The bad
news is that apostasy is inevitable! Yet, the good news is that no one
has to be a part of it — especially if he is alert to, and recognizes,
the signs of its encroachment.
That
apostasy, of both individuals and groups, is inevitable is evident from
both Biblical and uninspired history. The Bible makes it clear in many
statements and examples that this is the case. To name a few, there are
the examples of Adam and Eve (Gen. 3), Cain (Gen. 4), the antediluvians
(Gen. 6-9), the tower of Babel (Gen. 11), the general Gentile world
(Rom. 1:24,26,28), the Israelites on numerous occasions — in the
wilderness (Heb. 3:16-19), in Canaan during the times of the judges
(Judg. 2:11-23), the kings (2 Kgs. 17:1-23; 2 Chr. 36:11-17), and Christ
(Matt. 12:43-45) — Solomon, 1 Kgs. 11:1ff), and the apostle Judas
(Matt.
26:14,15).
Jesus and
Paul express the inevitability of apostasy in particularly succinct and
definite statements. Jesus said, “… It is inevitable that stumbling
blocks come …” (Matt. 18:7), while Paul said, “… There must also be
factions among you …” (1 Cor. 11:19), and “… in later times some will
fall away from the faith …” (1 Tim. 4:1).
In
addition to these examples, there are numerous Biblical prophecies and
warnings regarding apostasy by Jesus (Matt. 24:12), Paul (Acts 20:29,30;
1 Cor. 10:12; 2 Thess. 2:1-3; 1 Tim. 4:1-3,6), the writer of Hebrews
(2:1; 3:12), and Peter (2 Pet. 2:1). Indeed, the Bible is so replete
with such examples, prophecies, and warnings that the prospect of
becoming an apostate ought to strike fear in the heart of any pious
soul. If even the humble and wise Solomon failed to escape apostasy, no
one is justified in feeling safe and secure while in this life!
Furthermore, these prophecies and warnings about apostasy are repeatedly
confirmed in uninspired history and experience. A generation ago, the
student of American religious history, David Edwin Harrell, reported
that apostasy among churches of Christ had progressed to the point of
bifurcation into two separate alignments: “The fact that the church of
Christ is divided into conservative and denominational factions is not a
partisan question. It is not even debatable. This is a good, sound,
inescapable, historical conclusion. Every secular scholar who has
studied the current status of the church of Christ understands that the
movement is in the process of a ‘sect to denomination’ evolution” (The
Emergence of the “Church of Christ” Denomination, pg. 26, 1972).
A
generation later it would seem that that evolution is approaching its
culmination. Even some in the liberal alignment (i.e., “institutional
churches”) have begun to complain about the apostasy among themselves,
so that what once might have seemed to be a bifurcation has actually
emerged into a trifurcation of conservatives, moderates, and liberals.
“We’ve raised up a generation … where some of us kids have forgotten
[the passion to teach the lost]. In fact, too many. And the result is
now slapping us in the face. … ‘A National study of about 2,000 junior
high, senior high and college students in the Church of Christ shows
that nearly 80 percent of the teenagers do not believe one must be an
active member of the Church of Christ in order to go to heaven” (Larry
West, World Radio News, March-April, 1995, pg. 2).
“The
church of Christ is dividing into two irreconcilable camps. On one side
are those who have kept the same faith. On the other side are those who
are experimenting with a broad range of differing faiths. And there is
a vast gulf between these two sides, separating the light from the
darkness. … Christians usually fall into error gradually rather than
instantly. A small compromise here, a little concession there, and
before you know it the whole has changed. Lowering the boundaries
between the church and other religions weakens the meaning of being a
Christian. It is an apostasy of attrition” (Gregory Alan Tidwell,
Gospel Advocate, March 2016, pp. 12, 15).
“Churches of Christ have also felt the pressures of social liberalism.
An increasing number of congregations and institutions do not teach and
practice the simple truths of New Testament Christianity. When I was a
young adult, if a congregation claimed to be a church of Christ, you
knew what the assembly believed. College students today face a blurred
ambiguity of doctrinal confusion” (Joe Wiley, Gospel Advocate, January
2017, pg. 12).
“In his
excellent new book, Will Our Faith Have Children?, Stan Mitchell writes,
‘The church is just one generation away from disappearing. All it takes
is for one generation in a long line of generations to fail to teach the
next. The most important question of our age is this: Will there be a
church, Christ-like and biblical, faithful and evangelistic, in the next
generation? Will our faith have children?’” (Billy R. Smith, Gospel
Advocate, January 2017, pg. 22).
However,
no one has to be lost to apostasy. These very examples and warnings are
testimony to the fact that the situation with any individual is by no
means hopeless. Indeed, the very fact that one takes notice of, and
trembles, at such warnings makes it that much less likely that he will
be overtaken by apostasy.
