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BCC Index
Bible Correspondence Course Lesson 49
1954, 1965 Edition
I Will Build My Church, Part 1
About Our Cover ...
A tenth century Greek vellum manuscript, from Calabria,
Italy, of the four Gospels -- in the Ambassador College Library,
Pasadena -- illustrates one of the purposes for the life-work of
the apostle Paul.
Magnified is verse eighteen of Matthew 16: "And I say unto
thee, that thou art Peter (petros -- a little stone), and upon
this rock (Petra -- a boulder or rock ledge) I will build my
church; and the gates of (the grave) shall not prevail against
it."
What that Church is -- and what that petra is -- will be
explained in this and succeeding lessons.
"I WILL BUILD MY CHURCH"
JESUS CHRIST said, "I WILL BUILD MY CHURCH."
Did He build it?
That Church, said Jesus, would NEVER be extinguished. "And
the gates of hell (the grave)," He said, "shall not prevail
against it" (Mat. 16:18). Christ's Church is to LAST THROUGH all
ages! Has it? WHERE IS it, today?
Is it divided -- composed of more than 400 different,
disagreeing, arguing sects?
World Looks at the Wrong Church!
Did God's Church rapidly grow big, become a powerful
organization, exerting powerful influence on the world? Did it
gradually turn to false doctrines, finally splitting up into
today's denominations?
You need to ASK -- and to ANSWER -- these questions.
Strange to say, almost everyone -- for these past nineteen
centuries -- has been looking IN THE WRONG PLACE for the Church
Jesus built.
What really happened -- after 70 A.D. -- to the Church of
the Bible? Was it shifted to Rome? What DID happen?
Missing History Foretold!
The True Church DID NOT DIE after 70 A.D.! It went to sleep.
It was foretold in a parable (Mat. 25:1-13). Ten virgins (the
pure Church) expected Christ's immediate return. But while he
TARRIED, all slumbered and slept. Only after nearly 1900 years,
finally, in our generation, they began very drowsily to awaken.
Only half of them were found ready to carry on the work of
warning the world at its midnight hour.
But where has the True Church been for these 1900 years? HOW
and WHERE did it sleep, and WHY did it awaken?
Here is what Mosheim, the church historian, admits:
"Christian churches had scarcely been organized when MEN
ROSE UP, who, not being contented with the simplicity and purity
of that religion which the Apostles taught, attempted
innovations, and fashioned religion ACCORDING TO THEIR OWN
LIKING."
There were conspirators! Men masquerading as God's ministers
-- but who were wolves in sheep's clothing!
Since the new inventions and ideas of these clever men
required PROOF -- not to be found in the writings of the Apostles
-- "recourse was had to falsehoods and impositions ... When asked
where they had learned what they so confidently taught, some
produced fictitious books under the names of Abraham, Zoroaster,
and Christ, or His Apostles; some pretended to have derived their
principles from a secret doctrine taught by Christ."
Had the True Church gone wrong? Or was this ANOTHER, a
DIFFERENT and FALSE church, that was being founded by men who
were tools of Satan the Devil?
A telltale clue is found in the complete absence of
historical connecting links. A great yawning gap -- an
unbridgeable chasm -- lies between the APOSTOLIC Church Jesus
founded and the earliest beginnings of today's professing
Christian churches. Nearly all the writings of the Church in the
years after 70 A.D. have perished. Only prophecy remains -- and
the slanders of enemies!
The historian Gibbon ("Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire") candidly states: "The scanty materials of ecclesiastical
history seldom enable us to dispel the cloud that hangs over the
first age of the church."
For nearly a century Church history is blank!
Jesse Lyman Hurlbut ("The Story of the Christian Church")
calls this period, just after Acts, the "Age of Shadows."
He continues "... of all the periods in the church's
history, it is the one about which we know the least ... 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."
Was this -- when the curtain arose -- really the same
church?
It was NOT!
The True Church of God had faded from view! ANOTHER church
was on stage!
But the life and the mission of the TRUE Church was not
finished!
This and following lessons will show you the astounding, but
little known facts of Church history. It will clearly identify
and describe the True New Testament Church of Jesus Christ -- and
prove where that Church is today.
LESSON 49
True Church to Be Small
1. Have those really faithful to God ever been many?
Consider the time of the Flood. Gen. 6:5 and 7:1. Were there so
few in Elijah's time that he thought he was the only faithful
one? I Kings 19:14. Did God show him He had reserved a mere 7000
to be His own? Verse 18. Out of millions in Israel, only a
population equal to one average small town!
2. Had Jesus led -- in three and one-half years -- an even
smaller number? Acts 1:15. Certainly Jesus had not been trying to
save the world THEN! What a miserable failure, if that were His
aim!
3. Did Jesus prophesy there would be few that find the way?
Mat. 7:14. Compare Luke 12:32.
4. What did Jesus tell His Apostles to do? Mat. 28:18-20.
Did He say He would build a Church? Mat. 16:18.
5. Does Mat. 16:18 imply that at times the True Church would
be so small as to seem in danger of completely dying out? But
WOULD it ever die? Same verse.
COMMENT: The gates of hell (original Greek means "the
grave") COULD never prevail over Christ's Church. Of course! For
Christ Himself is alive and active -- more than able to guard and
guide His "little flock" throughout all ages.
6. Would it have been possible for civilization as a whole
to have ever been influenced greatly by the truth? John 1:5;
3:19. Compare I John 3:1; 4:6 with this. Surely FEW COULD ever
have been converted.
How the True Church Grew
1. Had Jesus prepared the way for the founding of His
Church? Mat. 4:24-25; Acts 26:26, last part. How many were added
to the New Testament Church in its first day of existence? Acts
2:41. Did it continue to grow? Verse 47.
