Apostasy In The Church
How it is accelerating and how it
relates to the return of Jesus.
Observations by Dr. David R. Reagan
(Note: This article is a highly abridged version of a chapter from Dr.
David Reagan’s new book, Living for Christ in the
End Times.)
The Bible clearly prophesies that the Church of the
end times will be characterized by apostasy. Paul said
that the Antichrist will not be revealed until "the
apostasy comes first" (2 Thessalonians 2:3). Jesus
prophesied that "many will fall away" and "most people’s
love will grow cold" (Matthew 24:10, 12).
In the book of Revelation, chapters 2 and 3, the
Apostle John records seven letters of Jesus to seven
churches in the area of modern day Turkey. Among other
things, these letters present a panoramic prophetic
survey of the Church in history. The last of the
churches mentioned, the one that represents the Church
of the end times, is the church at Laodicea. It is
pictured as a church that is neither hot (healing) nor
cold (refreshing), but rather is lukewarm or tepid
(Revelation 3:15-16). In short, it is a church that is
apathetic. Jesus also pictures it as a worldly church
enamored with its wealth (Revelation 3:17). The Lord is
so dissatisfied with this church that He declares,
"Because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I
will spit you out of my mouth" (Revelation 3:16).
Clues from the Apostle Paul
Paul supplies us with some strong clues as to why the
end times Church will be weak, vacillating, and full of
apostasy. One of those clues can be found in 2 Timothy
4:3-4 which says that "the time will come when they
[Christians] will not endure sound doctrine; but wanting
to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for
themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires;
and will turn away their ears from the truth, and will
turn aside to myths."
Another clue is located in Paul’s famous prophecy
about end time society, the one in 2 Timothy 3. After
describing in graphic detail how society will fall apart
in the end times, Paul adds that the basic reason will
be due to people "holding to a form of godliness,
although they have denied its power" (2 Timothy 3:5).
There will be no lack of religion, says Paul, but people
will deny the true power that is able to transform
society for the good, producing peace, righteousness and
justice.
What is that power? First and foremost it is the
power of the blood of Jesus. It is also the power that
comes from accepting the Bible as the infallible Word of
God. It is the power of believing in a Creator God with
whom all things are possible. And certainly it includes
a belief in the power of the Holy Spirit.
Today, these essential beliefs, which constitute the
power of Christianity, are being subjected to an
unparalleled assault from within the Church itself. The
Bible says that in the end times people will mock the
promise of the Lord’s return (2 Peter 3:3-4). What is so
shocking is that most of the mockery is coming from
within the Church!
The Root of Apostasy
How have we reached this crisis point in the Church?
It is rooted in the German School of Higher Criticism
which invaded this country big-time in the 1920's.
According to the "scientific approach" of this school of
skeptics, the Bible is not the revealed Word of God.
Rather, it is Man’s search for God, and therefore it is
filled with myth, legend and superstition.
Today this viewpoint dominates the seminaries of
America. The Bible is studied not to be believed and
obeyed but to be analyzed, dissected, and criticized.
The result is that the Scriptures have lost their
authority.
Apostate Leaders
John Spong, Episcopal Bishop of New Jersey, has
written books in which he denies the virgin birth,
denies the miracles of Jesus, denies the resurrection,
denies the Second Coming, and argues that Paul and
Timothy were homosexual lovers. Bishop Spong has become
so enamored with other religions that he has announced
he will no longer witness to those caught up in the
spiritual darkness of pagan faiths!1
Similar apostate thoughts were mouthed by Norman
Vincent Peale in 1984 on the Phil Donahue program. Peale
announced, "It’s not necessary to be born-again. You
have your way to God; I have mine. I found eternal peace
in a Shinto shrine . . . I’ve been to Shinto shrines,
and God is everywhere."
Phil Donahue was so shocked that he actually came to
the defense of Christianity. "But you’re a Christian
minister," he retorted, "and you’re suppose to tell me
that Christ is the way and the truth and the life,
aren’t you?"
Peale replied, "Christ is one of the ways. God is
everywhere."2
Look again at Peale’s incredible statement: "It’s not
necessary to be born-again." What did Jesus say? "Truly,
truly, I say to you, unless one is born-again, he cannot
see the kingdom of God" (John 3:3). Who are we to
believe?
