The Legacy of the True Historical Patrick

Ireland has a very distinctive history.  It was an island untouched by the Roman legions, and Patrick, the Evangelist, brought to it the Gospel of grace.  Patrick was descended from a family that had placed their faith in Christ Jesus for at least two generations.  He tells us his father was “the deacon Calpurnius, son of the late Potitus, a presbyter, of the settlement of Bannaven Taburniae.”[1]  These facts are recorded in Patrick’s own testimony of faith.  This authentic document is preserved in five manuscripts: one in the Book of Armagh of the seventh century, the second in the Cotton Library of the tenth century, a third in the French monastery of St. Vedastus, and two more in the Cathedral Library of Salisbury.  This authenticated document is the main source of both the person and the mission of Patrick, and also his clear statement of the Gospel of grace.

Patrick was born in the year A.D. 373[2] in a town on the River Clyde in Roman Britain, now a part of Scotland.  When he was sixteen years old, Patrick was captured by a band of pirates who sold him to a chieftain in what is now county Antrim in Northern Ireland.  For six years he tended flocks.  In his testimony, he tells us, “I was taken captive before I knew what I should desire and what I should shun.”[3]  It was during the time of his captivity that he turned from his careless ways and came to a saving knowledge of Christ Jesus.  He was convicted that he was a sinner.  In his own words,

“[B]efore I was humbled I was like a stone lying in deep mire, and He that is mighty came and in His mercy raised me up and, indeed, lifted me high up and placed me on top of the wall.  And from there I ought to shout out in gratitude to the Lord for His great favours in this world and for ever, that the mind of man cannot measure.”[4]  

Patrick, like so many of the godly men of history, found God’s favor in the riches of the grace of Christ.  This was the theme echoing throughout the testimony of Patrick, in his own words “I am greatly God’s debtor, because he granted me so much grace.”[5]   He then grew in the grace of God.  Having believed on “the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth,”[6] he directly received “of his fullness…grace for grace.”[7]  In his own words,

“More and more did the love of God, and my fear of Him and faith increase, and my spirit was moved so that in a day [I said] from one up to a hundred prayers, and in the night a like number; besides I used to stay out in the forests and on the mountain and I would wake up before daylight to pray in the snow, in icy coldness, in rain, and I used to feel neither ill nor any slothfulness, because, as I now see, the Spirit was burning in me at that time.”[8]

Patrick relates how, after six years, he escaped and following a difficult journey on land and sea returned to his people in Scotland.  In his own words, “I was again in Britain with my family [kinsfolk], and they welcomed me as a son, and asked me, in faith, that after the great tribulations I had endured I should not go any where else away from them.”[9]

His Direct Mission from the Lord

Like the Apostle Paul, he received a clear and personal call from the Lord to preach the Gospel in the land of his former captivity.  He described his call in these words,

“I saw a man whose name was Victoricus coming as if from Ireland with innumerable letters, and he gave me one of them, and I read the beginning of the letter:  ‘The Voice of the Irish’, and as I was reading the beginning of the letter I seemed at that moment to hear the voice of those who were beside the forest of Foclut which is near the western sea, and they were crying as if with one voice:  ‘We beg you, holy youth, that you shall come and shall walk again among us.’  And I was stung intensely in my heart so that I could read no more, and thus I awoke.  Thanks be to God, because after so many years the Lord bestowed on them according to their cry.”[10] 

He speaks of being called again in a dream another night, but makes it clear how he interpreted what was happening by the Scriptures.  He wrote, “‘Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we know not how to pray as we ought. But the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with sighs too deep for utterance.’”  And again, “‘The Lord our advocate intercedes for us.’”  Thus, Patrick relies on Scripture to understand his experience and to see that it was the Lord Himself who was calling him.  In his own words, “He who gave his life for you, He it is who speaks within you.”[11]  He understood that Christ Jesus, who had died for his sins, was the One who was calling him to work as an evangelist in the very island where he had been held captive.

A second historical document from Patrick’s own hand is his letter to Coroticus.  In it he explains, “Thus I am a servant in Christ to a foreign nation for the unspeakable glory of life everlasting which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”[12]  This is a major factor in understanding Patrick.  He knew himself as a sinner and found salvation where only sinners find it, “in Christ Jesus our Lord.[13]  The first words of his testimony read, “I, Patrick, a sinner, a most simple countryman, the least of all the faithful and most contemptible to many.”  Likewise, in the beginning of his letter to Coroticus he states, “I, Patrick, a sinner, unlearned, resident in Ireland”.  Quite clearly Patrick saw himself as a sinner.  He did not look to some spark of divine life from within himself or to some ritual; rather, he looked unto Christ Jesus.  Patrick’s words, “unspeakable glory of life everlasting which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” shows his distinct and personal comfort and courage in Christ.  Totally unlike religion that looks to rituals, Patrick had his eyes set on the Lord.  Catholicism now, and to some extent even in Patrick’s time, looks to sacraments as necessary for salvation.[14]  Patrick saw himself only as a sinner saved by grace in Christ Jesus.  Patrick’s message is that salvation is totally in Christ alone—a message utterly diverse from that of Roman Catholicism, then and now.

His Mission Begins

Patrick, the Christian evangelist, being about 30 years old, together with some brothers in the Lord, set out for Ireland.  He arrived in or about the year 405.  This fact of history is authentic and verified.  For example, Marcus, an Irish Bishop, who lived at the beginning of the ninth century, states that Patrick came to Ireland in the year 405, and Nennius, who lived about the same time, repeats the statement.[15]  This date is of great importance because many centuries later there was an attempt made to confuse Patrick with Palladius, who had been sent out by Pope Celestine as a missionary to Ireland.  When news of Patrick’s Christian success had reached Rome, Pope Celestine then sent Palladius as a bishop to bring the churches under the control of the Papacy.  It was in 432, at least 27 years after Patrick’s commission from God, that Palladius from Rome came on the scene.  When Palladius did come to Ireland, it was to an Ireland that had many Christian churches and that did not accept his message of subservience to the Bishop of Rome.  In actual fact, Palladius was greatly discouraged by his lack of success.  To quote from the historian Philip Schaff, “Palladius was so discouraged that he soon abandoned the field, with his assistants, for north Britain, where he died among the Picts…. The Roman mission of Palladius failed; the independent mission of Patrick succeededHe is the true Apostle of Ireland, and has impressed his memory in indelible characters upon the Irish race at home and abroad.”[16]

God’s Grace Over the Course of Sixty Years

The work of Patrick and his associates in Ireland was extremely difficult.  He came up against the old pagan religion of the Druids.  The people believed in the Druids as pagan priests who would mediate for them in the things of the spirit.  When Patrick preached Christ Jesus in his own words he said,

“I am greatly God’s debtor, because he granted me so much grace, that through me many people would be reborn in God, and soon after confirmed, that clergy would be ordained everywhere for them, and the masses lately come to belief, whom the Lord drew from the ends of the earth.  As He once promised through His prophets:  ‘To you shall the nations come from the ends of the earth, and shall say, Our fathers have inherited naught but lies, worthless things in which there is no profit.’[17]  And again, ‘I have set you to be a light for the Gentiles that you may bring salvation to the uttermost ends of the earth.’  And I wish to wait then for His promise which is never unfulfilled, just as it is promised in the Gospel.”[18]  He wrote of baptizing many thousands of believers after they had professed faith.[19]

He also wrote about anxious journeys, difficulties, and disappointments.  He combated the powers of darkness in the priesthood of the Druids.  He relied on Christ Jesus and the glorious Holy Spirit given to convict people of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment.  He understood grace to be entirely from God when he declared,

“I, alone, can do nothing unless He Himself vouchsafes it to me.  But let Him search my heart and [my] nature, for I crave enough for it, even too much, and I am ready for Him to grant me that I drink of His chalice, as He has granted to others who love him.  Therefore may it never befall me to be separated by my God from His people whom He has won in this most remote land.  I pray God that He gives me perseverance, and that He will deign that I should be a faithful witness for His sake right up to the time of my passing.”[20]

Over the course of 60 years, Patrick went the length and breadth of Ireland preaching the Gospel and, like Timothy and Titus before him, he ordained elders and established churches.  It is reckoned that at the end of his days there were 365 churches across the island.  These were established, as were the churches in biblical times, with the people served by a pastor or elder.  The authority of the pastor was one of service, rather than lording it over the people.  It was like the establishing of churches that were written about in the pages of the New Testament.  Likewise, the monasteries set up by Patrick, were totally unlike the monasteries that were established under the Church of Rome.  These monasteries were quite like those of the Vaudois and other early Christian churches of northern Italy and southern France, whereby men came aside for some years to be trained in the Scriptures and to learn how to evangelize and to bring the Gospel to others.  Later in their lives, these men married and had families.  These men were not forsaking the world for some retreat of inner holiness; rather, they were men who saw light and life in Christ Jesus and wished to evangelize others with the true Gospel.  Because of these monasteries and the churches that Patrick founded in Ireland, Ireland became known as the “Isle of Saints and Scholars.”