2. Were miracles again performed by the same POWER that had
been in Jesus Christ? Acts 2:43; 3:7; 5:12, 14-15, 16; 6:8.
3. Did Peter and all the Apostles continue to SPEAK BOLDLY,
the same POWER of the Holy Spirit motivating THEM? Acts 2:14, 40;
3:4, 6, 12, 14-16; 4:8-10.
PHOTO CAPTION: Sheep naturally follow a leader. Christ likens His
Church to sheep -- a little flock. Christ said His sheep will
hear His voice -- and follow Him. The world does not hear Him,
and will not follow.
4. Was the True Gospel heard and known by a great many --
the majority of all people living in Judea at the time? Acts 2:6;
3:9, 10; 4:21. How many now were members of the Church? Acts 4:4;
5:14; 6:1, 7.
COMMENT: These CAME OUT of the world -- they LEFT their
Jewish denominations. They were no longer of the world, but were
FILLED WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT (John 17:15-17; Rom. 8:9).
... and Was Scattered!
After such a start -- such booming, powerful growth -- the
infant Church might seem to be overwhelming the world. But it was
not long to be so!
1. What kind of reception does the world give God's Church?
Acts 2:13; 26:24. Does the truth make some people MAD? Acts 4:2.
Had Jesus prophesied persecution? John 15:20; II Tim. 3:12.
2. Did persecution come early? Acts 5:17-18; 6:9-13. To what
did this lead -- to a complete scattering of the members of the
Church? Acts 8:1, 3.
3. But could all of Saul's raging stop the progress of the
gospel? Acts 8:4-6. To whom at first did scattered Christians
spread the Word? Acts 11:19. But then to whom? Verses 20 and 21.
COMMENT: This was done according to the will of the LIVING
Jesus Christ to work out His PLAN here below. For salvation was
not to be limited to Judea.
4. To whom did PHILIP go? Acts 8:5, 6.
COMMENT: The Samaritans were Gentiles, descendants of
Babylonian and other immigrants placed there by Assyrian kings
and later rulers. Their religion was the old Babylonian religion,
but much mixed with elements adopted from the neighboring Jews.
Of all the Gentiles, the Samaritans would seem to have been the
most prepared to accept the religion of the New Testament.
Simon, the chief in the Samaritan religion, was among those
who listened to Philip. Who he was and what part he played in
Church history will be made plain later.
5. What did the Apostles do when they realized Christ was
calling Samaritans? Acts 8:14.
6. Had David sung of the day the gospel would go to
Gentiles? Ps. 96:1, 3, 10. And did the prophets predict it? Isa.
11:10. Note that the Greeks were true Gentiles. The Samaritans
were already partly mixed with Jewish renegades and also had
circumcision and a perverted form of the law of Moses.
7. Did Peter still have to be shown at the time of
Cornelius' conversion that all peoples could really become one in
Christ? Acts 10:28, 34. Did God then use Peter to officially
inaugurate salvation to the Gentiles, with the same special
"one-time-only" manifestations of the Holy Spirit as when first
it was confirmed for the Jews? Compare Acts 10:44-47 with 2:1-4.
COMMENT: Some today falsely claim Peter was still so
completely a Jew in his outlook, that he led a so-called
"Judaizing party" within the Church. This is a lie! The proof
lies overlooked here in Acts 11:6.
Peter was staying at the house of one Simon A TANNER. Under
Jewish ceremonial law, a tanner, by virtue of his occupation --
tanning the raw hides of dead animals -- was considered unclean.
Had Peter been the thorough-going Judaizer some claim him to be,
he would certainly have lodged elsewhere!
Here is proof Peter knew and practiced the same freedom from
CEREMONIAL prohibitions as did Paul (Col. 2:20, 21).
A little later we find Peter freely living and eating with
Gentiles -- whose very persons were "unclean" and contaminating
in Pharisaic doctrine. He mistakenly withdrew only when others
arrived for fear THEY might not yet understand (Gal. 2:12).
8. Meanwhile, did Philip continue to preach the gospel to
other Gentiles who had been prepared by previous conversion from
heathenism to the Jewish religion? Acts 8:26, 27, 40.
COMMENT: Azotus is the city of Ashdod -- one of the five
ancient royal cities of the Philistines.
9. Does this mean that Christianity is, or ever could
become, a Gentile religion? John 4:22; Rom. 9:4, 5; Mat. 10:5, 6.
Why Paul's Work Among the Greeks?
1. Had Jesus forewarned that His followers would be put out
of the synagogues? John 16:2. That whoever would kill them would
think he was serving God? Same verse. Did this begin to come true
in the persecution by Saul (afterward called Paul)? Acts 8:3;
26:9-11; I Tim. 1:13.
COMMENT: The earliest Christians -- almost all Jewish --
continued to meet in the synagogues. They regarded Christianity
truly, as the fulfillment of the Old Testament religion. At first
the majority of unconverted Jews listened without rancour --
until the Pharisees stirred them up. Notice how in later times
Paul always went and preached first in the synagogues and places
of prayer of the Jews, and preached there until persecution drove
him out (Acts 13:5, 14; 14:1; 16:13, etc.).
2. Did Jesus Christ strike Saul down and convert him? Read
the whole of chapter 9 and the first part of chapter 22.
COMMENT: Paul's conversion brought into the Church a man of
great zeal, and the best of education. He had been trained "at
the feet of Gamaliel" who was regarded as the greatest Jewish
teacher of the day.
3. Did Jesus Christ call Paul for a particular mission? Acts
9:15; 26:16; Rom. 11:13.
COMMENT: Note that Christ called Paul or Saul to be a
special "apostle to the GENTILES." But he was also chosen to aid
in the MAJOR mission of the Church, too, that of reaching the
House of Israel. Notice it carefully in Acts 9:15.