Schuller’s Apostate Gospel
Peale’s leading disciple, Robert Schuller, has
outdone his teacher with the development of his "gospel
of possibility thinking." In his book, Self
Esteem: The New Reformation, Schuller
states that the leaders of the Reformation Movement made
a mistake in centering their theology around God instead
of Man!3
Schuller teaches that the essence of Man’s problem is
low self-esteem.4 The Bible teaches it is
pride. Schuller says that when Jesus referred in John
7:38 to "rivers of living water" flowing out of
believers, He was speaking of self-esteem.5
The very next verse says He was speaking of the Holy
Spirit. Schuller argues that sin is anything that robs
us of our "divine dignity" (our "divine
dignity"?).6 The Bible says sin is rebellion
against God.
The Response of Christendom
Schuller’s book calling for a "new reformation"
caused a firestorm of controversy. The Evangelical
magazine, Christianity Today,
invited readers to give their opinions of the book,
and many people wrote in to denounce it. One writer
referred to Schuller as "a modern-day apostle of
humanism."7
The letters continued to pour in for weeks, and they
were so critical that Dr. Schuller decided to respond to
them. In a long letter published in the October 5, 1984
issue of Christianity Today, he
made an incredible comment that has haunted him to this
day:8
I don’t think anything has been done in the name of
Christ and under the banner of Christianity that has
proven more destructive to human personality and, hence,
counterproductive to the evangelism enterprise than the
often crude, uncouth, and unchristian strategy of
attempting to make people aware of their lost and sinful
condition.
As a writer for Time put it in an
article in 1985, "For Schuller, an acknowledgment of
self-worth, more than a confession of sinfulness, is the
path to God."9
Further Evidence of Schuller’s Apostasy
In an appearance on the Phil Donahue show in 1980,
Schuller tried, incredibly, to portray Jesus as an
egotist! Here’s what he said:10
The Cross sanctifies the ego trip. That’s very
significant. In other words, Jesus had an ego. He said,
"I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men to me." Wow!
What an ego trip He was on!
What blatant blasphemy — to accuse the One who was
the very essence of humility of being an egotist!
Schuller gave a speech at the headquarters of the
Unity Church in Lees Summit, Missouri and shared with
their pastors his church growth principles. This is a
cult that denies the deity of Jesus and which teaches
reincarnation! He also dedicated a new Unity Temple in
Warren, Michigan, in spite of warnings from a local
Baptist pastor not to do so because of the errors of
this cult.11
In a recent speech honoring an Islamic spiritual
leader named Alfred Mohammed, Schuller said that if he
were to come back in 100 years and find his descendants
to be Muslims, it wouldn’t bother him!12
An Apostate Seminar
Another modern day apostate is Robert Funk, a New
Testament scholar at the University of Montana. He is
the founder of the notorious Jesus Seminar which began
operating in 1985. The avowed purpose of the Seminar was
"to renew the quest for the historical
Jesus."13 The Seminar conducted this quest in
a very unusual way. Meeting twice a year for six years,
the group voted on each of the sayings of Jesus recorded
in the Gospels. They voted by dropping colored beads in
a box. A black bead meant Jesus definitely did not make
the statement in question. A gray bead meant He did not
say it, but it might have represented His thinking. A
pink bead meant He probably said something like this,
but not in the words recorded. A red bead meant He
definitely made the statement.14
As you can see, the very approach expressed contempt
for the veracity of the Gospel accounts. What a
spectacle this must have been to the Lord as He watched
these so-called scholars vote on passages from His Word.
"Professing to be wise, they became fools" (Romans
1:22).
The final product of the Seminar, published in 1993,
was a blasphemy of God’s Word. It was titled, The
Five Gospels.15 The title
comes from the fact that the Seminar decided to grant
the apocryphal Gospel of Thomas equal standing with the
four traditional Gospels.
Only fifteen sayings of Jesus made it into The
Five Gospels in red! In Matthew’s account of the
Lord’s Prayer, the only words that made it in red were,
"Our Father." Only one saying in the entire book of Mark
was colored red. It is the statement of Jesus in Mark
12:17 where He told His disciples to "Render unto Caesar
the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that
are God’s." Likewise, only one statement from the Gospel
of John qualified for the red coloring: "A prophet has
no honor in his own country" (John 4:44).
The chilling thing to keep in mind is that the men
who produced this spiritual pornography are professors
at seminaries across America. They are the ones who are
training the current generation of pastors and
teachers.
Apostasy in the Denominations
The apostasy is not confined to the seminaries. It is
pervasive. It can be found in all denominations.
Consider the following examples.
