, avoiding profane and vain babblings, and
disputations of what is falsely called knowledge [gnôsis].”
13
In 1 Timothy 1:3–4
[1
Tim. 1:3–4], Paul counseled Timothy to teach others
to avoid “fables and endless genealogies.” Similarly, he admonished
Titus to “avoid foolish questions, and genealogies.” (Titus
3:9.) We know that genealogy for worthy purposes was known
among early Christians. (See Matt.
1:1–16; Luke
3:23–38; Acts
4:36; Philip.
3:5.) What Paul was referring to here was quite different,
since he denounced it in the context of speculative doctrinal contention
that was “unprofitable and vain.” (Titus
3:9.)
Gnosticism’s dualism of pure spirit on
one extreme and evil matter on the other gave rise to an extensive
genealogy of subordinate deities, each descending from one more holy
than himself. In some second-century gnostic systems, there were as many
as 365 levels in this chain of divine beings.
14 Many commentators believe that Paul’s prohibition against
“endless genealogies” refers to this type of structure.
15 Such diverting speculations do not edify in faith, Paul said, but
“minister questions.” (1
Tim. 1:4.)
The pastoral epistles show other signs of
the popularity of false doctrine in the Church. Paul warned Timothy of
those who teach ideas other than the word of Jesus Christ. Those who do
so are obsessed with “questions and strifes of words,” out of which
come “perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds.” (1
Tim. 6:3–5; see also 2
Tim. 2:23.) He told Titus:
“For there are many unruly and vain
talkers and deceivers, specially they of the circumcision:
“Whose mouths must be stopped, who
subvert whole houses, teaching things which they ought not. …
“Wherefore rebuke them sharply, that they
may be sound in the faith,
“Not giving heed to Jewish fables, and
commandments of men, that turn from the truth.” (Titus
1:10–11, 13–14.)
Paul’s final letter, written to his
beloved associate Timothy, was penned while the aged Apostle awaited his
execution in Rome. In this pathetic setting, Paul spoke of the apostasy
as having already begun. He warned Timothy against “profane and vain
babblings: for they will increase unto more ungodliness. And their word
will eat as doth a canker.” (2
Tim. 2:16–17.) He mentioned two men guilty of spreading
false doctrine who had ruined the faith of some by teaching that the
final resurrection had already taken place.
Perhaps Paul’s most sorrow-filled words
are those found in 2 Timothy 1:15 [ 2
Tim. 1:15]: “This thou knowest, that all they which are in
Asia be turned away from me.” His choice of words is grim evidence of
apostasy among the churches in Asia. Paul had taught the gospel there
thirteen years earlier, and the people had accepted it in tremendous
numbers. (Acts
19:8–22.) But now they were turning from him, and from his
message as well. (See 2
Tim. 2:16–18, 23–26.) He saw the time when the churches
would become corrupted, “having a form of godliness; but denying the
power thereof.” (2
Tim. 3:5.)
By the time the epistle of Jude was
written, the apostasy was well underway, as Jude’s words attest. He
exhorted his readers to “earnestly contend for the faith which was
once delivered unto the saints.” (Jude
1:3.) As Elder James E. Talmage wrote, “It is plain that
Jude considered ‘the faith which was once delivered unto the saints’
as in danger; and he urges the faithful to contend for it and openly
defend it.”
16 A translation of the Greek original of verse 4
[Jude
1:4] shows the cause for Jude’s concern: “Certain
people have infiltrated among you; and they are the ones you had a
warning about, in writing, long ago.”
17
Jude continued by likening the apostates of
his day to several from more ancient times. Among other charges with
which he condemned them was the assertion that they “despise dominion
and speak evil of dignities” (Jude
1:8), an overt act of rebellion similar to that described in
3 John [3
Jn.].
Near the end of the letter, Jude reminded
the readers, “Remember ye the words which were spoken before of the
apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ; how that they told you there should
be mockers in the last time, who should walk after their own ungodly
lusts.” He emphasized that this day had now arrived: “These be they
who separate themselves, sensual, having not the Spirit.” (Jude
1:17–19.) Elder Talmage commented, “clearly he is
referring to the apostates of the time.”
18
In John’s apocalypse we find convincing
evidence that apostasy was finally destroying the Church. The evidence
is found in the messages to the seven churches of Asia in chapters 2 and
3.
