Chapter 1
What Happened to
the Church?
Jesus Christ said: "I will build My church, and the gates of
Hades [the grave] shall not prevail against it" (Matthew 16:18). Which
church did Jesus build, and what happened to it?
When the Bible speaks of the Church, it is never speaking of a
building or of a human organization incorporated under secular
authority. The word in the Greek language that is translated "church" in
English is ekklesia. It is derived from two root words in Greek
and literally means "called out" or "called from." In secular usage, it
referred to an assembly of citizens who were "called out" from the
inhabitants of the city to consider some matter of importance. It was
often used in the Greek translation of the Old Testament to refer to the
congregation of Israel or to the assembly of God’s people.
"Congregation" or "assembly" expresses the meaning in New Testament
usage as well.
However, the "called out" aspect of ekklesia is fundamental
to understanding the Church. In Genesis 12 we read that Abraham was
"called out" by God from Ur of the Chaldees. In Exodus 12 we read of
Abraham’s descendants, the children of Israel, being "called out" by God
from Egypt. They then became the congregation of Israel or the "Church
in the Wilderness" (Acts 7:38, KJV).
One of God’s final warnings to His people is a call to "come out"
of Babylon (Revelation 18:4). The saints of God are not to participate
in that corrupt, end-time culture’s sins so that they will not partake
of the divine punishments that "Babylon" will receive.
Jesus made it plain that one cannot come to Him, and be part of His
Church, without being called by the Father (John 6:44). Only those who
respond to the Father’s call, through repentance and baptism, will
receive the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38), and it is only through the Holy
Spirit of God that we become part of the Church that Jesus built (Romans
8:9; 1 Corinthians 12:13).
What happened to the Church that Jesus Christ said He would build?
Did it adapt and change with the times through progressive revelation?
Did it veer "off the track" and need to undergo a reformation at the
hands of such men as Martin Luther and John Calvin? Or, has there been a
body of believers, down through the centuries, continuing to believe and
practice the same doctrines Jesus Christ and the first-century Apostles
taught?
When we look at the story of the mainstream, professing Christian
church throughout the centuries, it appears to be a vastly different
church from the one described in the pages of your New Testament. In the
book of Acts we find that God’s Church celebrated "Jewish" holy days
(Acts 2:1; 13:14, 42, 44; 18:21), talked about the return of Jesus
Christ to judge the world (Acts 3:20–21; 17:31) and believed in the
literal establishment of the Kingdom of God on earth (Acts 1:3, 6;
28:23).
Yet, less than 300 years later, we find a church claiming
Apostolic origin, but observing the "venerable day of the Sun" instead
of the seventh-day Sabbath. When that church assembled its bishops to
discuss doctrinal matters at the Council of Nicea, the meeting was
presided over by a Roman Emperor—Constantine! How could such an amazing
transformation have taken place? What happened?
Protestant author Jesse Lyman Hurlbut acknowledged the dramatic
change that took place in his book, The Story of the Christian
Church. He wrote: "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 120AD 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" (p. 41).
The history of the Christian church between Pentecost of 31AD and
the Council of Nicea in 325AD, almost 300 years later, is truly amazing.
It is the story of how yesterday’s orthodoxy became today’s heresy, and
how old heresies came to be considered orthodox Christian doctrine. It
is the story of how church tradition and the teaching of bishops came to
supersede the Word of God as a source of doctrine. It is a story that is
stranger than fiction, yet is historically verifiable.
Simon and "Another Gospel"
In Acts 8, we are introduced to a man who was used by Satan to
infiltrate and subvert God’s Church. This man was Simon, the sorcerer
from Samaria, better known in secular history as Simon Magus. Simon was
considered by the Samaritans to be God’s divinely chosen representative
(Acts 8:9–10). Eduard Lohse, writing in The New Testament
Environment, states that the expression, "the great power of God,"
represents Simon’s "claim to be the bearer of divine revelation" (p.
269). Simon was baptized and became a nominal Christian, along with the
rest of the Samaritans. However, the Apostle Peter recognized Simon’s
real motives. In Acts 8:22–23 Peter rebuked him in the strongest terms
as being "in the gall of bitterness, and in the bond of iniquity"
(KJV).
Who were the Samaritans? The book of 2 Kings tells us that when the
northern ten tribes of Israel were deported by the King of Assyria,
Babylonians were settled in their place. These Babylonian Samaritans
continued to practice their old Babylonian paganism, but with the added
infusion of biblical terminology to obscure what they were doing (2
Kings 17:33, 41). Though they professed adherence to the God of Israel,
they did not really obey God’s law (v. 34). In fact, as is made plain in
the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, they became enemies of the true Work of
God.
The Samaritans, just as the Jews, had become dispersed throughout
the known world in the aftermath of Alexander the Great’s conquests.
There were Samaritan colonies in several major centers of the Roman
Empire, including Alexandria, Egypt and Rome. Simon had admirers and
adherents among these people.
Samaritanism, with its blending of Babylonian paganism and
lip-service to the God of Israel, was also heavily influenced by Greek
philosophy. Simon Magus added to this an acknowledgment of Jesus Christ
as the Redeemer of mankind. However, as Jesus explained: "Not every one
who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter into the kingdom of heaven,
but he who does the will of My Father in heaven" (Matthew 7:21). Simon
used the name of Jesus, but substituted a different message—a message
that did away with the need to really obey God and keep His
commandments!
Eerdman’s Handbook to the History of Christianity notes:
"Early Christian writers regarded Simon as the fount of all heresies"
(p. 100). The Encyclopaedia Britannica (11th ed.) in its article
on Simon Magus identifies him as the "founder of a school of Gnostics
and as a father of heresy." Noted historian Edward Gibbon says the
Gnostics "blended with the faith of Christ many sublime but obscure
tenets which they derived from oriental philosophy" (The Triumph of
Christendom in the Roman Empire, p. 15).
Gnosticism (the term is derived from the Greek word for
knowledge) was a highly intellectual way of life. It represented a
blending of Babylonian mystery religion, Greek philosophical speculation
and an overlay of biblical terminology. Among the Gnostics, biblical
accounts were not taken literally but were treated as allegories used to
teach deeper "truths." "The Mosaic account of the creation… was
treated with profound derision by the Gnostics" (Gibbon, p. 13).
Gnosticism stressed pagan dualism with its emphasis on the immortality
of the soul and the inherent evil of matter. It also introduced much
vain speculation on the nature of God and the spirit realm. Several New
Testament books—including the Gospel of John, Colossians and 1 John—were
written to refute the Gnostic heresies that Simon Magus and many others
began to spread.
Hellenistic culture, which pervaded the Middle East and
Mediterranean regions, was an alternative worldview—a competitor to the
perspective and values of the Bible. It stressed the supremacy of reason
and logic rather than divine revelation. The later Greeks, embarrassed
by the ribald antics of their ancient gods and heroes in the writings of
Homer and Hesiod, sought to explain them away as profound allegories.
This approach to their "inspired" writings was picked up by Hellenistic
Jews, such as Philo of Alexandria, and applied to the Bible. This
treatment of the Old Testament as an allegory was a handy tool for
Gnostics and others who wanted to evade obedience to plain commands.
About 15 years after the baptism of Simon Magus, the Apostle Paul
found it necessary to warn the Church in Thessalonica, "the mystery of
lawlessness is already at work" (2 Thessalonians 2:7). About five years
later Paul warned the Corinthians that they were in danger of being
corrupted by false apostles teaching "another Jesus" and "another
gospel." Simon and his followers were, in reality, ministers of Satan
masquerading as ministers of Christ (2 Corinthians 11:3–4, 13–15).
By the 60s AD, the Apostle Jude, brother to James and Jesus Christ,
exhorted Christians of the necessity to "contend earnestly for the
faith which was once for all delivered to the saints" (Jude 3). He
went on to warn that there were certain men who had stealthily crept
into the church organization, trying to turn grace into lawlessness by
teaching that God’s law was no longer necessary (v. 4). By Jude’s
time, the true faith had already been once and for all delivered.
Modern scholars who claim that it remained for second and third century
theologians to begin to formulate an accurate understanding of God’s
nature would do well to reread Jude 3. It is clear that Jude does not
allow for "progressive revelation"!
Writing at the close of the first century, almost 30 years after
the rest of the New Testament was completed, the aged Apostle John had
to contend with heresies that were far more widespread than those of the
days of Paul and Jude. John repeatedly emphasized the necessity of
keeping God’s commandments (1 John 2:3; 3:4, 22; 5:3). He stressed in 2
John 7: "Many deceivers have gone out into the world." In 3 John 9–10, a
leader by the name of Diotrephes had gained control of some
congregations in Asia Minor and was actually putting out of the Church
true Christians that remained loyal to the aged Apostle John and his
teachings.
The Church in Transition
An event of far-reaching implications for the New Testament Church
had occurred about 25 years prior to John’s writing. This event was the
destruction of Jerusalem by the Roman legions under Titus in 70AD. The
Jerusalem Church of God, under the leadership of James’ successor,
Simeon (first cousin of James and Christ), fled Jerusalem shortly before
70AD and went to Pella, a remote desert community. Following Simeon’s
death, the Jerusalem Church of God experienced great instability, having
13 leaders in the next 28 years.
Many previously promulgated heresies now emerged in full bloom. In
addition, many in the Church were discouraged and confused. Events
had not gone as had been generally expected. The Church was
increasingly becoming a mix of new Gentile converts and second or even
third generation members.
During the last part of the first century and the beginning of the
second, the Roman world became increasingly hostile to the Jews.
Extremely oppressive laws and heavy taxes were directed against them by
the Roman Empire as punishment. Between the first (66–73AD) and second
(132–135AD) Jewish revolts, there were many violent anti-Jewish pogroms
in places such as Alexandria and Antioch. Reacting to this, the Jews
rioted in Mesopotamia, Palestine and Egypt.
Frequently, Christians suffered as victims of these outbursts
because they were regarded by the authorities as a Jewish sect. However,
they were considered by Jewish revolutionaries to be traitors to Judaism
and to Jewish political aspirations because they would not fight the
Romans. During these times, hundreds of thousands of synagogue
and church members—those who worshipped on Sabbath days and studied
the Scriptures—perished at Roman hands or by mobs.
During this dangerous era, the Roman church under its Bishop Sixtus
(ca. 116–126AD) began holding Sunday worship services and ceased
observing the annual Passover, substituting Easter Sunday and
"Eucharist" in its place. This is the clear record preserved by Eusebius
of Caesarea, a late third and early fourth century ad scholar, who
became known as the "father of church history." Eusebius quoted his
information from a letter of Irenaeus, bishop of Lyons (ca. 130–202AD)
to Bishop Victor of Rome. Dr. Samuele Bacchiocchi, in his book, From
Sabbath to Sunday, acknowledges: "There is a wide consensus of
opinion among scholars that Rome is indeed the birthplace of
Easter-Sunday. Some, in fact, rightly label it as ‘Roman-Easter’" (p.
201). Of course, what is not generally realized by the speakers of
non-Latin languages is that the Romans did not use the name "Easter" for
their new celebration; they continued to call it by the Latin word for
Passover, paschalis.
This official break from the law of God was the natural outgrowth
of the "mystery of iniquity," which confused grace with
lawlessness and taught that obedience to the law was unnecessary.
When a practice is not deemed necessary, it is only a matter of time
until convenience will dictate either its modification or its abolition.
As the conflict between Judaism and the Empire heightened, many
"Christians" in Rome, under the leadership of Bishop Sixtus, took steps
to avoid any possibility of being considered Jews and thereby suffer
persecution with them.
In 135AD, at the end of the Second Jewish Revolt, the Roman Emperor
Hadrian (Publius Aelius Hadrianus) took drastic steps against the Jews.
He renamed Jerusalem after himself and the "god" Jupiter Capitolinus—Aelia
Capitolina—and imposed the death penalty on anyone called a "Jew"
who would dare enter the city.
At this point Marcus, an Italian, became bishop of Jerusalem, as
Edward Gibbon records in the fifteenth chapter of his famous Decline
and Fall of the Roman Empire: "At his [Marcus’] persuasion, the most
considerable part of the congregation renounced the Mosaic law, in the
practice of which they had persevered above a century. By this sacrifice
of their habits and prejudices they purchased free admission into the
colony of Hadrian, and more firmly cemented their union with the
Catholic church" (vol. 1, p. 390).
