APOSTASY IS A defection, a falling away from what one believed in,
as apostasy from one’s religion, creed, or politics. Thus, one becomes an
apostate as soon as he departs from his former belief, whatever it was. What
undergoes change is not the person nor his nature but his beliefs.
In the field
of religion, apostasy is one of the most controversial and confused terms.
Reformers accused the Catholic Church of having departed from the original
teachings of Christ. The Catholic Church turns the table on them by calling
them apostates or separated brethren.
This article
will determine the issue of who really departed from the truth or from the
teachings of Jesus Christ. Two things must be made clear: a) what Christ and the Apostles taught
and b) if the bishops who succeeded
the Apostles in the administration of the Church continued such teachings or
not. If they did, then there was no apostasy; if they did not, then there was
an apostasy.
Christ’s Teachings Are In The Bible
Christ’s Teachings Are In The Bible
Not all the
things done by Christ and the Apostles were written (cf. Jn. 20:30-31). In fact
there were some things that God did not want to be written (cf. Dan. 12:4; Rev.
10:4). The Apostles wrote down what they witnessed (cf. 1 Jn. 1:1-4). All such
writings were inspired by God, should be used for doctrine, correction,
instruction, and they make man perfect (cf. II Tim. 3:16-17). What were written
are enough and nothing should be added to them nor subtracted from them (cf.
Rev. 22:18-19) for what are written were written so that we might believe that
Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God and that by believing we might have eternal
life through His name (cf. Jn. 20:30-31). Apostle Paul adds that we must not go
beyond what is written (cf. I Cor. 4:6). And if the Apostles did give
instructions by word of mouth, such instructions were taken from what they had
witnessed and such things they wrote down (cf. I Jn. 1:1-4).
Thus, the
teachings of Christ and the Apostles on which we must remain if we are to be
true Christians are written in the Bible, and for as long as we remain in them,
we are truly Christ’s disciples (cf. Jn. 8:31) or Christians (cf. Acts 11:26).
The Process of Apostasy
The Process of Apostasy
The process of
apostasy or the turning away from the teachings of God as written in the Bible,
was already at work even during the times of the apostles (cf. II Thess. 2:7).
Apostle Paul warned the Christian
s for the burning of the city of Rome in A.D. 64. It is also very likely that
Saint Peter and Saint Paul were put to death at Rome about this time… . in Galatia that those who teach doctrines different from what
the Apostles already taught be accursed (cf. Gal. 1:6-9). But for as long as
the Apostles were still alive and in control of Church administration, such
forces of iniquity did not succeed in enticing the entire living members of the
Church away from what the Apostles taught them (cf. II Thess. 2:7).
With the death
of the Apostles, however, something happened to the Church of Christ:
“For the years after the record in Acts ends, evidence for
the history of the Christian Church becomes more scanty. There began to be
passing references to it in pagan writers. These writers make it seem likely
that the Roman Emperor Nero blamed the Christian
“When the original Apostles died, the leadership of the
Church was taken over by local pastors known as bishops. Under them were
ministers of lower rank, known as presbyters and deacons. The Church organized
the area of the Roman Empire into provinces. The bishops at the head of the
Christian communities in the large cities such as Rome, Antioch, Alexandria,
and Carthage ranked highest.” (The New Book of Knowledge, vol. 3, pp.
280-281)
Thus, when the
Apostles died, not much was recorded on what went on in the Church of Christ
but during this period of silence the administration of the Church fell into
the hands of the bishops.
Apostle Paul
describes the bishop as he was in the first century Church of Christ. His
qualities are detailed in I Timothy 3:2-7 as:
“…blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good
behaviour, given to hospitality, apt to teach; Not given to wine, no striker
not greedy of filthy lucre; but patient, not a brawler, not covetous; One that
ruleth well his own house, having his children in subjection with all gravity;
(For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the
church of God?). Not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the
condemnation of the devil. Moreover, he must have a good report of them which
are without; lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil.” (King James
Version)
Apostle Paul
further says that a bishop should be “holding fast the faithful word as he hath
been taught, that he may be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to
convince the gainsayers.” (cf. Titus 1:9)
Thus, among
other things, a bishop in the first century Church of Christ is a husband of
one wife and a teacher of things taught by the Apostles and Christ, things that
are written in the Bible.
