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number one. from The Papacy is the Antichrist. We pray that the Lord Jesus Christ
will greatly bless you as you listen. The Papacy is the Antichrist,
a demonstration by Rev. J. A. Wiley, LL.D., author of
History of Protestantism, History of the Scottish Nation, etc.,
published by George MacGibbon in 1888. The dedication is to
the Reverend Ministers of the Church of Scotland with Mr. John
Hope's compliments. Preface The following demonstration
is rested on no narrow basis. Its two postulates, like two
posturns, admit us into the edifice, but they are not its foundations.
The whole economy of redemption and the whole course of history
are the broad substructions on which the argument is based and
built up, and the author humbly submits that it cannot be overturned
or the conclusion arrived at set aside without dislocating
and shaking the structure of both revelation and providence.
The same line of proof which establishes that Christ is the
promised Messiah, conversely applied, establishes that the
Roman system is the predicted apostasy. In the life of Christ
we behold the converse of what the Antichrist must be, and in
the prophecy of the Antichrist we are shown the converse of
what Christ must be and was. And when we place the papacy
between the two and compare it with each, we find on the one
hand that it is the perfect converse of Christ as seen in his life,
and on the other that it is the perfect image of the Antichrist
as shown in the prophecy of him. We conclude, therefore, that
if Jesus of Nazareth be the Christ, the Roman papacy is the Antichrist. Chapter 1 The Term Antichrist We shall not go far afield in
this discussion, nor is it in the least necessary to do so.
The materials for a right decision on the question before us lie
close at hand. The Apostle John, speaking of
the great apostasy to arise in Christendom, calls it the Antichrist,
and the Pope has taken to himself, as the name that best describes
his office, the title Vicar of Christ. All we shall ask as the
basis for our argument are these two accepted facts, namely, that
John styles the apostasy the Antichrist, and that the head
of the Roman system styles himself Christ's Vicar. The papacy holds
in its name the key of its meaning. We shall make use of that key
in unlocking its mystery and true character. The papacy cannot
complain, though we adopt this line of interpretation. We do
nothing more than use the key it has put into our hands. The
Apostle John, we have said, speaking of the apostasy, the coming of
which he predicts, styles it the Antichrist. And we have also
said that the papacy, speaking through its representative in
head, calls itself the Vicar of Christ. The first, Antichrist,
is a Greek word. The second, Vicar, is an English
word. But the two are in reality one,
for both words have the same meaning. Antichrist, translated
into English, is Vice Christ. or vicar of Christ and vicar
of Christ rendered into Greek is antichrist antichristos if
we can establish this and the ordinary use of the word by those
to whom the Greek was a vernacular is decisive on the point we shall
have no difficulty in showing that this is the meaning of the
word antichrist even a vice Christ And if so, then every time the
Pope claims to be the vicar of Christ, he pleads at the bar
of the world that he is the Antichrist. Moreover, this will clear our
way and simplify our discussion. For let it be noted, if Antichrist
signifies a vice-Christ, that is, one who comes in the room
of Christ, deception, dissimulation, counterfeit, must be an essential
element in his character. In whatever persons or systems
that fundamental characteristic is lacking, we fail to find the
Antichrist, whatever may be their general opposition to Christ
and to Christianity, or whatever other features of the Antichrist
they may bear. They may have every other characteristic
by which prophecy had described this noted adversary of Christ
in his gospel, yet lacking this fundamental one, their claim
to this pre-eminently evil distinction cannot be admitted. This enables
us to dismiss summarily and at once a host of antichrists which
have been conjured up by persons who have drawn upon their imagination
rather than followed any sound principle of prophetic interpretation.
The cause of the papacy is served by the false glosses and mistaken
interpretations of Scripture which interpose a pseudo-antichrist
between it and prophecy, which unfolds against it so black a
record and suspends above it so terrible a doom. We shall
suppose that an atheist or an infidel has been put to the bar
to answer it to a charge of being the Antichrist. He has manifested
a satanic malignity against the gospel and has labored to the
utmost of his power to destroy it. He has blasphemed God, execrated
Christ, and derided, vilified, and persecuted all who profess
his name, and on these grounds he has been assumed to be the
Antichrist. The case is no imaginary one. Atheists and scoffers in
former ages, Voltaire and Paine in later times, communists and
pantheists on our own day, have all been arraigned as the Antichrist. Well, let us suppose that one
or other of these notoriously wicked personages or systems
has been put to the bar on the charge of being the adversary
predicted by John. Who are you, says the judge?
Are you a vice-Christ? So you make a profession of Christianity,
and under that pretext seek to undermine and destroy it? No,
replies the accused, I'm no counterfeit. Christ and his gospel I hate,
but I'm an open enemy. I fight under no mask. Turning
to the likeness drawn by Paul and John of Christ's great rival
and opponent, and finding the outstanding and essential feature
in the portrait absent in the accused, the judge would be constrained
to say, I do not find the charge proven. Go your way. You are
not the Antichrist." Mohammadanism comes nearer than
any of the other opposing systems to the Antichrist of the Bible,
yet it falls a long way short of it. Muhammad did not disavow
the mission of Jesus. On the contrary, he professed
to hold him in honor as a prophet, and in much the same way do his
followers still feel toward Christ. But Islam does not profess to
be an imitation of Christianity. Any counterfeit that can be discovered
in Mohammedanism is partial and shadowy when placed alongside
the bold, sharp-cut counterfeit of Romanism. It requires a violent
stretch of imagination to accept Mohammedanism, or indeed any
other known ism, as a vice-Christ. Of all systems that ever were
on the earth or are now upon it, Romanism alone meets all
the requirements of prophecy, and exhibits all the features
of the vice Christ. And it does so with a completeness
and a truthfulness which enables the man who permits himself to
be guided by the statements of the word of God on the one hand,
and the facts of history on the other, to say at once, This is
the Antichrist. What we have said is meant to
indicate the lines on which our demonstration will proceed. We
must trace the parallelism between their respective chiefs, Christ
and the Pope, along the entire line of their career. In this
parallelism lies the essence of anti-Christianism and, of
course, the strength of our argument. It is this counterfeit, so exact
and complete, which has misled the world into the belief that
this is Christianity, to the waste of ages, not a few. the
unsettling and overthrowing of kingdoms, the stunting of the
human understanding, and the loss of millions of immortal
souls. Chapter 2 Antichrist Portrayed
Before His Birth It is somewhat remarkable that the clearest,
fullest, and most lifelike description of Antichrist we possess is that
which was given of him before he arose. The papacy, if we may
be allowed to anticipate what it will be the object of the
following pages to demonstrate, the papacy has been 1,200 years
in existence, and during all these centuries it has been one
of the main actors in the world. Neither time nor opportunity
has been lacking to it for the display of its spirit and aims.