What of those who continued to regard the law of God as binding for
Christians? Gibbon writes: "The crimes of heresy and schism were imputed
to the obscure remnant of the Nazarenes which refused to accompany their
Latin bishop.… In a few years after the return of the church of
Jerusalem, it became a matter of doubt and controversy whether a man who
sincerely acknowledged Jesus as the Messiah, but who still continued to
observe the law of Moses, could possibly hope for salvation" (p. 390).
It was only a matter of time until professing Christians who had
ceased observing the Sabbath "excluded their Judaizing brethren from the
hope of salvation… [and] declined any intercourse with them in the
common offices of friendship, hospitality, and social life."
Incredible! This happened even though, just a few years earlier,
they had all observed God’s Festivals together. Yet after Bishop Marcus
brought in "new truth," most professing Christians joined him in
condemning those faithful Christians who held fast to the historic faith
that they had all been taught. Those who remained loyal to the truth
were soon shunned as a source of "division" by a majority seeking to
replace historic Christianity with something different.
A
Theology of "New Truth"?
Many of the "Christian" writings that have been preserved, from the
second century onward, put forward a totally different theology from
that of the Apostle John, who wrote just 10 or 20 years earlier. As
Bacchiocchi asserts: "Ignatius, Barnabus, and Justin, whose writings
constitute our major source of information for the first half of the
second century, witnessed and participated in the process of separation
from Judaism which led the majority of the Christians to abandon the
Sabbath and adopt Sunday as the new day of worship" (p. 213). Ignatius
of Antioch, in about 110AD, wrote: "It is monstrous to talk of Jesus
Christ and to practice Judaism" (Magnesians, 10). He also talked
of "no longer observing sabbaths." Yet John, writing his gospel scarcely
20 years earlier, emphasized that Jesus kept the same Festivals the
Jewish community kept (John 7:2; 11:55).
Barnabus of Alexandria, not to be confused with the Apostle
Barnabus, in his epistle written about 130AD, alleges that the Old
Testament is an allegory and not intended to be understood literally. He
regards the prohibitions of the law against eating unclean meats as an
allegory of the type of people that Christians should avoid (Epistle
of Barnabus, 10). He also seeks to allegorize the Sabbath and
states: "We keep the eighth day for rejoicing in the which also Jesus
rose from the dead" (Epistle of Barnabus, 15).
Two prominent second century theologians, who played an important
transitional role in the change from biblical theology to Roman Catholic
theology, were both baptized in churches under faithful Polycarp’s
leadership. Polycarp (ca. 69–155AD) had been a personal disciple of the
Apostle John and was one of the few church leaders of his day to hold
fast to the Truth. These two men, Justin Martyr (ca. 95–167AD) and
Irenaeus (ca. 130–202AD), while maintaining some truths they had learned
under Polycarp, also sought to accommodate themselves to the new
direction of Roman theology in the name of "church unity." Irenaeus,
though he departed from much of Polycarp’s teaching, maintained a
lifelong admiration for Polycarp as a great man of God.
Justin was a Greek from Samaria who became a Platonist philosopher
and then, under the influence of Polycarp and his disciples, was
baptized as a Christian at Ephesus in about 130AD. He came to Rome in
151AD, founded a school and was subsequently martyred in 167AD. After
arriving in Rome, Justin sought to steer a middle course on the subject
of the law. Henry Chadwick writes:
"Justin believed that a Jewish Christian was quite free to keep
the Mosaic law without in any way compromising his Christian faith,
and even that a Gentile Christian might keep Jewish customs if a
Jewish Christian had influenced him to do so; only it must be held
that such observances were matters of indifference and of individual
conscience. But Justin had to admit that other Gentile Christians
did not take so liberal a view and believed that those who observed
the Mosaic law would not be saved" (The Early Church, pp.
22–23).
Irenaeus grew up in Asia Minor and, when a teenager, heard Polycarp
preach. He came to Rome as a young man and later became bishop of Lyons
in France in 179AD. Irenaeus is considered the first great Catholic
theologian and seems to have gone to great lengths to promote peace and
a conciliatory spirit. His desire for peace was so great, however, that
he was willing to compromise with the Truth to maintain church
unity. The churches in Asia Minor under Polycarp’s leadership observed
the Sabbath and the Holy Days. Yet, when Irenaeus came to Rome, he
readily adapted to the Roman practices of observing Sunday and Easter.
In Lyons there were some who kept Passover on Abib 14 and some who kept
Easter. Irenaeus kept Easter but sought to be tolerant of those who
still observed Passover.
A theological revolution was indeed taking place in the Church of
the second century. Notice: "Justin Martyr occupies a central position
in the history of Christian thought of the second century.… Justin also
molded the thinking of Irenaeus, bishop of Lyons" (Chadwick, p. 79).
Though Justin became a professing Christian in Ephesus, he "did not
understand this to mean the abandonment of his philosophical inquiries,
nor even the renunciation of all that he had learnt from Platonism" (p.
75). He believed that the God of Plato was also the God of the Bible.
"Justin does not make rigid and exclusive claims for divine revelation
to the Hebrews so as to invalidate the value of other sources of wisdom.
Abraham and Socrates are alike Christians before Christ" (p. 76).
This approach set the stage for a reshaping of Christian theology to
embrace much of Greek philosophical thought concerning the nature of
God.
In spite of all this, Justin acknowledged the authority of the book
of Revelation and believed "Christ would return to a rebuilt
Jerusalem to reign with his saints for a thousand years" (p. 78).
Irenaeus, heavily influenced by Justin, also preserved bits and
pieces of the Truth in spite of conforming to Roman practices. He
rightly taught: "The purpose of our existence is the making of
character by the mastery of difficulties and temptations" (p. 81).
He also adhered to the literal hope of an earthly millennium,
during which Christ would reign on earth, and taught against
interpreting the millennial hope as symbolic of heaven, though he toned
down his insistence on this point in his later works.
Truth Abandoned in Favor of Unity and Tradition
There were two fundamental errors that separated professing
Christians from those who truly represented the continuation of the
Church that Jesus built. These errors involved whether or not God’s
law was still obligatory for Christians, and who and what God is. Errors
on these two points led to an ever-widening divergence between the
professing Christian church and the true Church of God.
The importance of the law was the major area of controversy from
about 50AD until 200AD. It was not finally resolved until the Councils
of Nicea (325AD) and Laodicea (363AD) when the Roman state became
involved. The substance of the conflict is preserved in the
confrontation between Polycrates of Asia Minor and Victor, bishop of
Rome, about 190AD. Polycrates was the successor of Polycarp who was
himself a disciple of the Apostle John. Irenaeus records that
Polycarp had traveled to Rome in the mid-second century to try and
persuade Anicetus, bishop of Rome, of the true time of the Passover.
Anicetus claimed to have been bound by the tradition of his predecessors
since Bishop Sixtus, while Polycarp declared: "He had always observed it
[Passover] with John the disciple of our Lord, and the rest of the
apostles, with whom he associated" (Eusebius, xxiv).
About 50 years after Polycarp’s journey, Victor of Rome sought to
intimidate the churches of Asia Minor into conforming to the Roman
Easter practice. Polycrates wrote Victor:
"We therefore observe the genuine day [Passover]; neither
adding thereto nor taking therefrom. For in Asia great lights have
fallen asleep, which shall rise again in the day of the Lord’s
appearing, in which he will come with glory from heaven, and will
raise up all the saints; Philip, one of the twelve apostles, who
sleeps in Hierapolis… John, who rested upon the bosom of our Lord…
Polycarp of Smyrna… All these observed the fourteenth day of the
Passover according to the gospel deviating in no respect, but
following the rule of faith… and my relatives always observed the
day when the people threw away the leaven [Abib 14]. I,
therefore, brethren, am now 65 years in the Lord, who having
conferred with the brethren throughout the world, and having studied
the whole of the sacred Scriptures, am not at all alarmed at those
things with which I am threatened, to intimidate me. For they who
are greater than I, have said, ‘We ought to obey God rather than
men’" (Eusebius, xxiv).
As various controversies raged during the second century, a new
approach to church government was to have consequences of monumental
proportions. This approach was an emphasis on what was termed "Apostolic
Succession."
In the first century, Paul had praised the Bereans for their
approach in "checking up on him" by searching the Scriptures daily to
see if he was teaching truth (Acts 17:11). He exhorted the Thessalonians
to, "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good" (1 Thessalonians
5:21, KJV). Constantly, throughout the first century, we see an
appeal being made to the Scriptures.
But, beginning with the writings of Clement, bishop of Rome, we
find a new emphasis. Clement wrote a letter to the church in
Corinth about 100AD, probably very shortly after John’s death. The
editors of Masterpieces of Christian Literature summarize
Clement’s principal ideas as: "The way to peace and concord is through
obedience to established authorities, the elders. Christ rules the
churches through the apostles, the bishops appointed by them, and the
approved successors of the bishops."
About ten years later Ignatius stressed the same point: "Unity and
peace in the church and the validity of the church are acquired through
faithful adherence to the bishop" (Masterpieces).
By the middle of the next century the claims had grown so
forcefully that Cyprian of North Africa stated: "The focus of unity is
the bishop. To forsake him is to forsake the Church, and he cannot have
God for his Father who has not the Church for his mother" (Chadwick, p.
119).
These claims were being made to hold brethren in an organization
that was rapidly developing into what we know today as the Roman
Catholic Church. How different these appeals are to those of Paul and
the other New Testament leaders who pointed to the Scriptures and to the
fruits of their ministries for authentication (cf. 1 Corinthians 11:1;
Acts 17:2). No longer able to rely on a clear appeal to Scripture,
second and third century church leaders increasingly based their claim
to the loyalty of the brethren upon their assertion of being duly
ordained successors of the Apostles and the bishops that succeeded them.
While they increasingly abandoned what the Apostles taught, these
deceivers sought to hold brethren together by appeals to unity and to
the memory of the Apostles.
Chapter 2
A Dramatic
Transition
How did so many move so far so quickly? This is the question
that simply leaps out at us as we examine the history of the early
Church.
At the time of the Apostle John’s death near the dawn of the second
century ad, the Christian movement, though obviously beset by many
problems and false teachers, bore at least a recognizable resemblance to
the Church of God of the book of Acts. But, by the beginning of the
third century ad, most of those same congregations, though still calling
themselves "Church of God," bore far more resemblance in doctrine to the
medieval Catholic Church than to the Church of God during the days of
the Apostles Peter, James, Paul and John.
During the second century a number of gradual shifts occurred in
both the doctrine and practice of the vast majority of church
congregations. The stage was set for those shifts by some of the very
ideas that began to be promulgated only a few years after Christ’s
resurrection and ascension into heaven. Ideas always produce
consequences!
Another Gospel
Christ spent His ministry preaching the "Good News" of a coming
divine government that would replace the oppressive human governments
Jesus’ listeners knew all too well. The disciples asked Him for signs
showing when that time would be near (Matthew 24:3). The last question
they asked, as He was preparing to ascend into heaven, concerned whether
it was yet time for the Kingdom to be established (Acts 1:6). In the
last stage of Paul’s ministry of which we have any record, we find that
Paul was still "preaching the kingdom of God and teaching the things
which concern the Lord Jesus Christ with all confidence, no one
forbidding him" (Acts 28:31)! Even in the last inspired book of the New
Testament canon, Jesus Christ inspired the Apostle John with visions
about the literal establishment of the Kingdom of God on this earth
(Revelation 19:11–21; 20:4–6; 21).
In spite of this clear record of Jesus Christ’s plain teaching, we
read in 2 Corinthians 11:3–15 that false ministers had crept in to the
Church, and within 25 years after its founding were preaching what Paul
called "another gospel." By the second century, the true Gospel that
Jesus had taught was being called a "doubtful opinion" by the leaders of
the budding "orthodox" Christian church. By the third century, Christ’s
own example and teaching was being regarded as rank heresy.
During the second and third centuries, the "gospel" that was being
preached focused almost exclusively on the person of Jesus. Also,
at that same time, pagan concepts about the immortality of the soul, as
well as heaven and hell, gained acceptance.
The correct understanding about the Kingdom of God was maintained
well into the second century, even by men such as Justin Martyr and
Irenaeus. Of course, they were seriously off-track in other areas, such
as their teaching concerning God’s law. Edward Gibbon writes of this
period:
"The
assurance of such a Millennium was carefully inculcated by… [those]
who conversed with the immediate disciples of the apostles.… But
when the edifice of the church was almost completed, the temporary
support was laid aside. The doctrine of Christ’s reign upon earth
was at first treated as a profound allegory, was considered by
degrees as a doubtful and useless opinion, and was at length
rejected as the absurd invention of heresy and fanaticism" (Decline
and Fall, vol. 1, ch. 15).