Years later, tradition states, after preaching all over the
Greek-speaking world (Rom. 15:19) and after going to Spain (verse
28) Paul went on even into Britain.
4. Did the other apostles recognize Paul's special
responsibility of going to the Gentiles? Gal. 2:8, 9. But did
Paul and Barnabas always go first to the Jews (the only
Israelites in that area)? Rom. 1:16; 2:9, 10; Acts 13:42-48.
COMMENT: Paul and Barnabas always went to the larger cities
in the Gentile areas. Here they expected to find significant
numbers of Jews. Many such cities boasted a synagogue and an
organized congregation.
Being of equal rank, when Paul and Barnabas found themselves
in disagreement as to how best to prosecute the work in their
area, they separated (Acts 15:36-41). Barnabas then continued his
work to the Gentiles in the area of Cyprus and Egypt. Of his
later work we hear next to nothing. Probably not a great many
Gentile converts were made in those areas. And there is a reason!
Why did Paul's work prosper in Greece while Barnabas' work
in Egypt did not?
The answer to that question lies in the nature of the
special purpose Christ was working out through Paul. What was
that PURPOSE?
PHOTO CAPTION: A modern air view of Ashdod and a corner of the
Mediterranean Sea. Philip the evangelist (who was first a deacon
-- Acts 6:5) came down here in one of the earliest evangelistic
efforts beyond Judea. Jerusalem -- in the mountains of Judea --
lies off to the right.
Jesus Christ knew the days His gospel would have free course
within the Roman Empire were limited. The True Church would soon
be expelled. For long ages, it would have to exist beyond the
reach of the long arm of the Roman government. To enable that
Church to read His Word, something would have to be provided to
preserve it.
That was a people to preserve in the Roman world the New
Testament THROUGH those difficult times! That people would be
GREEK.
They had to be people not to be persecuted from place to
place, but remaining in their homeland, their possessions --
including the New Testament -- relatively safe from destruction.
Unlike God's Church, they must be a part of this world, yet with
"Christian" background and tradition. Not being themselves
CONVERTED, they must nevertheless cherish and take pride in the
original Greek New Testament.
Their mission would be to treasure, preserve and copy the
Scripture message -- word for word and letter by letter --
through the long dark night of the Middle Ages. It was NOT
essential that they believe it.
All this Jesus Christ knew, and prepared for, when He began
by the Apostle Paul what was to be essentially a ONE-GENERATION
work in the Greek world.
Jesus Christ knew the false church, then arising, would be
centered in Egypt and Rome.
Hundreds of corrupt Egyptian and "Western"
(Roman-influenced) manuscripts prove Jesus was right. And even
THOSE were kept hidden lest people should read them!
THAT is why Paul was sent to the Greek Gentiles. That is why
thousands of Greeks were converted, many congregations
established. Paul knew the Greek nation could not long remain
faithful (Acts 20:29). With the great falling away (II Thes.
2:3), these congregations would be taken over by that great false
church which was even then at work (verse 7) through men
masquerading as Jesus' apostles (II Cor. 11:13-15). But the
Greeks would still preserve the true inspired Greek New
Testament.
Paul's later work in Spain was no more prosperous or
permanent than Barnabas' in Africa or the other apostles'. That
is why Paul did not stay long in Spain.
Because we possess much more knowledge of the travels of
Paul, the world today seems to think Paul was much greater than
the other apostles. This is not the point. It was only because of
his special commission -- to teach the Greeks and to have much of
the gospel preserved in their language through his own epistles
-- that Paul supersedes and overshadows all the rest. The "false
apostles" of those days forged writings in the names of Peter and
the others as well as in Paul's.
5. Did "many thousands" -- probably the majority -- of the
members of the Church continue to be Jewish? Acts 21:20. This was
now about 30 years after the Church began. Were many of them
former Pharisees? Acts 15:5; 26:5.
What Was Peter's Job?
We saw how all the early lay members of the Church were
scattered from Jerusalem. But what of the apostles?
1. What was the main commission given to the Twelve? Were
they called specifically to go to the "lost sheep of the HOUSE OF
ISRAEL? Mat. 10:2-6. But to do this they would have to leave
Palestine! Only the Jews -- HOUSE OF JUDAH -- had returned to
Palestine from captivity.
2. Whom did Paul find left in Jerusalem about 38 A.D.? Gal.
1:18, 19.
COMMENT: Of the original Twelve, only Peter was there! The
James mentioned here is the "Lord's (half-)brother," also
mentioned in Mat. 13:55. He was not one of the original Twelve,
although he had become an apostle. As late as the last six months
of Jesus' life, James did not believe in Him (John 7:5-8).
3. When King Herod, about A.D. 42, martyred James, the
brother of John, whom else did he find in Jerusalem? Acts 12:1-3.
COMMENT: Peter was there. But the rest were long gone! Note
that it was the season for the Days of Unleavened Bread. This
probably accounts for the temporary presence of James.
4. When Paul again went up to Jerusalem in A.D. 49, whom did
he find? Gal. 2:9.
COMMENT: Again, PETER (Cephas), James (the Lord's brother)
-- and John. Now it was John who was temporarily at headquarters
in Jerusalem.
It is evident that most of the apostles had designated
responsibilities elsewhere, which were occasionally interrupted
either by trips to or temporary tours of duty at headquarters.
Peter was most often at Jerusalem after the first 12 years in
which the Syro-Palestinean area had been thoroughly covered. But
this does not mean that Peter settled back on an ecclesiastical
throne and never left the city. Notice!
5. We have already noted Peter journeying to Samaria, Joppa,
and other places around Palestine. Where else does the Bible show
Peter traveled? Gal. 2:11. Then isn't it evident that part of
Peter's job among the Twelve was to travel around and to
coordinate the Work of the Church to the House of Israel and the
Jews in the Near East?