The record of its deeds lies open to the world, and he that
runs may read it. And, after so long, and, we may
add, so dismal an acquaintance with it, it might be supposed
that we should now be able to give a fuller and truer description
of it than any that could possibly be given before it had come into
existence. Yet no. Incomparably, the most
lifelike portrait of the papacy that exists is that which was
given by Paul in the first century, when writing to the Thessalonian
Christians, and which we give below. But Paul's is not the
only painting of potpourri on the page of the Bible. Daniel,
centuries before, had foreshadowed the rise of this system in imagery
of graphic vividness and dramatic grandeur. A little while after
Paul, John, in symbols equally majestic and awful, foretold
the advent of the same power. The vision was doubled because
the thing was sure. Paul comes in between these two
prophecies, two yet one, as their inspired interpreter. He employs
neither figure nor symbol, but in words, plain yet solemn, he
lifts the veil and lays bare the infernal origin and satanic
character of that power, which, when he wrote, was so near that
the Christians to whom he addressed his epistle might almost hear
the sound of its approaching footsteps and see the shadow
which it had already begun to project upon the church and the
world. We quote the passage of 2 Thessalonians,
chapter 2, verses 1 through 11. Now we beseech you, brethren,
by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering
together unto him, that ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be
troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter, as
from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand. Let no man deceive
you by any means, for that day shall not come, except there
comes a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed,
the son of perdition. who opposeth and exalteth himself
above all that is called God, or that is worshipped, so that
he as God sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that
he is God. Remember ye not that when I was
yet with you I told you these things? And now ye know what
withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time. For the
mystery of iniquity doth already work. Only he who now letteth
will let, until he be taken out of the way. And then shall that
wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit
of his mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming,
even him whose coming is after the working of Satan with all
power and signs and lying wonders, and with all deceivableness of
unrighteousness in them that perish, because they receive
not the love of the truth that they might be saved. And for
this cause God shall send them a strong delusion that they should
believe a lie. Chapter 3 Antichrist an Enemy
Under a Mask In order to introduce ourselves to our subject we have
taken it for granted that the system described by Paul in the
passage we have just quoted is the papacy. This is the thing
to be established. We now proceed to prove this,
and provided we shall show on good and conclusive grounds that
the system depicted by Paul is the Roman apostasy, and that
this is the same system which Daniel and John have portrayed
under symbolic imagery, it will follow that one who admits the
Bible to be the word of God, and that Paul wrote by the inspiration
of the Holy Ghost, must believe that the papacy, that is, the
Roman apostasy, is the Antichrist of Scripture. This is not a point
of mere speculation. It is a question that has attendant
upon it great practical issues. This inquiry has for its object
the ascertainment of the true meaning of an important part
of the word of God, even the better half of its prophecies.
Moreover, on this question must rest the verdict we are to pronounce
on that society which calls itself the Church, as also the revelations
in which we are to stand to it. And on it, too, must depend whether
we shall abandon or whether we shall continue to occupy the
ground which we have been accustomed to regard as our divine central
position in our war with popery, or rather whether we ought not
to end this war and confess that we have been fighting all along
under a mistake. Who is Antichrist? It will help
us to the right answer to this question if we shall first determine
what is Antichrist. Antichrist is an enemy who makes
war with the Son of God. Of that there is no doubt. But
what is the form of this war? And under what character does
Antichrist carry it on? Does he wage it openly? Or does
he fight it under a mask? Does he take the field as an
open rebel and a declared foe? Or does he come as a friendly
adherent who professes to bring support and help to the cause,
which in reality he seeks to undermine and destroy? To determine
this point, let us look at the meaning of the word Antichrist
as employed in scripture. The reader sees that the term
is a composite one, being made up of two words, Anti and Christ. The name is one of new formation,
being compounded, it would seem, for this very enemy, and by its
etymology expressing more exactly and perfectly his character than
any older word could. The precise question now before
us is this. What is the precise sense of
anti in this connection? Does it designate an enemy who
says openly and truly, I am against Christ? Or does it designate
one who says plausibly, yet falsely, I am for Christ? Which? To determine this, let us look
at the force given to this prefix by writers in both classic literature
and Holy Scripture. First, the old classic writers.
By these, the preposition anti is often employed to designate
a substitute. This is, in fact, a very common
use of it in the classic writers. For instance, anti-basilis, he
who is the locum tenens of a king, or as we should now say, a viceroy. Anti, having in this case the
force of the English term vice. He who filled the place of council
was anti-opatus, pro-council. He who took the place of an absent
guest at a feast was entitled or styled Antidepnos. The preposition used in this
sense of the great substitute himself, Christ is said to have given
himself as an antilutron, a ransom in the stead of all. Classic
usage does not require us to give only one sense to this word
and restrict it to one who seeks openly and by force to seat himself
in the place of another, and by violent usurpation bring that
other's authority to an end. We are at liberty to apply it
to one who steals into the office of another under the mask of
friendship, and while professing to uphold his interests, labors
to destroy them. This leaves us free to turn to
the use of the word in Scripture. The Antichrist comes first into
view in our Lord's discourse recorded in Matthew 24.24 and
Mark 13.22. For false Christs and false prophets
shall arise and show signs and wonders to seduce, if it were
possible, even the elect. Our Lord does not indeed use
the word Antichrist but what is almost its synonym, Pseudo-Christ
or False Christ, Pseudo-Christos in the Greek. Nevertheless, the
persons whose coming he foretells are in the line of Antichrist.