Though
the apostasy of individuals can occur, or seem to occur, rather
suddenly, the dynamics of a social group do not typically allow for
this. Instead, the influence of individuals upon one another and the
change in attitudes necessary to receptiveness to unconventional ideas
within the membership of a group require time. Therefore, the apostasy
of an affiliation of persons usually takes place over years, decades, or
even generations.
The
difficulty under which this phenomenon places members of a group wishing
to preserve the status quo or original identity of the group consists in
the fact that the early or even intermediate steps in the process of
apostasy, especially critical attitudinal changes, tend to occur so
gradually or incrementally that they are nearly imperceptible to most of
the members. To use a medical metaphor, apostasy is not a heart attack
— it is cancer! Adding to this difficulty of discerning the forces of
apostasy at work is the fact that those who do notice, and warn of, the
changes taking place might often be disregarded, declaimed, and
discredited by being labeled as “alarmists,” “traditionalists,”
“legalists,” “hobby-riders,” or “nit-pickers.”
The
apostasy of the Israelites following the death of Joshua provides a good
illustrative paradigm of this phenomenon (Judg. 2:7-23). Three
generations are distinguishable: (a) Joshua and his contemporaries
(vs.
7), (b) the generation following Joshua (vs. 7), and (c) the next
generation (vs. 10).
This
observation that apostasy occurs in cycles of three generations is, of
course, somewhat artificial. It might occur more slowly or more
quickly. [Paul was amazed, for instance, that apostasy had occurred so
“quickly” among the Galatians and that they were ready to “turn back
again to the weak and worthless elemental things” (1:6ff; 4:9).]
However, this should not obscure the fact that group apostasy is
typically a slow, gradual, even multi-generational process. This
pattern is also confirmed by the narrative of the books of Joshua and
Judges, which show that apostasy tended to develop over a period of
40-80 years (3:11,30; 5:31; 8:28,33). When Joshua called upon the
Israelites to put away the false gods they had among themselves, they
did so (Josh. 24:14ff). Yet, two generations later, false gods were
reintroduced among them (Judg. 2:10ff).
Later
generations tend to lose the fervor with which their forebears fought
for, and adhered to, the principles which activated their movement.
They simply did not share the experiences of their forebears.
Patriotism is strongest among veterans. It seems to be contrary to the
nature of life to keep a fire of fervor forever fueled. It is difficult
to pass on a legacy of enthusiasm to a later generation. They have come
to live in a different world. They cannot relate to, or appreciate,
bygone conditions which led to the movement to which they have now
become only a nominal and habituated part. They have a different set of
concerns, which leads them to take for granted that for which their
forebears so fiercely and fearlessly fought.
The
advantage of thinking of apostasy as occurring in small steps is that,
not only does this concept generally conform to reality, but it also
allows for better discernment of the process by which apostasy takes
place. Therefore, while it might be a little simplistic to do so, it
might also prove helpful to analyze the process of apostasy in three
stages taking place over three generations.
The
First Generation: Silence
Once the
victory has been won, or at least the battle lines have been clearly
drawn, a kind of “peace” settles over the scene of conflict. The guns
are silenced, as an uneasy armistice becalms the former warzone. A sort
of “battle fatigue” has set in. The war has been fought, and the issues
have been resolved as far as they can be. Foes have nestled into
something akin to static and entrenched truce. Quiet descends softly
over the fields where fighting has recently raged. Foes see no point in
engaging each other, since sides have been chosen and combatants have
made up their minds. They now focus on consolidating their positions.
They become complacent and cease to teach the principles and make the
applications which once animated them.
This
silence is itself a problem. Satan takes advantage of this “quiet time”
to get his forces ready for his next offensive. Younger generations are
not being taught principles which will prepare them to identify and
confront renewed assaults in slightly different forms.
It is
both wrong and dangerous to keep silent about the truth. Isaiah
affirmed his obligation to declare the truth when he said, “For Zion's
sake I will not keep silent, and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not keep
quiet, until her righteousness goes forth like brightness, and her
salvation like a torch that is burning” (62:1). The four lepers at the
gate of famine-stricken Samaria understood this. They initially kept
quiet about the bounty they found in the abandoned camp of the Arameans
but then repented and said, “We are not doing right. This day is a day
of good news, but we are keeping silent; if we wait until morning light,
punishment will overtake us. Now therefore come, let us go and tell …”
(2 Kgs. 7:9). When Esther hesitated to intervene on behalf of her
people, her guardian, Mordecai, told her, “Do not imagine that you in
the king’s palace can escape any more than all the Jews. For if you
remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the
Jews from another place and you and your father’s house will perish.
And who knows whether you have not attained royalty for such a time as
this?” (Esth. 4:13,14). Peter and John refused to comply with the
Sanhedrin’s command to cease preaching the gospel, replying, “For we
cannot stop speaking what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20).