To Ephesus the message contained both
congratulations and condemnation. (Rev.
2:1–7.) The Ephesians had been successful in rejecting
false apostles and other apostate influences, yet they had “fallen,”
succumbing to certain evils. Without immediate repentance, John warned,
they would be cast off by the Lord.
Similarly, the Saints at Pergamos were told
that if they did not repent the Lord would destroy them quickly. (Rev.
2:12–17.) They were guilty of false religion, characterized
as “the doctrine of Balaam,” the Old Testament prophet who led
Israel into apostate worship.
To Thyatira the condemnation was of the
same sort. (Rev.
2:18–29.) Though worthy of congratulation for good works,
the Saints there were guilty of allowing a heretical movement referred
to by the name Jezebel to “seduce” them into apostate practice.
Jezebel was infamous for guiding Israel into the worship of false gods.
Though challenged to repent before, those who had been seduced by the
heresy had refused. Those who had not been tainted by the doctrine, who
had “not known the depths of Satan,” were commanded to “hold
fast” to what they had.
To Sardis the communication was somber: the
church there was “ready to die.” (Rev.
3:1–6.) Only a few had not defiled themselves. If the rest
did not repent, their names would be blotted out of “the book of
life.”
Philadelphia received a more promising
message. (Rev.
3:7–13.) It had a “little strength” left, and if it
held fast, no one would take its crown.
The two remaining messages are those to
Smyrna (Rev.
2:8–11) and Laodicea (Rev.
3:14–22). The Saints in Smyrna were praised, and no faults
were mentioned concerning the church. But a tragic fate awaited them.
They would be imprisoned and suffer martyrdom. They were admonished not
to fear what was coming and to be “faithful unto death.” In so
doing, they would receive a “crown of life” and would “not be hurt
of the second death.” In contrast, the Lord’s word to Laodicea was
that the church there was spiritually “wretched,” “miserable,”
“poor,” “blind,” and “naked.” Because of its indifference to
the things of God, he would spit it out of his mouth.
If the messages to the seven churches of
Asia paint a fair picture of the overall status of early Christianity,
one cannot avoid the conclusion that the prophecies of apostasy were
then being fulfilled. Of the seven churches, only two were not
condemned, and one of those was to suffer martyrdom. One church was
ready to die because of its sins; another was to be spit out of God’s
mouth. Of the rest, all were guilty of serious error, and each was told
in strong terms that if it did not repent it would be rejected.
1 and 2 John (ca. A.D.
98)
John’s letters are the latest writings of
the New Testament. The view that they provide of the Church at the end
of the century is a tragic one. John told his readers that the last
hours of the Church had come, as prophesied, and that the powers of
apostasy were among them in force:
“Little children, it is the last time:
and as ye have heard that antichrist shall come, even now are there
many antichrists; whereby we know that it is the last time.” (1
Jn. 2:18; italics added.)
19
Continuing, John stated that the
antichrists had come from among the Saints: “They went out from us,
but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would no doubt
have continued with us.” (1
Jn. 2:19.)
Later in his letter, John warned his
readers further about apostate influences among them: “Many false
prophets are gone out into the world.” (1
Jn. 4:1.) John clearly was writing about false prophets
within Christianity. Recall that in his letter from Patmos to the
Ephesians he made mention of false apostles who had been discovered and
repelled. (Rev.
2:2.)
Next, John gave the means by which his
readers could test a person or prophet to see if he were of God:
“Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus
Christ is come in the flesh is of God:
“And every spirit that confesseth not
that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that
spirit of antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should come; and
even now already is it in the world.” (1
Jn. 4:2–3.)
The belief that Jesus had not really come
in the flesh but had only appeared to do so is called docetism.
20 This belief was based on the gnostic view that it would be
impossible for a divine being such as Christ to be associated with
matter, since matter was evil. Docetism denied, therefore, the humanity
of Christ, his physical suffering, his physical death, and his physical
resurrection; he only seemed to have a physical body.
John denounced as deceivers and antichrist
those “who confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh” (see 1
Jn. 2:22–26; 2
Jn. 1:7) and pleaded with the Saints to hold fast to true
doctrines: “Let that therefore abide in you, which ye have heard from
the beginning. If that which ye have heard from the beginning shall
remain in you, ye also shall continue in the Son, and in the Father.”
(1
Jn. 2:24.)
John’s third letter focuses on apostasy.
