According to Jesus’ words in Matthew 24, one of the increasing characteristics
of the age preceding the overthrow of Israel was to be apostasy within the
Christian Church. This was mentioned earlier, but a more concentrated
study at this point will shed much light on a number of related issues in the
New Testament – issues which have often been misunderstood.
We generally think of the
apostolic period as a time of tremendously explosive evangelism and church
growth, a “golden age” when astounding miracles took place every day. This
common image is substantially correct, but it is flawed by one glaring
omission. We tend to neglect the fact that the early Church was the scene of
the most dramatic outbreak of heresy in world
history.
The Great
Apostasy
The Church began to be
infiltrated by heresy fairly early in its development. Acts 15 records the
meeting of the first Church Council, which was convened in order to render an
authoritative ruling on the issue of justification by faith (some teachers had
been advocating the false doctrine that one must keep the ceremonial laws of
the Old Testament in order to be justified). The problem did not die down,
however; years later, Paul had to deal with it again, in his letter to the
churches of Galatia. As Paul told them, this doctrinal aberration was no minor
matter, but affected their very salvation: it was a “different gospel,” an
utter distortion of the truth, and amounted to a repudiation of Jesus Christ
Himself. Using some of the most severe terminology of his career, Paul
pronounced damnation upon the “false brethren” who taught the heresy (see Gal.
1:6-9; 2:5, 11-21; 3:1-3; 5:1-12).
Paul also foresaw that
heresy would infect the churches of Asia Minor. Calling together the elders of
Ephesus, he exhorted them to “be on guard for yourselves and for all the
flock,” because “I know that after my departure savage wolves will come in
among you, not sparing the flock; and from among your own selves men will
arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after them” (Acts
20:28-30). Just as Paul predicted, false doctrine became an issue of enormous
pro- portions in these churches. By the time the Book of Revelation was
written, some of them had become almost completely ruined through the progress
of heretical teachings and the resulting apostasy (Rev. 2:2, 6, 14-16, 20-24;
3:1-4, 15-18).
But the problem of heresy
was not limited to any geographical or cultural area. It was widespread, and
became an increasing subject of apostolic counsel and pastoral oversight as
the age progressed. Some heretics taught that the final Resurrection had
already taken place (2nd Tim. 2:18), while others claimed that
resurrection was impossible (1st Cor. 15:12); some taught strange
doctrines of asceticism and angel-worship (Col. 2:8, 18-23; 1 Tim. 4:1-3),
while others advocated all kinds of immorality and rebellion in the name of
“liberty” (2 Pet. 2:1-3, 10-22; Jude 4, 8, 10-13, 16). Again and again the
apostles found themselves issuing stern warnings against tolerating false
teachers and “false apostles” (Rom. 16:17-18; 2nd Cor. 11:3-4,
12-15; Phil. 3:18-19; 1st Tim. 1:3-7; 2nd Tim. 4:2-5),
for these had been the cause of massive departures from the faith, and the
extent of apostasy was increasing as the era progressed (1st Tim.
1:19-20; 6:20-21; 2nd Tim. 2:16-18; 3:1-9, 13; 4:10, 14-16). One of
the last letters of the New Testament, the Book of Hebrews, was written to an
entire Christian community on the very brink of wholesale abandonment of
Christianity. The Christian church of the first generation was not only
characterized by faith and miracles; it was also characterized by increasing
lawlessness, rebellion, and heresy from within the Christian community itself
– just as Jesus had foretold in Matthew 24.
The
Antichrist
The Christians had a
specific term for this apostasy. They called it antichrist. Many
popular writers have speculated about this term, usually failing to regard its
usage in Scripture. In the first place, consider a fact which will undoubtedly
shock some people: the word “antichrist” never occurs in the Book of
Revelation. Not once. Yet the term is routinely used by Christian teachers
as a synonym for “the Beast” of Revelation 13. Obviously, there is no question
that the Beast is an enemy of Christ, and is thus “anti” Christ in that sense;
my point, however, is that the term antichrist is used in a very
specific sense, and is essentially unrelated to the figure known as “the
Beast” and “666.”