PHOTO CAPTION: Photographic reproductions of Codex Sinaiticus
(above and below) and of Codex Alexandrinus (opposite page).
These Egyptian manuscripts, written in Greek -- the international
language of the time, have been corrupted by Egyptian scribes. To
the end of the book of Revelation (above) has been added the
spurious epistle of Barnabas. In the photograph below, we see
this spurious epistle followed by another book -- the Shepherd of
Hermas -- which originated in Rome and is filled with false
doctrine. On opposite page the first letter of Clement, bishop of
Rome, is deliberately added by a scribe to the Book of
Revelation. And that despite the dire warning which he had just
copied of Rev. 22:18 (visible on opposite page beginning on line
17 of first column).
6. On Peter's first trip, did John accompany him? Acts 8:14.
Did the Church usually send out men by twos? Luke 10:1; Acts
15:39. Jesus Christ from the beginning designed John to be the
one to supervise the whole Church after all the other apostles
were dead (John 21:22-23).
COMMENT: This does NOT mean that Peter, or John, was ever
the Head of the Church or in a pontifical office over the other
apostles. Notice! Peter and John were SENT by the apostles
collectively under Christ's inspiration.
Nor was Peter at ROME! It was another Simon, also called a
Peter, who went to Rome. (See Mr. Armstrong's account of this
Simon in "God Speaks Out on the New Morality".) Rome, basically,
was not a Christian headquarters at all! When Paul wrote to the
Romans -- in about 56 A.D. -- was there even an organized
congregation there to which to write? Rom. 1:7. There was none!
As late as 56 A.D.!
COMMENT: The Apostle PETER was not there. Paul devotes a
whole chapter to personal greetings to individuals (chapter 16)
yet never once mentions Peter. What a slap in the face that would
be if Peter were there!
Yet some today claim a "Peter" arrived in Rome in 45 A.D.!
But THAT Peter was not the apostle whom Jesus baptized.
7. Somewhat later, when Paul in person arrived in Rome, did
he call a CHURCH congregation to him, or were there only
unconverted Jews to whom he could preach? Acts 28:17.
COMMENT: There were SCATTERED Christians in south Italy
(verse 14) as well as in Rome, but at the time no organized
congregations in either area, outside of family worship in
private homes.
8. As late as Paul's SECOND imprisonment in Rome, were there
only three other TRUE ministers there? Col. 4:10-11. But were
there false ministers PRETENDING to be on Paul's team? Phil.
1:15; 2:20-21.
9. One more mention of Peter requires our notice. Where was
Peter, much later, after persecution and Roman-Jewish strife had
virtually ended the Work in the Palestine area? I Peter 5:13. NOT
at Rome. But at Babylon on the Euphrates! Where thousands of Jews
still lived, descended from those anciently carried there captive
by Nebuchadnezzar.
Where Did the TWELVE Apostles Go?
Most of the "lost sheep of the HOUSE OF ISRAEL" were not in
Palestine. Not since the ancient Assyrians had deported them.
Where WERE they? Let us notice WHERE THE APOSTLES WENT.
1. As a headquarters apostle, Peter had also a certain
responsibility toward the whole Church. In fulfilling this
overall responsibility, did he write two epistles to
congregations abroad? I and II Peter. To whom did he address the
first epistle? I Peter 1:1.
COMMENT: These provinces were in northern and central Asia
Minor (Turkey of today) along the southern shores of the Black
Sea. They were non-Greek areas. The Galatia here mentioned is
NORTHERN Galatia, not the southern Galatia PAUL visited and to
which he wrote the Epistle to the Galatians. Archaeology has
proven northern Galatia was non-Greek in language and culture.
Who lived in these provinces? Peter writes to people called
"strangers" scattered throughout that land. It was not their
homeland, then. Now compare I Peter 2:10 with Hosea 1:10-2:1.
Clearly both references are speaking of the same people --
Israel! In Peter's day this region was a chief dwelling place of
the "lost" tribes of Israel -- brother tribes to the Jews who
were the tribe of Judah.
Peter not only wrote to these people from Babylon, he
visited them in person. As overall coordinator of the Church, he
met and conferred with his brother Andrew there.
This region was greatly affected by the teaching of the
apostles. And the effect remained for at least 2 generations.
About 112 A.D., Pliny the Younger, governor of Bithynia, wrote to
Roman Emperor Trajan that the temples of the old gods were almost
forsaken and that Christians were everywhere a multitude!
2. Did James, the Lord's brother -- another headquarters
apostle -- also write an epistle to all the twelve tribes --
WHEREVER they were SCATTERED? James 1:1. Shortly after he wrote
this epistle, James was slain -- martyred -- at the Temple in
Jerusalem, about 62 A.D.
COMMENT: In addition to those in Bithynia and nearby, other
Israelites were widely dispersed on three continents. But
already, a major homeland was Britain. Here Peter next turned his
steps. We are told that he spent MUCH TIME in Britain!
We do not know exactly when Peter died -- probably before 69
A.D. But in 80 or 81 A.D. Anacletus, Roman Pope, consecrated a
tomb for "Peter" at Rome. Whoever was really buried there, this
proves that the real apostle Peter was no longer alive -- had
indeed been gone for some time -- or the fraud would soon have
been exposed.
After Peter's death, the supervision of the whole Church
under Christ was given to John, the last of the three "pillars"
of headquarters (Gal. 2:9). He too wrote General Epistles to the
Church at large -- I, II and III John -- and the Book of
Revelation.
PHOTO CAPTION: Trajan, Roman Emperor (98-117 A.D.). He allowed
Christians peace instead of persecution -- though the law
demanded persecution -- because truly repentant and converted
Christians were obedient, peaceful, dependable -- the kind of
subjects any government appreciates.
