THE CHURCH COUNCILS, PART 1
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug 29, 2019
Blog Post Date: 9-19-2019
While
the virgin birth of Jesus was a teaching from the earliest times in the church,
it was used mainly to prove the uniqueness of the Messiah without elevating Him
to the equal status in a Godhead Trinity. Long before there were any serious
discussions about the Godhead status of the Holy Spirit, church leaders
pondered the relationship between the Father and His Son.
The
first century was dominated by apostolic teaching, and so it retained its
Hebrew perspective and viewpoint. But as the gospel achieved greater success
among the Greeks than among the Jews, it was inevitable that sheer numbers
would overcome the ability of the church to train them to think outside of their
culture. By the first half of the second century, the Hebrew concepts and
patterns had succumbed to Greek culture.
Ironically,
many church leaders assisted in this process by trying to adapt the gospel to
Greek culture and make it more acceptable to their main audience.
In
the first 40 years of Christianity, the church in Jerusalem attempted to remain
a sect of Judaism. Its main leader, James, was a Nazarite, which meant that he
was allowed to enter the sanctuary to pray and intercede for Jerusalem. It was
on one of those occasions in 62 A.D., upon exiting the temple, that he was
questioned about Jesus.
When
he gave a positive testimony, the people stoned him to death.
Soon
afterward, the Jewish revolt began, and the church escaped to Pella, avoiding the
calamity of which Jesus had warned in Matthew 23-25. The destruction of
Jerusalem itself settled the question about whether the Old Jerusalem or the
New Jerusalem was the capital of Christ’s Kingdom. The Apostle Paul’s view in
Galatians 4 prevailed until the 20th century.
The Loss of the Law
When
the supremacy of the earthly Jerusalem was discredited, along with its
sacrificial system, the law itself began to be discounted and set aside. Fewer
and fewer Christians studied the law, leaving Christianity vulnerable to
ignorance as to the definition of sin (1 John 3:4). Likewise, its prophetic
revelation began to be lost. The great divorce between Judaism and Christianity
essentially resulted in a new marriage between the Church and Plato.
Perhaps
the most significant loss was the distinction between the Old and New
Covenants. They tended to retain the Ten Commandments as a general outline of
moral behavior, but they failed to view the Commandments in terms of New
Covenant promises. Hence, they “kept” the Commandments as mandates for
Christian behavior, much as the people did during Old Testament times. They
forgot that “You shall not steal,” when viewed as a promise of God, meant that
God Himself took the responsibility upon Himself to change our hearts so that
we would not steal.
This
led to a religion of works, powered by the Greek emphasis on man’s so-called
“free will.” Once every man was made fully responsible for his own salvation,
it was easy for the later Church Councils to condemn “heretics” to death,
rather than pray that God would reveal the truth to them by the working of the
Holy Spirit.
Gnosticism
Meanwhile,
Simon Magus, calling himself “The Great Power of God” (Acts 8:10),
heard the gospel from Philip, Peter, and John. He was impressed with their
power to impart the Holy Spirit to men and with the miracles they performed, so
he offered money to acquire the same power. Peter rebuffed him, telling him in Acts 8:21,
21 You have no part or portion to this matter, for your heart is not
right before God.
According
to early church accounts, Simon then became the chief apostle of a new religion
called Gnosticism, in which he challenged the apostles’ authority and their
teachings. Because both Simon Magus and Simon Peter had the same name, modern
Gnostics claim that they were actually the same man and that Gnosticism was and
is the true form of Christianity.
Simon
Magus blended the teachings of the Greek, Egyptian, and Persian religion with
some elements of Christianity, it soon became the church’s main rival. If the
church had been able to remain on its Hebrew foundation, it may have been
overwhelmed by the Gnostics. Christianity and Gnosticism may have become one
and the same, and the apostolic writings would have been lost, altered, or
simply reinterpreted in Gnostic terms.
This,
in fact, happened with the Gospel of John, which was claimed by the Gnostics as
their own quite early. Of course, to do so required serious reinterpretation of
key words and concepts, but modern Gnostic teaching shows that they have done
this very thing.
John’s
concept of the Logos was not so different from the concept first set forth by
Heraclitus (535-475 B.C.). He defined it as the organizing force behind an
ever-changing universe. A century later, his successors, Plato and Aristotle
saw it as the principle that gave life to all creation and the faculty of
reason to men.
Plato
did not view the demiurge as an evil god but merely as a lesser god who had
created matter. Only later (in Gnosticism) did that lesser god take a more devilish
persona. Yet the philosophers framed their concept of the Logos within the
context of matter being created evil and the soul being spiritual and good. The
Gnostics, in fact, said that Yahweh was the evil demiurge responsible for
creating such inferior matter.
Hence,
they drove a wedge between Yahweh and the people, teaching them to pursue a
mystical, spiritual existence that was divorced from the biblical God and His
“evil” matter.
Philo,
the Jewish philosopher from Alexandria in the early first century, blended
Judaism with Greek philosophy, and many Christians later followed his example.
Philo viewed the Logos as an angel of God. He tried to prove that the Hebrew davar
(“Word”) was the same as the Greek Logos. While the Hebrew davar was
indeed the linguistic equivalent of logos, the philosophical meanings of
the terms were quite different.
Further,
the idea that a lesser god (the demiurge) was the creator of matter denied the
Logos as having anything to do with the creation of the world. After all, how
could Divine Reason create something as inferior as matter? So the Greek
philosophers did not understand that the earth was created to express the glory
of God in a cosmic marriage. They did not believe that the material world could
ever bear witness to heaven and to spiritual things as a whole.