Six Hundred Years of Fruitfulness

The clarity of the Gospel message cherished by Patrick and those who worked with him was to live on for many years after him. There were many famous missionaries like Patrick, such as Columba and his companions who set out for Scotland in 563.  Then there was Columbanus with his companions that went to evangelize France and Germany in 612.  Kilian and the brothers that accompanied him went as missionaries to Franconia and Wurzburg in 680.  Forannan and twelve brothers with him set out to bring the Gospel to the Belgian frontier in 970.[21]

For more than 600 years, Irish missionaries carried the Gospel with the same truthfulness as Patrick’s to Britain, Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy, and beyond.  Darkness covered Europe in the ninth and tenth centuries.  The Dark Ages had begun and the Roman Church, having gained rulership through intrigue and persecution, now held most of Europe in her iron grip.  Even so, in those dark centuries, the Irish missionaries continued to spread the true Gospel, seed which for centuries to come would bear much good fruit all across Europe. 

Embezzlement of the Legacy of Patrick

With the coming of the Danes in the ninth century, however, the Celtic Church in Ireland began to lose its biblical clarity.  Furthermore, Papal Rome began to unleash military power to bring Ireland under her control.  This began with the decree of Pope Adrian IV issued to King Henry II of England in 1155.  The Pope authorized the invasion of Ireland and sent the king a ring of investiture as Lord of Ireland, calling upon the monarch to, “to extirpate the vices that have there taken root, [in Ireland]…saving to St. Peter and the holy Roman Church the annual pension of one penny from each house.”[22]

King Henry carried out the designs of the Papacy in 1171 and with a strong military force subdued the whole Irish nation.  He received from every Archbishop and Bishop, at the Synod of Cashel in 1172, charters whereby they confirmed the Kingdom of Ireland to him and his heirs.  The King sent a transcript of these charters to Pope Alexander III, who, according to the letters of the Archbishops and Bishops, was extremely gratified by the extension of his dominion, and in 1172 issued a bull confirming the Papal decree of Pope Adrian.  Further rulings were sent from Rome to Henry II and to the princes and nobles of Ireland, and to the bishops of Ireland to establish the hierarchy over the people and pastors and command obedience of both Ireland and England to the Papal throne.

The Heritage of Patrick Lives On!

The heartbeat and the soul of Patrick was the Gospel of Christ.  He wrote in his testimony,

“I am imperfect in many things, nevertheless, I want my brethren and kinsfolk to know my nature so that they may be able to perceive my soul’s desire.  I am not ignorant of what is said of my Lord in the Psalm: ‘You destroy those who speak a lie and a lying mouth deals death to the soul.’  Likewise the Lord says in the Gospel, ‘In the day of judgment, men shall render an account for every idle word they utter’’ So it is that I should fear mightily, with terror and trembling, this judgment on the day when no one shall be able to steal away or hide, but each one shall render account for even our smallest sins before the judgment seat of Christ.”[23]

These words of Patrick are like a prophetic trumpet of the Lord.  It is most serious to steal the legacy from the people of the nation, particularly when that heritage was life and light in Christ Jesus!  Many Irish have grown up engrossed in the rites and rituals of Roman Catholicism.  Many of us, turning from those dead things and having drunk deeply of the biblical grace of God that is in Christ Jesus, now want to stand on Patrick’s words, “no one shall be able to steal away or hide, but each one shall render account for even our smallest sins before the judgment seat of Christ.”  To publish abroad the Gospel of God’s chosen in Christ “before the foundation of the world[24] is our longing now, as it was Patrick’s then.  The wonder of Patrick’s life was simply God’s grace in Christ Jesus.  The divine call to the true Gospel went forth from Ireland for more than 600 years.  Just as Patrick expected the power of God’s grace to overcome the priesthood of the Druids, we now stand for the same biblical Gospel that he preached to evangelize even those in the Catholic priesthood and hierarchy.  The battle is the Lord’s and the victory will be His.  “Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.”[25]  In the legacy of Patrick, we pray Christ words, Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am.”[26]  The frightening words of the Lord ring in the ears of those who spend their lives in man-made religion, “Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.”[27]  No person by merely acknowledging Christ through a priesthood and sacraments shall have any part with God in Him, but only the one who does the will of His Father.  The Lord made the will of the Father abundantly clear when He said, “this is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent.”[28]  Today if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts….”[29]  As Christ Jesus’ Gospel stands, so also is His call on your life.  “Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.”[30]   Believe on Him alone for, “this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.  He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life.”[31]  Then you will stand where, before you, Patrick stood immoveable, and this is how it will be for all eternity.  “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature:  old things are passed away; behold all things are become new.”[32]  “Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues.   §

 

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[1] The Confession of Patrick,  http://irelandnow.com/confession.html  1/18/2012

[2] “According to the best authorities, Patrick was born about A.D. 373; and Lanigan has adduced good evidence to prove that he died in A.D. 465 (Apud Lanigan, vol. iv. p. 112).  The Book of Armagh furnishes corroborative evidence of the same fact.  It says, ‘From the passion of Christ to the death of Patrick there were 436 years.’  The crucifixion took place about A.D. 30; and adding these thirty years to the 436 that intervened between the crucifixion and the death of Patrick, we arrive at A.D. 466 as the year of his demise.  Traditions of the highest authority attest that he spent sixty years in preaching the Gospel to the Scoto-Irish.” From, “St. Patrick: Apostle of Ireland” in History of the Scottish Nation by J.A. Wylie (London:  Hamilton, Adams & Co. Andrew Elliot, Edinburgh 1886) Vol. II, Ch 9.

[3]  The Confession of Patrick, p. 2.

[4]  Ibid., p. 2

[5]  Ibid., p. 5

[6]  John 1:14

[7]  John 1:16

[8]  The Confession of Patrick, p. 2.

[9]  The Confession of Patrick, p. 3.

[10]  Ibid., p 3.

[11]  Ibid., p. 3.

[12]  Letter to Coroticus, http://prayerfoundation.org/st_patricks_letter_to_coroticus.htm  1/30/03, p. 2.

[13] “…that I may win Christ, and be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith.. Philippians 3:8-9

[14] “The Church affirms that for believers the sacraments of the New Covenant are necessary for salvation.”  (italic in the original).  Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second ed., (United States Catholic Conference, 1997) Para. 1129.

[15]  The historian, J A Wylie goes to great lengths of demonstrate the fact that Patrick came to Ireland to evangelise in 405.  Among others, he quotes Dr. Killen as saying “‘Its [i.e., this fact] claims to have been acknowledged by the best critics of all denominations,’ by Usher, Ware, Tillemont, Lanigan, and Neander….He [Dr. Killen] thinks that Patrick arrived in Ireland immediately after the death of Nial, or Nial of the Nine Hostages, in the year 405.’”  From “St Patrick:  Apostle of Ireland” by J.A. Wylie in History of the Scottish Nation, Vol. II, Ch. 13, endnote No. 4.

[16]  Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Vol. 4, Ch. 2, Sect. 14, “The Conversion of Ireland”.

[17] Jeremiah 16:19

[18]  The Confession of Patrick, p. 5.

[19] Ibid., p. 2.

[20]  Ibid p 8

[21] For a more complete list, see Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Vol. 4, Ch. 2, “Conversion of Northern and Western Barbarians”, Sect. 15, “The Irish Church after St. Patrick.  The Missionary Period”.

[22]  The full text of the Papal Bull of Pope Adrian IV that empowered king Henry II to conquer and subdue Christian churches to Rome can be read at: http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/bullad.htm   2/1/2003

[23] The Confession of Patrick, p. 8.

[24] Ephesians 1:4

[25]  Luke 12:32

[26]  John 17:24

[27]  Matthew 7:21

[28]  John 6:29

[29]  Hebrews 3:7, 8

[30]  Romans 10:17

[31] 1 John 5:11-12

[32]  II Corinthians 5:17

The Appalling History of Croatia in the 20 Century

By Richard Bennett and Michael De Semlyen

 

In 1929, Mussolini signed the Lateran Treaty, along with Pope Pius XI, officially conceding Vatican Hill to the Pope.  The Papacy once again became a sovereign, civil state.  The legal agreement between Mussolini and the Vatican was just the beginning.  Following this, the Papacy formed alliances in the twentieth century with Roman Catholic dictators such as Adolph Hitler of Germany, Francisco Franco of Spain, Antonio Salazar of Portugal, and Juan Peron of Argentina.  But the alliance that proved to be the most brutal and bloodthirsty of all was that between the Papacy and Anton Pavelic in Croatia.  Within the Papacy it was agreed that Anton Pavelic[1] was to be head of the new nation-state of Croatia, which was carved out of Yugoslavia during the Second World War.