In it he made reference to one Diotrephes, a local Church leader who, as
John put it, “loveth to have the preeminence” among the Saints. (3
Jn. 1:9.) In his capacity as an Apostle, John had written to
him, but Diotrephes would not receive him. Neither would he receive
“the brethren,” and he would not let his congregation do so either.
In fact, he excommunicated those who would. (3
Jn. 1:10.)
This was apostasy by any definition. It was
rebellion against divinely instituted authority. John promised to deal
with the offending leader when he could, but if Diotrephes did not
recognize John’s authority, no doubt he would not have responded to
his discipline either. Hence, by the third generation of Christian
history, not only doctrinal apostasy was taking place, but some were in
open rebellion against priesthood authority. With their rejection of
John, they severed the final legitimate link of doctrinal and priesthood
authority between Christ and the church that bore his name.
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Suggested Dates of the Letters
Chronicling the Apostasy
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1 and 2 Thessalonians
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ca. A.D.
50–51
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James
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ca. mid-50s A.D.
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1 Corinthians
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ca. A.D.
56
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2 Corinthians
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ca. A.D.
57
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Galatians
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ca. A.D.
58
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Colossians
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ca. A.D.
61
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1 Timothy, Titus
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ca. A.D.
63
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2 Timothy
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ca. A.D.
67
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Jude
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ca. A.D.
80
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Revelation
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ca. A.D.
96
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1–3 John
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ca. A.D.
98
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The End of the Apostolic
Era
The New Testament does not preserve for us
a complete history of the Christian church of the first century A.D.
We possess in addition to the Gospels only the twenty-eight chapters of
the book of Acts—most of which is not a history of the Church but a
history of the career of one Apostle—and less than two dozen letters.
These documents give us only a faint view of the seventy-year period
which they span. There are major gaps in our knowledge of the activities
of the Apostles, their lives, their teachings, and their deaths.
We do know that in the early years
following the resurrection of Jesus the Apostles added additional
members to their number as vacancies required.
21 Eventually, however, the succession ended. By A.D.
95 only John remained, as far as we know. When John left his public
ministry, apostleship ceased. Had it been God’s will, others certainly
could have been chosen. But clearly it was not. The apostasy did not
happen because the Apostles were gone; the Apostles were taken because
the apostasy had occurred.
22
When Jesus sent his Special Witnesses into
the world, he commanded them to bear testimony of him. They did this in
two significant ways. First, they traveled far, preaching the gospel and
bearing witness of Jesus wherever they went. Second, they left their
testimony in the form of the records that we call collectively the New
Testament. This record, preserved for all generations, is the written
testimony of those who were commissioned to be “witnesses unto
[Christ] … unto the uttermost part of the earth” (Acts
1:8). The Apostles were kept on earth long enough to fulfill
the divine command. They did not fail.
As we have seen, the Lord knew, and his
Apostles knew, that the Saints would turn away from the true faith that
had been taught to them. We have seen also that it happened—slowly at
first, but with increasing speed in each succeeding decade. And, as we
have seen, with the rejection of true religion came the rejection of
true authority as well. Concerning this, Elder Mark E. Petersen stated,
“But this all had been predicted. The Lord foresaw this apostasy. As
he would not perform further miracles before the unbelievers at
Capernaum, neither would he leave his anointed Twelve in an apostate
group. So John was taken from among men.”
23
With the last Apostle gone from the church,
the night of apostasy was upon it; and so it would remain until the dawn
of another day—the day of the Restoration.
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There is way more info than you will probably
need. Again, I used clear, 9 oz. cups, taped the info on the inside (They
stack nicely, are protected better, and are easy to update - Apostle
pictures - as they change.) You may want to simply the info (especially
how the first 12 apostles died which may not be appropriate for Primary
children) and just include the names of the original 12 apostles (Matthew,
Thomas, etc.) On each of the first apostles cup (on the other side of the
same cup) I taped a picture of a current apostle. They should be ok, but
let me know if you catch an error on any of these!
When I set these up, I would explain this is way Christ set up his church.
1. Jesus Christ (John 14:6)
2. Prophets (Eph. 4:11) Continuous revelation (Amos 3:7)
3. Apostles (Eph. 4:11)
Peter
was crucified head down in Rome, 66 A.D.