Much of this progression was the result of Origen’s influence.
Origen was, as we shall shortly see, one of the least sound-minded
individuals ever to be accepted as a Christian theologian. He played a
major role in formulating Catholic teaching on the Trinity, the
immortality of the soul and the Kingdom of God.
As the foundational understanding of the true nature of the Gospel
and the Kingdom of God was abandoned, there were many disastrous
consequences. One was the participation of church members in politics
and in the military. Historians are virtually unanimous in acknowledging
that early Christians avoided such involvement: "But, while they
inculcated the maxims of passive obedience, they refused to take any
active part in the civil administration or the military defense of the
empire" (Gibbon, The Triumph of Christendom in the Roman Empire,
p. 41). By the end of the third century, however, there were "Christian"
legions in the Roman army. Professing Christians were told that
political involvement was acceptable.
The Immortal Soul
The doctrine of the immortality of the soul, virtually universal in
paganism, is not taught in either the Old or the New Testaments. Notice
the admission of the Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible in
this regard:
"In the KJV
of the OT [the clue is partly obliterated in modern translations]
‘soul’ represents almost exclusively the Hebrew nephesh. The
word ‘soul’ in English… frequently carries with it overtones,
ultimately coming from philosophical Greek (Platonism) and from
Orphism and Gnosticism, which are absent in nephesh. In the
OT it never means the immortal soul, but is essentially the life
principle, or the living being… psuche in the NT corresponds
to nephesh in the OT" (vol. 4, p. 428).
How did the concept of an immortal soul enter into Christianity? As
early as 200BC, some Jewish sects were beginning to absorb this idea,
due to Greek influence, and were attempting to meld it with the biblical
teaching of the resurrection. This is illustrated by such
intertestamental apocryphal writings as the Book of Jubilees and Fourth
Maccabees, as well as by both Philo and Josephus. The Gnostics, with
their emphasis on pagan dualism, stressed the immortality of the soul in
contrast to the resurrection of the body. The International Standard
Bible Encyclopedia states: "There is a distinction between a
Platonic belief in the immortality of the soul alone and biblical
teaching regarding the resurrection of the dead" (vol. 2, p. 810).
Late second and early third century writers such as Tertullian and
Origen played a major part in shaping future Catholic doctrine regarding
heaven, hell and the immortality of the soul. The ISB Encyclopedia
goes on to reveal: "Early Christians were often influenced by Greek as
well as Jewish thought. For example, many were influenced by Pythagoras’
teachings about the soul’s division into several parts and its
transmigration: Platonic and Neoplatonic [especially Plotinus’]
understandings lay behind Origen’s view of the soul.… Tertullian
followed Stoic thought" (vol. 4, p. 588). The Encyclopedia of
Religion brings out that many later influential Catholic theologians
"all interpreted the biblical concepts of the soul along Platonic lines
and in the general tradition of Origen and his school."
The Trinity
There was not simply one heresy regarding the nature of God, but
many different contradictory ones. There seem to have been almost as
many different ideas as there were philosophical schools and teachers.
Mainstream Catholic thought, from which orthodox Protestant teaching on
the subject sprang, merely represents the particular brand of heresy
that won out over its competitors. Since it is this teaching that has
survived, with some modification, until our time, it is the one that we
will examine most closely.
The background of third century orthodoxy on the subject of the
Trinity is to be found not in the biblical text, but in Greek
philosophical writings. The Roman Catholic New Theological Dictionary
makes a number of frank admissions in this regard. Concerning the
Scriptural teaching on the nature of the Holy Spirit, in its article,
"Trinity," it acknowledges: "As such, the Spirit is never the explicit
object of NT worship, nor is the Spirit ever represented in NT discourse
as interacting in an interpersonal way with the Father and the Son."
Later in the same article, modern Catholic scholars, discussing the
background of orthodox teaching on the Trinity, confess pagan influences
upon their theology:
"Christians…
conversant with the then dominant philosophy of middle-Platonism
seized the opportunity to proclaim and elucidate the Christian
message in a thought form which was meaningful to the educated
classes of the widespread Hellenistic society. This movement, which
Catholic theology has generally evaluated positively, will have an
enormous impact on the development of Christian theology.… Confident
that the God they [pagan Greek philosophers] preached was the Father
of Jesus Christ and the salvation they proclaimed was that of Jesus,
the apologists adapted much of the Hellenic worldview… [Tertullian
made] the first known use of the term ‘trinity.’
Origen appropriated the philosophy of middle-Platonism more
systematically than the apologists and Tertullian had. In fact, his
‘concept of eternal generation’ was an adaptation of the
middle-Platonic doctrine that the whole world of spiritual beings
was eternal. The Son is eternally derived (or generated) from the
very being of God and hence is of the Father’s essence, but second
to the Father.… Origen, like Tertullian coined a generic term for
the ‘three’ of the divine triad. The Father, the Son, and Holy
Spirit are ‘three hypostases’.… Origen’s major contribution to the
formulation of the trinitarian doctrine is the notion of eternal
generation. His generic term for the ‘three’ (hypostases) will be
adopted and refined in the fourth century" (p. 1,054).
As we look at the development of "Christian" theology in the late
second and early third centuries, the names of Tertullian and Origen
keep coming up. Tertullian (ca. 150–225AD), called the father of Latin
theology, was "one of the most powerful writers of the time and almost
as influential as Augustine in the development of theology in the West"
(Eerdman, Handbook to the History of Christianity, p. 77).
Tertullian lived in Carthage and was one of the first to teach that
a fiery hell began at death. In his later years he broke with Rome and
became a Montanist. This meant that he accepted the claims of two
demon-possessed women who called themselves prophetesses. They went into
ecstatic frenzies and "spoke in tongues," claimed to be the "Paraclete"
(a term for the Holy Spirit in John’s Gospel), and taught a message
termed the "New Prophecy."
Origen (ca. 185–254AD) "was the greatest scholar and most prolific
author of the early church" (Eerdman, p. 104). About 203AD, Origen
succeeded Clement of Alexandria as leader of a famous school that
purported to prepare Christians for baptism, and offered courses in
philosophy and natural science for the general populace. For all his
reputation as a great scholar and teacher of theology, how much did
Origen really understand? According to fourth century church historian
Eusebius, not too long after he took over the school at Alexandria,
Origen castrated himself! This act was based upon his understanding (or
rather, misunderstanding!) of Christ’s words in Matthew 5:29–30.
This same utter lack of sound-minded understanding of the real
meaning and intent of Scripture is poignantly displayed in much of his
theological writing. "Origen introduced the possibility of a remedial
hell [purgatory]" (International Bible Encyclopedia, "Hell"). He
also played an important part in what later developed into Catholic
Mary-worship by first proposing the idea that Mary remained a virgin
after the birth of Jesus.
Religious Art In Worship
One of the most drastic changes to affect the church after the
first century was the introduction of religious art into worship.
This innovation so obviously smacked of the idolatry prohibited by the
second commandment that it was slow to catch on. Notice:
"Both
Tertullian and Clement of Alexandria regarded this prohibition as
absolute and binding on Christians. Images and cultic statues
belonged to the demonic world of paganism. In fact, the only
second-century Christians known to have had images of Christ were
radical Gnostics.… Yet before the end of the second century
Christians were freely expressing their faith in artistic terms"
(Henry Chadwick, The Pelican History of the Church, p. 277).
The earliest example of a church that had pictures on the wall was
a third-century building in Dura on the Euphrates. Even then, it was
primarily Old Testament scenes. As late as the Emperor Constantine, many
leaders of the professing Christian church were still shocked at the
idea of having pictures or images of Christ. We read:
"About 327AD
the learned historian Eusebius of Caesarea received a letter from
the emperor’s sister Constantia asking him for a picture of Christ.…
Eusebius wrote her a very stern reply. He was well aware that one
could find pictures of Christ and of the apostles. They were for
sale in the bazaars of Palestine, and he had himself seen them. But
Eusebius did not think the painters and shopkeepers selling these
mementos to pilgrims were Christians at all… [he] takes it for
granted that only pagan artists would dream of making such
representations" (ibid., pp. 280–281).
Epiphanius of Salamis, a fourth-century church leader, was
horrified to find a curtain in a church-porch in Palestine with a
purported picture of Christ. He not only lodged a vehement protest with
the bishop of Jerusalem, but personally tore down the curtain and
destroyed it. By the time of his death in 403AD, however, portrayals of
Christ and the saints were becoming increasingly widespread. This was
accompanied by the veneration of Mary which, by 400AD, was
occupying an ever-increasing place in private devotions.
The Imperial Church
After almost three centuries of on-again, off-again persecution by
the Roman government, the Edict of Toleration was issued at Milan in
313AD. Soon after, Christianity went from simply being officially
tolerated by the Roman Empire, to actually becoming the official
state religion of the empire. Did this represent a success story for
the Church that Jesus Christ built? Had true, biblical Christianity
triumphed in the Roman Empire?
Far from it! What we have seen is a Gentile-influenced religion
that appropriated Christian terminology while retaining pagan
traditions—all enforced by the Roman emperor, Constantine. It was vastly
different from the persecuted, Judeo-Christian Church established by
Jesus Christ Himself in the first century. Constantine recognized the
important role that religion could play in uniting his empire and giving
his populace a common identity. Motivated primarily by these political
concerns, Constantine forged an alliance with the bishop of Rome and
began the process of creating a "standard brand" of "Christianity"
throughout his empire. He was instrumental in calling the Council of
Nicea in 325AD and actually presided over it himself. Keep in mind that
Constantine was not even baptized yet! In fact he put off baptism until
he was on his deathbed, at which point he was too ill to be immersed.
His personal example of being sprinkled contributed much to an
abandonment of immersion in favor of sprinkling.
The Council of Nicea primarily sought to resolve two thorny issues
that had not been fully settled earlier. These involved controversies
about the nature of God as well as the Easter/Passover
question. Backed up by imperial muscle, the views of the Roman church
prevailed at the council. All opposition was squelched.
Constantine was also responsible for making "the venerable day of
the Sun" a state holiday when the courts were to be closed and most
businesses were to shut their doors.
This Roman emperor had previously been a devotee of Sol Invictus
("the Unconquered Sun") and with his "conversion," many motifs of sun
worship, such as the use of the cross and the halo in art, entered
"Christianity." Also at this time, there began to be mass conversions of
the populace. To facilitate this, popular holidays such as Saturnalia
and Lupercalia were recycled into new "Christian" observances, now
called Christmas and St. Valentine’s Day. The leaders of the church
at Rome claimed that they were merely broadening the way, making
Christianity more accessible to the masses and certainly much less
"Jewish." Anti-Semitism was a motivating force in Roman Christianity.
Where Was the Church That Jesus Built?

|
What
had happened to the Church that was established through an
outpouring of God’s Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost in 31AD?
Where was Christ and what was He doing during this time?
|
In the second
and third chapters of the book of Revelation, we find messages that
Jesus Christ recorded for the seven churches of Asia Minor. In chapter
one, the Apostle John saw a vision of the glorified Christ standing in
the midst of seven golden lampstands. These seven lampstands represent
the Church of God in its entirety throughout time (Revelation 1:12–20).
The seven cities of Asia Minor mentioned in Revelation were physically
situated as successive stops on a Roman mail route. What is the
significance of these seven messages?
Clearly, this message has a historical application to seven literal
congregations in the first century. Additionally, however—and important
for us today—these congregations exemplify attitudes and problems that
might characterize the Christian community, as well as individual
Christians, in the years since John wrote (cf. Revelation 2:7).
When we look at the context of the book of Revelation, we must
recognize that it is primarily intended as a prophecy. Revelation
1:1 shows that the book’s purpose is to show to God’s servants things
that would soon begin to happen. Thus the seven churches should
primarily be understood as representing the entire history of God’s
Church in seven successive church eras.
The first church to be addressed in Revelation 2 is the Church at
Ephesus. This church characterized the Apostolic Era. In verse 2, we
read that the great test of that first era lay in determining who were
the true Apostles of Christ and who were liars (cf. 2 Corinthians
11:3–15). This was an era that labored long and hard to do the Work of
God and endured much difficulty and persecution in the process. The true
Christians of the Ephesian Era were those who rejected and hated the
practices of the Nicolaitans (followers of Simon Magus).
However, after the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70AD,
discouragement and spiritual lethargy set in. The brethren had expected
Christ to return shortly after Roman armies had surrounded Jerusalem.
But now most of Judea and Galilee lay in ruins—occupied by Roman
legions. The Jewish Christians were considered traitors by their fellow
countrymen, and probable troublemakers by the Roman authorities. Life
was hard and dangerous.