 

During Pavelić's four-year reign, he and Roman Catholic Prelate, Archbishop Alois Stepinac, pursued a “convert or die” policy among the 900,000 Greek Othodox Serbs, Jews, and others in Croatia.  Two hundred thousand were converted; the 700,000 who chose to die were tortured, burned, buried alive, or shot … after digging their own graves.  This appalling persecution carried out by the Ustaše included many of the worst atrocities of history.  The mutilations were horrific, the tortures vicious, and the savagery terrible.  The Catholic Church did not leave the execution of a religious war to the secular arm.  She was there herself, openly ignoring precautions and bolder than she had been for a very long time.  Wielding the hatchet or dagger, pulling the trigger, organizing the massacre, the

Anton Pavelić with Archbishop Stepina    Roman Catholic priests tortured and killed. 

 

Anton Pavelić with Franciscan Monks

Many of the Ustaše officers were priests or friars sworn to fight “with dagger or gun,” for the “triumph of Christ and Croatia.”  Priests played a prominent role in the closing or takeover of Serbian Orthodox churches, the seizure of church records, and the interrogation of the Serbian

 

Orthodox clergy.  They also supervised concentration camps and organized the torture of many of their victims. 

French author Edmond Paris, who was born a Roman Catholic, and has written a very thorough account of this terrible massacre in his book Convert or Die, has said,

“It is difficult for the world to believe that a whole people could be doomed to extermination by a government and religious hierarchy of the twentieth century, just because it happened to belong to another ethnical and racial group and had inherited the Christianity of Byzantium rather than that of Rome.” 

The creation of the entirely Roman Catholic, independent State of Croatia during the Second World War was accompanied by a persecution so ferocious that it is difficult to find a parallel in all of history.  The Inquisition applied to the Serbian Orthodox by the Croatian Catholics accounted for 700,000 Serbs being tortured and killed in just four years.  So, while the Inquisition ended in the nineteenth century, the same procedures and mindset were evident in Croatia in the twentieth century.  In fact, the same mindset is still officially maintained by the Papacy in the twenty-first century.  The Roman Church to this day maintains the laws that she used as her authority to torture and murder Bible believers for over 600 years.  In her present-day laws she states her right to coerce Christian people.  Thus, Canon 1311 states, 

“The [Catholic] Church has an innate and proper right to coerce offending members of the Christian faithful by means of papal sanctions.” 

While there are no sanctions in torture and death at the present time, the same astonishing mindset is Roman Catholic law.  The fact is that the Papacy still claims the right to judge and impose chastening that has not changed since the days of the Inquisition.  In present-day Canon Law she also decrees,

Canon 1405 (Sect.1)  “It is the right of the Roman Pontiff himself alone to judge in cases mentioned in can.  1401:1.  Those who hold the highest civil office in a state...

Canon 1401 “By proper and exclusive right the Church adjudicates: 1. cases concerning spiritual matters or connected with the spiritual; 2.  the violation of ecclesiastical laws and all those cases in which there is a question of sin in respect to the determination of culpability and the imposition of ecclesiastical penalties.”

The Holy Spirit’s admonition to believers is to be remembered as these decrees are certified into law, “Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.”[2]            

In past times, kings, princes, and nations were supposed to tremble at her decrees.  Woe to him who resisted!  Subjects were released from their oaths of allegiance; whole states were placed under interdict.  By deception regarding the Gospel and, subsequently by force, the Papacy has held her domain together.  She has only external unity, as any one who has lived within her system and studied her decrees and history knows.

Our Prayer for Croatia

We have documented on how the institutionalized Papacy and the powers of darkness have conspired against Serbs, Jews, and others in Croatia.  It is horrendous!  Our prayer now is that the Lord Jesus Christ would show the power of His kingdom in Croatia.  Psalms 2 reminds us that the Lord Jesus the Messiah reigns; His throne is not moved, whatever may be the turmoil and schemes against Him.  While the enemies of the Gospel are plotting and planning how to break His bands asunder and cast His cords from them, He has already defeated their devices, and He says to them, “yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion.[3]  All events are in His hands.  None can stand against the almighty Lord Jesus Christ!

The voice of the Lord thunders from the final chapters of the Bible and reverberates throughout the world, “Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues.”[4]  While the Papacy from the city of Rome continues to wax strong, her final condemnation is already written, “Babylon is fallen, is fallen, that great city, because she made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.”[5]  God’s reserved wrath, His punishing justice, and His enmity to sin, will be revealed to the entire world.  The destruction of Papal Rome will proceed from the glory of His power.  “The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation.[6]  The certainty of the final triumph should animate us in our efforts, and embolden true believers in their struggles. 

The frequently quoted maxim that “peoples ignorant of history are destined to repeat it” is still true.  True believers are in real danger of compromising with the Church of Rome.  Without the knowledge of the horrifying history of Croatia in the 20th Century, we can fail to see that the true Gospel is a matter of life and death.  As the Apostle Paul told believers, “All who live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution.[7]  The victory of the faith and courage of believers over the severest trials is repeatedly recorded in the pages of history.  As the Lord proclaimed, “Be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do.[8]  “Also I say unto you, whosoever shall confess me before men, him shall the Son of man also confess before the angels of God.”[9]  We appeal especially to Croatian people—where there is true faith and love of the Lord, there is in the midst of all afflictions a joy unspeakable and full of glory.  God is the only Holy Father, the All Holy One.  His holiness is the distinguishing factor in all His essential characteristics and attributes.  This is the reason why we need to be in right standing before the one and only All-Holy God on the terms He prescribes.  The good news is that by His grace you can turn to Him in faith alone for the salvation that He alone gives, by the conviction of the Holy Spirit, which is based on Christ’s death and resurrection for His people.  Believe on Him alone; as the Scripture states, “For by grace are you saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:  Not of works, lest any man should boast.”[10]  ♦

If the Lord has by His grace touched your heart in reading this account of Croatian history, please let us hear from you using the email address: richardmbennett@yahoo.com

 

Thank you,

Richard Bennett and Michael De Semlyen

 

[1] Ante Pavelić, born July 14, 1889 – died December 28, 1959

[2] Galatians 5:1

[3] Psalm 2:6

[4] Revelation 18:4

[5] Revelation 14:8

[6] Revelation 14:10

[7] 2 Timothy 3:12

[8] Matthew 10:28

[9] Luke 12:4

[10] Ephesians 2:8-9

An Overview the History of the Catholic Church

The Papal Church, a magnificently rich splendidly housed political and ecclesiastical power, headquartered in Rome stands in stark contrast to what started there in the first century with some pastors ministering to small congregations.  The differences are graphic.  The early home churches under their pastors looked to the authority of the Word as received in the gospel accounts of the life of the Lord and the writings of the Apostles, together with the Old Testament.  These pastors and churches had a true and living faith in God’s grace through the Gospel.  From the letter of Paul to the Romans one sees that the Gospel was faithfully treasured in those early Roman congregations.  At the beginning of this letter the Apostle commends the believers at Rome for their faith, “first, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all, that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world, for God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of his Son.…”  Such approvals are infrequent with the Apostle Paul.  The faith of the churches of Rome continued to be well known and faithfully lived for two hundred fifty years more under very adverse situations, including extreme persecutions, the most famous being that which took place under Emperor Nero in the 64 A.D.  Totally unimaginable for these early believers in Rome would be the present concept of “the most holy Roman Pontiff.”  Unthinkable likewise would be the belief that rituals could confer the grace of the Holy Spirit, and that Mary the mother of the Lord, could be addressed in prayer as “the All Holy One.”  In the fellowship of believers, a top heavy hierarchical system, from layperson to priest, from to priest to bishop, from bishop to cardinal and cardinal to pope would have been totally abhorrent, as from the world and not from Christ who said, One is your Master, even Christ; and all ye are brethren.

The spread of the Christian faith during the first three centuries was extensive and rapid.  In the providence of God, the main reasons for this were the fidelity and zeal of the preachers of the Gospel, the heroic deaths of the martyrs, and the translation of the Scriptures into the languages of the Roman world.  Under Emperor Septimius Severus (193-211) Christians suffered appallingly.  The most severe persecution was under the Emperor Diocletian and his co-regent, Galerius, during the years 303-311.  The historian Philip Schaff states that, “all copies of the Bible were to be burned; all Christians were to be deprived of public office and civil rights; and last, all, without exception, were to sacrifice to the gods upon pain of death.”  Yet far from exterminating the Christians and the Gospel, the persecution purified those who preached and increased their ability to give the Gospel message.  