They belong to the same family, and their grand characteristic
is deception. Manifestly, they are not open
enemies, but pretended friends. They are False Christs and False
Prophets. And as such are forerunners of
that great Antichrist who is to succeed them, and in whom
they are to find their fuller development and final consummation. They shall seek by signs and
wonders, false of course, to obscure the glory of Christ's
true miracles, to weaken the evidence of His Messiahship arising
therefrom, and to draw men away from Him and after themselves.
The other place in the New Testament in which reference is made to
Antichrist is the first and second epistles of John. The idea which
John presents of the Antichrist is quite in harmony with that
of our Lord. John looks for him in the guise of a deceiver. Little
children, says John, from his first epistle, chapter 2, verse
18, it is the last time. And as ye have heard that Antichrist
shall come, even now there are many Antichrists. After this
announcement of a special and great Antichrist to follow in
the wake of those minor Antichrists that were already arrived and
were urging their claims on the attention of the world, he comes
to look more closely at the giant who was to stand up after these
dwarfs had passed away. He notes prominently one characteristic
of him, and it is his falsehood. Antichrist, says John, is to
be a liar. Who is a liar, but he that denieth
that Jesus is the Christ? He is Antichrist that denieth
the Father and the Son." St. John's words, says Archbishop
Trench, seem to me decisive on the matter. That resistance to
and defiance of Christ, not the false assumption of his character
and offices, is the essential mark of Antichrist. That is from
Synonyms of the New Testament by R.C. Trench, B.D., page 120,
published in Cambridge and London in 1854. Such is Dr. Trench's opinion,
but he gives no grounds for it, and we are unable to imagine
any. We draw the exactly opposite
conclusion from the Apostle's words, even that the false assumption
of his character and offices is an essential mark of Antichrist.
He is a liar, says John. But if he comes boldly and truthfully
avowing himself the enemy of Christ, how is he a liar? If he avows without concealment
his impious design of overthrowing Christ, with what truth can he
be spoken of as a deceiver? But such is the character plainly
ascribed to him by John, in the second epistle, verse 7, For
many deceivers are entered into the world who confess not that
Jesus Christ has come in the flesh. This is a deceiver and
an antichrist." Plainly the exegesis, or rather supposition, of Dr. Trench is inadmissible. Dr. Chalmers had no difficulty in
seeing the Roman system in the apostasy predicted by Paul. We
find him saying in his scripture readings, Save us, O Lord, from
falling away, lest we share in the perdition that waiteth on
the great apostasy. We hold the usurpation of Rome
to be evidently pointed at, and therefore let us maintain our
distance and keep our resolute protest against its great abominations. That is from Dr. Chalmers' Sabbath
Scripture Readings, Volume 1, page 310, as published in Edinburgh
in 1848. Archbishop Trench was misled,
it may be, by the strength of the term deny. Quote, he is Antichrist
that denieth the Father and the Son. But he who does not confess
when he is called to do so denies. Such is the use of the word in
these applications all through the New Testament. Such is the
use John makes of it in this very passage. Quote, for many
deceivers are entered into the world who confess not that Jesus
Christ has come in the flesh. It is clear that Antichrist,
as depicted by our Lord and by his apostle John, is to wear
a mask and to profess one thing and act another. He is to enter
the church as Judas entered the garden, professedly to kiss his
master, but in reality to betray him. He is to come with words
of peace in his mouth, but war in his heart. He is to be a counterfeit
Christ, Christ's likeness stamped on base metal. He is to be an
imitation of Christ, a close, clever, and astute imitation,
which will deceive the world for ages. Those only accepted
who, taught by the Holy Spirit, shall be able to see through
the disguise and detect the enemy under the mask of a friend. Chapter 4 Antichrist, No Atheist
or Communist Antichrist, then, is a counterfeit. But this one
mark is not alone sufficient to identify the person on whom
it is found as the great apostate. All deceit in religion is anti-Christian. The other marks must come along
with this one to ward us to say that we have found that pre-eminently
wicked one and that portentous combination of all evil that
is to form the Antichrist. Yet this one mark enables us
to test certain theories which have been advanced on this subject.
If Antichrist must necessarily be a deceiver, a false Christ,
then no atheist or body of atheists can be Antichrist. No pantheist
or body of pantheists can be Antichrist. They are not deceivers,
they are open enemies. They make war in defiance of
God and Christ and under the protestation that there is no
such person as the Bible affirms filling the office of the world's
mediator and savior. They hold the whole affair to
be an invention of priests. Antichrist dared to make no such
avowal. It would be fatal to him. Were
he to affirm that Christianity is a fable, an out-and-out imposture,
he would cut away the ground from under his own feet. He would
deny the very first postulate in his system, for there must
first be a Christ before there can be an Antichrist. And not
less does this mark shut us up to the rejection of the theory
which has been advanced with much earnestness and some plausibility
that Antichrist is a political character, a potentate, some
frightfully tyrannical and portentously wicked king who is to arise and
for a short space devastate the world by arms. This is an altogether
different Antichrist from that Antichrist which prophecy foreshadows. He may resemble, may surpass
him in open violence, but he lacks the profound dissimulation
under which Antichrist is to commit his atrocities. The rage
of the mere tyrant is indiscriminately vented upon the world at large.
Antichrist's rage is concentrated on one particular object and
cause. Nor with any propriety can such
a one be said to sit in the temple of God, the seat on which the
mock Christ specially delights to show himself. Prophecy absolutely
refuses to see in either of these theories the altogether unique
and overtopping system of hypocrisy, blasphemy, and tyranny which
it has foretold. So far we are helped in our search. When we are able to put aside
some of the false antichrists, we come more within sight of
the true one. We turn now to the prophecy of Paul. And we
shall be blind indeed, if after the study of it we shall be in
any doubt as to whose likeness it is that looks forth upon us
from this remarkable prediction. Chapter 5 The Two Mysteries of
the Bible The name Antichrist, it is true, does not occur in
this prophecy. It is not needed. John had given
the name. Paul presents us with his portrait. He says the Antichrist has power,
a truth, an accuracy, and a fullness which has left nothing for the
eighteenth centuries which have since rolled past to supplement,
much less to correct or amend. The strokes with which this portrait
is drawn are few, but each is a lightning flash, and every
member and feature of the terrible colossus stands revealed. Paul
did not paint this portrait and leave it as a riddle to perplex
and baffle future ages. With history in our hands, there
is no room for a moment's doubt about it. Since Paul wrote, there
has been only one system to which this portrait can apply. It applies
to it in every particular, as the photograph agrees in every
liniment with the living face from which it is taken. But it
will agree with no other system that now is or ever was on the
earth, even as the photograph will not agree with any countenance
but that which stamped itself upon the plate of the artist.