This era had left its first love, that early zeal for doing the
Work. The membership began losing focus regarding those doctrines,
practices and priorities that gave them their true identity and purpose.
The living Christ’s message to Christians of the Ephesian era was
that if they did not repent, and return to their first works of zealous
proclamation of the Gospel, He would remove their lampstand. The
apostasy of the overwhelming majority of the Jerusalem Church in 135AD
(when the Second Jewish Revolt against Rome was totally crushed), is
generally taken to mark the ending of the Ephesian Era. Those who
remained faithful during these trying final days were labeled as
"Nazarenes" (cf. Acts 24:5) and "Ebionites" (poor ones) by the larger
church. As is also the case today, a wide variety of "independent"
groups, mixing truth and error in a wide assortment of ideas, existed
alongside the true Church of God. These groups were sometimes lumped in
as fellow "heretics" with the "Nazarenes" or "Ebionites" by the Roman
church.
The Church at Smyrna is the second of the seven Revelation churches
to be addressed. The Apostle John died in Ephesus at the end of the
first century. The next faithful leader in Asia Minor, as noted in the
previous chapter, was Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna. As a young man,
Polycarp had been a personal disciple of John and had observed the
Passover with him on several occasions. Polycarp became prominent during
the first couple of decades of the second century. The churches under
his leadership remained one of the few areas where God’s Festivals
continued to be observed throughout the remainder of the second century.
In his old age, Polycarp even made a journey to Rome seeking to
convince the bishop of Rome, Anicetus, of his errors in not celebrating
the biblical Passover date and in observing, in its place, an annual
Sunday Paschal observance (Easter) and a weekly celebration of
"Eucharist."
In the closing decades of the second century, Polycrates, a
faithful church leader who had been personally trained by Polycarp,
arose. He remained the only Christian leader of prominence who was
faithful to the example of the Apostles of the Jerusalem Church of God.
Polycrates taught the true Gospel of the literal establishment of the
Kingdom of God on earth, the unconscious state of the dead awaiting the
resurrection, the importance of keeping God’s law and the observance of
the biblical Festivals.
Toward the end of the second century, Victor, bishop of Rome, had
begun labeling Polycrates and those who followed his teachings as
heretics—sources of discord and schism in the church. Polycrates
remained faithful despite increasing pressure and isolation from
supposed "fellow Christians," as well as persecution and hostility from
the surrounding pagan society. After his death, however, we know of no
other strong, prominent leader among those faithful churches in Asia
Minor.
In the public’s perception, true Christians lost ground to the much
more popular and accommodating Roman church. Their numbers shrank and
they became increasingly isolated. Despised and labeled "Ebionites" by
the mainstream church, individuals and groups of families who remained
faithful had to relocate into more remote areas of Asia Minor.
Even as early as the end of the first century, there were true
Christians being put out of congregations headed by apostate leaders (3
John 9–10). By the second century, others, such as the faithful remnant
who refused to accept "new truth" from Bishop Marcus of Jerusalem, were
being forced to withdraw themselves from congregations of which they had
been members. This occurred as unfaithful leaders led the visible church
further and further astray.
The great test of the Smyrna Era lay in two areas. One was their
ability to distinguish between the continuation of the true Church of
God and what was, in reality, the emerging Synagogue of Satan. The
other lay in their willingness to endure persecution and even death in
order to remain faithful to God (Revelation 2:9–10).
Physically, the Christians of this era were impoverished and
persecuted. They were rejected as heretics by the rapidly growing
"Orthodox" movement, labeled as apostates from the synagogue by the
Jews, and looked upon with contempt and suspicion by the surrounding
pagan Roman society. In God’s estimation, however, those who remained
faithful during this horrible time were accounted as having spiritual
wealth of great value, and will ultimately receive a crown of life
(Revelation 2:9–10).
After Constantine began the systematic enforcement of compliance
with Roman theology in 325AD, the remnants of the true Church were in
large part forced to flee the bounds of the Roman Empire into the
mountains of Armenia, and later into the Balkan areas of Europe. They
were few in number, utterly lacking in prestige or wealth and labeled as
enemies of the state by a supposedly "Christian" Roman Empire.
In God’s sight, however, they were precious. It was not God’s
purpose that His true Church grow into a great, powerful organization
that would "Christianize" the world. His true Church was to remain a
"little flock" (Luke 12:32). Its continuity would be measured, not by a
succession of proud, powerful, presiding bishops in a particular city
(cf. Hebrews 13:14), but by a succession of faithful, converted people
who, though scattered and persecuted, continued to worship the Father in
spirit and in truth (John 4:23–24).
There would be times when God would raise up faithful leaders to
revitalize His people and do some sort of Work that had public
visibility, at least in localized areas. There were other times when
God’s Church continued to exist in such scattered obscurity that it was
visible only to God. Still, it never died out.
Chapter 3
The Church in the
Wilderness
In the aftermath of the Council of Nicea, Emperor
Constantine and his successors sought to stamp out all non-conforming
brands of Christianity. Groups that refused to conform to the teachings
and practices of the "established" church, which now called itself the
Catholic (universal) Church of God, were viewed not merely as heretics,
but as subversive enemies of the Roman state.
The true Church, symbolized by a woman in Revelation 12, was forced
to flee into the wilderness for 1,260 "days." In Bible prophecy, a "day"
often represents a year (Numbers 14:34; Ezekiel 4:6). Thus, the true
Church would have to remain in hiding for 1,260 years following
the Nicene Council. Historically, that is what happened. Though these
were truly dark ages, there was a light that continued to burn. Its
flame sometimes flickered, but it was never extinguished.
Several problems confront any church scholar or historian who
wishes to trace the wanderings of the true Church during this 1,260-year
period. This is because the true Church’s history is not about
one continuous human organization. The preserved history of the
Sabbath-keeping Church of God has been almost entirely written by its
enemies who viewed it as heretical. We read of groups labeled by hostile
outsiders with such names as Paulicians, Bogomils and Waldenses—of whom
smaller or larger segments, at different times, appear to have been true
Christians in the mold of the first century Jerusalem Church. Another
difficulty is that the teachings of each of these groups changed over a
period of time, generally becoming more like those of their Catholic and
Protestant neighbors.
Also we find that writers often lumped together various groups of
"heretics," including the true Church, under the same name, not truly
distinguishing the differences in their teachings. Thus the great
challenge in Church history is not simply to identify who taught what,
but to recognize when a church ceased to be part of the true Church, and
when God removed that true Church to another place.
The Church Flees to the Wilderness
During the first three centuries of its existence, the Church of
God faced intermittent periods of harsh persecution. However, during
those times, they were not singled out, but were generally lumped in
with the Jews and a wide range of Christ-professing sects. Those
persecutions were of limited duration and local in scope. The Roman
Emperor Diocletian, from 303 to 313AD, unleashed the worst of these
pre-Council of Nicea persecutions. These are the "ten days" referred to
in Revelation 2:10.
When Constantine consolidated his power in the Empire, things
changed significantly. Gibbon tells us that Constantine’s religious
devotion was "peculiarly directed toward the genius of the Sun… and he
was pleased to be represented with the symbols of the God of Light and
Poetry. The unerring shafts of that deity, the brightness of his eyes…
seem to point him out as the patron of a young hero. The altars of
Apollo were crowned with the votive offerings of Constantine; and the
credulous multitude were taught to believe that the emperor was
permitted to behold with mortal eyes the visible majesty of their
tutelar deity.… The Sun was universally celebrated as the invincible
guide and protector of Constantine" (The Triumph of Christendom,
p. 309).
Four years prior to the Council of Nicea, Constantine proclaimed a
law for the Roman Empire that was to have far-reaching implications for
God’s people. "The earliest recognition of the observance of Sunday as a
legal duty is a constitution of Constantine in 321AD, enacting that all
courts of justice, inhabitants of towns, and workshops were to be at
rest on Sunday (venerabili die solis, i.e., venerable day of the
Sun).… This was the first of a long series of imperial constitutions,
most of which are incorporated in the Code of Justinian." About forty
years later, the Catholic Church followed up on this imperial edict in
"canon [29] of the Council of Laodicea [363AD], which forbids
Christians from Judaizing and resting on the Sabbath day, and actually
enjoins them to work on that day" (Encyclopaedia Britannica,
11th ed., "Sunday").
The very fact that, in the latter fourth century, the Roman Church
felt the need to legislate against Sabbath observance shows that
faithful remnants, particularly in Asia Minor, persevered in the Truth.
This increasingly powerful church insisted that all must now accept the
"Christianized" brand of Roman Sun worship. Those who refused were
easily identified and could no longer function if they remained in the
urban areas of the Roman Empire. Consequently, in the fourth century,
those Christians labeled as Nazarenes disappeared from the populous
areas of Asia Minor. For three centuries the remnants of the true Church
had sojourned there, but with the enactment of this Sunday law by
Constantine, they were forced to flee. The fourth century Catholic
historian, Epiphanius, describes these people who differed "from the
Jews and [Catholic] Christians: with the Jews they do not agree because
of their belief in Christ, with [Catholic] Christians because they are
trained in the Law… This heresy of the Nazarenes exists in Beroea in the
neighborhood of Coele Syria and the Decapolis in the region of Pella…
from there it took its beginning after the exodus from Jerusalem when
all the disciples went to live in Pella" (Ray Pritz, Nazarene Jewish
Christianity, p. 34).
The "Paulicians" Appear in Armenia
In the fifth century, the Church appeared in remote areas of
eastern Asia Minor near the Euphrates River and in the mountains of
Armenia. These people were labeled by their contemporaries as
"Paulicians." Who were they?
According to Armenian scholar Nina Garsoian in The Paulician
Heresy: "It would, then, appear that the Paulicians are to be taken
as the survival of the earlier form of Christianity in Armenia" (p.
227). The author also states that the Paulicians were "accused of
being worse than other sects because of adding Judaism" (p. 213).
Christ’s message to this third stage of God’s Church (Paulicians)
is characterized by the Church at Pergamos (Revelation 2:12–17). The
word Pergamos means "fortified," and the Church members of this
era were noted for dwelling in remote, mountainous areas. In Revelation
2:13, Christ said of the Pergamos Church that they dwell where Satan’s
seat is. Pergamum was a center of the ancient Babylonian mystery
religion. In 133BC, Attalus III, the last "god-king" of Pergamum, died
and in his will bequeathed his kingdom and his title, Pontifex
Maximus ("Supreme Bridge-builder" between man and God), to the
Romans. The Roman rulers took the title and held it until Emperor
Gratian bestowed it on Pope Damascus in 378AD. The Catholic popes
continue to use that title to this day. Also, historically, the term
"Satan’s seat" alludes back to Nimrod’s ancient kingdom, which in
distant antiquity included Armenia and the upper Euphrates (Genesis 10).
The Pergamos Church—the Paulicians—geographically relocated to that same
area after Constantine enforced Sunday keeping on the Roman Empire.
As far back as the fifth century, we find the Paulicians
condemned as heretics in Catholic documents. However, the first
prominent leader among them with whose name we are familiar is
Constantine of Mananali (ca. 620–681AD). About 654AD he began to preach,
helping to revitalize the Church. Prior to his ministry, most of the
Church membership consisted of descendants of Christians who had fled
Greece and Asia Minor more than two centuries earlier. They preserved
the names of their original congregations and continued to refer to
themselves as the "church of Ephesus" or the "church of Macedonia"
though they were located hundreds of miles from the original sites.
Constantine of Mananali was executed by Byzantine (Eastern Roman)
soldiers commanded by an officer named Simeon in 681AD. Simeon was so
overwhelmed by the example and teachings of Constantine that, in 684AD,
he returned, not as a Roman soldier, but as a convert. Simeon became a
zealous Paulician preacher and he, in turn, was martyred three years
later in 687AD.
In 1828, the manuscript of an ancient book entitled The Key of
Truth was discovered in Armenia. Portions of the book date to 800AD
and it provides us with the greatest detail of the teachings of the
Paulicians. Translated into English by Fred Coneybeare around 1900, we
learn from it that the Paulicians shunned the use of the cross in
worship and religious art, calling it a "cursed implement." They
condemned warfare, and observed the Passover on the fourteenth day of
the first month of the sacred calendar. The Paulicians rejected the
Roman Catholic Church’s claim to be the "Church of God," and disputed
papal claims of "apostolic succession" and other pretensions. They
regarded the Trinity, purgatory and intercession of the saints as
unscriptural.