Such scanty information as we possess suggests that John
only returned to the region of the eastern Mediterranean after
many years absence. We hear nothing of him between the 40's and
the 90's A.D. He may have been in Gaul, where French tradition
declares Mary came (see John 19:26-27).
History tells us Peter's brother Andrew had the primary
charge of the northern Asia Minor area to which Peter wrote.
Andrew went all around the eastern and northeastern coasts of the
Black Sea as far as the Crimea. Philip too worked in these areas,
and far into Scythia.
Another apostle Philip is often confused with the first.
Sometimes he is called an evangelist. We first meet this very
zealous man as a deacon in Acts 6:5. He labored among the Grecian
population on both sides of the Aegean Sea and in Gaul.
Bartholomew (Nathaniel) worked among Israelites then living
in Cilicia, Armenia and beyond the Caspian. Thomas likewise went
to those who still lived in the vast areas of the Iranian
plateau. The northeastern part of this region was often called
India in ancient times. Matthew (Levi) reached many in Scythia,
on the west coast of the Caspian Sea, and in "Ethiopia" (an area
of dark-skinned people in India). Thaddeus Lebbeus ministered in
upper Mesopotamia, including Assyria proper.
Farther west, Matthias' sphere was Macedonia, Dacia --
modern Romania -- and areas in central Europe. Still farther,
James of Alphaeus is said to have gone to Spain, Britain and
Ireland, while Simon the Zealot was in North Africa, in Britain
and other islands.
Did you notice how many reached Britain?
If you would like to know more about the later life and work
of the apostles who so strangely disappear from the New Testament
account, write for the free article "Where Did the Twelve
Apostles Go?"
End of the Apostolic Era
When the gospel first reached each new region, there were
those God had prepared to receive it. Church growth was
spectacular. Soon, however, the first rush was over. Real
conversions now came much more slowly, as the number of
Christians in relation to the population of each region tended to
reach its "saturation point."
And now, side by side with success and growth, came
increasing persecution.
Nero, mad Roman Emperor, initiated the first GOVERNMENT
persecution in A.D. 64. A disastrous fire had destroyed a large
part of the capital city. It was whispered that Nero himself had
set it, to clear away the slums that cheapened the view from his
palace, and that he had celebrated by fiddling while Rome burned.
To clear himself -- and safeguard his position -- Nero accused
Christians.
Some were martyred by lingering torture, other by exposure
to wild beasts in the arena. THE INFANT CHRISTIAN CONGREGATION AT
ROME WAS VIRTUALLY DESTROYED.
Nero's government had, in A.D. 61, released the apostle Paul
after two years at Rome. (Two years was the maximum imprisonment
prescribed by a Roman "statute of limitations" since in the
meantime no accusers had appeared against him -- Acts 28:30, 31.)
Now Paul was seized again (II Tim. 4:13), spoke personally before
Nero himself, and in A.D. 68 was beheaded.
Meanwhile, in Judea the unconverted Jewish nation had risen
in rebellion to drive out the Romans from Palestine. A Roman army
under General Cestius came in sight of the walls of Jerusalem in
A.D. 66. Had he only known it, the rebels were beaten. But
SOMETHING held him back! The rebels took heart. His chance was
past.
But God's headquarters Church was still in danger -- in the
doomed and besieged city! Nero had tended to favor the Jews
because of his Jewish mistress. He died in 68 -- shortly after
Paul. General Vespasian now commanded the Roman army and moved
energetically to crush the rebellion.
Was the living, active Jesus Christ on the job? Yes! A
stronger hand than all the might of Rome would make the next
move!
The new Emperor died suddenly. Leaving the army in Palestine
to his son, Vespasian raced for Rome to be emperor. Again, the
Roman armies temporarily withdrew!
And in Jerusalem, as God's people were gathered at the Feast
of Pentecost, there was an earthquake, accompanied with a great
noise, and a supernatural voice was heard to say in the Temple:
"LET US REMOVE HENCE!"
PHOTO CAPTION: Likeness of mad emperor Nero preserved on Roman
coin. Note the facial expression of this man who persecuted the
Christian Church and martyred the Apostle Paul.
God's people did "remove hence!" The Church fled to the
mountains, and on to Pella, a small town just beyond the River
Jordan. Behind them the Roman armies closed in rapidly on
Jerusalem. The Jews were STARVED into submission. Jerusalem fell
after HORRIBLE SUFFERING. The Temple of God was razed to the
ground!
And the Church of God everywhere in Roman lands was
silenced. No meetings were allowed after A.D. 69 out of fear of
revolt after the death of two Caesars already that year.
Thus ended, after just two 19-year cycles, the work of the
Apostolic Church in Jerusalem!
Candlestick Removed From Ephesus!
The Pella congregation still called itself the Jerusalem
church. Its chief elder was still pastor of "Jerusalem."
In the first 38 years, as congregations and conversions
multiplied, the distant churches had very frequently appealed to
the authority of the mother church in Jerusalem. But now a period
of declining zeal set in for the whole Church.
This condition was foretold in the prophetic messages to the
seven churches (Rev. 2 and 3).
1. Did Jesus Christ highly commend the first era of the
Church for its labor and patience and goodness? Rev. 2:2, 3. Did
He state it had EARLY to face false apostles -- men seeking to
build up a following for themselves, whom Jesus Christ had not
ordained? Same verse. Who were these people whom the True Church
"canst not bear"? Verse 6.
2. But did He also have something against this church era?
What is it? Verse 4. What did Christ threaten to do if this
church did not awaken from its lethargy? Verse 5 compared with
chapter 1, verse 20.