So clearly did the spirit of prophecy foresee the coming of
Antichrist, and so truthfully did he enable Paul to depict
him. The key of this prophecy is in
the seventh verse. For the mystery of iniquity doth
already work. The mystery of iniquity. The
phrase is a striking one. It is not simply iniquity. It
is the mystery of iniquity. Since the time when the first
transgression in Eden opened the door for its entrance, iniquity
had never been absent from the earth. History is little else
than a sorrowful recital of iniquities. But now a new epoch was to be
opened in the career of evil. A hitherto unexampled and unthought
of organization of iniquity was about to appear. The phrase mystery
of iniquity suggests a secret and terrible conspiracy to sin
amongst beings of various ranks and faculties and perhaps also
of various natures. Not a mere series of isolated
acts, but a skillfully constructed system, the several parts nicely
adjusted to one another, and their joint working inducing
a product of tremendous evil character, surpassing what any
former age had witnessed. That mystery was as yet undivulged,
but it was, even now, when Paul wrote, traveling towards the
light, and would be revealed in due time. the mystery of iniquity. This is our true standpoint once
we may look around over the whole passage. When surveyed from this
position, Paul's prophecy will be seen to have an amplitude
of meaning and a depth of import as profound as its range is vast. We venture to think that the
height and depth of this prophecy have not yet been very accurately
measured or its meaning fully fathomed. What is the mystery
of iniquity? The phrase suggests another,
the mystery of godliness. Paul writing to Timothy says
in 1st Timothy chapter 2 verse 16, without controversy great
is the mystery of godliness. These two phrases stand alone
in the Bible. We read but once of the mystery
of godliness and but once of the mystery of iniquity. They
are the two preeminently grand mysteries of revelation. They
stand over against each other. The mystery of iniquity, fashioning
its outward character and semblance upon the mystery of godliness,
making it its pattern, till at last the mystery of iniquity
presents itself to the world a perfect imitation and counterfeit
of the mystery of godliness. Seeing the two mysteries stand
so related to each other, the one mystery interprets the other.
We must give the same height and depth, the same length and
breadth to the one as to the other, so far as the diverse
origin and character of the two will permit. We ask then, what
is the precise idea of the Holy Spirit in the phrase the mystery
of godliness? Does the phrase denote simply
that system of spiritual truth which God has been developing
during the successive ages of the world, which now at last
stands fully manifested in the gospel? No doubt this is part
of the mystery of godliness, but it is not the whole, nor
indeed is it the principal part of it. The mystery of godliness
is not the development of a system only, it is the development of
a person. So does the apostle define it.
Without controversy, says he, great is the mystery of godliness.
God was manifest in the flesh. It was the gradual development
of certain great and supernatural principles and truths through
symbols, prophecies, and typical persons, till at last they attained
their completed development and full manifestation in the person
of the Son of God. The mystery of iniquity, which
stands over against the mystery of godliness as its parallel
and counterfeit, must be like it. like it in having its source
outside the world, like it in its slow and gradual development,
and like it in its final culmination. Of it, too, we must say, it is
not the development of a system only, it is the development of
a person. It is the gathering together
of all the principles of evil and the marshalling of them into
one organization or host and their embodiment at last in a
representative person or head. Antichrist. He was to be the
grand outcome of the apostasy, not its mere ornamental head,
but its executive. He was to guide its councils,
inspire its policy, execute its decrees. In short, he was to
be the organ through which its terrible powers were to be put
forth. This we take to be the ruling
idea in the passage. Just as the mystery of godliness
is not merely the manifestation of the system of godliness, but
the manifestation of God himself, So the mystery of iniquity is
not merely the manifestation of the system of iniquity, but
the manifestation of the person or author of iniquity. The prophecy
brings us two mysteries, the one the counterfeit in all points
of the other. We have an invisible agent, even
God, beneath the one. We have an invisible agent, even
Satan, beneath the other. We have the one mystery culminating
at last in an incarnation, God manifest in the flesh. We see
the other in like manner culminating in an incarnation, in a loose
sense, for all its principles concentrate themselves in and
show themselves to the world through its living head on earth,
Antichrist. We may go even farther and say
that there is as real an incarnation of the spirit and mind of Satan
in the mystery of iniquity as there is of the spirit and mind
of God in the mystery of godliness. And, as in Christ God and man
meet, so in Antichrist, his counterfeit and rival, the human and the
superhuman meet and act together. Earth-born man and archangel
fallen. Chapter 6 Unfolding of the Two
Mysteries The Apostle, having brought these two mysteries upon
the stage and shown them to us standing face to face, goes on
to trace the parallel between the two. This parallel is distinctly
discernible in every stage of their career. The Apostle traces
it first in their rise, second in their coming, and third in
their full and completed development. Let us follow the parallelism
step by step and stage by stage. In their rise, for the mystery
of iniquity, doth already work. It was already in existence,
its energies were all astir, but it worked in secret, and
was inaudible to the world. It worked as leaven doth in the
meal, which keeps silently fermenting in the mass till the whole has
been leavened. It worketh as the seed does in
the soil, which, germinating in the darkness, pierces the
clod, bursts into the light, and receiving an accession of
strength from the sun and air, shoots up in the stem, and at
last culminates in flower and fruit. The mystery of iniquity
worked as treason works. The conspirators meet in secret
conclave, they concert their plans unknown to the world, they
speak in whispers, but their schemes at length ripen, and
now they come abroad into the light of day and proclaim in
the housetops what they had hatched in darkness. So did the mystery
of iniquity work. So too did the mystery of godliness
work. Even at this initial stage of
the two mysteries, we trace a resemblance between them. Let us think how
long the gospel worked before it issued in the incarnation
of the Son of God. For ages and for generations,
Christianity was a hidden mystery. The redemption of men by means
of the incarnation of the Son of God was a secret, profoundly
hidden in the counsels of God in eternity, and even after time
had begun its course, it long remained a secret unknown to
the world. Bit by bit this mystery revealed itself. First the idea
of incarnation was dimly made known. In the first promise mention
was made of the seed of the woman, and on this obscure intimation
was built the hope of a deliverer, and that hope descended the ages
with the race. The idea of expiation was next
revealed in the appointment of sacrifice, which also, with the
hope which is expressed and sustained, came down the stream of time.