In the introduction to his English translation of The Key of
Truth, Coneybeare provides invaluable historical background on the
practices of the early Paulicians. "We also know from a notice preserved
in Ananias of Shirak that the Pauliani, who were the same people at an
earlier date, were Quartodecimans, and kept Easter in the primitive
manner at the Jewish date. John of Otzun’s language perhaps implies that
the old believers in Armenia during the seventh century were
Quartodecimans, as we should expect them to be" (Coneybeare, intro.,
clii). Dr. Coneybeare further states: "The Sabbath was perhaps kept and
there were no special Sunday observances" (p., cxiii). He goes on to say
of the Paulicians that "they were probably the remnant of an old
Judeo-Christian Church, which had spread up through Edessa into Siuniq
and Albania" (p., clxii).
At some point in their history, however, many Paulicians
succumbed to a fatal error. They reasoned that they could outwardly
conform with many of the practices of the Catholic Church in order to
avoid persecution as long as in their heart they knew better. This
road of compromise led many to have their children christened and others
to attend mass. Christ prophesied of this, admonishing the Church at
Pergamos about those who held to pagan, immoral doctrines (Revelation
2:14–15). The result of their compromising was that Christ allowed
severe persecution to come upon them. When persecution came, some of the
beleaguered Paulicians decided that the solution to their trouble lay in
entering into an alliance with the Moslem Arabs who were then making
serious incursions into the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire.
Controversies among the Paulicians during these years created various
splits in the group.
Prior to 800AD, a leading Church personality, a man named Baanes,
came to the leadership of the Paulicians in Armenia and promulgated a
doctrine of military retaliation. Shortly thereafter, another church
minister named Sergius became prominent within the Paulicians. Because
Sergius condemned warfare, disagreeing with the position taken by
Baanes, he was accused of causing a schism within the group. But, in
spite of difficulties, Sergius’ ministry lasted more than 30 years.
After his death, however, most of his followers began to take part in
warfare as well.
Rise of the Bogomils
In the eighth and ninth centuries, many Armenian Paulicians were
forcibly resettled in the Balkans by Byzantine emperors. They were
placed there as a bulwark against the invading Bulgar tribes. Relocated
to the Balkans, the Paulicians came to be called Bogomils.
What did these Bogomils teach? "Baptism was only to be practiced on
grown men and women… images and crosses were idols" (Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 11th ed., "Bogomils"). They also taught that prayer
should be done at home, not in separate buildings such as churches. They
taught that the congregation consisted of the "elect" and that each
individual should seek to attain the perfection of Christ. Their
ministry is said to have gone about healing the sick and casting out
demons.
In the tenth and eleventh centuries, many Bogomils spread westward
and settled in Serbia. Later, large numbers took refuge in Bosnia by the
end of the twelfth century. These Bogomils were "only one version of a
group of related heretical sects that flourished across Asia Minor and
southern Europe during the Middle Ages under a variety of names, the
best-known being the Patarenes, Cathars and Albigensians" (Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 15th ed., vol. 29, p. 1,098). They were condemned as
heretics due to their belief that "the world is governed by two
principles, good and evil, and human affairs are shaped by the conflict
between them; the whole visible world is given over to Satan" (Encyclopaedia
Britannica, p. 1,098). From their Balkan base, the Bogomils’
influence, initially fostered by a merchant’s trading network, extended
into Piedmont in Italy and also southern France. By the time the Ottoman
Turks assumed power in Bosnia, the seeds of the Truth had spread to the
Piedmont, Provencal and Alpine areas of Europe.
The Cathars and Waldenses
In the beginning of the twelfth century, there was a revitalization
of the Truth with the raising up of the next phase of the Church under
the leadership of Peter de Bruys in southeastern France. This stage in
church history is characterized by the Church at Thyatira in Revelation
2. The Piedmont valleys of southeastern France were described by Pope
Urban II, in 1096, as being "infested with heresy." It was from one of
these valleys, the Valley Louise, that Peter de Bruys arose in 1104 and
began to preach repentance. He gained many followers among the Cathars,
initially, and later among the general public.
The Cathars (meaning "puritans"), among whom de Bruys originally
preached, were remnants of earlier Bogomil settlements. However, by this
time, most had accepted a variety of new and strange doctrines and were
quite divided among themselves. His preaching, and that of his
successors, brought about a revitalized Church during the first half of
the twelfth century in the valleys of southeastern France. De Bruys
professed to restore Christianity to its original purity. At the end of
a ministry of about 20 years, he was burned at the stake. In rapid
succession after him, there arose two other strong ministers, Arnold and
Henri.
After the death of Henri in 1149, the Church languished and seemed
to go into eclipse. A few years later a wealthy merchant in Lyons, Peter
Waldo, was struck down by an unusual circumstance and began preaching
the Gospel in 1161. After being shocked into contemplating the real
meaning of life as a result of the sudden death of a close friend, Waldo
obtained a copy of the Scriptures and began studying God’s Word. He was
soon amazed to find that the Scriptures taught the very opposite of much
of what he had learned during his Catholic upbringing.
Historian Peter Allix, quoting from an old Waldensian document,
The Noble Lesson, tells us: "The author upon supposal that the world
was drawing to an end, exhorts his brethren to prayer, to watchfulness.…
He repeats the several articles of the law, not forgetting that which
respects idols" (Ecclesiastical History of Ancient Churches of
Piedmont, pp. 231, 236–237).
Elsewhere, Dr. Allix writes that the Waldensian leaders "declare
themselves to be the apostles’ successors, to have apostolic authority,
and the keys of binding and loosing. They hold the church of Rome to be
the whore of Babylon" (Ecclesiastical History, p. 175).
Peter Waldo made Lyons, France, the center of his preaching from
1161 until 1180. Then, because of persecution, he relocated to northern
Italy. From about 1210 until his death seven years later, Waldo spent
his time preaching in Bohemia and Germany. "Like St. Francis [of
Assisi], Waldo adopted a life of poverty that he might be free to
preach, but with this difference that the Waldenses preached the
doctrine of Christ while the Franciscans preached the person of Christ"
(Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th ed.).
What were some of the other doctrines taught by the Waldenses? Is
there evidence that the early Waldenses were Sabbath-keepers? One
of the names by which they were most anciently known was that of
Sabbatati! In his 1873 work, History of the Sabbath,
historian J. N. Andrews quotes from an earlier work by Swiss-Calvinist
historian Goldastus written about 1600. Speaking of the Waldenses,
Goldastus wrote: "Insabbatati [they were called] not because they were
circumcised, but because they kept the Jewish Sabbath" (Andrews,
p. 410). Dr. Andrews further refers to the testimony of Archbishop
Ussher (1581–1656) who acknowledged "that many understood that they [the
names Sabbatati or Insabbatati] were given to them [Waldenses] because
they worshipped on the Jewish Sabbath" (p. 410). Clearly even
noted Protestant scholars at the end of the Middle Ages were willing to
acknowledge that many Waldenses had observed the seventh-day Sabbath.
In his 1845 work, The History of the Christian Church,
William Jones wrote:
"Investigators made a report to Louis XII [reigned 1498–1516],
king of France, that they had visited all the parishes where the
Waldenses dwelt. They had inspected all their places of worship… but
they found no images, no sign of the ordinances belonging to the
mass, nor any of the sacraments of the Roman church.… They kept
the Sabbath day, they observed the ordinance of baptism according to
the primitive church, instructed their children in the articles of
the Christian faith and the commandments of God.…
The Waldenses could say a great part of the Old and New
Testaments by heart. They despise the sayings and expositions of
holy men [Roman Catholic Church fathers], and they only plead for
the test of Scripture.… The traditions of the [Roman] church are no
better than the traditions of the Pharisees, and that greater stress
is laid [by Rome] on the observance of human tradition than on the
keeping of the law of God. They despise the Feast of Easter, and all
other Roman festivals of Christ and the saints" (A Handbook of
Church History, pp. 234, 236–237).
Compromising Once More
There was, however, a serious problem that affected most of the
Waldensian groups through the latter Middle Ages just as it had troubled
the Paulicians. This was the tendency of many to allow Catholic priests
to christen their children, as well as their willingness to participate
in Catholic worship ceremonies. Knowing that such ceremonies were
useless in gaining salvation, many felt that outward conformity with
Rome would avoid persecution and allow them to privately practice the
Truth. This tendency was prophesied of the Church in Thyatira in
Revelation 2:20–24. From God’s standpoint, what they were doing amounted
to spiritual fornication and partaking of Catholic communion was "eating
things sacrificed to idols."
What happened to the Waldenses? "Waldenses slowly disappeared from
the chief centers of population and took refuge in the retired valleys
of the Alps. There, in the recesses of Piedmont… a settlement of the
Waldensians was made who gave their name to these valleys of Vaudois.…
At times attempts were made to suppress the sect of the Vaudois, but the
nature of the country which they inhabited, their obscurity and their
isolation made the difficulties of their suppression greater than the
advantages to be gained from it" (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
ed., "Waldenses").
In 1487, Pope Innocent VIII issued a bull calling for their
extermination and a serious attack was made on their stronghold. A fog
settling over and encircling the Catholic armies saved the Waldenses
from total destruction. However, most were simply worn out and had
lapsed into a spirit of compromise. When the Reformation began a few
years later, the Waldensian leadership sent emissaries to the Lutheran
church. "Thus," as the Encyclopaedia Britannica writes, "the
Vaudois ceased to be relics of the past, and became absorbed in the
general movement of Protestantism."
As total apostasy swallowed up most remnants of the Waldenses by
the end of 1500s, God preserved a faithful remnant. Individuals who were
the fruit of the last seven years of Waldo’s ministry had been converted
in Bohemia and Germany in the thirteenth century. In remote areas of the
Carpathian Mountain area of central and eastern Europe, individuals and
small groups survived—in fact a faithful remnant has survived in
isolation in those areas down to modern times (cf. Revelation 2:24–25).
As the seventeenth century approached, the next era of God’s Church
was ready to emerge on the stage. Remnants of German Waldensians,
sometimes labeled Lollards by outsiders, had penetrated into Holland and
England as early as the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. However, it
was only in the final decades of the sixteenth century that the Church
could begin to emerge openly in Germany and Britain.
Chapter 4
Taking Root in a
New World
What happened to the Church that Jesus built? It endured and
it survived against incredible odds! The men and women who were the
spiritual ancestors of God’s people today exemplified faith and courage.
Time after time through the centuries they had to relocate in order to
remove themselves from either outside persecution or internal apostasy
and compromise. At those times, when it seemed that the flame of
God’s Truth flickered most dimly, Christ always raised up another
faithful leader to rally His people and revitalize the Work of God.
By the end of the 1500s, congregations that the world labeled
"Sabbatarian Anabaptists" had emerged from remnants of the Waldensians
and were growing in Central Europe, Germany and England. They were
termed Sabbatarian because they taught and observed the seventh-day
Sabbath. They were called Anabaptists, meaning "re-baptizers," because
they refused to accept as Christians those who had merely been sprinkled
as babies. They taught that baptism was only for adults who had come to
believe the Gospel and had repented of their sins (cf. Acts 2:38).
The Story of the "Anabaptists"
Among them were remarkable men such as Oswald Glaidt, Andreas
Fischer and Andreas Eossi. Their area of ministry was primarily in
Germany, Poland, Hungary and parts of what later became known as
Czechoslovakia and Romania. These men taught obedience to the Sabbath
and Holy Days as well as a rejection of infant baptism and the Trinity.
God used them to strengthen the faithful remnant and to provide a
witness of the Truth as the turbulent Protestant Reformation was
sweeping the same area.
Oswald Glaidt and Andreas Fischer met during a trip up the Danube
River in 1527. They both wrote books in defense of the Sabbath. In
response to those who accused him of trying to earn salvation because he
taught that obedience to the Ten Commandments was necessary, Glaidt
responded: "The moral law says, ‘Do not murder,’ yet nobody would argue
seriously that this is no longer in effect, nor would anyone argue that
simply to refrain from murder is an attempt to achieve salvation on the
basis of ‘works’" (Daniel Liechty, Sabbatarianism in the Sixteenth
Century, p. 31). Glaidt was executed in Vienna in 1546. Shortly
prior to his death he told his accusers: "Even if you drown me, I will
not deny God and His Truth. Christ died for me and I will continue to
follow Him and would die for His Truth before I would give it up" (p.
35). Books and tracts on the Sabbath and other related subjects were
also published in the late 1500s by Andreas Eossi, a Hungarian of noble
birth.