The persecution of Christians ended in 313 A.D. when the emperors Constantine in the West and Licinius in the East proclaimed the Edict of Milan.  This decree established the policy of religious freedom for both paganism and Christianity.  Four vice-prefects governed the Roman Empire under Constantine.  Accordingly, under his authority the Christian world was to be governed from four great cities, Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Rome.  Over each city there was set a Patriarch, who governed all the elders of his domain.  (This was later to be a called a diocese.)  The mind of and purpose of Constantine was that the Christian churches were to be organized in a fashion similar to the government of the Empire.

The respect enjoyed by the various Christian elders was usually in proportion to the status of the city in which they resided.  At that time, Rome was the most powerful city in the world, the principle city of the Empire.  Since Rome was the most prestigious city, it stood to unbiblical reason that the most prominent and influential bishop should be the Bishop of Rome.  Gradually the honor and respect given to the Bishop of Rome grew, and these bishops in turn desired this adulation from bishops of other cities.  The church was in such a decline that with the passing of third and fourth centuries the bishops of Rome began to demand recognition for the exalted position they now considered their possession.

Gradual Rise of Papal Rome

In the fourth and fifth centuries as the true Gospel was watered down, its place was taken by ritualism and ceremony.  The true worship of God and the inner conviction of the Holy Spirit gave way to formal rites and idolatry.  Pagan practices were also introduced, white washed with an external form of Christianity.  From the beginning, the Gospel produced an internal unity among the believers, but with the substitution of ritualism for the Gospel came the insistence on an external, visible unity to the church.  As the historianD’Aubigne relates, 

“Various circumstances early contributed to originate and develop the idea of the necessity of an external unity.  Men accustomed to the ties and political forms of an earthly country transferred some of their views and customs to the spiritual and eternal kingdom of Jesus Christ….The semblance of an identical and external organization was gradually substituted for the internal and spiritual unity which forms the essence of genuine religion.  The precious perfume of faith was left out, and then men prostrated themselves before the empty vase which had contained it.  The faith of the heart no longer uniting the members of the Church, another tie was sought, and they were united by means of bishops, archbishops, popes, mitres, ceremonies, and canons.  The living Church having gradually retired into the hidden sanctuary of some solitary souls, the external Church was put in its place, and declared to be, with all its forms, of Divine institution….As soon as the error as to the necessity of a visible unity of the Church was established, a new error was seen to arise—viz., that of the necessity of an external representative of this unity.”  

The clergy-laity division of the church became the accepted base.  This further devolved into a hierarchy of the ruling clergy.  By the end of the fifth century, a sacrificing priesthood in which the priest presumed to mediate between God and men had replaced the early ministers of the Gospel who had taught the Scripture.  The Church was no more the fellowship of believers under Christ Jesus, united by the Gospel, true worship, and indwelling of the Holy Spirit, but rather an institution dominated by a hierarchy of bishops and elders.  At this time also, the Bishop of Rome, Leo (440-461) claimed the position of sovereign over Western Christianity.  Historian LeRoy Edwin Froom explains the transfer of power that came about as the bishop of Rome clasped at the title of supreme ruler. 

“… Leo began to feel that the time had come to materialize the claims of Augustine regarding the temporal millennial kingdom of Christ, and with his avowed vested powers of loosing and binding openly to declare his right to the vacant throne as the fitting seat of Christ’s universal kingdom.  In this way the Roman church pushed its way into the place of the Western empire, of which it is ‘the actual continuation.’  Thus, the empire did not perish; it only changed its form.  The Pope became Caesar’s successor.  This was a long stride forward.”

Bishop of Rome Becomes the Pope

The removal of the seat of the empire from Rome to Constantinople in 330 A.D. enhanced marvelously the Bishop of Rome’s power.  The ecclesiastical contest which had been going on for some time between Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Rome as to which was the greatest was now for most part confined to the dioceses of Rome and the new contender, Constantinople.  

The barbarian invasions of the Western Roman Empire helped immeasurably to build the whole structure of papal Rome.  The ten barbarian kingdoms that were a serious threat were the Alamanni, Franks, Visigoths, Burgundians, Suevi, Anglo-Saxons, Lombards, Heruli, Vandals, and the Ostrogoths.  The Emperor of Rome now lived in Constantinople; yet his armies uprooted and destroyed the Vandals and the Heruli, while simultaneously contending with the Ostrogoths, who continued their siege of Rome.

Clovis, King of the Franks, was the first of the barbarian princes to accept the faith proposed by the Church of Rome.  In fulfillment of a vow that he had made on the battlefield when he defeated the Allemanni, Clovis was baptized in 496 AD in the Cathedral of Rheims.  The Bishop of Rome gave him the title of “the eldest son of the Church.”  In the sixth century, the, the Burgundians of Southern Gaul, the Visigoths of Spain, the Suevi of Portugal, and the Anglo-Saxons of Britain all followed suit in joining themselves to the religion of that of the Bishop of Rome.  These barbaric kings and their peoples accepted easily the faith of Rome, which because it lacked the Gospel, was not too different in form and substance from their own pagan worship.  All of these conversions advanced the power of the Roman Bishop.  Then, too, these barbaric nations more easily accepted the religion of Rome because this city had traditionally been the seat authority of the Caesars as masters of the world.  The bishops of Rome now played their role as rightful heirs to the Caesars.  The city that had been the seat power for the Empire became the place for the Bishop to exercise his authority.  More and more nations accepted to his position.  

Emperor Justinian I was the one, more than anyone else, to establish the supremacy of the Bishop of Rome.  He did it in a formal and legal manner, bringing even things religious under the control of civil law.  Froom summarized, 

“Justinian I (527-565) [was the] greatest of all the rulers of the Eastern Roman Empire....[His] great achievement was the regulation of ecclesiastical and theological matters, crowned by the imperial Decretal Letter seating the bishop of Rome in the churches as the ‘Head of all the holy churches,’ thus laying the legal foundation for papal ecclesiastical supremacy.”  

Justinian’s official civil codex of law was to be enforced civilly throughout the Roman Empire, although that did not come about immediately.  

“‘Hence, in accordance with the provisions of these Councils, we order that the Most Holy pope of ancient Rome shall hold the first rank of all the Pontiffs, but the Most Blessed Archbishop of Constantinople, or New Rome, shall occupy the second place after the Holy Apostolic See of ancient Rome, which shall take precedence over all other sees.’…Thus, the supremacy of the Pope over all Christians received the fullest sanction that could be given by the secular master of the Roman world.  From this time, then, is to be dated the secular acknowledgment of the Papacy’s claims to ecclesiastical primacy, which became effective generally in 538, by the freeing of Rome from the Ostrogothic siege.”  

Justinian’s decree did not create the office of the Pope but set a legal foundation for advancement in ruling power for the bishops of Rome.  The Emperor had his purposes, 

“Justinian improved the advantage afforded by his reconquest of Italy to achieve his design of a universal conformity in religious matters that would exclude heresy and schism, as well as strengthen his own authority over the Western kingdoms.  His object was to secure a unity of the church which should embrace both East and West.  He considered that there was no surer way of reducing them all to one religion than by the advancement of the authority of ecclesiastical Rome, and by acknowledgment of the head of that church as the promoter of unity among them, whose business it should be to overawe the conscience of man with the anathemas of the church, and to enforce the execution of heavy penalties of the law.  From about 539, the sovereign pontiff and the patriarchs began to have a corps of officers to enforce their decrees, as civil penalties began to be inflicted by their own tribunals.”

Thus, to allay the demise of the Imperial Empire, ecclesiastical unity was to be imposed by coercion if necessary, not the first time nor yet the last that religion would be used to buttress political positions.  As proclaimed head of the empire’s church, the job fell to the Bishop of Rome.  The title of “pope” began to fit the one who sat as “Bishop of Rome,” who now was free to use the civil sword of coercion given him by Justinian’s decree.  Formerly, ecclesiastical unity came by the moral persuasion of the Gospel and the Scripture alone to save individuals who then would be salt and light to their civil societies.  But such unbiblical ideas and methods as the Bishops of Rome had so willingly sought after and received could hardly produce something other than worldly corruption.  It is no surprise then that soon the Bishop of Rome desired to reign like a king with worldly pomp, and worldly power.  The very thing that the Lord had warned against was now transpiring.  “And he said unto them, the kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them…but ye shall not be so.