Next, a complete system of ceremonial worship was instituted, to reveal
the coming redemption in the amplitude of its blessings. Still
the veil was upon it. It stood before the world in
type. There arose an illustrious series
of august personages who were forerunners or types of Christ. They exhibited to the church
the offices which her incarnate Savior was to fill and the work
He was to execute. There stood up an order of prophetical
men who prefigured Him as the Great Teacher. There stood up
an order of sacrificial men who prefigured Him as the One Priest.
There stood up an order of kingly men, who prefigured himself as
a monarch, and a monarch who was to be higher and mightier
than any of the monarchs of earth. The kings of the house of Judah
foreshadowed him as sprung of a royal stock, and the heir of
a throne, which all nations should serve, and before which all kings
should bow. Thus did the mystery of godliness
work. unfolding and still unfolding
itself as the ages passed on, the type growing ever the clearer
and the prophecy ever the fuller, till at last the mystery stepped
out from behind the veil and stood before the world, perfected,
finished, and fully revealed in the person of Jesus of Nazareth,
the Christ, God manifest in the flesh, and centering in His person
and flowing out from it through His life and ministry, and death,
as raised from the sun, were all the glorious doctrines of
the gospel. In like manner, the mystery of
iniquity kept traveling by the same stages towards the day of
its final revelation. It was not the production of
one, but of many ages. The fashion of the world changed.
Great empires, which had filled the earth with their glory and
burdened it with their oppression, went down into the grave. Worships
arose with their powerful hierarchies and grand ceremonials, and when
their day was over, passed away, leaving only ruined fanes and
deserted altars to tell that they had ever been. But the mystery
of iniquity, as if deathless, like the being which inspired
it, refused to succumb to these shocks. It kept on its course
over broken thrones and desecrated altars, ever reaching forth to
that high goal where it should show itself to the nations and
be the wonder of all that dwell upon the earth. Silently and
stealthily, this mystery pursued its course. For ages and for
generations, it too was a hidden mystery. Paul tells us that it
was working in his day. This warrants us to say that
Antichrist was then born and was making trial of his infantile
powers. The world did not hear his working,
but Paul, by the spirit of prophecy, did so and sounded an alarm to
the church. The Gnostics and other teachers
of error that had gone forth into the world so early as Paul's
day were anti-Christs, and those in a special who propagated the
delusion that it was a phantom which the Jews seized and crucified
on Calvary. They seemed to admit the mission
of Christ, yet they subverted the great end of His coming by
denying His incarnation, and by consequence the whole work
of redemption. But though these teachers were
anti-Christian, they were not the anti-Christ. After them Paul
gave warning that there should come one far mightier than they,
the lachet of whose shoes they were not worthy to lose. They
were misgrown and misshapen antichrists. Their system of error was immature,
and their power of attack contemptible compared with that full-grown
anti-Christianism which would stand up on after days and say
to the world, I am Christ, and under that color make war upon
the true Christ. Nay, even before the apostles'
day, the mystery of iniquity had begun to work. From the beginning,
Satan had made the line of error to run parallel with the line
of truth. He had been a close observer of God's plan from the
first, and he made it the model on which to form his own. Never
was the divine plan advanced a stage without Satan making
a corresponding advance in his plan, as like to the other as
it was possible to make it in all outward respects, but essentially
antagonistic to it in principle and spirit. Satan has been a
counterfeit from the beginning. Even in the times of paganism,
he never showed himself as an avowed adversary or waged open
war. He nowhere established a system
of atheism. He permitted the great idea of
a god to be received in the pagan world. But he took care to intercept
the influence of that great truth in the heart and life by seducing
men to the worship of many gods, and these gods in man's own likeness. He set up altar against altar,
priesthood against priesthood, and sacrifice against sacrifice,
and he enlarged and beautified his ritual in the heathen world
till it seemed no unworthy rival of the divinely instituted ceremonial
on Mount Moriah. Moreover, he sent forth pioneers
to keep alive expectation in the pagan world of some great
one yet to come. He showed to the world a colossal
picture of the Antichrist, while yet he was at a distance. For
what were the Caesars, king and priest of the Roman world, but
types of that more terrible power, temporal and spiritual, that
was to center in the chair of the popes? That colossal image
he kept full in the world's view till the fullness of the time
for Antichrist's appearance had arrived, and then he withdrew
the image and brought forth a great reality. The man of sin now come
to his full birth, though not as yet to his full stature, and
he found for him a seat and throne on the seven hills. Chapter 7 The Pastor Becomes
a Monarch Ten Centuries of Climbing Beginning his career in the days
of Paul, it was not till the 13th century that the man of
sin reached his maturity and stood before the world full grown.
During all these ages, he kept stretching himself higher and
higher, piling assumption upon assumption and prerogative upon
prerogative, till at last he raised himself to a height from
which he looked down not only upon all churches, but upon all
kings and kingdoms. He claimed to be the world's
one bishop and world's one monarch. In the first century, he is seen
as the humble pastor, whose only care is to feed his flock, and
who looks for no crown, save that which the chief shepherd
may be pleased to give him at his appearing. In the thirteenth,
he is beheld as a mighty potentate, who stands with his foot planted
on every throne and realm of Christendom. He writes himself
a king of kings, and he claims by divine right to administer
all the affairs of earth. If we accept Christianity, there
is no similar example in history of what was at first so small
becoming in the end so great. Three hundred popes and more
are seen one after the other steadily prosecuting this idea
without once relaxing in their efforts or turning aside from
the pursuit. Each in succession takes up the
plan at the point where his predecessor had left it and carries it a
stage nearer its consummation. For 1,300 years on end, we see
the Enterprise pushed forward with an undeviating constancy
and an unflinching courage, with a perseverance and a subtlety.