By the mid-1600s, remnants of the Church in Central Europe were
being increasingly persecuted by a resurgent Catholic Church that was
regaining control there after the turbulence of the Reformation. True
Christians were faced with either severe persecution or emigration to an
area that offered greater freedom to practice their beliefs. The remote
Trans-Carpathian mountain area, which was already home to Waldensian
remnants, became a sanctuary for many. In the eighteenth century most of
the few remaining German Sabbath-keepers migrated to Pennsylvania. There
were also a number of people who were associated with the "Anabaptist
movement," but who accepted other Protestant teachings of the
Reformation. From those descend such modern-day groups as the Baptists,
Mennonites and Amish.
In the meantime, remnants of the true Church had come into England.
The scene was set for the fifth stage in the history of the Church of
God, characterized by the Church at Sardis. Our first clear records of
Sabbath-keeping church congregations in England date from the 1580s. By
the early 1600s a public debate was being waged over whether the
biblical Sabbath was still in effect. Quite a few books were written on
the subject of the law of God and the Sabbath during this period, many
of which still survive.
John Traske was one of the first to publish a book in England
dealing with the Sabbath. Writing around 1618, he was imprisoned for his
efforts. Some credit him with raising up the Mill Yard Church in London,
the oldest known Sabbath-keeping church still functioning and parent of
later Sabbatarian churches in America. Though some other historians date
the founding of Mill Yard to the 1580s, well before Traske’s time, he
certainly pastored the church in the early seventeenth century. John
Traske was later arrested and put in prison. While there, he seems to
have recanted his teachings in order to gain release, though his wife
refused to do so; she remained faithful to the Truth and spent the
remaining 15 years of her life in prison.
In 1661, John James, another Church of God minister in the London
area, was arrested for preaching the Truth.
"In his
final words to the court he simply asked them to read the following
scriptures: Jeremiah 26:14–15 and Psalm 116:15… after his execution
his heart was taken out and burned, the four quarters of his body
fixed to the gates of the city and his head set up on a pole in
Whitechapel opposite to the alley in which his meeting-house stood.
Such was the horrible price that some were prepared to pay for
obedience to God in seventeenth century England" (Ivor Fletcher,
The Incredible History of God’s True Church, p. 176).
Another remarkable leader was Francis Bampfield, a copy of whose
autobiography, The Life of Shem Acher, has been preserved in the
British Museum Library. From 1662 until his death in 1683, he spent most
of his time either in prison or on the run from the English authorities.
Even when he was detained at Dorchester Prison, people flocked there to
hear him preach. It was at this time of persecution that an event of
far-reaching implications happened: Stephen Mumford and his wife,
members of the Church, left England for the New World and came to Rhode
Island in 1664. By the early 1700s the Church of God in England was
virtually dead. Most of the ministers at that time, in addition to
preaching on the Sabbath, were now pastoring churches on Sunday to make
extra money. Compromise took its toll.
The Church in Early America
Upon arriving in Rhode Island, the only American colony founded
upon the principle of religious liberty, the Mumfords began to
fellowship with Baptists in Newport. They were not quiet, however, about
their belief in the Sabbath. In 1665, within the first year of the
Mumfords’ arrival, Tacy Hubbard started keeping the Sabbath with them,
becoming the first convert in America. Shortly afterward, her husband
Samuel joined her. In 1671 the first Sabbath-keeping church in America
officially began with seven members. William Hiscox was the first pastor
of the church, serving from 1671 until his death in 1704.
In 1708, a second church was officially organized in Westerly,
Rhode Island (later renamed Hopkinton). Throughout the eighteenth
century, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania and New Jersey seem to have been the
main areas of Sabbath-keeping churches. During this time, German Sabbath
keepers immigrated to Pennsylvania. Peter Miller was the best known
minister of the German Sabbath-keepers in Pennsylvania and was a friend
of Benjamin Franklin.
The time of the American Revolution was difficult for many of God’s
people. The history of that era also demonstrates how spiritually dead
many of the ministers and members were. Several congregations were
greatly divided on the issue of warfare and political involvement. Jacob
Davis, pastor of the Shrewsbury, New Jersey, Church of God, joined the
Continental Army as a chaplain. Many of the members followed his example
and enlisted also. One member, Simeon Maxson, boldly objected and
labeled any church members who supported carnal warfare as "children of
the devil" (Richard Nickels, Six Papers on the History of the Church
of God, p. 60). He was put out of the congregation because of his
stand.
Sabbath-keepers in the Shrewsbury area were impoverished and
divided by the War. Many relocated to Pennsylvania after the Revolution
and, prior to 1800, most of those moved to Salem, Virginia (later West
Virginia). The area around Salem became one of the major centers of
God’s people from about 1800 on into the twentieth century. The history
of God’s people in this area is not, however, the story of unity and of
a great work being done. It is the story of division, apostasy and
spiritual lethargy on the part of the majority—much of it furthered by
the influence of the prominent Davis family, which produced many of the
leading ministers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The vast
majority of the brethren appear to have been so spiritually dead that
they blindly followed apostate ministers into Protestantism.
William Davis, born in Wales in 1663, went from the Church of
England to the Quakers, then became a Baptist. In 1706, he accepted the
Sabbath and applied for membership in the Newport church, but was
rejected because he held wrong doctrines. Finally, in 1710, he was
accepted for membership and, in 1713, was authorized to preach and to
baptize. Yet he believed in the Trinity, the immortality of the soul and
in "going to heaven"—totally contrary to the doctrines taught by the
Church at that time! For the rest of his life, Davis was variously in
and out of fellowship with the Church. "Davis played a powerful role in
shaping the future of Sabbatarian Baptists." (Nickels, p. 55).
In the earliest days, no special thought was given to an official
church name. The congregations in their correspondence with one another
referred to themselves as "the Church of Christ which is at Newport" or
"the Church of God living in Piscataway." Most members simply called it
"the Church." Outsiders referred to them as Sabbatarians or Sabbatarian
Baptists. When the church in Newport received an official state charter
in 1819 (it had been established in 1671, but legal requirements were
changing), it was registered under the name "Seventh-Day Baptist Church
of Christ."
In 1803 a general conference was organized by eight Sabbath-keeping
congregations in the Northeast in order to coordinate their evangelistic
efforts and cooperate in the publication of literature. In 1805 they
adopted the name "The Sabbatarian General Conference." By 1818 the name
was changed to Seventh-Day Baptist General Conference and the
organization had grown to include Sabbath-keeping congregations outside
the Northeast.
The Church was undergoing many changes. We can note a progression
from non-Trinitarianism to the Trinitarian position championed by the
Davis family and others. A statement written in 1811 upheld the
traditional teaching of the Church noting "that Sabbatarian Baptists
believed the Holy Ghost to be the operative power or spirit of God…
there are few… who believe that the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, are
three absolute distinct persons, coequal… and yet one God" (Nickels, p.
91). Just 22 years later, in the 1833 Expose of Sentiments,
however, the official position was: "We believe that there is a union
existing between the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit; and that they
are equally divine and equally entitled to our adoration" (Nickels, p.
91). Even as late as 1866, it was acknowledged that some of the
ministers still possessed a strong aversion to using the word "Trinity."
During this time many ministers and members had gotten so far from
the Truth that they were now merely Protestants who met on Saturday. The
November 18, 1983, edition of The Westerly Sun newspaper
described the anniversary celebration of the oldest Sabbath-keeping
church in the United States with this headline: "Church Will Celebrate
275 Years Marked with Change." The article in the newspaper said the
"church will celebrate its 275th anniversary this weekend—an experience
which has been marked by change from societal pressures, despite its
Sabbath-keeping custom."
The changes that have occurred have been marked by a steady erosion
of the Truth and a move into mainstream Protestantism. In fact, the
Seventh-Day Baptist churches in Rhode Island have long since ceased
housing the living Church of God. They are merely old buildings, museums
of where the Truth was once taught and the Work of God was once carried
on. The congregations that now meet there believe in the Trinity,
observe Christmas and Easter, and have even gone back and built
steeples—definite pagan symbols—onto some of the old buildings.
While the bulk of Sabbath-keepers were moving further and further
from the Truth, there were individual members and congregations that
remained faithful. We find records of the South Fork church, in West
Virginia, which observed the Passover and avoided unclean meats in the
early 1800s. This little group was forced to withdraw "fellowship from
the General Conference and all other Seventh-Day Baptist organizations,
because of doctrinal differences" (Nickels, p. 68). By the 1870s,
another generation was on the scene and, eventually, most of the South
Fork Church accepted the Seventh-Day Baptist organization.
Another group, calling itself the Church of God at Wilbur, was
organized in 1859 by Elder J. W. Niles from Pennsylvania. It was still
functioning in the 1930s and was called by Andrew Dugger, in his book
A History of the True Religion, "the oldest true Church of God now
functioning in the state of West Virginia" (p. 311).
The Adventist Movement
In the 1830s a movement arose among Protestant churches in western
New York that focused on the return of Jesus Christ to this earth, and
the establishment of a literal Kingdom. This message, which first began
to be forcefully proclaimed by William Miller, was totally different
from accepted Protestant doctrine. His teachings on prophecy attracted
much interest and stirred increasing attention as his predicted 1844
date for the return of Christ drew near. After what was termed "the
great disappointment," confusion set in among these Protestant
Adventists. Ridiculed by mainline Protestants, some became disillusioned
and gave up religion altogether. Others continued to search the
Scriptures to see where they had gone wrong.
Frederick Wheeler was a Methodist minister in Washington, New
Hampshire, who had accepted the Adventist message of Christ’s Second
Coming, and the literal establishment of His Kingdom. Around the
beginning of 1844, he received a visitor to his congregation. Mrs.
Rachel Oakes, a member of a Seventh-Day Baptist congregation in Verona,
New York, had come to visit her daughter.
Hearing Mr. Wheeler call upon his congregation to obey God and keep
His commandments in all things, Mrs. Oakes confronted him after the
service with the truth that Sabbath-keeping played a vital part in
obeying God’s commandments. Taken aback, he promised to study the
subject. Within weeks, he was convinced of the truth of the Sabbath, and
began to proclaim it. The truth of the Sabbath spread like wildfire
among disillusioned Adventists. Hundreds of others responded, as well,
to the simple truth of the real Gospel and of obedience to all of God’s
commandments.
Into the fellowship of these zealous Sabbatarian Adventists came
Roswell Cottrell, a long-time minister and Sabbath-keeper. His family
had been among the earliest members of the Church of God in Rhode
Island, but the Cottrell family withdrew from the fellowship of what was
then being called the Seventh-Day Baptist Church over doctrine. This was
the time when such changes as the Trinity and the immortality of the
soul were being adopted as official Seventh-Day Baptist doctrine. About
15 years after coming into the fellowship of the Sabbatarian Adventists,
he found himself once again embroiled in controversy. Elder James White,
who had emerged as the main leader among the Sabbath-keeping,
Adventist Churches of God, was pushing for an organizational
conference and an official name, Seventh-Day Adventist Church.
There were those who opposed this change as unscriptural and also
opposed giving credence to the visions of Elder White’s wife, Ellen G.
White. Roswell Cottrell opposed Mr. White’s organizational moves. He
wrote, in the May 3, 1860, Review and Herald: "I do not believe
in popery; neither do I believe in anarchy; but in Bible order,
discipline, and government in the Church of God" (Nickels, p. 162).
In October 1860, at a conference in Battle Creek, Michigan, the
overwhelming majority of those present rejected the name "Church of God"
and adopted the name Seventh-Day Adventist as a name descriptive of
their beliefs. This was the name being pushed by the Whites. Mrs.
White’s visions were increasingly being advanced as "new truth" for the
Church.
Throughout the 1860s, the split between the majority who followed
the Whites and the scattered remnant who did not became more and more
decisive. During the Civil War, Church of God members took a firm stand
as conscientious objectors, in contrast to the Seventh-Day Adventists
under the Whites’ leadership. A delegation from the Church of God met
with President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, in order to establish
conscientious objector status for young men in the Church.
A quotation from a circular letter from brethren in Marion, Iowa,
published in the September 7, 1864, issue of The Hope of
Israel, the Church’s publication, gives a flavor of what was
happening at the time:
"On the 10th
of June, 1860, something over 50 of us adopted a form of a church
covenant, drawn up by [M. E. Cornell].… Nearly a year and a half
afterward, the same messenger held up, publicly, some other volumes
by the side of the Bible… and urged us to adopt their teaching also,
as a rule of faith and discipline. A portion of us were unwilling to
accept these new planks in the platform of our Church.… The
result was, about one half of the Church decided to receive these
volumes as a valid Scripture, and drew off from us, or rather
repelled us from them, denouncing us as rebels.… As it regards us
being rebels, we boldly assert that we are not rebels. We have not
rebelled against the constitution which we adopted, for we stand
firm on it yet… so the charge of rebellion reflects with shame on
them, who have made it, they being the ones who have departed from
their first position and have adopted a new one" (Robert
Coulter, The Story of the Church of God Seventh Day, p. 16).