Second Generation: Apathy
Because
the first generation ceases teaching certain Biblical principles, the
next generation becomes indifferent to them. They might be aware of
them and even abide by them, but they do not have a strong emotional or
principled attachment to them. They accept them because they are a part
of the heritage which gives them their identity. They know that they
are expected to oppose the teachings and practices their forebears did,
but the basis of their commitment to these principles goes no farther
than that. In any event, they have even less to say about these
principles to the next generation than the preceding one had to say to
them.
This
indifference might evolve into embarrassment about these principles or
even hostility toward them. Such reactions might be driven by a
psychological impetus not uncommon in younger generations to forge an
independent identity and define their spirituality by its distinction
from that of their forebears, especially if their spirituality seems
stilted and legalistic. Such hostility might not express itself openly
and explicitly, for fear of backlash from those who care about such
matters. Yet, they might become increasingly intolerant of sermons
critical of other religious viewpoints. They want “truth” which is
palatable and imbalanced in favor of subjects which are inoffensive.
One is reminded of Isaiah’s contemporaries, who said, “to the seers,
‘You must not see visions’; and to the prophets, ‘You must not prophesy
to us what is right, speak to us pleasant words, prophesy illusions’”
(30:10), or Amaziah, the priest of Bethel, who was aggravated by Amos’
prophesying and told him, “Go, you seer, flee away to the land of Judah,
and there eat bread and there do your prophesying!” (7:12), or Paul’s
warning to Timothy, “For the time will come when they will not endure
sound doctrine; but wanting to have their ears tickled, they will
accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires;
and will turn away their ears from the truth, and will turn aside to
myths” (2 Tim. 4:3,4).
They
might conceal their antipathy toward “distinctive preaching” by calling,
instead, for emphasis on preaching which is more devotional or
“positive” or which focuses on supposedly neglected subjects. While
there might be some validity to their complaints, they might also be
taken to the opposite extreme and used to justify it.
Third Generation: Reintroduction
The third
generation experiences the reintroduction of those elements which their
forebears found so offensive. Not only have they not experienced the
battles which their forebears fought, but they have not heard much about
them or been taught the principals involved. They have not been
encouraged to care about them. They see matters much differently. They
are looking for a different kind of religion and life. Hence, they feel
no compunctions about reintroducing to their lives and worship what was
once so offensive to their forebears.
By the
end of the first century, the church had been in existence for about
seventy years — enough time that the second and third generations of
Christians had come, or were beginning to come, to the forefront. The
author of Hebrews, writing perhaps several years before the destruction
of Jerusalem in 70 A.D., appears to be concerned about the threat of
extensive apostasy among Jewish Christians, as he warns, “For this
reason we must pay much closer attention to what we have heard, lest we
drift away from it” (2:1).
John,
whose writings are probably the latest in the New Testament and might
coincide with the last decade of the first century, describes conditions
among Christians in that period. He seems to acknowledge the existence
of three generations in the church when he refers to “fathers,” “young
men,” and “(little) children” (1 Jn. 2:12,13). By this time, apostasy
was already well under way, for he says, “… Even now many antichrists
have arisen; from this we know that it is the last hour” (1 Jn. 2:18).
By the
end of the first century, only two of the seven churches of Asia
addressed by Christ in Revelation (chs. 2,3) escaped serious rebuke for
their unfaithfulness. Second Peter’s second chapter and Jude’s only
chapter are largely parallel, but while Peter uses the future tense in
referring to the arrival of apostates, saying that “there will also be
false teachers” among his readers (vs. 1), Jude uses the past tense,
saying that “certain persons have crept in” (vs. 4), thus confirming
that the very ones about whom Peter had warned had arrived on the scene
by the time Jude picked up his pen.
Conclusion
If both
Scripture and historical experience teach that apostasy is virtually
inevitable, why should any generation of Christians, even today’s, feel
comfortable, thinking that they, their children, or their grandchildren
are immune to it? Biblical truths and their proper application are a
“tradition” (1 Thess. 3:6) in the truest sense: they must be handed
down by teaching to succeeding generations, for time and lack of direct
experience lead those who come later to forget their importance. There
will eventually arise those who “did not know Joseph” (Ex. 1:8) or “had
not experienced any of the wars of Canaan” (Judg. 3:1), and their
behaviors and reactions will be different from those who did — unless
they are taught by an older generation to “stand by the ways and see and
ask for the ancient paths, where the good way is, and walk in it” (Jer.
6:16).
The
Lord’s church is now entering, or approaching, the third generation
since institutionalism was a source of serious and divisive conflict.
“Therefore let him who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall” (1
Cor. 10:12).
Other Articles by Gary P. Eubanks
A Fool's Approach
Some Practical
Considerations for Those Considering Marriage
Talking Code
If You Remain Silent - Intolerance of
Controversy
Fathers, Divorce and Brethren
The Sunday Supper
Negative About Positivism
- Caffin,
B.C. (1950), II Peter – Pulpit Commentary, H.D.M. Spence
and Joseph Exell, eds. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans).
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