Every
once in a great while a news story pops
up wherein a species once thought to be extinct is rediscovered in some
Amazonian wilderness. As seems to be the case nowadays, the story starts to
trend, specialists in the field are befuddled by the reality of a species they
thought extinct prancing about in flesh and bone, then something new comes
along and the newly no-longer-extinct species is summarily forgotten about.
Even
within Christendom there are certain species we thought extinct. We read of
their existence some nineteen hundred years ago then as though they never
existed they disappear into the vast storehouse of history thought never to
return.
Truth
be told, it would have been far better for the species to I am referring to
have stayed extinct, but alas, it seems to have been rediscovered, and many a
soul, especially the young and impressionable are enamored if not outright
enraptured.
Recently
I was reading a passage out of John’s first epistle, and a handful of words
moved me so, that I began to research what it was John’s heart was so broken
over, and why his writings to the churches seemed so emotional.
1 John 2:18-19, “Little
children, it is the last hour, and as you have heard that the Antichrist is
coming, even now many antichrists have come, by which we know that it is the
last hour. They went out from us, but they were not of us; if they had been of
us, they would have continued with us; but they went out that they might be
made manifest, that none of them were of us.”
John
wrote his first, second and third epistles near the tail end of his life. He
knew he was close to going home, to finishing his race faithfully and receiving
his just reward, and he set about writing a letter of warning to those he
considered his spiritual children, in an almost paternal and fatherly manner.
‘Little children,
it is the last hour,’
I keep rereading these words over and over again, and I can’t help but think
that if during John’s time it was the last hour, then we must be living in the
last seconds of the last minute of the last hour.
Strangely
enough, the selfsame individuals John was warning against in his first epistle
have reemerged from the shadows, with the selfsame polluted doctrine and
teaching. These individuals no longer go by the name Gnostics, but have
modernized their title and rebranded themselves Emergent. Make no mistake, the
roots of such individuals can be traced back to the Gnostics of old, and the
heresies they preach are an echo of centuries past.
The
Gnostics believed – like so many do today – that the Word of God was not the
final authority, and because of their spirituality they had somehow tapped in
to a hidden knowledge that caused them to be above the normal distinctions of
right and wrong, giving them license to sin with impunity.
Because
sin became relative to them, the Gnostics were known for their deplorable
conduct and complete disregard for Christian ethics.
Certain
denominations today believe, and wrongly so, that all revelation can be labeled
heretical because John labeled the Gnostics are heretics.
I
agree, any revelation which attempts
to redefine Christ, or contradicts the Word of God is heretical. However, we
cannot make the broad claim that all prophecy is likewise heretical, because this
is not what John was saying, and he clarifies this further in letter.
John’s
issue was with men attempting to redefine Christ, the teachings of Christ, and
the standard of Christ based on their own hidden
knowledge.
It’s
like some men today who say it is within their right to leave their present
wives, and marry another while still being in leadership because the Lord told
them to.
Sorry,
out of bounds, no can do. God will not tell you to do something His own Word
tells you, you cannot do.
It
wasn’t the God of the Bible that told you to divorce your spouse for another;
it was your lust which you’ve made your new god.
Like
the Gnostics of old, men attempt to justify their licentiousness, their lust,
their sin and their perversions by employing the notion of hidden knowledge or special dispensation based on a self-analysis
of their own spirituality.
There’s
no deception like self-deception, but just because some men deceive themselves,
it does not mean that God will change His mind on what He has already
established in His word.
Perhaps
the Gnostics of old are no more, but their offspring are still skulking about,
admittedly under a different name. So the next time you see Gnosticus Modernicus know that it is not
a new, as yet undiscovered species, but an old one thought to be extinct all
this time.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea Jr.
5 comments:
Could this scripture verse you talked about deal with so called Christian pastor's who preached the word of god. Now these so called pastor are now coming out for gay marriages?
Michael, I think perhaps you have just described the "apostate church." I tended to think of them as an organized group, as in a denomination, but now I realize the apostate church is made up of individuals. They are the fallen away and the never were. Oh, how much our Lord wants prayer warriors to plead for the souls of the lost and the deceived. Brokenhearted saints driven by love to their knees.
Thanks again,
Marshall Warren
Then there are Agnostics. I think they believe that God cannot be known by man. Most who call themselves Agnostic just aren't sure if there is a God, and they aren't that interested in looking either. They feel that their own sense of morality is all they need to lead a good and righteous life. They apparently have not faced their own sin and evil head on.
The Bible is very simple, plain and obvious to anyone willing to understand it. The people who add to it and make it all complicated and hard to understand are the ones who don't want to take it at face value.
They want the Bible to be a big mystery that only they seemingly have the keys to unlocking. Then they can self righteously promote whatever scheme is in their heart for their own benefit.
It's very reassuring to see that God is having several of us warn the Body about this emergent movement. I, myself, was unaware of it until a good friend brought it to my attention.
I recently posted on my discipleship blog an article I came across written by Roger Oakland that explains the emergent movement very well, especially for those who seek to understand it better. The link to this article on my blog: http://growingasadiscipleofchrist-fionab.blogspot.com/2013/02/is-your-church-changing.html.
Fiona
Hello Michael,
Thank you for addressing this and giving clarification on the distinction between those who claim hidden knowledge and true revelation from God.
Thanks to Barbara for her comments. - I think Barbara (April 13 at 11:31 p.m.) hit the nail on the head.
Suzy
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