In short, a combination of powers never before seen working together
for the realization of any other project. There is more than man
here. The spirit who conceived this
plan, who inspired the actors and kept them working century
after century on the same lines till at last the goal was reached,
was more than human. Paul tells us that its author
was Satan. A great apostasy was to precede
the rise of the Antichrist. In truth, the man of sin was
to grow out of that apostasy. Be not troubled or alarmed, says
the Apostle writing to the Thessalonians, as if time were to be wound up
and Christ were to return. Thessalonians 2 verses 2 and
3 says, That day shall not come, except there come a falling away
first, and that man of sin be revealed. Not a falling away,
but the falling away, as it is in the original Greek, some great
and notable apostasy. The church must pass through
a dark and terrible shadow before Christ shall return. The prophets
had spoken not obscurely of that evil time. It was a burden of
Daniel's prophecy. It was repeated in the symbolic
picturings of John. Paul in his other writings had
referred to it, portraying with brief but vivid touches the essential
characteristics of the power which at that era was to cast
his dark shadow on the world. Hardly had the early persecution
ceased till that falling away set in. Jerome lifts the veil
in the fourth century and disclosed a truly melancholy picture. In
vain we look for the humility, the simplicity and the purity
of the early church. The gold refined in the furnace
of ten persecutions is waxing dim. The vine which Paul planted
at Rome is being transformed into the vine of Sodom. The pastors
of the church are becoming inflamed with a love of riches and are
striving with one another for preeminence. Rome daily sees
her bishop ride forth in a gilded chariot drawn by prancing steeds. Her clergy show themselves attired
in robes of silk. The members of their flock crowd
alternately the church and the theater and rush with indecent
haste from superstitious rites performed at the tombs of the
martyrs to the games and sports of the circus. The apostasy has
fairly set in. The corruption grows with the
current of the centuries. It shapes itself into system.
It builds error upon error and buttresses itself all around
with assumptions and falsehoods. The organization in which it
enshrines itself necessarily and naturally finds for itself
a chief or head. Now comes the Pope and his hierarchy. The man of sin has appeared.
He is seen to rise out of the earth of a paganized Christianity.
Like the soil from which he sprung, he is pagan in essence, though
a Christian in appearance. Several notable events helped
him to attain his full stature. We must indicate a few, not all
of these, for it is impossible to write the history of thirteen
centuries in one short chapter. The first event which contributed,
and contributed essentially to the development of the papacy,
was the removal of the emperor from Rome. Had Caesar continued
to reside in his old capital, he would, as the phrase is, have
sat upon the Pope, and this aspiring ecclesiastic could not have shot
up into the powerful potentate which prophecy had foretold.
But Constantine, A.D. 334, removed to the new Rome
on the Bosphorus, leaving the old capital of the world to the
Bishop of Rome, who was henceforth the first and most influential
personage in that city. It was then, probably, that the
idea of founding an ecclesiastical monarchy suggested itself to
him. He had fallen heir, by what must
have seemed a lucky accident, to the old capital of the world.
He was, moreover, possessor of the chair of Peter, or believed
himself to be so, and out of these two, the old town of the
Caesars and the old chair of the Apostle, it might even be
possible So, doubtless, he reasoned to fabricate an empire that would
one day rival and even overtop that of the emperors. These,
it might have been thought beforehand, were but slender materials to
bear the weight of so great an enterprise. Yet with their help,
and aided doubtless by deeper than mere human counsel, he projected
a sovereignty which has not had its like on earth, which survived
the fall of the Roman Empire, which lived through all the convulsions
and overturnings of the Middle Ages, and which has come down
to our day, and has the art, when men believe it about to
expire, of rallying its powers and coming back upon the world.
About this time, moreover, the equality which had reigned among
the pastors of the church in the primitive age was broken.
The bishops claimed superiority above the presbyters, nor was
their equality even among the bishops themselves. They took
precedence, not according to their learning, or their talents,
or their piety, but according to the rank of the city in which
their sea was placed. Finally, a new and loftier order
arose, overtopping the Episcopate. Christendom was partitioned into
five great patriarchs, Rome, Constantinople, Antioch, Alexandria,
and Jerusalem. These were the five great cities
of the empire, and their bishops were constituted the five great
princes of the church. Now came the momentous question,
for a while so keenly agitated, which of the five shall be the
first? Constantinople claimed dishonor for her patriarch on
the ground that it was the residence of the emperor. Antioch, Alexandria,
and Jerusalem each put in its claim, but to no effect. Constantinople
found, however, a powerful rival in the old city on the banks
of the Tiber. Rome had been the head of the world, the throne
of the Caesars. Around it was still the halo
of a thousand victories, and that gave it a mysterious influence
over the imaginations of men, who began to see in its bishop
the first ecclesiastic of the Christian world. The popular
suffrage had pronounced in favor of the Roman bishop before his
rank had received imperial ratification. He was installed as the first
of the five patriarchs in A.D. 606. The Emperor Phocas, displeased
with the Bishop of Constantinople, who had condemned the murder
of Maurice, by which Phocas opened his way to the imperial dignity,
made Boniface III universal bishop. The imperial edict, however,
gave to the Roman bishop only the precedence among the five
patriarchs. It gave him no power or jurisdiction
over them. Mere rank the bishops of Rome
held to be but an empty honor. What they coveted was substantial
power. Their policy was now shaped with
a view of reducing the whole clergy of the church into obedience