Above
all, they did not believe that the word could become flesh, as John 1:14 says.
Instead, the Gnostics taught that Christ was an emanation of the good Supreme God.
As such, He would never take upon Himself a fleshly body. The good God, to
them, was opposed to the evil demiurge who had created matter. Hence, Christ
had been sent to save us from the clutches of the evil god and to help men
separate themselves from evil matter.
The
humanity of Christ, then, was denied outright by the Gnostics, who taught that
Christ only appeared to have flesh. Yet His flesh was unreal or perhaps
other-worldly, an illusion of flesh.
The
Gnostics adopted the Greek view of matter and the demiurge, building into their
religious system an opposite view of that which is taught in Scripture.
Gnosticism held an advantage over Christianity, however, because the Gnostic
view was more compatible with Greek assumptions. It was much easier for a pagan
Greek to accept Gnosticism than Christianity, as the miraculous signs in
Christianity faded over time.
Docetism
The
earliest trend in the church was Hellenization, or the adoption of Greek
philosophy into Christianity, in much the same manner as had been done earlier
in Judaism—particularly among the Sadducees. But the Gnostics had specialized
in such Hellenization, so they had reason to claim to be the first and “originals”
to receive the “truth.” Hebrew Christianity was seen as lagging behind the
times.
The
church fathers widely condemned Gnosticism, but as they trended toward
Hellenization, they found it more and more difficult to distinguish themselves
and to point out their differences with their Gnostic adversaries.
One
of the earliest concepts to find root in portions of the church was Docetism,
which separated matter from spirit in the nature of Jesus Christ. In other
words, it essentially split the nature of Jesus Christ into two distinct parts:
human and divine.
It
was popularized by Marcion (85-160 A.D.). He taught that Christ was good and
was therefore entirely spiritual. Christ only appeared to be physical.
Jesus only appeared to need food and clothing, only appeared to
become tired and hungry, and only appeared to suffer on the cross. He
taught that Jesus was not truly a man but was a spiritual being clothed in the
form of man.
We
do not know if the Apostle John met Marcion personally, but John died in the year
100, when Marcion was about 15 years old. Marcion developed his philosophy
shortly after John died.
About
the same time, Cerinthus began to teach that Jesus and Christ
were two different beings, one human and the other divine. This was another
attempt to explain the nature of Jesus Christ under an assumption of Docetism.
To Cerinthus, Jesus was begotten by Joseph and given birth through Mary,
while Christ descended upon Him at His baptism. When Jesus was
crucified, he said, Christ left Him so that the human Jesus alone experienced
death.
The
third important deviation from Christianity came through Valentinian (100-160
A.D.), the most popular of the Christian Gnostic teachers. He taught that Jesus
descended from heaven in an incorruptible human body, born of the Virgin Mary.
The eastern branch of Valentinianism taught that the Christ joined Jesus at His
birth and that Christ possessed an incorruptible human body given to Him by the
Aeon named Acamoth. The western branch taught that Christ joined Jesus only at
His baptism and that it was the evil demiurge that gave Jesus His physical
body.
The
eastern school of Valentinianism was only partly docetic, while the western
school was fully so. Valentinian himself never taught that Christ only appeared
to suffer on the cross, so his view was established in the east and was not so
different from orthodox Christianity as it developed later. The later
Trinitarians found it difficult to distinguish themselves from Valentinianism.
The
problem with eastern Valentinianism was that they taught that while Jesus
experienced death, Christ experienced only the grief of death. In other
words, they maintained docetic thought by continuing to separate Jesus from
Christ and to consider each to be a separate and distinct nature, one fleshly
and one divine. By contrast, Paul distinguished between spirit, soul, and body
but considered them to be three parts of one being.
Docetism
itself, being rooted in Greek philosophy, separated body from a spiritual soul,
whereas Hebrew thinking distinguished between a fleshly soul and the spirit.
The other main difference, of course, was if matter was created inherently evil
(Greek) or if matter was good but was invaded by sin afterward. These
philosophical differences determined the goal of history and the religious path
to attain that goal.
John’s Opposition
All
three of these teachings above were rooted in Docetism, which separated matter
from spirit and which found it necessary to separate Jesus from Christ. These
teachings must have been developing toward the end of John’s life, which caused
the apostle to write in 1 John 4:1-3,
1 Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see
whether they are from God; because many false prophets have gone out into the
world. 2 By this you know the Spirit of God; every spirit that
confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God; 3
and every spirit that does not confess Jesus is not from God; and this is the
spirit of the antichrist, of which you have heard that it is coming, and now it
is already in the world.
John
understood that the Hebrew word basar, “flesh,” also meant “good news;
gospel.” To eat the flesh of Jesus (John 6:53) was to believe and
assimilate the gospel of Christ. Hence, Gnostic “faith” in a non-flesh Logos is
“the spirit of antichrist.”
We
see, then, that the spirit of antichrist (in its docetic form), came into the
church through the Gnostics, even as in earlier days the spirit of antichrist
had followed Absalom’s example in overthrowing the Anointed One and usurping
the throne of David.
The
Jewish version of antichrist, which rejected the Son while claiming to adhere
to the Father (1 John 2:22), was but a different form
of antichrist from the Gnostic version. Both rejected Christ in their own way.
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