The empire continued to crumble.  The Emperor Phocas reigned in Constantinople from 602 to 610 A.D.  Boniface III, who became pope in 607, had known him previously, for Boniface had been a legate to the Emperor Phocas before becoming pope.  Boniface showed great skill in obtaining further official recognition from the Emperor.  

“He [Boniface] sought and obtained a decree from Phocas which restated that ‘the See of Blessed Peter the Apostle should be the head of all the Churches’.  This ensured that the title of ‘Universal Bishop’ belonged exclusively to the Bishop of Rome, and effectively ended the attempt by Cyriacus, Bishop of Constantinople, to establish himself as ‘Universal Bishop.’” 

Pope Boniface III shrewdly took hold of two measures to secure papal hegemony in the ecclesiastical domain of the failing empire.  First, he made excellent use of the conjecture that Peter was the First Bishop in Rome.  Second, his acquisition of the title of “Universal Bishop,” granted to him by Emperor Phocas, accorded him dominion and power to reign in ecclesiastical supremacy from the central city of Rome to the utmost reaches of the Empire.  This twofold stratagem has continued throughout history.  

Fraudulent Documents and the Rise of the Papacy as a Temporal Power

It was not until the middle of the eighth century that the outlandish claim was made that the Emperor Constantine had transferred his power, authority, and palace to the Bishop of Rome.  The fraudulent Donation of Constantine was purported to be the legal document in which the Emperor Constantine bestowed on Sylvester, the Bishop of Rome (314-335), much of his property and invested him with great spiritual power.  The enormity and grandeur of the bequest allegedly given by Constantine to Sylvester in this spurious document is seen the following quotation from the manuscript,

“We attribute to the See of Peter all the dignity, all the glory, all the authority of the imperial power.  Furthermore, we give to Sylvester and to his successors our palace of the Lateran, which is incontestably the finest palace on the earth; we give him our crown, our miter, our diadem, and all our imperial vestments; we transfer to him the imperial dignity.  We bestow on the holy Pontiff in free gift the city of Rome, and all the western cities of Italy.  To cede precedence to him, we divest ourselves of our authority over all those provinces, and we withdraw from Rome, transferring the seat of our empire to Byzantium; inasmuch as it is not proper that an earthly emperor should preserve the least authority, where God hath established the head of his religion.”

The “Donation of Constantine” was most likely forged a little before 754 A.D.  Of it, the historian Wylie says, “In it Constantine is made to speak in the Latin of the eighth century, and to address Bishop Sylvester as ‘Prince of the Apostles, Vicar of Christ’.  During more than 600 years Rome impressively cited this deed of gift, inserted it in her codes, permitted none to question its genuineness, and burned those who refused to believe in it.  The first dawn of light in the sixteenth century sufficed to discover the cheat.”  

It was also in the eighth century that temporal power came within the grasp of the Papacy.  The kings of Lombardy, once barbarian and now believers in the Arian heresy, were intent on the conquest of all Italy, threatening even Rome itself.  At the same time, the Muslims had overrun Africa, conquered some of Spain, and were also endangering Rome.  Pope Stephen II looked to France for help.  He called on Pepin the Short.  Pepin, the son of Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer) and the father of Charlemagne, was the chief steward of the king’s lands and army.  Pepin had just usurped the throne from Childeric and needed approval for his new position.  He therefore crossed the Alps with an army and was able to defeat the Lombards.  The conquered towns he conceded to the Pope for his possession.  Thus, in 755 A.D, Pepin the Short made material the temporal power of the popes, and achieved papal approval for himself.  

Charlemagne, Pepin’s son, continued to strengthen the temporal power of the Pope.  The Lombards were again about to besiege Rome.  The Pope again looked to France and this time to Charlemagne for help.  He answered the call and defeated the Lombards.  He confirmed and enlarged cities and lands given by his father, Pepin, to the Church of Rome.  Later, on Christmas Eve 800, Charlemagne, as master of nearly all the Romano-Germanic nations, knelt before Pope Leo III.  The Pope placed on his head the crown of the Western Empire.  This act exhibited the Pope’s burgeoning power.  In 538 the Emperor Justinian had given the Bishop of Rome the title of Pontifex Maximus.  Two hundred sixty two years later, it was the Pope who was crowning an emperor.  

The fraudulent “Donation of Constantine,” less than fifty years old, was already proving to be one of a number of very useful tools.  Pope Nicholas I in 865 drew from this and other forgeries a way to demand submission from bishops and princes and to amass tremendous riches to the Papacy.  The arrogance of the Popes grew from this time onward, as did their treasury.  Popes became intoxicated with their own pride, some in their teens and twenties, losing their senses in nefarious practices.  Infamous women of history, Theodora and Marozia, for many years governed the papal throne.  As they desired they installed and deposed their lovers, sons, and grandsons as so-called masters of the Church.  That unholy See, which pretended to rise above the majesty of kings and princes, descended into dregs of sin.  For two centuries, the papacy was one wild arena of bedlam as the most powerful families of Italy disputed and fought over it like a possession.  As Wylie recounts, 

“The candidate who was rich enough to offer the largest bribe, or powerful enough to appear with an army at the gates of Rome, was invariably crowned emperor in the Vatican….The Popes did not trouble the world with any formal statement of their principles on the head of the supremacy; they were content to embody them in acts.  They were wise enough to know that the speediest way of getting the world to acknowledge theoretic truth is to familiarize it with its practical applications—to ask approval of it, not as a theory, but as a fact.  Thus, the Popes, by a bold course of dexterous management, and of audacious but successful aggression, laboured to weave the doctrine of the supremacy into the general policy of Europe.”  

Lusts of the Mind Followed by Murder and Torture

The year 1073 was a turning point from the centuries of gross immorality.  Rigorous discipline now became the norm of the Papacy.  Reaching above the lusts of the flesh, the lusts of papal minds continued to clutch at total dominion, both ecclesiastical and temporal.  By this time, the line of Charlemagne had grown too weak to keep papal ambitions in check, and the Pope Gregory VII (also known as Hildebrand) was ambitious beyond all who had preceded him.  He was convinced that the reign of the Pope was in fact the reign of God on earth and determined to subject materially all authority and power, both spiritual and temporal, to the “chair of Peter.”  It was Gregory VII who envisioned what was to become the vast structure of the Papacy.  His goal was to be the supreme ruler and judge of all leaders both Church and state.  Wylie summarizes,

“Gregory rekindled, with all the ardour and vehemence characteristic of the man, the war between the throne and the mitre.  The object at which Gregory VII aimed was twofold: 1. To render the election to the pontifical chair independent of the emperors; and, 2. To resume the empire as a fief of the Church, and to establish his dominion over the kings and kingdoms of the earth.  His first step towards the accomplishment of these vast designs was…to enact clerical celibacy.  His second was to forbid all ecclesiastics to receive investiture at the hands of the secular power.”

Gregory VII advocated the notion that the Pope is Christ’s Vicar.  This supremacy, which he claimed by divine right, demanded sure dominion over both emperors and kings.  

“The overthrow of the empire contributed most materially towards the elevation of the Bishop of Rome; for, first, it took the Caesars out of the way…Second, it compelled the bishops of Rome, now deprived of the imperial influence which had hitherto helped them so mightily in their struggles for [ecclesiastical] pre-eminence, to fall back on another element…which constitutes the very essence of the papacy, and on which is founded the whole complex fabric of the spiritual and temporal domination of the Popes…[the idea that] the Bishop of Rome is the successor of Peter, the prince of the Apostles, and in virtue of being so, is Christ’s Vicar on earth.” 

This idea had been circulating for some time.  “The primacy had been promulgated by synodical decrees, ratified by imperial edicts, the pontiffs perceived that what synods and emperors had given, synods and emperors might take away.  The enactments of both, therefore, were discarded, and the Divine right was put in their room, as the only basis of power which neither lapse of years nor change of circumstances could overthrow.  Rome was henceforward indestructible.”  The material supremacy of such a notion was not won in a day, however.  But it was Gregory’s astute grasp of the notion and his crushing ambition, coupled with the enormous wealth that the Roman Catholic Church by then possessed, which made its implementation possible.  These shrewd enactments began to bear fruit even in Gregory’s own rule from 1073-1085.  

The pontiffs that followed him developed the structures he had established.  They continued his projects and strove by deceit, crusades, and by interdicts, to place the world under papal suzerainty.  For two centuries from the time of Gregory VII’s reign, the papacy increased in power and glory, always at the price of thousands of destroyed lives, many deposed kings and princes, numerous ruined cities, and countless homesteads and farms utterly wasted, all in the name of the religion of Rome. 