COMMENT: He would REMOVE IT OUT OF ITS PLACE! This was done
physically, in type -- even before the prophecy was written, when
the Jerusalem headquarters church was transferred to Pella. It
was done spiritually when the authority and respect in which this
mother church had been held was stripped from it in A.D. 135
after a second Jewish War with Rome.
At the time John penned these words, Jesus Christ already
knew the performance record of the church at Ephesus. That church
congregation was a type of the entire church in apostolic times.
The Ephesus Church had let down. It had not continued its work
after A.D. 69 to all nations (Mat. 28:19).
3. Did the apostle Paul before A.D. 68 find it necessary to
warn even some ministers to be more diligent? Col. 4:17. Was even
the Evangelist Timothy, his most faithful helper, in need of
being stirred up? II Tim. 1:6, compared with Philippians 2:19-20.
COMMENT: The Church and most of its ministers seem to have
acquired "lazy bones." Perhaps it was because they had decided
Christ's return was not imminent (Mat. 24:48). Are you making the
same mistake?
4. Was there an early SECONDARY headquarters of the Ephesian
era? Acts 11:26. See following COMMENT.
COMMENT: The earliest large, predominantly Gentile
congregation of the Church was at Antioch. Barnabas was sent
there to be its first minister (Acts 11:22). However, trouble
soon arose. Eusebius' "Chronicle" gives PETER the credit for
"establishing" it in A.D. 42. Another account tells WHY -- he
went there to withstand Simon Magus!
Antioch became a secondary headquarters because it was
equally accessible from Pontus and Syria, as well as from the
Greek-speaking area in western Asia Minor. Here was the major
Gentile center for the Feast of Tabernacles (Gal. 2:12-14). Paul,
Barnabas and other leaders continued to work in Gentile lands
from a headquarters in Antioch.
Even long after apostolic days, Antioch remained a chief
center. It was one of the 5 seats of Patriarchs (great fathers,
or 'papas') in the false church that Constantine organized as a
state church.
5. But where was Paul's LATER headquarters? Acts 19:1, 10.
Did he return there once more after his trip to Spain and
Britain? I Tim. 1:3.
COMMENT: Ephesus was the later headquarters of the Ephesian
era, to which it gave its name. It was more than coincidence that
Christ chose Ephesus to represent the first organization of the
Church!
John, last survivor of the original twelve apostles, and the
Philip who had originally been a deacon, both died in Ephesus.
(The original Apostle Philip, one of the Twelve, was buried at
Hierapolis of Phrygia, according to Polycrates.)
About A.D. 90, Emperor Domitian began the second imperial
persecution. John was imprisoned on the isle of Patmos in the
Aegean Sea where he received the Revelation and the command to
write it down. Probably the reason Christ allowed John to be
imprisoned was to give him the leisure to write the remaining
greatly needed parts of the New Testament.
But like Nero's persecution, Domitian's was local and
spasmodic. MOST OF THE SLAIN WERE IN ITALY AND IN ROME ITSELF.
Once again, TRUE Christianity, IF ANY, was driven from Rome.
At Patmos the apostle John was finally released. Again at
Ephesus he trained Polycarp who later carried forward the work of
John and Philip. Polycarp and Polycrates are the last leaders of
the Church in this part of the world of which we have any record.
6. What had previously happened in Ephesus, when once the
strong hand of Paul was removed? Acts 20:30; I Tim. 1:3; II Tim.
1:15.
COMMENT: Ephesus and all the local congregations in the
surrounding Roman province of Asia, were soon turned against Paul
personally, by false teachers and disloyal elders who sought
power and prestige for themselves. Many of these detached groups
were permanently drawn away from the True Church. Ultimately, the
"mystery of iniquity" already in operation long before (II Thes.
2:7), gathered them all in by posing as the universal mother
church of Christianity!
PHOTO CAPTION: Map illustrated eastern half of Roman world in
which the New Testament Church spread. Arrows indicate routes
along which the gospel was disseminated first from Jerusalem to
Antioch, Syria, and then to Asia Minor, Cyprus and Egypt. It
spread east to the area of ancient Babylon and, later, west into
Europe.
Jesus Christ ALLOWED this -- because Ephesus left its first
love. Fully ABLE to protect His own, He LET the wolves devour
these who had become lukewarm. It happened in Pella as well, as
we will shortly see.
7. This is why John, years later, wrote the way he did!
Compare I John 2:19, 20, 26; 4:1; III John 9, 10.
COMMENT: Even the literal CITY of Ephesus suffered the stern
sentence of the living Christ. "If you will not repent, I will
move your candlestick out of its place." In later years, the site
was completely deserted. The population moved to a higher
location more than a mile to the northeast, which is today call
Ayassoluk. That name itself is nothing more than a corruption of
the Greek words for "St. John, spokesman for God"!
It stands thus attested -- in prophecy fulfilled -- that
John DID speak for God!
Leadership Shifts to Smyrna
At neighboring Smyrna, Polycarp presided over the Church for
half a century after John's death. Polycarp stood up boldly for
the truth, though by this time the True Church in his area had
dwindled to almost nothing. History relates that, following the
example of Peter, Paul, and John, he wrote many letters to
congregations and individuals, though all these have perished,
save one doubtful exception.
In old age -- he was about 85 -- Polycarp journeyed to Rome.
His mission was not a success. The bishop of Rome, Anicetus,
observed Easter. Nor would he be converted, nor observe GOD'S
Passover.
The following year (155 A.D.) Polycarp was burnt to death by
a mob in Smyrna.
PHOTO CAPTION: The desolate site of ancient Ephesus from which a
whole city has literally been removed. To the "Ephesian" era of
the church which the city named, Christ said: "I will remove your
candlestick."
The name Smyrna means BITTER. And BITTER, indeed, was the
era of the Church that it symbolizes! In the words of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica:
"The steady progress of the heretical movement in spite of
all opposition was a cause of deep sorrow to Polycarp, so that in
the last years of his life the words were constantly on his lips,
'Oh good God, to what times hast thou spared me, that I must
suffer (tolerate) such things!"'