The bishops
that took control of the Church administration in the second century were of a
different breed. They were priests who were not allowed to marry and taught
things not coming from the Bible. Moreover, the bishops of the first century
Church were not monarchical:
“In Acts 20:28, …the fact that there were several bishops in
one community excludes the monarchical concept of the term…” (New
Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 2, p. 585)
In spite of
this clear evidence from the Bible that the original bishop in the Church of
Christ was not monarchical, Catholic Church authorities inject the idea that
the monarchical episcopate which prevailed in the second century must have come
from oral tradition:
“Therefore, since there is no clear evidence in NT for a
monarchical episcopate, this office, which was firmly established by the early
decades of the 2d century must have been based on oral apostolic tradition
going back ultimately to Christ.” (Ibid.)
A monarchical
episcopate is defined as “one single bishop assisted by priests and deacons” (Ibid. p. 589), a thing that did not prevail during the
time of the Apostles. In spite of this difference in administration between the
first century Church of Christ and that of the second, Catholic authorities
reject the first and accept the second:
“The testimony of Ignatius from the first decade of the 2d
century, along with the evidence of the writers from the second half of that
century and the earliest catalogs of bishops in the principal Churches – all of
which trace a line of succession of individual bishops back to the apostolic
age – satisfies most Catholic theologians that this form of Church government
was the only one ever recognized as normal and regular.” (Ibid.)
This control
of the Church administration by the bishops who began to teach different
doctrines was the fulfillment of what Apostle Paul prophesied concerning the
overseers (bishop):
“Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse
things, to draw away disciples after them.” (Acts 20:30, KJV)
Soon after the
bishops took over the administration of the Church in the second century, the
doctrines of this Church began to be infected with poison:
“At first the history of the Roman Church is identical with
the history of the Christian truth. But unhappily there came a time when
streams of poison began to flow from the once pure fountain.” (The
World’s Great Events, vol. 2, pp 163-164)
From Church of Christ To Catholic Church
From Church of Christ To Catholic Church
The great
apostasy did not consist in the destruction of the first century Church of
Christ and the establishment of another one. It consisted in the deterioration
of the Church established by Christ. As already mentioned, there was a sort of
“news blockout” during the years immediately after the death of the Apostles. During
this period the bishops took over the administration of the Church. When events
began to be recorded again, what was revealed was a Church very different from
what Christ founded:
“For fifty years after St. Paul’s life a curtain hangs over
the church, through which we strive vainly to look; and when at last it rises
about 120 A.D. with the writings of the earliest church-fathers, we find a
church in many aspects very different from that in the days of St. Peter and
St. Paul.” (The Story of the Christian Church, p. 41)
The
differences between what used to be the Church of Christ in the first century
and the Church that was revealed in the second to the fourth centuries are
profound:
“It is necessary to note that we should recall the reader’s
attention to the profound differences between this fully developed Christianity
of Nicaea and the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth….What is clearly apparent is
that the teaching of Jesus of Nazareth was a prophetic teaching of the new type
that began with the Hebrew prophets. It was not priestly, it had no consecrated
temple, and no altar. It had no rites and ceremonies. Its sacrifice was ‘a
broken and contrite heart’. Its only organization was an organization of
preachers, and its chief function was the sermon. But the fully fledge
Christianity of the fourth century, though it preserved as its nucleus the
teachings of Jesus in the Gospels, was mainly a priestly religion, of a type
already familiar to the world for thousands of years. The center of its
elaborate ritual was an altar, and the essential act or worship the sacrifice,
by a consecrated priest, of the Mass.” (The Outline of History, pp. 552-553)
These profound
changes, made on the original teachings of Christ, dealt great violence on the
teachings of the Bible for the purpose of enhancing the interests of the
Catholic Church:
“Jesus too, being a Galilean, was of Aryan stock, a
remarkable man whose teachings had, in the course of centuries, been deformed