A further error teaches that
“the Antichrist” is a specific individual; connected to this is the notion
that “he” is someone who will make his appearance toward the end of the world.
Both of these ideas, like the first, are contradicted by the New Testament.
In fact, the only
occurrences of the term antichrist are in the following verses from the
letters of the Apostle John:
Children, it is the last hour;
and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists
have arisen; from this we know that it is the last hour. They went out from
us, but they were not really of us; for if they had been of us, they would
have remained with us; but they went out, in order that it may be shown that
they all are not of us . . . . Who is the liar but the one who denies that
Jesus is the Christ? This is the antichrist, the one who denies the Father and
the Son. Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father; the one who
confesses the Son has the Father also. . . . These things I have written to
you concerning those who are trying to deceive you. (1st John
2:18-19, 22-23, 26).
Beloved, do not believe every
spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God; because many
false prophets have gone out into the world. By this you know the Spirit of
God: every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is
from God; and every spirit that does not confess that Jesus Christ has come in
the flesh is not from God; and this is the spirit of the antichrist, of which
you have heard that it is coming, and now it is already in the world. You are
from God, little children, and have overcome them; because greater is He who
is in you than he who is in the world. They are from the world; therefore they
speak as from the world, and the world listens to them. We are from God; he
who knows God listens to us; he who is not from God does not listen to us. By
this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error (1st John
4:1-6).
For many deceivers have gone out
into the world, those who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as coming in the
flesh. This is the deceiver and the antichrist. Watch yourselves, that we
might not lose what we have accomplished, but that we may receive a full
reward. Anyone who goes too far and does not abide in the teaching of Christ,
does not have God; the one who abides in the teaching, he has both the Father
and the Son. If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not
receive him into your house, and do not give him a greeting; for the one who
gives him a greeting participates in his evil deeds (2nd John
7-11).
The texts quoted above
comprise all the Bible passages that mention the word antichrist, and
from them we can draw several important conclusions:
First, the Christians had
already been warned about the coming of antichrist (1st John
2:18; 4:3).
Second, there was not just
one, but “many antichrists” (1st John 2:18). The term
antichrist, therefore, cannot be simply a designation of one individual.
Third, antichrist was
already working as John wrote: “even now many antichrists have arisen” (1st
John 2:18); “I have written to you concerning those who are trying to
deceive you” (1st John 2:26); “you have heard that it is coming,
and now it is already in the world” (1st John 4:3); “many
deceivers have gone out into the world. . . . This is the deceiver and the
antichrist” (2nd John 7). Obviously, if the antichrist was
already present in the first century, he was not some figure who would arise
at the end of the world.
Fourth, antichrist was a
system of unbelief, particularly the heresy of denying the person and
work of Jesus Christ. Although the antichrists apparently claimed to
belong to the Father, they taught that Jesus was not the Christ (1st
John 2:22); in union with the false prophets (1st John 4:1), they
denied the In- carnation (1st John 4:3; 2nd John 7, 9);
and they rejected apostolic doctrine (1st John 4:6).
Fifth, the antichrists had
been members of the Christian Church, but had apostatized (1st
John 2:19). Now these apostates were attempting to deceive other Christians,
in order to sway the Church as a whole away from Jesus Christ (1st
John 2:26; 4:1; 2nd John 7, 10).
Putting all this together,
we can see that antichrist is a description of both the system of
apostasy and individual apostates. In other words, antichrist was
the fulfillment of Jesus’ prophecy that a time of great apostasy would come,
when “many will fall away and will betray one another and hate one another.
And many false prophets will arise, and will mislead many” (Matt. 24:10-11).
As John said, the Christians had been warned of the coming of antichrist; and,
sure enough, “many antichrists” had arisen. For a time, they had believed the
gospel; later they had forsaken the faith, and then went about trying to
deceive others, either starting new cults or, more likely, seeking to draw
Christians into Judaism – the false religion which claimed to worship the
Father while denying the Son. When the doctrine of antichrist is understood,
it fits in perfectly with what the rest of the New Testament tells us about
the age of the “terminal generation.”