Popes Innocent III (1198-1216) and Boniface VIII (1294-1303) put the final touches to papal triumph of spiritual and temporal power.  Pope Innocent III proclaimed a crusade against the Albigenses and offered to all who would engage in it the pardon of all sins to get to heaven without passing through purgatory.  This war was perpetrated with unimaginable cruelty.  Whole villages and towns were indiscriminately butchered, thousands of others were burned alive at the stake, while others were subjected most hideous torture.  The history of these horrendous deeds of cruelty and murder are established by numerous accounts.  Pope Boniface VIII “was stubborn, ambitious, intelligent, vain, and unscrupulous.  He believed deeply that the Pope was literally the vicar of Christ on Earth and that he held extraordinary powers.  Anyone who opposed him opposed God and therefore must certainly be wicked.”  He is most famous for a statement in his papal bull Unum Sanctum, “We declare, say, define, and proclaim to every human creature that they by necessity for salvation are entirely subject to the Roman Pontiff.”  Seventy-five popes, one after another, from Pope Innocent III to Pope Pius VII, approved of torture, murder, and burning at the stake, and the confiscation of the property of believers in the horrific centuries of the Inquisition.  Many of those slain were true Bible believers.  

More Than 600 Years of Papal Inquisition

The Inquisition is a term that historically applies specifically to the time when the Popes of Rome took the initiative in attempting to stamp out by torture, imprisonment, and death what they call “heresy.”  Before the Popes began to decree such torture and death, a type of persecution involving incarceration and confiscation of property was practiced at the parish level and at the diocesan level in the Roman Catholic Church.  The prophecies of Scripture had predicted what indeed happened, “and it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them.”  This text fulfilled in the wars against the Waldenses, the Albigenses, and the other followers of the Lord at the time of the Papal persecutions.  This prophecy is the same as what is found the the book of Daniel, “the same horn [that] made war with the saints, and prevailed against them.  

During the Inquisition, “the most ghastly abomination of all was the system of torture.  The accounts of its cold-blooded operations make one shudder at the capacity of human beings for cruelty.  And it was decreed and regulated by the Popes who claim to represent Christ on earth.  In 1252 Pope Innocent IV solemnly authorized it.  Confirmatory or regulatory decrees about it were issued by Alexander IV, Clement IV, Urban IV and Clement V.”  The Papacy had become “drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus.”  No other kingdom or power has ever drunk so deeply of this blood as has Papal Rome.  The facts are undeniable.  

“From the birth of Popery in 600, to the present time, it is estimated by careful and credible historians, that more than FIFTY MILLION [50,000,000] of the human family, have been slaughtered for the crime of heresy by popish persecutors, an average of more than forty thousand religious murders for every year of the existence of Popery.”  

The torture chambers of Inquisition, which lasted more than 600 years, were all across the nations controlled by Rome.  The instruments of torture were horrendous.  If you are sensitive you ought to pray for courage to read on these in the account by Wylie:

“We pass on into the chamber, where more dreadful sights meet our gaze.  It is hung round and round with instruments of torture, so numerous that it would take a long while even to name them, and so diverse that it would take a much longer time to describe them.  We must take them in groups, for it were hopeless to think of going over them one by one, and particularizing the mode in which each operated, and the ingenuity and art with which all of them have been adapted to their horrible end.  There were instruments for compressing the fingers till the bones should be squeezed to splinters.  There were instruments for probing below the finger-nails till an exquisite pain, like a burning fire, would run along the nerves.  There were instruments for tearing out the tongue, for scooping out the eyes, for grubbing-up the ears.  There were bunches if iron cords, with a spiked circle at the end of every whip, for tearing the flesh from the back till bone and sinew were laid bare.  There were iron cases for the legs, which were tightened upon the limb placed in them by means of a screw, till flesh and bone were reduced to a jelly.  There were cradles set full of sharp spikes, in which victims were laid and rolled from side to side, the wretched occupant being pierced at each movement of the machine with innumerable sharp points.  There were iron ladles with long handles, for holding molten lead or boiling pitch, to be poured down the throat of the victim, and convert his body into a burning cauldron.  There were frames with holes to admit the hands and feet, so contrived that the person put into them had his body bent into unnatural and painful positions, and the agony grew greater and greater by moments, and yet the man did not die.  There were chestfuls of small but most ingeniously constructed instruments for pinching, probing, or tearing the more sensitive parts of the body, and continuing the pain up to the very verge where reason or life gives way.  On the floor and walls of the apartment were the larger instruments for the same fearful end—lacerating, mangling, and agonizing living men; but these we shall meet in other dungeons we are yet to visit.”

Indictment on the Inquisition

The best summary statement on the papacy’s Inquisition is that of the renowned Catholic historian Lord Acton.  He declares,

“The Inquisition is peculiarly the weapon and peculiarly the work of the Popes.  It stands out from all those things in which they co-operated, followed or assented as the distinctive feature of papal Rome.  It was set up, renewed and perfected by a long series of acts emanating from the supreme authority in the Church.  No other institution, no doctrine, no ceremony is so distinctly the individual creation of the Papacy, except the dispensing power.  It is the principal thing with which the papacy is identified, and by which it must be judged.  The principle of the Inquisition is the Pope’s sovereign power over life and death.  Whosoever disobeys him should be tried and tortured and burnt.  If that cannot be done, formalities may be dispensed with, and the culprit may be killed like an outlaw.  That is to say, the principle of the Inquisition is murderous, and a man’s opinion of the Papacy is regulated and determined by his opinion of religious assassination.’”

The Papacy inflicted excruciating torture and cruel death on true believers.  It was like the sufferings recorded the Old Testament, “others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of bonds and imprisonment: They were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword: they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented; of whom the world was not worthy.” Arthur Pink comments, “Papists have exceeded pagans herein: witness their cruel massacres in France and other places: well may the Holy Spirit represent the whore Babylon as being ‘drunk with the blood of the saints’ (Revelation 17:6)…“Of whom the world was not worthy”…the most merciless, conscienceless, cruel, and inveterate persecutors of God’s elect have been religious people!”

Characteristics of the Reformation and the Papacy Compared

The Reformation period was full with historical figures and an enormous amount of theological debate.  However, in the midst of all the doctrinal issues and events there were five biblical principles accepted among the Reformers.  In all matters of faith and morals, the final authority is the Bible alone.  Before the all-holy God, an individual is saved by grace alone through faith alone, in Christ alone.  Following on this, all glory and praise is to God alone.

For an overview of the distinctiveness of Reformation history, we have obtained an extended quotation,

“The Protestant Reformation possessed definite characteristics, many of which set it apart from any other revolution in history.  One of the distinguishing features was its territorial scope.  It began simultaneously and independently in various European countries.  About the time that Martin Luther posted his ninety-five theses on the church door in Wittenberg in 1517, John Colet, dean of St. Paul’s in England, was denouncing the abuses of the Catholic Church and upholding the supremacy of the Bible as the rule of faith.  Lefevre in France and Zwingli in Switzerland were at the same time preaching against the evils of the church and pointing to Christ as the door of salvation.  Although Luther is called the originator of the Reformation, the other Reformers discovered and preached the same message that he did, without having received knowledge of it from him.

“There was a power, however, that brought the Reformation into existence and made its progress possible—and that was the Holy Scriptures.  The Greek New Testament prepared by Erasmus was a help to scholars all over Europe in learning the way of truth and life.  After the Reformation once got under way, there existed a great friendship and fraternization among the Reformers.  There was frequent interchange of ideas, and hospitality was freely extended.  One of the surprising features of the Reformation was this extent of contact and cooperation among the Reformers as they encouraged each other in their efforts.  The Reformation spread with great rapidity.  Of course, consolidations, refinements, and extensions needed to be made; but that so tremendous a revolution, on such a vast scale, could be executed in so short a time, bringing with it a complete change in thought and habit, still remains one of the amazing events of history.

“The Protestant Reformation actually began in Europe’s citadels of learning, her universities.  There were scholars, such as Luther and Melanchthon at Wittenberg; Erasmus, Colet, and More at Oxford; Bilney, Latimer, and Cartwright at Cambridge; and Lefevre and Farel at Paris.  Almost without exception the leaders of the Reformation were highly trained men of that generation.  In some instances, as Beza and Tyndale, they ranked high as men of letters.  Others, like Cranmer and Valdes carried responsibilities at court...

“Why was this so necessary at that time, when in other ages men of lesser abilities and education have been used effectively to preach the gospel with power?  At least two answers can be given: Only the educated knew the Hebrew, Latin, and Greek necessary to read the Bible as it then existed.  Then, too, it was essential that the Bible be translated into the vernacular of each country so that the common people could have the privilege of reading the Scriptures in their own tongue.  This task demanded scholarship.