4. Andrew was stoned to death. He preached until his death.
5. James son of Zebedee, was beheaded in Jerusalem by the sword
(Acts 12:1-9)
6. John was banished to the Isle of Patmos 96 A.D. (Rev. 1-9)
7. Phillip was crucified at Heirapole Phrygn, 52 A.D.
8. Bartholomew was beaten, crucified and beheaded by command of a
kind, 52 A.D.
9. Thomas was run through by a lance at Corehandal, East Indies, 52
A.D.
10. Matthew was slain by the sword in the city of Ethiopia, about 60 A.D.
11. James, son of Alphaeus, was thrown from the pinnacle, then beaten to
death 60 A.D.
12. Thaddaeus was shot to death by arrows, 72 A.D.
13. Simon was crucified in Persia, 74 A.D.
14. Judas Iscariot committed suicide by hanging himself 34 A.D. (Acts
1:18)
15. Men called of God “as was Aaron.
Authority in the Priesthood (Heb. 5:4)
16. A lay clergy (Matthew 10:8)
17. Deacons (Phil 1:1)
18. Teachers (Eph 4:11)
19. Priests (Acts 6:7, Luke 1:8)
20. Bishops (Phil 1:1)
21. Elders (Acts 14:23)
22. Seventies (Luke 10:1)
23. High Priests (Heb 5:1)
24. Evangelists or Patriarchs (Eph. 4:11)
25. Members called Saints (Eph. 2:19)
26. Church named after Christ
(Acts 4:12, Heb 12:23)
27. Belief in a personal godhead
(Heb
1:1-3, Matt. 28:19)
28. Faith (Heb 11:1-6)
29. Repentance (Acts 2:38)
30. Baptism by immersion (Matt 3:16)
31. Gifts of Holy Ghost (Acts 2:38)
Gifts
of Holy Spirit (1 Cor:12)
32. Keep Sabbath day holy (Gen 2:2, Exo 20:8)
33. Additional scripture (Ezek 37:16-17)
34. Temples (Rev 7:15)
Sealing
power (Matt 16:19, 2 Cor 1:22)
(To double purpose the cups, I taped the biblical reference (i.e. 33.
Additional scripture) on one side and religion history on the other (i.e.
Baptist church)
Seventh-Day Adventist Church
Founded on the beliefs of William Miller in 1863 as a breakaway group from
the Baptist Church
Reason: Sabbath should be on the seventh day
Main Tenet: Observe the Sabbath on Saturday and Christ will return in
person in latter-days.
Church of England
(Anglican, Episcopal)
Founded by King Henry VIII in 1534 as a breakaway group from the Roman
Catholic Church
Reason: Henry refused to recognize the authority of the pope who would not
dissolve his marriage to Catherin of Aragon
Main tenet: Belief in the Nicine Creed (A.D. 325) and Bishops to be
independent of Rome
Pentecostal Church
Protestant denomination founded by Charles Fox Parkam in 1901
Reason: Religious revival required before end of the world
Main Tenet: Christians should experience baptism in the Holy Spirit,
manifested by speaking in tongues.
Presbyterian Church
(Reformed Church)
Protestant denomination founded on the belief of John Calvin in 1560 as a
breakaway group from the Roman Catholic Church
Reason: Congregations should be governed by boards of elders and not a
pope
Main tenet: Bible is the final authority and the local lay elders govern
the church.
Roman Catholic Church
Founded in 1054 after a split between the Eastern and Western Christian
churches
Reason: Acknowledgment by the Western Church of the primacy of the Bishop
of Rome
Main Tenet: Belief in the Nicine Creed (A.D. 325) and that the pope is
successor of the apostle Peter
Lutheran Church
Protestant denomination founded on the beliefs of Martin Luther in 1526 as
a breakaway group from the Roman Catholic Church
Reason: Denied the supremacy of the Pope
Main Tenet: People can be saved only by faith in Jesus Christ…rather
than by works
Baptist Church
Protestant denomination founded by Smyth in 1611 as a breakaway group from
the Church of England
Reason: opposed baptism of infants
Main tenet: Baptism should be by immersion following voluntary declaration
of faith in Jesus Christ as Savior
Methodist Church
Protestant denomination founded by John Wesley in 1784 as a breakaway
group from the Church of England
Reason: Anglican clergy opposed Methodist lay preachers
Main Tenet: Live a disciplined Christian life according to the method laid
down in the Bible |
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