out of all recognition in the interests of the Catholic Church.” (The
Vatican in the Age of Dictators, p. 168)
Adding insult
to injury, Catholic authorities acknowledge such changes without shame and even
with pride:
“We Catholics acknowledge readily, without any shame, nay
with pride, that Catholicism cannot be identified simply and wholly with
primitive Christianity, nor even with the Gospel of Christ, in the same way
that the great oak cannot be identified with the tiny acorn.” (The Spirit
of Catholicism, p. 2)
“ ‘Without the Scriptures’, says Mohler, ‘the true form of the
sayings of Jesus would have been withheld from us….Yet the Catholic does not
derive his faith in Jesus from Scripture’.” (Ibid. p. 50)
Hence, those
responsible for this apostasy of the first century Church of Christ were the
bishops under whose administration these profound changes took place. The first
bishop identified as having introduced changes into the Church was Ignatius,
bishop of Antioch who was martyred in Rome about 110 A.D. He was the first to
use the term Catholic Church in reference to the Church of Christ:
“The name Catholic as a name is not applied to the Catholic
Church in the Bible. ..St. Ignatius of Antioch, writing to the Christians of
Smyrna about the year 110, is the first to use the name ‘The Catholic Church’
…” (The Question Box, p. 132)
This same
Ignatius introduced the doctrine that Christ is both God and man. “He asserted
unequivocally both the divinity and humanity of Christ, the Savior.” (New Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 7, p. 353)
Ignatius is
one of the so-called Antenicene Fathers who were divided into three groups,
namely:
1. Apostolic Fathers – supposedly had personal contact with the Apostles or were instructed by their disciples. To this group belong Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp of Smyna, and Clement of Rome.
2. Greek Apologists – born of the Church’s reaction to paganism. To this group belong Justin Martyr, Athenagoras of Athens, Theophilus of Antioch, and Irenaeus.
3. Theologians – to this group belong Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Tertullian, and Cyprian.
1. Apostolic Fathers – supposedly had personal contact with the Apostles or were instructed by their disciples. To this group belong Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp of Smyna, and Clement of Rome.
2. Greek Apologists – born of the Church’s reaction to paganism. To this group belong Justin Martyr, Athenagoras of Athens, Theophilus of Antioch, and Irenaeus.
3. Theologians – to this group belong Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Tertullian, and Cyprian.
These Church
Fathers were the source of the teachings that the Catholic Church taught and
implemented beginning the second century and formalized by the decrees of the
Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D. Such persons were not immune from errors and yet,
the apostatized church approved their teachings:
“Obviously much that Christ and the apostles preached was in
time reduced to writing. Hence there grew up a library composed of men called
‘the fathers of the Church’. They were called so because in apostolic days the
word ‘father’ also meant teacher of spiritual things, and these were among her
earliest teachers. But, unlike the apostles, all of whom enjoyed infallibility,
they were not immune from error nor inspired as the scriptural writers had
been. In so far as they dealt with questions of faith and morals, much of what
they wrote was approved by the Church, and thus, became part of written
tradition.” (Whereon to Stand: What Catholics Believe and Why, p. 142)
As a result of
the teachings of these early Church Fathers, the Church of Christ or
Christianity became Roman Catholicism, the last and the greatest of the mystery
religions:
“On that dies Domini, or Lord’s Day, the Christians assembled
for their weekly ritual. Their clergy read from the Scriptures, led them in prayer,
and preached sermons of doctrinal instruction, moral exhortation, and sectarian
controversy…
“By the close of the second century, these weekly ceremonies
had taken the form of the Christian Mass. Based partly on the Judaic Temple
service, partly on Greek mystery rituals of purification, vicarious sacrifice,
and participation through communion, in the death-overcoming powers, of the
deity, the Mass grew slowly into a rich congeries of prayers, psalms, readings,
sermon, antiphonal recitations, and, above all, that symbolic atoning sacrifice
of the ‘Lamb of God’ which replaced, in Christianity, the bloody offerings of
older faiths. The bread and wine which these cults had considered as gifts
placed upon the altar before the god were now conceived as changed by the
priestly act of consecration into the body and blood of Christ, and were
presented to God as a repetition of the self-immolation of Jesus on the cross.