In 1997, on the eve of Lent, the Right Reverend Alan
Smithson, the Bishop of Jarrow (Anglican Church in
England), held a press conference in London. He
announced that it was traditional for Christians to give
up something during the forty days of Lent. He then
dramatically announced that he had decided to give up
Bible reading! He went on to explain that he was going
to devote his time during Lent to reading the Koran,
because he felt like the Muslim scriptures would make
him "more understanding, more compassionate, and more
fully human."16
R. Kirby Godsey, president of Mercer University, a
school heavily supported by the Georgia Baptist
Convention, "denies the infallibility of the Bible, the
unique power and authority of God, the validity of the
Gospel’s account of the life and teachings of Jesus, the
efficacy of Christ’s atonement, and the uniqueness of
Christ as the only Savior."17
In 1997 the General Board of Global Ministries of the
United Methodist Church sponsored a meeting in Kansas
City that attracted 4,000 participants from all over the
world. Called, "Global Gathering III," the conference
featured a parade of speakers who attacked the
fundamentals of the Christian faith. One speaker
declared that the crucifixion of Jesus reveals an
"abusive Heavenly Father who is not fit for Christian
worship." The speaker urged instead that the Church
revere all the world’s children as little messiahs equal
to Jesus.18
Apostasy in Local Churches
The spreading cancer of apostasy in the Church is not
confined to theologians and church conferences. It can
be found at the grass roots level, in local
churches.
Consider, for example, The Episcopal New Church
Center in Walkersville, Maryland. This church hired a
public relations firm to develop a print and television
advertising campaign. One of the first ads in this
campaign carried a banner headline that read, "To Hell
With Church!" It showed a man thinking, "If I want to
feel guilty, I’ll eat some cheese fries." Another ad in
the series showed a painting of Christ nailed on the
Cross. Scrawled over the painting were the words, "Of
course people with pierced body parts are welcome in our
church."19
The Maryland church really went wacky when it moved
to producing TV ads. They hired a fellow known for the
kinky cartoons he produces for Saturday Night
Live. His first ad for the church opened
with a father and son tossing a baseball to each other
in the front yard.
"Guess what, Timmy?" the father asks. "Tomorrow your
mother and I are going to take you to church." The
father continues, "Not only will you be able to learn
about the wages of sin and eternal damnation, but you
can play fun games like ‘Bible Sword Drill’ and sing
inspirational songs like ‘Kumbaya’ and ‘I’ve Got Joy,
Joy, Joy Down in My Heart.’"
Dejected by this prospect, little Timmy walks into
the middle of the road and holds up his hands in
surrender as a semi-truck blows its horn and bears down
on him.20
Not only apostate, but sick.
Inter-Faith Apostasy
The big move at the grass roots level these days is
interfaith worship services. I’m not talking about
inter-denominational — rather, the emphasis is on
inter-faith. Christians are inviting Muslims, Jews,
Hindus, American Indian practitioners of "native
religion," and others to join in worshiping "the one
true god, regardless of the name you may give to him or
her."
Pope John Paul II got caught up in this inter-faith
fad in 1986 when he invited the leaders of the world’s
religions to come to Assisi, Italy to join him in
praying for world peace.21 One hundred sixty
representatives came, including the Dali Lama (who
considers himself to be a god). Each representative
prayed to his own god at the Pope’s request! Did the
Pope believe their gods were real? Or did he believe
that they were all praying to the same god, but under
different names?
The Challenge
Englishman William Booth (1829 - 1912), who founded
the Salvation Army, was a man with a great zeal for the
Lord and a passion for lost souls. He was also a man of
vision. On the eve of the 20th Century when
Christendom was caught up in euphoria about how the
Church would soon take the world for Christ, Booth
predicted that the Gospel would not fare well in the new
century. Specifically, he prophesied that by the end of
the 20th Century, much of the Church would be
preaching:22
Christianity without Christ
Forgiveness without repentance
Salvation without regeneration
Heaven without Hell
That’s exactly where we are today. Because of it, as
we begin the 21st Century, Christians are
faced with unparalleled challenges from the decay of
society and the apostatizing of the Church.
Increasingly, many are going to give up hope. Some will
express this hopelessness by withdrawing from society
and assuming a siege mentality. Others will throw in the
towel and adopt the attitude, "If you can’t lick them,
join them."
Considering the magnitude of the challenge, is there
any hope for triumphant Christian living? And if so, how
then shall we live?
(Note: Dr. Reagan proceeds to respond to these
questions in his new book by presenting ten chapters of
down-to-earth guidelines for living as a victorious
overcomer in these end times.)