In August 1863, the small church paper called The Hope of Israel
began to be printed in Michigan. It started with less than forty
subscribers. In 1866 it was relocated to Marion, Iowa, and in 1888 moved
again to Stanberry, Missouri. Over the years, the paper underwent
several name changes, ultimately being called The Bible Advocate.
One of the most prominent figures in the Church of God during this
time was Jacob Brinkerhoff. He edited the paper from 1871 until 1887,
and again from 1907 until 1914. In 1874, A. F. Dugger Sr. of Nebraska
entered the full-time ministry of the Church of God. From the 1870s
until the years just prior to World War I, Elders Brinkerhoff and Dugger
contributed many of the articles that helped to clarify and solidify
doctrine in the Church. Articles on prophecy, clean and unclean meats,
tithing, proper observance of the Passover and what it means to be "born
again" were printed.
As early as 1866, articles on prophecy taught that the Jews would
be restored to a homeland in Palestine. There was some truth restored
and taught but, all in all, the efforts of the Church were weak and only
reached small numbers of people, primarily in rural parts of the
Midwest.
The phase of Church history we have focused on in this chapter is
best described by Christ’s message to the Church at Sardis recorded in
Revelation 3:1–6. This Church was told that while it had a name that it
was alive, it was really spiritually dead. "Be watchful, and strengthen
the things which remain, that are ready to die" (Revelation 3:2). While
this Church as a whole is spiritually lethargic or even dead, there are
a few among them who Christ says "have not defiled their garments; and
they shall walk with Me in white, for they are worthy" (v. 4).
Chapter 5
Schisms, Splits
and a New Start
The twentieth century was clearly the time of the most rapid
change in human history. The century opened with the horse and buggy as
the primary means of transportation, yet within the first 70 years men
had traveled to the moon and back! This century saw two great world wars
and the introduction of weapons of mass destruction. For the first time
in human history, it was possible to annihilate all life from this
planet, just as Jesus Christ foretold (Matthew 24:22).
Another prophecy that uniquely characterizes this end time is that
the true Gospel of the Kingdom of God will be preached in all the world
for a witness and then the end will come (v. 14).
The First Quarter of the Twentieth Century
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Church of God was
small and scattered, with fewer than 1,000 members, living mostly in the
American Midwest. The General Conference of the Church of God legally
incorporated in 1900 in the state of Missouri. The Church’s newspaper
underwent a name change that same year to become, as the last chapter
showed, The Bible Advocate.
In 1903, Gilbert Cranmer, a minister since the 1850s and one of the
chief builders of the Church in the aftermath of the Seventh-Day
Adventist/Church of God split in the 1860s, died at age 89. In 1910,
Alexander Dugger, who had served as a leader of the General Conference
since its inception, as well as having served as editor of The Bible
Advocate, also died. A third faithful pioneer, Jacob Brinkerhoff,
died in 1916. He had served as editor of the Advocate on and off
from 1871 to 1914. Mr. Brinkerhoff was considered by many to be the most
outstanding leader of the Church in his time. "Jacob Brinkerhoff had
served the Church of God for over 40 years.… Instead of buying a home in
1874, Brinkerhoff used the money instead to buy the press equipment for
the Advent and Sabbath Advocate.… Single-handedly, it seems, he
had prevented the total collapse of the Work" (Richard Nickels,
History of the Seventh Day Church of God, p. 85).
Andrew N. Dugger, son of Alexander Dugger, began his ministry with
the Church of God in 1906. When Jacob Brinkerhoff retired from the
editorship of The Bible Advocate in 1914, he became both
president of the General Conference and editor. "During his tenure as
president and editor, Dugger exerted much influence upon the Church.
Throughout the early period of Dugger’s leadership, the Church of God
experienced some of its most rapid and greatest growth" (Coulter, pp.
41–42). Andrew Dugger retained leadership from June of 1914 until 1932.
The issue of organization and government had long been a source of
controversy within the Church of God. Recognizing that no Work of any
consequence could be done with the meager amount of monies coming into
the headquarters in Stanberry, Missouri (less than $1,000 in 1917),
Andrew Dugger took steps to correct the situation. He sent a survey to
the membership in 1922 to find out how much tithe they had paid over the
previous year and to whom it was paid. It became apparent that most of
the tithes were being collected by individual ministers, and that one
particular minister who "worked little" had collected the lion’s share.
Soon, a policy was enacted that all tithes were to be paid into the
State Conferences, and that a tithe of that tithe was to be sent to the
General Conference. In 1923, the income of the General Conference in
Stanberry jumped to more than $18,000.
In about 1904, G. G. Rupert entered the ministry of the Church of
God. Mr. Rupert had previously been in the ministry of the Seventh-Day
Adventist Church and had raised up congregations in South America. After
several years of growing doctrinal disagreement, he left the Adventists
in 1902. Among other things, Mr. Rupert had come to understand that both
the Sabbath and the annual Holy Days were binding upon the New
Testament Church. In 1913, Jacob Brinkerhoff published a series of
articles by G. G. Rupert in The Bible Advocate discussing the
subject of the law of God, arguing that the Holy Days of Leviticus 23
were binding upon the New Testament Church. Though the Church in the
United States paid little heed to this teaching, many of the South
American congregations Mr. Rupert had established not only followed his
example in leaving the fellowship of the Adventists, but also accepted
God’s Holy Days. Because of disagreement between Mr. Dugger and Mr.
Rupert over some issues of doctrine, and particularly over the issue of
church organization and government, Mr. Rupert continued as an
"independent" Church of God minister, publishing his own magazine,
The Remnant of Israel, until his death in 1922.
The 1930s and 1940s—A New Beginning
The late twenties and early thirties saw the Church of God become
virtually paralyzed by political infighting and doctrinal strife. The
Church’s Conference in 1929 was marked by considerable confusion and
dissension. Issues of controversy revolved around "born again," clean
and unclean meats, the use of tobacco, the date of the Passover (Nisan
14 or 15), and the work of the Holy Spirit (Pentecostalism). The number
of conversions dwindled and the Work of the Church was virtually at a
standstill.
It was at this point, in the autumn of 1926, that the life of Mr.
Herbert W. Armstrong became intertwined with the story of the Church of
God. Mr. Armstrong’s ministry undoubtedly had greater impact on more
people than any Church of God minister since the first century.
Challenged by his wife regarding which day was the Christian Sabbath, as
well as by a sister-in-law over the question of evolution, Mr. Armstrong
began a six-month period of intensive study. By the spring of 1927, he
had come to understand that much of what he had grown up believing was
not biblical Truth. He learned that both the seventh-day Sabbath as well
as God’s annual Holy Days are to be kept by Christians today!
In the aftermath of this intensive study, Mr. Armstrong struggled
with the question: "Where is the true Church?" He eventually entered the
fellowship of Church of God brethren in the Willamette Valley of Oregon,
because he saw them as retaining more Truth than any other group.
By 1928, Mr. Armstrong began submitting articles for publication in
The Bible Advocate. As there was no minister in Oregon at that
time, the brethren in Eugene frequently asked him to speak to the
congregation. In June of 1931, Mr. Armstrong was ordained to the
ministry by the Oregon Conference of the Church of God, thus beginning a
ministry that lasted almost 55 years!
In the meantime, trouble was building for the Church of God as a
whole. At the General Conference, held in August 1933, Andrew Dugger,
the primary church leader for the past 20 years, lost his position by
one vote. This precipitated a crisis that split the Church down the
middle. "On the one side, Andrew N. Dugger and others held to
‘reorganization’ of church government, clean meats, no tobacco, and
Passover on Nisan 14. On the other hand, Burt F. Marrs led a group of
‘independents’ who were pro-pork and tobacco, and felt Passover should
be on Nisan 15. The issue of when to observe the Passover was debated
for three days during the time of the division" (Nickels, p. 151).
Andrew Dugger withdrew from the General Conference of the Church of God
headquartered at Stanberry and held a meeting to reorganize the Church
in Salem, West Virginia, in November 1933. A new organizational
structure was instituted with "Twelve Apostles," "Seventy Elders" and
"Seven" set over the finances.
Offices were chosen by lot rather than by vote. Mr. Armstrong, of
Oregon, was chosen as one of "The Seventy." He and most of the Oregon
brethren switched their affiliation from the Stanberry organization to
the new organization headquartered in Salem. Though Mr. Armstrong did
not receive a salary from Salem, he accepted their ministerial
credentials and submitted monthly ministerial reports.
"The division of the Church of God (Seventh Day) caused the
membership and leadership much grief. Many members and prospects were
discouraged by the frequent attacks one church launched on the other. In
some instances, ministers switched organizations, bewildering their
membership. In other cases, the membership became pawns in the struggle
between ministers who were vying for their loyalty and support. The
membership growth of the 1920s was not realized or even approached in
the decades of the 1930s and 1940s" (Coulter, p. 55). Actually,
membership decreased during this period.
At the time all this was occurring, the foundation was being laid
for a Work of God that would have unprecedented worldwide impact. Rather
than waste his energies on political infighting within the Church, Mr.
Armstrong began making a regular weekly radio broadcast aimed at
preaching the Gospel to the world. The program was called "Radio Church
of God," and first aired on KORE, a 100-watt station in Eugene. The
radio program was launched on the first Sunday in January 1934 and, in
February, Mr. Armstrong began publication of a mimeographed "magazine"
entitled The Plain Truth which was sent to about 200 people.
Little did he realize at the time that Christ was using him to raise up
the sixth era of the Church, typified by the Church at Philadelphia
(Revelation 3:7–13).
In addition to the weekly radio broadcast, Mr. Armstrong conducted
evangelistic campaigns throughout the area. Though several churches were
raised up as a result of his efforts, these new congregations usually
fell apart or went astray because of a lack of faithful, dedicated
ministers to shepherd the flock. During this period, Mr. Armstrong came
into increasing conflict with the Church headquarters in Salem because
of his teachings about the identity of Israel and the annual Sabbath
days. Although Andrew Dugger had admitted in a private letter that Mr.
Armstrong’s teachings on the "lost Ten Tribes" were correct, Mr. Dugger
refused to publish an article on the subject in The Bible Advocate.
Finally, the issue of the Holy Days came to a head in 1937. The
following is quoted from the minutes of the business meeting held in
Detroit, Michigan, May 5–10, 1937, by the Board of Twelve Apostles of
the Church of God (Seventh Day), Salem, West Virginia, Headquarters:
"May 7, at 1:00 p.m. Reading of Elder Armstrong’s letter to the Twelve.
Reading in periods of 20 minutes each of Elder Armstrong’s articles on
the Feast of Unleavened Bread, the Passover, Pentecost, Feast of
Tabernacles, etc., followed each time by discussion pro and con by the
Elders.… A decision was made as given in the following resolution:
‘Inasmuch as some have troubled the Churches, teaching them they should
observe the Feast of Unleavened Bread and yearly Sabbaths… we reaffirm
the teachings of the Church of God on this point… that we observe no
such custom’" (John Kiesz, History of the Church of God, p. 180).
According to the official records provided by Virginia Royer, bookkeeper
of the Church of God Publishing House in Salem: "It was in 1938 that he
[Mr. Armstrong] was asked to turn in his credentials for continuing to
preach contrary to Church doctrine" (p. 180).
Although Mr. Armstrong no longer carried ministerial credentials
from the Church of God (Seventh Day) after 1938, he continued to teach
and preach more forcefully than ever. As reported in the April 1939
Good News, the weekly Radio Church of God broadcast was
reaching 100,000 listeners in the Pacific Northwest. That also was the
year that the first, full eight-day Feast of Tabernacles was held in
Eugene, attended by 42 people. (From 1933 to 1938, services had been
held only on the Holy Days.) In addition to Mr. Armstrong, other Church
of God elders such as John Kiesz were guest speakers at the Feast until
about 1945.
By mid-1942, the name of the radio program changed from "Radio
Church of God" to The World Tomorrow, and there was an
experimental period of daily broadcasts begun in the Los Angeles area.
In the late summer of 1942, more than 1,700 people attended an
evangelistic campaign Mr. Armstrong held at the Biltmore Theater in Los
Angeles. The Work that God was accomplishing through Mr. Armstrong was
growing and bearing fruit. In August 1942, The World Tomorrow
went nationwide, with a Sunday broadcast from WHO in Des Moines and, in
1943, WOAI in San Antonio was added. By 1944, The Plain Truth’s
circulation reached 35,000.