“All the preaching of many Luthers, Latimers, Zwinglis, Knoxes, and Wisharts would have failed to accomplish the Reformation if, at the same time, the Bible in the vernacular had not been provided for the common people.  If at the moment Latimer was preaching at Cambridge it had not happened that Tyndale, who had fled to the Continent, was smuggling back thousands of copies of the English New Testament so that every Englishman could read the way of salvation for himself, there would have been no Reformation in England.  A similar situation occurred in Germany, France, and other countries.

“With these two phases must be combined the indispensable third—the invention of printing, which had made possible the publication of the translations of the Bible and had brought the price within range of the common man’s purse.  Within a ten-year period many of the nations of Europe had received translations of the Bible in their own tongue.  Luther had translated it for Germany in 1522, Lefevre for France in 1523, Tyndale for England in 1525, Bruccioli for Italy in 1532.  Within the next ten years Francisco Enzinas had translated the Bible into Spanish, and Petri had translated it into Swedish.  Shortly after, Karoli, one of the most energetic of Magyar preachers, had done the same in the Magyar tongue.  Another noteworthy characteristic of the Reformers was the basic agreement on important doctrines.  The tenet upon which all Reformers agreed was justification by faith.  They believed that salvation is not obtained by works, fasting, money, or penance, but that it is God’s free gift.  This doctrine formed the cornerstone of the Reformation.  Agreement also existed on the supreme and sufficient authority of the Scriptures, Communion in both kinds, and the disavowal of saint worship, images, relics, purgatory, mass, celibacy, and the Pope as head of the church....

“The Reformation proper, the break with Roman Catholic authority, was accomplished in a relatively short time; but not all the papal teachings were abruptly terminated....The Reformation was a continuous, all-enveloping movement of action and reaction, accruing more glory by the addition of more light.  It was a glorious spiritual awakening.”

The Papacy and Modern Times

What had looked like a mortal wound to Papal power took place in 1798.  A general of Napoleon’s army entered the Vatican, removing Pope Pius VI from his throne.  With that, the Papacy lost its basis as a civil power.  From the year 1846 Pope Pius IX, not having territorial or civil power, sought to re-establish the papacy.  An important part of his strategy was achieved by the declaration of papal infallibility.  With remarkable ingenuity against not only the absurdity of the notion, but also in spite of the historical fact of heretical popes, papal infallibility was made a binding dogma of belief at Vatican Council I in 1870.  Further, the Papacy re-established itself internally by re-organizing Roman Catholic law into the 1917 Code of Canon Law.  In 1929 when Mussolini signed the Lateran Treaty with Pope Pius X1 officially conceding Vaticanus Mons (Vatican Hill) to the Pope, the wound that had been inflicted was healed; the Papacy once again became a sovereign civil state.  The legal agreement with Mussolini was just the beginning of many civil concordats, one of the most infamous being that between Pope Pius XII and Adolf Hitler.  The Papacy had again consolidated its power from within by the 1917 Code of Canon Law and from without by legal concordats with the various nations.  Thus, the Vatican, with its own citizens as part of a “fifth column” within sovereign nations across the world and with her civil agreements with the same nations, has a double cord of power.  The individual Catholic, fearing for his salvation, and laden with his first allegiance being to “holy Mother Church,” is a pliable pawn in the hand of the Papacy.  

Modern Cruelty Through Wars and Intrigue

A partial list of Roman Catholic dictators with whom the Vatican had alliance in twentieth century is the following.  Benito Mussolini in Italy, from 1922 to 1943; Adolf Hitler in Germany, 1933 to 1945; Francisco Franco in Spain, 1936 to 1975; Antonio Salazar in Portugal, 1932 to 1968; Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt von Schuschnigg in Austria, 1932 to 1934; Juan Peron in Argentina, 1946 to 1955.  Possibly the most brutal and bloodthirsty of all was Ante Pavelic in Croatia, 1941 to 1945.

The Papacy and Hitler’s Germany

Adolf Hitler was baptized into the Catholic Church as an infant in Austria.  He was both a communicant and an altar boy.  To the day of his suicide, he remained a Catholic.  His dealings with the Catholic Church show how far the Vatican will go with the powerful dictators.  The alliance worked both ways.  It established Catholicism more deeply in Germany while promoting the objectives of Nazi movement.  Of it, John Robbins writes,

“The fountainhead and stronghold of the Nazi movement in Germany was Bavaria in south Germany, Roman Catholic Germany, not Protestant north Germany.  German Roman Catholics joined the Nazi Party en masse and enthusiastically supported the Hitler regime.  Over half of Hitler’s troops were Roman Catholic.  At the height of his power in 1942, Hitler ruled over the largest Roman Catholic population in the world.  They were accustomed to authoritarian government in their religious lives, which made them unquestioning and enthusiastic supporters of authoritarian civil governments as well.  Of course, Roman Catholic laymen were simply following the example and the instructions of their religious leaders.  Pius XI was the first head of state to recognize Hitler’s government in 1933.  Pius XI praised Hitler in public, even before he extended official recognition to the Hitler regime.  In 1933, Pius XI told Hitler’s Vice Chancellor Fritz von Papen, also a Roman Catholic, ‘how pleased he was that the German Government now had at its head a man uncompromisingly opposed to Communism….’  Not only did Pius XI’s 1931 encyclical Quadragesimo Anno influence Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, it apparently persuaded German Chancellor Franz von Papen to bring Hitler to power in Germany.” 

Regarding its involvement with Nazi Germany and other nations, the Vatican has repeatedly refused to open up its archives to scholars.  Nevertheless, evidence outside the Vatican’s archives shows that the Papacy encouraged, supported, and collaborated with both the Mussolini and Hitler regimes, as well as setting up its own totalitarian state in Croatia during the Second World War.  The Vatican’s legal agreement with the Nazism of Germany and the Fascism of Italy, Spain, Portugal, Croatia, and Latin America are the consequences of the Papacy’s economic and social teachings, and legal agreements between the Vatican and these nations.  The Crusades and the 605 years of the Inquisition have stopped, but the power of the Papacy to influence and to control governments, social, economic, political life and the destinies of peoples, has continued.  

Power Through Concordats, Laws, Universities, Welfare Services and a Council

Jean-Guy Vaillancourt, associate professor of sociology at the University of Montreal, has written a book entitled Papal Power: A Study of Vatican Control over Lay Catholic Elites.  After a perfunctory passing remark that the Inquisition’s burning of heretics and the crusaders’ holy wars were “but two more of the extreme forms of hierarchic coercion during the late feudal period”, Vaillancourt makes some salient observations,

“[After 1789 when the Roman Catholic Church was] no longer able to use the repressive power of the state, Church authorities became more and more interested in using the legal and ideological power of the state through the laws enshrined in the concordats, through education of youth in schools and universities and through welfare services such as hospitals and charity organizations.  In fact, the Church increasingly became an ideological apparatus which fulfilled for the state and for the ruling class the functions necessary for their own growth and reproduction….Inside the Church, the bishops and priests became functionaries of the central organization, with little individual freedom of their own.  An awakening laity was itself turned into a pawn in the papacy’s frantic efforts to retain its position of absolute power in Europe and especially in Italy.”

While the Papacy no longer has the military might by which to enforce its will, it has in no way renounced its sovereign control over men’s minds and bodies, as Catholic law shows.  Of necessity then, to reintroduce coercion of any consequence, there must first be enacted absolute law within the Catholic system.  Second, it is necessary to ensnare the civil authorities in such a way that they are again subservient to Catholic purposes.

The Catholic Church made this major change of tactic visible in its Vatican Council II (1962-1965).  That council moved from a position of separation from other religions to their new program of false ecumenism, not only with the religions of the world, but more importantly with Bible believers in particular.  “Separated brethren” was the term coined for those who were always before considered heretics (and who in spite of the new terminology still remain on the books as heretics), while the pagan religions of Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism now became to the papacy accepted ways to God.  This new approach was established by the Roman Church to win the world to herself by many avenues, one main such way being dialogue, the rules and goal of which she has carefully spelled out in her post-Conciliar Document No. 42 on ecumenism, which states that, “dialogue is not an end in itself….it is not just an academic discussion.”  Rather, “ecumenical dialogue…serves to transform modes of thought and behavior and the daily life of those [non-Catholic] communities.  In this way, it aims at preparing the way for their unity of faith in the bosom of a Church one and visible.”  

Pope John Paul II has consolidated the dictatorial powers afforded him by the 1917 Code of Canon Law and by his purported infallibility bequeathed him by Vatican Council I.  This he did by revising the 1917 Code, making it even more conservative than it had been.  He has also been careful to appoint new cardinals and bishops in line with his centralized way of thinking.