**********
Notes:
1. John Shelby Spong, Rescuing the
Bible from Fundamentalism: A Bishop Rethinks the Meaning
of Scripture (San Francisco, California: Harper,
1992). Another revealing book by Bishop Spong is Why
Christianity Must Change or Die: A Bishop Speaks to
Believers in Exile (San Francisco, California:
Harper, 1999). A good summary of Bishop Spong’s views
can be found on the Internet in his "Call for a New
Reformation,"
http://www.dioceseofnewark.org/jsspong/reform.htm.
2. Dave Hunt, "Revival or Apostasy,"
The Berean Call, October 1997, p. 2.
3. Robert Schuller, Self Esteem: The
New Reformation, (Waco, Texas: Word Books, 1982), p.
39. An insightful review of Schuller’s writings can be
found in an article by Joseph P. Gudel entitled "A New
Reformation?" It was published in Passport
Magazine, January-February 1988. It is available on
the Internet at
http://www.
issuesetc.org/resource/archives/guide12.htm. There are
other excellent summaries of Schuller’s thought that can
be found on the Internet. One is an article by David W.
Cloud entitled "Evangelicals and Modernist Robert
Schuller"
(http://cnview.com/on_
line_resources/evangelicals_and_modernist_robert_schuller.htm).
Another good analysis is entitled, "The
God of the Bible Versus the God of Multi-level
Marketing: Positive Thinking,"
(http://www.users.fast.net/~gospeltruth/positive.htm).
4. Ibid., p.19.
5. Ibid. p. 80.
6. Ibid. p. 14.
7. Hugh Cantelon, "More on Schuller,"
(letter to the editor), Christianity Today,
October 19, 1984, p. 11.
8. Robert Schuller, "Dr. Schuller
Comments," (letter to the editor), Christianity
Today, October 5, 1984, pp. 12-13.
9. Richard Stengel, "Apostle of Sunny
Thoughts," Time, March 18, 1985, p.
70.
10. The Phil Donahue Show,
transcript 08120, August 12, 1980, p. 10.
11. Rick Miesel, p. 5. Schuller’s
support of the Unity Church is also documented in an
article by Dave Hunt published in the CIB Bulletin,
January 1988. In a letter to the author, dated
January 24, 2000, Dave Hunt states that he has a tape
recording of the speech that Schuller delivered to the
Unity pastors about church growth principles.
12. Dave Hunt, "What’s Happening to the
Faith?" The Berean Call, May 1998, p.
1.
13. "The Jesus Seminar: The Search for
Authenticity,"
http://home.fireplug.net/~rshand/reflections/messiah/seminar.htm.
14. In April 1996, Time featured
the Jesus Seminar on its cover under the title "The
Search for Jesus." The cover article presented a
comprehensive survey of the seminar’s organization,
methodology, and conclusions. See David Van Biema, "The
Gospel Truth? — The iconoclastic and provocative Jesus
Seminar argues that not much of the New Testament can be
trusted. If so, what are Christians to believe?"
Time, April 8, 1996.
15. Robert W. Funk and Roy W. Hoover,
The Five Gospels (San Francisco, California:
Harper, reprint edition, 1997). A good review of this
book can be found in an article by D. A. Carson entitled
"Five Gospels, No Christ." The article appeared in
Christianity Today, April 25, 1994, pp.
30-33.
16. "Bishop gives up Bible for Lent"
unsigned article, Daily Mail, London, England,
February 14, 1997, p. 31.
17. Dave Hunt, "What’s Happening to the
Faith?" The Berean Call, May 1998, p. 1. Dr.
Godsey’s views can be found in the book, When We Talk
About God, Let’s Be Honest, (Macon, Georgia: Smyth
& Helwys Publishing Co., 1996). The Georgia Baptist
Convention adopted a resolution of censure in November
1996 in which it asked the trustees of Mercer University
to consider whether Dr. Godsey should be continued as
president of the institution. The trustees voted to
affirm his presidency.
18. Mark Tooley, "Church Gathering
Features Radical Speakers," AFA Journal, June
1997, p.19.
19. John Kirkpatrick, "Ads fish for
churchgoers with irreverent approach," Dallas Morning
News, April 18, 1998, p. 1F.
20. Ibid., p. 11F.
21. Richard N. Ostling, "A Summit for
Peace in Assisi," Time, November 10, 1986, pp.
78-79.
22. Joseph Revell, "The Salvation Army
Revisited," Report from the Wall, (an Internet
daily devotional message sent from yosef@gulf.net),
December 18, 1998, p. 2.
Original article: Lamb & Lion Ministries
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