to the Roman chair, and exalting the popes to supreme and absolute
sovereignty. Centuries passed away, in the
course of which, by the help of many an artifice, and under
cover of many a pretext, the Roman bishops slowly extended
their power over the West. The darkness which accompanied
the descent of the Gothic nations favored their project in a high
degree. Bad wares, says Puffendorf in
his introduction to the history of Europe, are best vended in
the dark, or at least in a dim light. Some of the wares vended
in these dark times were sufficiently remarkable. Out of many, we give
but two examples. The Emperor Constantine, by his
last will and testament, was made to bequeath to Sylvester,
Bishop of Rome, the whole Western Empire, including palace, regalia,
and all the belongings of the master of the world. A goodly
dowry, verily, for the poor fisherman. Then came another windfall to
the Papacy, in the shape of the decretals of Isidore. This last
showed the Church, to her equal surprise and delight, that her
popes from Peter downwards had held the same state, lived in
the same magnificence, and promulgated their pontifical will in briefs,
edicts, and bulls in the same authoritative and lordly style
as the grand popes of the Middle Ages. Both documents, it is unnecessary
to say, were sheer forgeries. They are acknowledged by Romanists
to be so. They could not have stood a moment's
scrutiny in an enlightened age, but they were accepted as genuine
in the darkness of the times that gave them birth, and vast
conclusions were founded upon them. The fabrications of Isidore
were made the substructions of canon law, and that stupendous
fabric of legislation is still maintained to be of divine authority,
despite that it is now acknowledged to be founded on a forgery. The northern nations arrived
in southern Europe in the fifth and succeeding centuries ignorant
of Christianity. This was another cause that favored
the advancement of the man of sin. These nations, on their
arrival in Italy, beheld a great spiritual potentate seated in
the chair of Caesar. He told them that he was the
successor of Peter the Apostle, whom Christ had constituted his
vicar on earth, with power to transmit all his prerogatives,
spiritual and temporal, to his successors in his office. This
was the only gospel the Pope ever preached to the barbarian
tribes, and they had no means of testing the legitimacy of
these mighty claims. In the Pope himself, they recognized
no very distant resemblance to their own archdruid. The rites
of the Roman temples were not unlike the worship they had practiced
in their pagan homes. They had easy access to the baptismal
font, their pagan beliefs and manners forming no impediment.
Nation after nation entered the Roman pale, the Franks leading
the way, and earning for themselves the title of the eldest son of
the Church. The Gothic nations had found
in the Pope, before whose chair they now bowed down, a common
spiritual father. Thus was accomplished another
notable stage in the development of the papacy. His dignity enhanced
by this vast accession of new subjects, the Pope himself set
to strengthen his power within the church by completing the
subjection and vassalage of the clergy. He let slip no opportunity
that offered to compass this end. Since the fifth century,
the bishops who lived on this side of the Alps used to go to
Rome to visit the sepulchers of the apostles Peter and Paul.
This journey was a voluntary one being undertaken to gratify
the devout or superstitious feelings of the pious excursionist. In no long time it was made obligatory,
and those who failed to present themselves at the apostolic threshold
were subjected to rebuke, as lukewarm in their devotion to
the holy chair. It was next interpreted in the
sense that the itinerant bishops had sought confirmation at Rome,
and that all bishops ought to go there for that end. Thus there
came another accession of prerogative and dignity to the papal chair.
Further, it was a usual practice of churches and bishops to ask
the advice of the Roman Church in matters of consequence and
difficulty, or crave the right interpretation of particular
canons. When they at Rome perceived that
their advice was taken as a decision, they began to send their decrees
before they were demanded, on pretense that Rome, being the
first sea of the Christian world, her bishop ought to take care
that the canons and ecclesiastical laws were duly kept. Hence another encroachment upon
the liberties of churches and pastors, and another accession
to papal dignity and jurisdiction. And further, when differences
or quarrels arose between bishop and bishop, or between church
and church, nothing was more natural than for the parties
at variance to solicit the mediation of the Bishop of Rome. The Pope
willingly undertook the task of composing their contentions
But the price he exacted was a still further surrender of
the liberties of the Church. He thence took occasion to assume
the office of a judge, and to represent his chair as a tribunal
to which he had a right to summon parties. At times he came in
between the Metropolitan and his diocesan, and on one pretext
or another deposed the latter to the waking of the jurisdiction
of the former. Moreover, it sometimes happened
that parties who had been condemned before provincial tribunals were
encouraged to appeal to Rome, where the cause was reheard and
the provincial sentence might be revoked. By these stealthy
and persistent steps, the Pope contrived to keep on the ascending
grade. There followed other most ingenious
devices, all for the same end. Among these was the pall of consecration. The pall was sent to all bishops
from the Pope at first as a gift. It was next represented as indispensable,
and that without it no bishops could discharge the functions
of his office. Thus a new hold was obtained
over the clergy, and a new method invented of replenishing the
papal coffers. for a high price was put on this
mystic article of dress, which was woven of the wool of the
lambs of St. Agnes. To the same end were annats
imposed. This was the sum paid by bishops
when they changed from one sea to another, a practice allowed
by the Pope for the gain it brought him. The multiplication of monks
and friars tended to the same end. The Pope summoned into existence
the core of the regular clergy to play them off against the
army of the seculars. He acted on the maxim, Divide
and Conquer. The monks were a check upon the
bishops. They watched their proceedings and carried their report to Rome.