Then, in an intense and moving ceremony, the worshippers partook of the very
life and substance of their Saviour. It was a conception long sanctified by
time; the pagan mind needed no schooling to receive it; by embodying it in the
‘mystery of the Mass’, Christianity became the last and the greatest of the
mystery religions.” (Ceasar and Christ, pp. 599-600)
From Persecuted Church To Persecutor Church
From Persecuted Church To Persecutor Church
The first
century Church of Christ suffered persecution at the very moment of its
inception. Christ was Himself crucified by the Jews; Stephen the deacon was
stoned to death with the approval of Saul who was to become the Apostle Paul
later. After the Jews came the Roman emperors, from Nero (54-68) to Diocletian
(284-305). The persecution was in progress when the Church of Christ developed
into the Catholic Church in the second century. Thus, those faithful to the
Church of Christ in the first century were killed and wiped out by the second
century in the Roman persecution. By the second century the Church of Christ
had already apostatized into the Catholic Church but the Roman persecutions
continued, and those getting killed were no longer true Christians but
followers of the bishops called Catholics. Among the victims was Ignatius
himself who began calling the Church of Christ Catholic Church. Even Popes were
killed. A former Jesuit priest says:
“Between the death of Simon Peter the Apostle in A.D. 67, and
the year 312, there were thirty-one popes, successors to Peter as bishops of
Rome. Not one of the first eighteen popes died in bed. All perished violently.”
(The
Decline And Fall Of The Roman Church, p. 3)
These two
centuries of intermittent persecutions led to the killings of thousands of
Catholics still called by historians as Christians.
Emperor
Constantine (306-337) stopped the persecutions, legalized and favored the
Catholic Church and assumed control over it. Thus began a pro-Christian
imperial policy which later turned into a policy of persecution of heretics and
pagans:
“This pro-Christian imperial policy…began with Constantine,
who favored the Christians and only tolerated paganism, hoping it to die a
natural death. His three sons, however, who succeeded him at his death in 337,
took a more resolute stance. This was especially true of Constantius, who was
left sole ruler in 350. He aimed at total extirpation of paganism; he ordered
the temples closed and imposed the death penalty for participating in
sacrifices.” (A Concise History of the Catholic Church, p. 68)
“Meanwhile, Gratian was taking steps to stamp out paganism,
and in 391 and 392 Theodosius issued stringent laws against idolatry. Sacrifice
to pagan gods, whether in public or in private, was to be regarded as treason,
and paganism gradually died out during the following century. The legal triumph
of the Church over heresy and paganism and its evolution from a persecuted sect
to a persecuting state church were complete.” (A Survey of European
Civilization, p. 95)
Thus, the
persecuted Church of Christ of the first century which became the persecuted
Catholic Church from the second to the fourth century became allied with the
Roman emperors in the fourth century and started persecuting not only pagans
but also its own members who dared to refuse allegiance to it or who questioned
its authority and teachings, members classified as heretics.
History
records that by the 13th century, this persecution by the apostate Church
surpassed in cruelty the persecutions done by the Roman emperors.
“The Inquisition lasted over two hundred years…If men or
women or children refused to accept Christianity, they were tortured until they
died.
“Even the early Christians, before Constantine, who were
tortured and killed and fed to the lions in Rome, and who are known to us as
Martyrs, were not treated more cruelly than the non-Christians during the
Inquisition. (How the Great Religions Began, p. 214)
Conclusion
Conclusion
The true
Church of Christ established by Christ in Jerusalem in the first century
followed a set of tenets which Christ received from God, which the Apostles
received from Christ, and which the Apostles committed into writing. Such
written words make references to the Old Testament so that the true Church of
Christ also recognizes the Old Testament as words of God. God commands that
nothing should be added to nor subtracted from what has been written in the
Holy Scriptures.