One of the antichrists who
afflicted the early church was Cerinthus, the leader of a first-century
Judaistic cult. Regarded by the Church Fathers as “the Arch-heretic,” and
identified as one of the “false apostles” who opposed Paul, Cerinthus was a
Jew who joined the Church and began drawing Christians away from the orthodox
faith. He taught that a lesser deity, and not the true God, had created the
world (holding, with the Gnostics, that God was much too “spiritual” to be
concerned with material reality). Logically, this meant also a denial of the
Incarnation, since God would not take to Himself a physical body and truly
human personality. And Cerinthus was consistent: he declared that Jesus had
merely been an ordinary man, not born of a virgin; that “the Christ” (a
heavenly spirit) had descended upon the man Jesus at His baptism (enabling Him
to perform miracles), but then left Him again at the crucifixion. Cerinthus
also advocated a doctrine of justification by works — in particular, the
absolute necessity of observing the ceremonial ordinances of the Old Covenant
in order to be saved.
Furthermore, Cerinthus was
apparently the first to teach that the Second Coming would usher in a literal
reign of Christ in Jerusalem for a thousand years. Although this was contrary
to the apostolic teaching of the Kingdom, Cerinthus claimed that an angel had
revealed this doctrine to him (much like Joseph Smith, a 19th-century
antichrist, would later claim to receive angelic revelation).
The true apostles sternly
opposed the Corinthian heresy. Paul admonished the churches: “But even though
we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel contrary to that
which we have preached to you, let him be accursed!” (Gal. 1:8), and went on
in the same letter to refute the legalistic heresies held by Cerinthus.
According to tradition, the Apostle John wrote his Gospel and his letters with
Cerinthus especially in mind. (We are also told that as John entered the
public bathhouse he spotted this antichrist ahead of him. The apostle
immediately turned around and ran back out, crying: “Let us flee, lest the
building fall down; for Cerinthus, the enemy of the truth, is inside!”)
Returning to John’s
statements about the spirit of antichrist, we should note that he stresses one
further, very significant point: as Jesus foretold in Matthew 24, the coming
of antichrist is a sign of “the End”: “Children, it is the last hour;
and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists
have arisen; from this we know that it is the last hour” (1st
John 2:18). The connection people often make between the antichrist and “the
last days” is correct enough; but what is often missed is the fact that the
expression the last days, and similar terms, are used in the Bible to
refer, not to the end of the physical world, but to the last days of
the nation of Israel, the “last days” which ended with the destruction
of the Temple in A .D. 70. This, too, will come to many as a surprise; but
we must accept the clear teaching of Scripture. The New Testament authors
unquestionably used “end-times” language when speaking of the period they were
living in, before the fall of Jerusalem. As we have seen, the Apostle John
said two things on this point: first, that antichrist had already come;
and, second, that the presence of the antichrist was proof that he and his
readers were living in “the last hour.” In one of his earlier letters,
Paul had had to correct a mistaken impression regarding the coming judgment on
Israel. False teachers had been frightening the believers by saying that the
day of judgment was already upon them. Paul reminded the Christians of what he
had explained before:
Let no one deceive you, for it
will not come unless the apostasy comes first . . . (2nd Thess.
2:3).
By the end of the age,
however, as John was writing his letters, the Great Apostasy–the spirit of
antichrist, of which the Lord had foretold – was a reality.
Jude, who wrote one of the
very last New Testament books, leaves us in no doubt about this issue. Issuing
strong condemnations of the heretics who had invaded the church and were
attempting to draw Christians away from the orthodox faith (Jude 1-16), he
reminds his readers that they had been warned of this very thing:
But you, beloved, ought to
remember the words that were spoken beforehand by the apostles of our Lord
Jesus Christ, that they were saying to you, “In the last time there shall
be mockers, following after their own ungodly lusts .“ These are the
ones who cause divisions, worldly-minded, devoid of the Spirit (Jude
17-19).
Jude clearly regards the
warnings about the “mockers” as referring to the heretics of his own day —
meaning that his own day was the period of “the last time.” Like John, he knew
that the rapid multiplying of these false brethren was a sign of the End.
Antichrist had arrived, and it was now the Last Hour.