As the impact of the Work God was doing through Mr. Armstrong grew,
the Church of God (Seventh Day) continued to split and splinter with
more and more independent churches and ministers. There were efforts
toward unity that resulted in the merger of the Salem and the Stanberry
groups in 1949. However, the merger itself spawned additional splits
and, 20 years later in 1969, that Church’s primary publication, The
Bible Advocate, had a circulation of just over 2,000. The Church
of God (Seventh Day) represented the final phase of what is described in
Revelation 3 as the Church at Sardis. Remember, it is described as being
spiritually dead, though there would be a few who walked with Christ in
white.
Open Doors and Dramatic Growth
In 1946, God started positioning the Radio Church of God, and the
Work being done through Mr. Armstrong, for dramatic growth. Faced with
the pressures of daily radio broadcasting (for which Hollywood was
well-equipped to provide technical support), and recognizing the need
for a college to train an educated and faithful ministry, Mr. Armstrong
looked into moving to Southern California. He located an appropriate
property in Pasadena, and entered into negotiations to purchase it.
At this time, Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong took a trip to Europe to
investigate the possibility of establishing a European branch of the
college to prepare ministers for a worldwide Work. No one can accuse Mr.
Armstrong of thinking small! Yet most people would have viewed his idea
as totally unrealistic. After all, only 50 people attended the Feast of
Tabernacles in Belknap Springs in 1946! There was not even an American
college up and running—only great dreams and a run-down estate with two
buildings that Mr. Armstrong was trying to purchase. Others, both within
and without the Church of God, were talking about "when this thing folds
up." However, vision and the ability to "think big" were qualities Mr.
Armstrong demonstrated in far greater measure than any other Church of
God leader of his day. Ambassador College opened its doors in the fall
of 1947, with four students and eight instructors. Expansion, and a
European branch college, would have to wait—for a little while.
In 1949, Ambassador College students conducted their first
nationwide baptismal tour. Much of the fruit of those early, student-led
baptismal tours was reflected in the jump in Feast attendance from 150
in 1951 to 450 in 1952. In December of 1952, Mr. Armstrong ordained the
first evangelists of this phase of the Church of God: Richard Armstrong,
Raymond Cole, Herman Hoeh, C. Paul Meredith and Roderick C. Meredith. In
February 1953, Marion and Raymond McNair were ordained, bringing the
total to seven. This began a period of rapid growth and development in
the Work.
After the first two classes of Ambassador College students had
graduated, a Graduate School of Theology was established. Mr. Armstrong
used the Graduate School of Theology as a springboard to delve more
deeply into a number of subjects, the most important of which involved
the nature of God and the destiny of man.
The Church of God has, throughout its history, been
non-Trinitarian, never accepting the formulations of the early Catholic
councils as a valid guide for Christians. However, in modern times, it
was not until the spring of 1953 that Mr. Armstrong and the other
ministers began to develop a clear understanding of the biblical
teaching that God is a divine Family into which converted human beings
will be born at the resurrection. At first, they attempted to prove this
understanding false, from the Bible. Instead, they found this vital
truth reaffirmed throughout God’s Word. Though this understanding was
the clear implication of much that had previously been taught, Mr.
Armstrong and the others found it challenging to accept this simple—yet
profoundly important and overwhelming—truth. This key teaching of
Scripture—that we can be born into the Family of God—is perhaps the
single greatest truth that God restored, through Mr. Armstrong, to the
Church of God.
Two giant leaps forward in the preaching of the Gospel occurred in
1953. The year began with the opening of one of the greatest single
doors in the history of the Work. On January 1, Radio Luxembourg—at that
time the most powerful radio station on earth—began broadcasting The
World Tomorrow to Europe. Additionally, Mr. Armstrong obtained time
for a daily broadcast carried over the entire ABC Radio Network.
In February 1953, Richard Armstrong (Mr. Armstrong’s eldest son,
who died in an automobile accident in 1958) opened a mailing office in
London. In 1954, accompanied by his wife Loma, Richard Armstrong and
Roderick C. Meredith, Mr. Armstrong conducted evangelistic campaigns in
Britain. In 1956–57, Mr. Meredith returned for more campaigns. In 1958,
back again in the U.S., he was appointed second vice president of the
Church.
The June 1960 Plain Truth magazine carried a special
announcement from Mr. Armstrong to the British readership, announcing a
series of campaigns in Britain by Mr. Meredith. Mr. Armstrong wrote:
"Mr. Meredith is fully consecrated, utterly sincere.… He is going to
tell you things you can’t hear from any other source… you’ll be shocked,
surprised—you’ll hear more real truth in one night of these meetings
than most people learn in years of the preaching of our day!" (Fletcher,
p. 256). By October 1960, the second Ambassador College opened its doors
in Bricket Wood, England and in 1964 a third campus opened in Big Sandy,
Texas.
As the number of ministers available to conduct baptizing tours and
pastor churches increased, so did the harvest that was being reaped by
the Work. Feast attendance jumped from 750 in 1953 to more than 2,000 in
1957. By 1961, the numbers were almost 10,000 and, by 1967, more than
40,000. The Plain Truth’s circulation topped the half-million
mark in 1964, and hit one million by 1967. By the late 1960s, The
World Tomorrow was broadcast daily and heard by tens of millions of
people around the world. Amid this worldwide explosion of interest in
God’s Word, in 1967 the legally incorporated name of the organization
was changed from "Radio Church of God" to "Worldwide Church of God."
Throughout the soaring 1960s, Garner Ted Armstrong (Mr. Armstrong’s
younger son) served as the main speaker on The World Tomorrow and
as vice president of the Church. Dr. Roderick C. Meredith (who had in
January 1966 received his Th.D. from the Ambassador College Graduate
School of Theology) was named director of the U.S. ministry.
In 1967, Mrs. Loma Armstrong died at age 75. By the end of the
1960s, signs of future problems for the Work were already surfacing.
In January 1972, the Church was shaken by the removal of Garner Ted
Armstrong from his responsibilities. Four months later he was
reinstated. The 1970s saw in the Church, as in America as a whole, the
emergence of an increasingly liberal, permissive spirit. A number of
ministers and members left the Church in 1974; increasing doctrinal
confusion, coupled with accusations of scandal, assaulted the Work.
After beginning recovery from massive heart failure in 1977, Mr.
Armstrong finally removed his son from his responsibilities in the
spring of 1978 and disfellowshipped him in June.
In January 1979, the Church was temporarily hit by a receivership
imposed by the State of California. Mr. Armstrong, from Tucson, Arizona
(where he was still recovering from heart trouble), named Dr. Meredith
to his old job as director of the ministry, seeking to restore stability
to the Church and the ministry during this troubled time. At the same
time, Mr. Armstrong sought to "set the Church back on track" doctrinally
after the liberal, watered-down doctrinal approach of the 1970s. By the
time of his death in January 1986, The Plain Truth had a
circulation of more than eight million copies printed in seven
languages. Attendance at the Feast of Tabernacles approached 150,000
worldwide.
When Joseph Tkach took the helm of the Worldwide Church of God upon
the death of Mr. Armstrong in January 1986, the Church was a seemingly
unified body. It appeared focused on the Work of God that lay ahead and
committed to the Truth. There were problems beneath the surface,
however. They became increasingly obvious, at first faintly and then
more clearly.
The Final Phase of Church History
In Revelation 3, we read of the two final phases of the history of
the Church of God. The Church of Philadelphia is characterized by a zeal
to do the Work. God promised to set before them an "open door" to preach
the Gospel (v. 8) as well as to protect them from the future Great
Tribulation (v. 10). However, there is a final, seventh stage of the
Church described, the Church at Laodicea. This Church is characterized
by spiritual lukewarmness and lethargy (vv. 15–17). Though Mr. Armstrong
put the Church "back on track" during the last seven years of his life,
it became increasingly apparent from the very early 1970s onward, that
two different "spirits" co-existed within one organization.
Starting about a year after Mr. Armstrong’s death, there began a
gradual trend back toward the permissive, liberal approach of the 1970s.
Within a few years, however, changes moved far beyond those of the
1970s, into total apostasy from the Truth—even to the point of
teaching the Trinity and that obedience to God’s law (including the
Sabbath, Holy Days, tithing and unclean meats) is unnecessary. In
December 1992, 40 years after his ordination, Dr. Meredith was forced
out of the Worldwide Church of God because of his refusal to compromise
with the prevailing forces of apostasy. Joined by faithful brethren and
ministers, Dr. Meredith moved quickly to revive the Work of God under
the banner of the "Global Church of God." Within six weeks, the Church
began producing a weekly radio program. In May 1995, the Church began a
weekly telecast.
In January 1995, the Worldwide Church of God leadership dropped all
pretense of continuity with historic Church of God doctrine and openly
embraced Protestant theology. This brought about a virtual "meltdown" of
the organization, and led to the departure of thousands of brethren as
well as scores of ministers from around the world. Sadly, this post-1995
departure spawned many competing organizations, and a multitude of
independent ministries that have continued to split and divide. In
November 1998 there was even an attempt, led by several Global Church of
God board members, to stage a "corporate takeover" of that organization.
Board members ousted Dr. Meredith, against the wishes of a majority of
the Church’s Council of Elders, but soon found that the vast majority of
GCG members and ministers continued to support the ousted leader, and
those Council of Elders members who left after his ouster. Dr. Meredith
immediately revived the Work under the banner of the "Living Church of
God," supported by thousands of faithful brethren and ministers, and was
back on television in less than two months—on the very same television
station and in the very same time-slot that the board members canceled!
Forty weeks after Dr. Meredith announced the formation of the
"Living Church of God," the GCG entered into bankruptcy proceedings.
Since then, the splinter groups forming from the bankrupt organization
have continued to scatter and divide. The ten men who, after ousting Dr.
Meredith, sat on the reconstituted GCG Council of Elders in December
1998 are scattered, as of the writing of this booklet, among seven
different Church of God organizations. By contrast, all the Council of
Elders members who left GCG and remained supportive of Dr. Meredith are
together, to this day, in the Living Church of God.
The Living Church of God has maintained its focus on doing the
Work—reaching the world with the true Gospel message of Jesus Christ.
You are reading this booklet because of the spirit of teamwork and unity
that has allowed the Living Church of God to hold Philadelphian zeal as
its common ideal, and to reject the spirit of self-will and "resting on
one’s laurels" that has afflicted so many Laodecian members of God’s
Church. The Living Church of God is committed to living by every word of
God—including Jesus Christ’s "Great Commission" to go "into all the
world and preach the gospel to every creature" (Mark 16:15).
As has occurred many times in the past, God’s people today find
themselves at a crossroads. Satan has sown confusion and discouragement.
As a result, many brethren are hurt and angry, or have been overwhelmed
by the cares of this life. Others have been deceived by false teachers,
and have gone into apostasy. Still others have become so lethargic and
lukewarm that they have lost their vision and merely wish to maintain
local congregations, no longer caring about doing the Work. This
represents a fulfillment of Christ’s warning to the Church contained in
Matthew 24:10–13.
However, the Gospel will
be preached to the world in this end-time (Matthew 24:14), and there is
a growing assembly of believers that is both zealous for the full Truth
and zealous to finish God’s Work. Just as God’s people have had to do
from the first century onward, so His people today must "contend
earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints"
(Jude 3). God states clearly: "He will finish the work and cut it short
in righteousness" (Romans 9:28). Who will He use to do it? According to
Daniel 11:32 it is "the people who know their God [that] shall be
strong, and carry out great exploits."
Where is the Church that Jesus built? It has not died
out! Rather, it has defied the gates of hell and is miraculously defying
them still. Today, the Living Church of God continues to do the Work of
God, proclaiming the true Gospel to a world spiraling toward
destruction.
Will you be one whom God uses to finish His end-time Work? Do you
have the true Philadelphian spirit that reaches out to the whole world
in genuine love and concern to share God’s message of Truth and hope? Do
you consider it important that the House of Israel be warned of the
impending time of Jacob’s trouble? Is the Work of God more important to
you than your own personal comfort?
We in the Living Church of God believe that we are a continuation
of the Philadelphia Era that Christ raised up through Mr. Herbert W.
Armstrong many years ago. We are motivated by a sense of urgency in
these years that are the immediate prelude to the Great Tribulation. We
truly believe what Jesus Christ taught—that we must work the works of
the Father while it is yet day, for the night indeed comes when no man
can work (cf. John 9:4)! Will you, too, heed Christ’s words? |