Such things as Anicetus -- who claimed he was human head of
the Catholic Church of God -- and pagan Easter, being observed
all over in churches claiming to be "Christian." These Polycarp
HAD to allow. For, indeed, there was nothing he could do to stop
it. Perhaps even he did not see CLEARLY that this apostacy was
never part of the True Church -- but was a conspiracy that wormed
its way into the local congregations to gain a following after
itself.
The struggle -- over observing Satan's days instead of God's
-- yet dragged on though Polycarp was dead. Now, it was
Polycrates of Ephesus resisting pagan presences of Victor at Rome
(190-198). But to no avail. Victor not only pretended his vast
Easter-keeping organization was Christ's Church but arrogated to
himself authority to "excommunicate" those who in Asia still kept
the Passover.
With this generation the True Church in the Greek-speaking
world had virtually DISAPPEARED. With Polycrates, its last candle
flickered out. The Synagogue of Satan was now triumphant in the
world.
1. Few understand the real origin of the Synagogue of Satan.
Is salvation OF (beginning with and proceeding FROM) the Jews?
John 4:22. Was there a people (and religion) which from Old
Testament times had claimed to be Jews and were not? Verse 12.
COMMENT: Josephus, the Jewish historian, reports the
Samaritans always pretended to be Jews when it favored them. Read
the origin of the Babylonian Samaritans and their hybrid pagan
religion in II Kings 17:18-33. They brought the worship of the
Babylonian goddess Ishtar or Easter (Succoth-benoth) with them.
From these Samaritans, under Simon Magus' leadership -- HE was
the false Peter of Rome -- sprang the false church or Synagogue
of Satan that triumphed in the world (Acts 8:9-11, 21-23). For
fuller information, write for our free reprint, "What is the
Synagogue of Satan?"
2. Does the sure finger of God's Word point out the identity
of the adversary of God's Church during the Smyrna era? Rev. 2:9.
COMMENT: Space will not permit complete revelation of the
origin and development of the false church in this Lesson. That
will follow later.
The Church of "Poor People"
We have traced the progress and decay of the Church in the
Greek-speaking Roman province of Asia, where the original "seven
churches" were located. We have seen also the later complete
fade-out of the Smyrna era in this region. But we are ahead of
our story. We must return to the predominantly Jewish Church in
Palestine and Syria.
1. In the time of the first Apostles, did the world regard
the True Church as only a "sect"? Acts 24:5. Did it also nickname
them "Nazarenes"? Same verse.
2. How does Jesus Christ characterize the second era of His
Church? Were they "poor" in the eyes of the world -- but actually
RICH? Rev. 2:9. WHY were they rich? Verses 8, 10. Wasn't it
because the LIVING Jesus Christ continued to guide and empower
them -- to prevent HIS Church from turning aside to false
doctrine? Mat. 28:19.
COMMENT: The WORLD now called these people "Ebionites,"
which means "paupers" -- "poor, destitute"! This small Church was
despised and rejected by the world and the religious
organizations of the day. And no wonder! Even the apostle Paul
admitted he was called a HERETIC -- that's how the world viewed
it! See Acts 24:14.
Instead of being any longer a part of the apostolic
"Ephesus" era, the time had come when Jew as well as Greek
composed the "Smyrna" era -- or "poor people" or Ebionites.
Here's how it had come to pass.
After the martyrdom of James the brother of Jesus, Simeon
son of Cleopas (Luke 24:18; John 19:25) became presiding elder in
the Headquarters congregation. Through the declining years of the
Ephesian era, Simeon, like John, lived on and on, as if he would
live forever. Finally, in 107 A.D. in the reign of the Emperor
Trajan, at a reported age of a hundred and twenty years, Simeon
was crucified.
Thirteen more "bishops" -- all circumcised Jews -- ruled the
Jerusalem-Pella church in rapid succession. Then, about A.D. 135,
came Jesus Christ's time to separate a living "Smyrna" remnant
from among the lukewarm and unspiritual who clung to it.
The stubborn Palestinian Jews had revolted in 132 for the
third time. The exasperated Romans this time completely destroyed
the city of Jerusalem. They then founded a new Roman colony, of
Gentiles only, on the site, renamed 'Aelia Capitolina'. Jews were
forbidden to approach it. This included, of course, Christian
Jews of Pella.
And now was shown just how worldly and spiritually drowsy
that church had become. Most of the Pella congregation rejected
God's method of government and ELECTED to themselves (II Tim.
4:3) a Gentile -- Marcus -- to be their leader. Thus the majority
found means to return to Jerusalem. There they became part of
that other religious organization which tried to be at the same
time both Jewish and Gentile (Rev. 2:9).
Marcus proceeded to declare disfellowshipped those few who
remained faithful to the true doctrine and to Jesus Christ! The
Smyrna Era now began.
3. Had the Apostle Paul prophesied this? II Tim. 4:3-4
4. Was this same thing happening -- even earlier -- among
the Greek congregations? III John 9, 10.
5. Does Jude mention that some -- even before the
destruction of the Temple at Jerusalem -- had begun to "separate
themselves"? Jude 19. This was about A.D. 66. Within a few
decades, only a remnant was left.
COMMENT: Hegesippus and Eusebius -- Greek writers -- tell us
of faithful Zokker and James, grandsons of this Jude. As He often
does, Jesus was still ruling His Church and working through
members of the same family.
In the reign of Domitian, Zokker and James were called
before the Roman governor, interrogated and contemptuously
dismissed -- being deemed unworthy of further notice. Yes, the
world now viewed the faithful few with contempt.