For as long as
the Apostles were at the helm of Church administration, the Church followed to
the letter all the commandments written in the Bible. But with the death of the
Apostles, the bishops took control of the Church and they introduced teachings
not drawn from what is written in the Bible but from tradition, writings of the
so-called Church Fathers, theologians, and other sources.
By the second
century, the bishops change the name of the Church, injected new doctrines into
it, changed its hierarchy so that what emerged by the year 120 A.D. was a
Church radically different in form and content from the Church during the time
of Apostle Peter and Paul.
The apostasy
did not consist in the establishment of a new Church but in the introduction of
teachings foreign to it and not written in the Bible. The Church of Christ
during the time of the Apostles became the Catholic Church of the bishops in
the second century, persecuted by the Roman emperors until the fourth century,
allied itself with the Roman emperors from that time on and became a persecutor
Church, killing both pagans and alleged heretics with unspeakable cruelty.
This is the
Church that turned away from Christ’s teachings as written in the Bible, the
Church that took on teachings of men, the Church that apostatized, the Church
that calls itself The Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church.
Bibliography
Books:
Adam, Karl. The Spirit of Catholicism. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1954
Bokenkotter, Thomas. A Concise History of the Catholic Church. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. 1977.
Brunini, John Gilland. Whereon to Stand: What Catholics Believe and Why. New York: Dell Publishing Co., Inc., 1961.
Conway, Rev. Bertrand L. The Question Box. New York: The Paullist Press, 1929.
Durant, Will. The Story of Civilization, Part III: Ceasar and Christ. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1944.
Ferguson, Wallace K. and Geoffrey Bruun. A Survey of European Civilization. Bostan: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1962.
Gaer, Joseph. How the Great Religions Began. London: The New American Library Limited, 1956.
Hurlbut, Jesse Lyman, D.D. The Story of the Christian Church. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1969.
Martin, Malachi. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Catholic Church. New York: Bantam Books, 1981.
Rhodes, Anthony. The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators, 1922-1945. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1973.
Wells, H.G. The Outline of History. New York: Garden City Publishing Company, Inc., 1931
General References:
New Catholic Encyclopedia, vols. 2 and 3. Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America, 1967.
The New Book of Knowledge, vol. 3. Connecticut:Grolier Inc., 1983.
The World’s Great Events, vol. 2:From BC 207 to AD 1190. New York: P. F. Gollier & Sons Corporation, 1948.
Bibliography
Books:
Adam, Karl. The Spirit of Catholicism. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1954
Bokenkotter, Thomas. A Concise History of the Catholic Church. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. 1977.
Brunini, John Gilland. Whereon to Stand: What Catholics Believe and Why. New York: Dell Publishing Co., Inc., 1961.
Conway, Rev. Bertrand L. The Question Box. New York: The Paullist Press, 1929.
Durant, Will. The Story of Civilization, Part III: Ceasar and Christ. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1944.
Ferguson, Wallace K. and Geoffrey Bruun. A Survey of European Civilization. Bostan: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1962.
Gaer, Joseph. How the Great Religions Began. London: The New American Library Limited, 1956.
Hurlbut, Jesse Lyman, D.D. The Story of the Christian Church. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1969.
Martin, Malachi. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Catholic Church. New York: Bantam Books, 1981.
Rhodes, Anthony. The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators, 1922-1945. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1973.
Wells, H.G. The Outline of History. New York: Garden City Publishing Company, Inc., 1931
General References:
New Catholic Encyclopedia, vols. 2 and 3. Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America, 1967.
The New Book of Knowledge, vol. 3. Connecticut:Grolier Inc., 1983.
The World’s Great Events, vol. 2:From BC 207 to AD 1190. New York: P. F. Gollier & Sons Corporation, 1948.