They had acquired a vast reputation for holiness, and the direction
of consciences through the confessional was mainly in their hands. They
had discovered the secret of amassing riches by the arts of
mendicancy. They swarmed over Europe and
were thoroughly devoted to the interests of the papal sea. And
if any bishop set himself in opposition to the Pope, they
raised such a clamor against him as speedily convinced him
that he had no alternative but submission. Especially did the
English monk Winfred, who changed his name to Boniface, enlarge
the papal dominion. This man is commonly but erroneously
credited with the first Christianization of Germany. Invested with the
authority of the Pope's legate, he traversed the countries on
the east of the Rhône, rooting out the schools and churches
of the evangelical faith, which had been numerously planted in
that region of Europe by the cul-de-missionaries of the Irish
and Scottish nations, substituting in their room Roman monasteries
and cathedrals. This was the work of Boniface,
a work well-pleasing to Rome inasmuch as it greatly widened
the bounds of the pontifical sway. Among the events of these
disastrous ages, contributing to the growth of the papal power,
not the least influential were the Crusades. They evoked a mighty
outburst of enthusiasm around the papal chair. They placed
powerful kings, vast treasures, and countless soldiers at the
service of the Pope. He took it into his own management,
the estates of those, who went to fight for the recovery of
the Holy Land, exempting their owners from the jurisdiction
of the civil power in both civil and criminal causes. When the
fury of the Crusades had spent itself, it was found that the
spirit of princes was broken, their resources dried up, their
realms impoverished by the loss of their subjects, and the only
institution that had profited by the frenzy was the papacy. which now, every other interest
abased, rose aloft in greater grandeur than ever. Nor was this
the end of the matter. The fanatical fury which had
found its first fearful discharge on the plains of Syria was diverted
back to the land whence it had come, and there it vented without
exhausting itself in those bloody persecutions and wars against
heretics which raged for centuries in Christendom. The Crusades have carried us
into the 13th century. We must turn back to the 8th
and 9th centuries and note certain political changes that occurred
in those ages which contributed material aid to the papacy in
fulfilling its destiny. It was the deep aim of the Pope
to plant his seat in a place where he should owe no subjection
to any civil power. He desired to have a country
of his own, such as might be sufficient to maintain his grandeur,
and whence he should reign as a temporal king as well as a
spiritual sovereign. For a business like this much
time and labor were needed. The project was manifestly unattainable
so long as an emperor reigned in the West, or the Gothic monarchy
subsisted in Italy. But strange to say, events conspired
to make empty and void a place where the Pope might set up his
combined spiritual and temporal sovereignty, so long his cherished
but unavowed aim. The first step was the overthrow
of the Gothic power in Italy by Justinian. Italy and Rome
now became a province of the Eastern Empire. The jurisdiction
of the absent Emperor was henceforward shadowy and weak, but even that
slight restraint was impatiently born, and Pope Gregory II began
to plot how to be rid of it altogether. The conflict between the Eastern
and Western Churches on the subject of image worship was then raging.
The Romans zealously maintained the cause of images. The Emperor
with the Eastern Church were ranged in opposition. Pope Gregory
instigated the Romans to refuse the tribute to the emperor. The
revolt was successful. The imperial representative at
Ravenna was slain, and the last vestiges of the emperor's jurisdiction
over Roman Italy were annihilated. It is worthy of note, by the
way, that the Romans, by their revolt against their lawful emperor,
put their necks under a yoke that continued to gall them for
twelve centuries. They did not succeed in breaking
it until 1870. The Pope was now in sight of
independent temporal sovereignty, but he had not yet fully achieved
it. Tidings out of the North troubled him. The Longobards
had crossed the Alps and were already at Ravenna. There was
no power in the spiritual artillery to arrest the victorious advance
of these hardy warriors. In his extremity, Pope Zachary
turned his eyes to Pepin, who, from Grand Marshal, had become
King of France. The Pope did not supplicate in
vain. Pepin I and his son Charlemagne next, A.D. 774, conquered the
Lungobards and endowed the papal chair with all the cities and
lands in Italy which had been subject to the jurisdiction of
the Greek rulers. The Pope was now a crowned monarch.
This was the third intervention by arms in the Pope's behalf
and the third Gothic power which had fallen before him. First,
the Vandals established themselves in the diocese proper of the
Pope, occupying his predestined domain and hindering his predestined
development. The arms of Justinian, under
his general Belisarius, swept them off. Second, the Ostrogoths
planted themselves in Italy, and their near neighborhood overawed
the Pope and prevented his expansion. They too were rooted out by the
arms of Justinian. Last came, as we have said, the
Longobards, pressing onwards to the gates of Rome. The sword
of France drove them back. Thus a field was kept clear on
which the Pope might develop both his spiritual and temporal
sovereignty. And thus was fulfilled what Daniel,
in chapter 7, verse 8, had foretold, that of the ten horns, or dynasties
of the modern Europe, three should be plucked up before the little
horn, or papacy. Their kingdoms and crowns were
given to the Pope, and it is probable that it was in memory
of these events that it became customary for the Pope in the
following centuries to array himself in a tiara. The pastor
of the Tiber had become a monarch with a triple crown. Was the
Pope now content? He sat amid the princes and kings
of earth as their equal. But to be simply their equal
he held to be an affront to his superhuman office as God's vice-regent. He aspired to plant his throne
among the stars, and thence look down upon all the dignities and
princedoms of earth. And to this dazzling height he
at last climbed up. There arose in the eleventh century
a pope of vast capability, of inflexible resolution, and towering
pride, Gregory VII Hildebrand. He put before the world with
a precision boldness and an argumentative force never till then brought
to its support the claim to be the Vicar of Christ. This was
the foundation stone on which he rested his scheme of pontifical
jurisdiction and grandeur. As Christ's Vicar, he claimed
to surpass all earthly monarchs in glory and power as far as
the sun surpasses the moon in brightness. He claimed, in short,
to be God upon the earth. There followed a series of popes
who struggled through two dreadful centuries of war and bloodshed
to convert Gregory's theory into fact. The struggle was successful
in the end, the miter triumph over the empire. The scheme of
Gregory VII, in all its amplitude of jurisdiction and magnificence,
and, we may add, in all its amplitude of despotism and blasphemy, was
exhibited to the world in the person and reign of Innocent
III in the 13th century. The history of the world does
not show another achievement of equal magnitude. The glory
of the pharaohs, the state and power of the kings of Babylon,
the victories and magnificence of the Caesars all pale before
this great conquest of the popes. Now had come the noon of the
papacy. But, as we have remarked elsewhere,
the noon of the popedom was the midnight of the world. The career,
both of Christ and of Antichrist, was to end on a throne. Though
each was to reach his destined elevation by a very different
road, not till we find them on their respective thrones shall
we see the parallelism perfected and completed. This we must preserve
for a subsequent chapter. Meanwhile, we pursue the parallelism
through its successive preparatory stages till it reaches this great
climax. This ends tape one of the Papacy
is the Antichrist by the Rev. Dr. J. A. Wiley, read by W. J. Mankaro, and produced by Stillwater's
Revival Books. Thank you for listening and we
hope you will go on to the next tape in this series. If you would
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