Ebionites in History
It was with contempt that the faithful few -- truly a
"little flock" -- were called Ebionites or "paupers" in reference
to their supposed unbelievable stupidity or naivete IN believing
the Bible. They clung to the Law of God! The world has nothing in
common with anyone who believes in obeying God. The world calls
that STUPID!
The large PROFESSING Christian church, founded by Simon
Magus, now branded them "heretics." Even the name "Nazarene" was
considered too honorable for them now!
They still kept their headquarters at Pella, and spread
themselves into villages near Damascus. There is also record of a
small congregation in Boerea, now called Aleppo. Traces of
Ebionites may be discovered here as late as the 4th century.
Among the people east of Jordan, Ebionite VIEWS lingered
until the Islamic conquest in the 7th century.
But that's again getting ahead of the story.
Hegesippus, afterward a famous Catholic, was once an
Ebionite. He copied the example of Marcus. Hegesippus yearned to
follow the crowd. So, determined to find the majority right, he
convinced himself by finding throughout the Empire in every city
the same (false) doctrines taught and mislabeled "Christian." He
it was who originally drew up the list of Roman bishops, on which
Anicetus and his successors -- down to the Pope today -- based
their claim to be the successors of a Peter.
Eusebius, whose chief theme was to justify and eulogize
Emperor Constantine and the church of Constantine's choice,
copied much of his information about the early True Church from
Hegesippus, not really telling the true story of either.
We know but little of Ebionite history. Because their own
writings have perished, our information must come from their
enemies. And here, clearly, truth is well-tempered with lies!
Eusebius claims they rejected the virgin birth and
pre-existence of Christ, and the writings of Paul. But this was
not true of all. The next age of God's True Church -- revived in
the place where migrating Ebionites disappear -- accepted these
truths! Their very distinguishing name became PAULician!
It was the elaborate theology of Catholicism and Gnosticism
which most "Ebionites" rejected! The interminable ARGUMENTS
whether God is one Person or three -- whether Jesus Christ was
God OR man (He was both -- God in the Flesh)! And a false version
of "Pauline" theology which claims the Law was abolished! (Using
Paul's name to put over false doctrine began early -- II Thes.
2:2.)
A rigid splinter group, also called Ebionite, WAS indeed
antagonistic to Paul. It was composed of carnal-minded Jews who
could plainly perceive Jesus was no ordinary man. But they could
never forgive Paul for having put GENTILES on the level of JEWS
by offering them salvation. Irenaeus (about A.D. 180, in the area
of modern France) wrote they used only the Gospel of Matthew.
A third group labeled "Ebionites" had accepted some Gnostic
doctrines. As the second century ended a considerable number had
exchanged the simple creed of Jesus Christ for a strange blend of
Christianity and Essenism. Some of these became Elchasaites, so
called after their leader, a false prophet led astray by demon
visions. About A.D. 220. Alciabides propagated their false
doctrine at Rome. Quite possibly this was the real origin of the
"pseudo-Clementine" HOMILIES (composed about 170 A.D.) and
RECOGNITIONS -- (WRITTEN later, but based on the former) -- whose
perverted ramblings betray knowledge that Simon Magus, NOT Simon
Peter, founded a church at Rome! All these were carnal-minded
sects labeled by the same name in church history as God's church.
In every age the Church has its unconverted "members." But
there were a few faithful, who really constituted the Church.
About 200 A.D. an Ebionite from Ephesus, named Theodotion,
revised earlier translations of the Old Testament into GREEK. His
translation of Daniel gained universal acceptance in place of the
poorly done original Septuagint version.
A little later another Ebionite, Symmachus, also made a
Greek translation of the Old Testament. His was probably the most
readable -- yet faithful -- such translation ever made. Symmachus
is also noted for his Commentaries on various Old Testament
books.
(To be continued)
CHRONOLOGICAL CHART
A.D.
- 31 New Testament Church begins on Day of Pentecost.
- 32 Stephen martyred -- Lay members scattered from Jerusalem.
- 33 Simon Magus "dunked."
- 35 Saul converted on road to Damascus early that year.
- 38 Paul returns to Jerusalem. Peter sent to Gentiles.
- 42 Church at Antioch founded.
- 42 James martyred.
- 45 Simon Magus goes to Rome.
- 45 Paul and Barnabas journey through Cyprus and southern Asia
Minor.
- 49 Council at the headquarters church.
- 50 Paul goes to Europe -- second 19-year cycle begins on Day of
Pentecost.
- 56 Paul writes Epistle to the Romans.
- 59 Paul arrives bound in Rome -- released in 61.
- 61 Epistles of James and I Peter.
- 62 Paul, released, goes on to Spain, etc. James, the Lord's
brother, martyred by being thrown from a high window of the
Temple.
- 64 "Nero's" fire at Rome.
- 66 Jews revolt.
- 66 II Peter and Jude written.
- 67 Paul's last imprisonment.
- 68 Paul beheaded, Peter killed.
- 69 Jerusalem congregation arrives at Pella.
- 70 Temple burnt.
- 80 Monument to a "Peter" dedicated at Rome.
- 90's John's Gospel, Epistles, and Revelation.
- 98 John dies.
- 107 Simeon, son of Cleophas, dies.
- 112 Pliny's letter about persecuting Christians.
- 132 Jews revolt again.
- 135 Most of Pella congregation apostatizes -- end of Ephesian Era
-- beginning of Smyrna Era.
- 155 Polycarp burnt to death.
- 195 Victor of Rome "excommunicates" true Christians.
- 303 Christianity persecuted (303-313) for 10 years in Eastern
Roman Empire. Recurring famines, pestilences and wars reach a
climax.
- 325 Catholics hold Council of Nicaea. Smyrna Era ended by
persecution of Constantine.
- 337 Death of Constantine "the Great."
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