Like another Pope Gregory VII, the present pope is determined to build, by both Church and civil law, the structure by which the Papacy can again wield supreme might and power among the nations.  This same Pope John Paul II has been adamant in his efforts to update the laws of the Roman Catholic Church.  Since the days of Gregory VII, the Papacy has seen the necessity of making iron and inflexible church laws before attempting to control both her subjects and those not Catholic by compulsion and coercion, if necessary.  In 1983, John Paul II’s revision of the 1917 Code of Canon Law added greater severity to the Roman Catholic laws.  For example it is decreed the following, “The Church has an innate and proper right to coerce offending members of the Christian faithful by means of penal sanctions.”  If one rejects submission of his intellect and will to the Pope’s doctrine, there are also new decreed penalties.  These are spelled out Canon #1371, Para. 1. “The following are to be punished with a just penalty: 1. a. person who…teaches a doctrine condemned by the Roman Pontiff….”  Canon law #1312, outlines specified penalties that are to be imposed, Para. 2. “The law can establish other expiatory penalties which deprive a believer of some spiritual or temporal good and are consistent with the supernatural end of the Church.”  The perverse vindictiveness of these laws contravenes the repeated Scriptural commands that the leaders of the body of Christ are not to be despotic, as are the rulers of this world.  Nonetheless even today—as it has been for the last 1,400 years—Catholic law, decrees and coercion supersede grace and the Gospel. 

The Outcome and the Lesson

From its formal inception through the decrees of the Emperor Justinian I in the sixth century, the Papacy has grown enormously: from nation to nation, in wealth and political influence, by means of laws, intrigue, deception, and sacraments.  The Papacy has always tried to cover itself with a veneer of Christianity, yet this pagan ritual religion has ever repressed and persecuted true godliness and true believers.  The history of the Papacy shows unequivocally that it is a power structure built on usurped authority both spiritual and temporal, forgeries, craft, persecution, a false gospel, church law, civil power, concordats and.  Nonetheless, the Papacy for most of its history has succeeded in deluding millions.  Present day Catholicism continues to insist that the Papacy represents God, and the world, for the most part, while not necessarily believing this claim, certainly gives recognition to her shrine and to her Pontiff—for the Papacy is still a powerful force with which they must reckon.

Jesus Christ deposed the overbearing hierarchy of the Pharisees, and gave to His disciples an immediate relationship with the divine fountain of life.  In the words Scripture believers are the “elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ,” “are sanctified in Christ Jesus” and are “the assembly of the first-born which are written in heaven.”  The Vatican, however, presents the Church as a vast hierarchical empire.  It consists of the Pope, cardinals, patriarchs, major archbishops, archbishops, metropolitans, coadjutor archbishops, diocesan bishops, coadjutor bishops, episcopal vicar, eparchs (bishops of the Eastern Churches), apostolic vicars, apostolic prefects, apostolic administrators and vicars general.  The early bishops of Rome were subject to the Roman Emperors, and later to French and German emperors.  The taste of power, however, brought with it its addictiveness, and in time, she was able to recognize no authority other than her own.  She still looks upon herself as Master of all, and boldly proclaims, “The First See is judged by no one.”  Christ Jesus did not sanction any such absolute supremacy outside of Himself.  The Lord opposed the dependence on power and supremacy other than His own, and solemnly declared, “verily I say unto you, except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.”  He said, “for even the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.”  This is the price demanded by the All-Holy God in order that His justice might be satisfied in the forgiveness of sins.  As a result of His perfect ransom the believer is freed from sin and has new life.  The character of a true believer is that he reposes in the Lord; his heartfelt desire is to worship God.  He loves to be alone with God and to converse with Him in prayer.  The psalms give the words that are in his heart, “I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I trust.”  The believer personally confides in the Lord as his fortress and stronghold.  In total contrast to this, a person who depends on any other power structure for his faith and security has only a shelter of lies.

What has been so tragic in the history of the Papacy and still remains today is that this massive power system has substituted for the Gospel.  Through this enormous structure men have imposed as divine their own decrees on the consciences of other men.  In place of direct contact with the source of life in Christ Jesus, the hierarchical structure substitutes a sacramental system over which it has absolute control.  The voice of the Church of Rome is said to be the voice of God Himself and as such, it holds influence and mastery over mind, will and soul—by tradition and by coercion, when necessary and possible.

The revealed Gospel teaches that salvation comes from God alone; that it is a gift from heaven; from the one and only Sovereign Ruler.  “And this is the record that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.”  Christ Jesus the Son is life; eternal life is of His own essence.  He is eternal life to the true believer, to whom He gives life.  Eternal life and salvation are in Him alone and not in any system.  The difference between the clarity of the Gospel and the Roman hierarchical structure is that of light and darkness.  The key question before you now is this: where do you personally stand?  Can you for your own part declare with the Apostle, I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him against that day.”  Those who trust on Christ Jesus know in whom they trust.  The salvation of their souls is entrusted to Him and to Him alone.  An active obedient faith in Jesus Christ is the only surety that will keep a person all days of this life until that day of final reckoning.  “And you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled in the body of his flesh through death, to present you holy and unblamable and unreprovable in his sight:  if ye continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel, which ye have heard.”

The lesson from history that one learns concerns the very nature of the Papacy and its modus operandi.  The mystery of iniquity spoken of in Scripture is not the evil lives of atheists, prostitutes, drunkards and the like, but rather the evil of false religion.  The Scripture reveals both a “mystery of godliness” and a “mystery of iniquity.”  The parallels between the two are both informative and frightening.  Just as the Lord God sends His angels to seal His servants in their foreheads, so also there is another who by his agents sets a mark in the foreheads of his devotees.  Christ Jesus performed miracles, so there is another who performs false signs.  The Savior is seated upon a throne in majesty, yet there is also a seat for one in opposition to Him.  Christ Jesus has His people, His Church; there is however another who also has his synagogue and his own false teachers.  Christ Jesus is truly the Light of the world; yet in opposition to Him there is one who is “transformed into an angel of light.”

Key Feature of the Papacy and the Assurance Given in Christ

Deliberate unbelief is a refusal to submit to the righteousness of God and His authority.  Often what follows is the establishment of a religion that has its own means of salvation.  The self-importance of the Vatican is proverbial.  It attempts to establish its own righteousness by devising the importance of merit, indulgences, purgatory and the observance of its sacraments.  The folly is that Christ Jesus has come and has brought in an everlasting righteousness.  He is the object of faith, and His followers belong to fellowships of believers, comprising His Church.  No assembly of believers can ever substitute for the Lord, and no group of believers can assume onto themselves His authority.  In history, this attempted replacement has been the key factor in the life of Catholicism and its hierarchy.  It is the very same issue that negated the way of salvation to the Pharisees and their followers, for they being ignorant of God’s righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.”  The Apostle calls this a seeking for righteousness “as it were by the works of the law”; not directly, “but as it were” by the works of the law, substituting one thing for another.  

As human creatures, each one of us has a supernatural and eternal end.  We are therefore bound to answer to the Lord God in the total obedience that He requires.  We soon discover, however, that all our efforts at achieving perfect obedience are fruitless, and that of ourselves it is impossible to meet the standards of divine perfection.  This righteousness is found in the Lord Christ alone, who in the words of the Apostle, “is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption.”  Christ Jesus the Lord totally satisfied the justice of God so that we might be partakers of righteousness by faith, “for he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.”  It is insufficient to be not guilty; we must also be actually righteous in God’s sight.  Not only all sin must be forgiven, but all righteousness must be fulfilled.  All the perfection that God requires of us is found in Him on whom we trust.  The actual obedience, which Christ lived in keeping whole law of God, is the righteousness whereby we are saved.  If you are found in Him, not having your own righteousness but rather having the righteousness that is of God by faith, then indeed your life is hid with Christ in God and when Christ shall appear, you also shall appear with Him in glory. 

Because Christ Jesus was both God and man, His transcendent excellence is such that it both satisfies for the sins of believers and to bestow on them His righteousness.  This awe-inspiring quality of perfection is a fitting ending to this article chronicling the darkness of papal history because through the Gospel it brings us back to the very saving faith of the early believers in Rome.  It is my heartfelt desire in prayer before the Lord that not only will many precious Catholic people come to this true faith in the Lord, but also that even in the city of Rome may there again be many that will be fitting testimony to the Lord in His Gospel of grace.   ♦

 

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Five Biblical Principles of Reformation

All true revival in both Old and New Testament times has been a return to the absolute authority of God’s written Word.  The absolute authority of God’s written Word was normative for the Old Testament saints.  Likewise, the absolute authority for Christ Jesus and for the apostles was God’s written Word and that alone.

It is of utmost importance to understand that because of mankind’s utterly lost condition, God has deemed it fit to make Himself, His will and purpose known only through His written Word.  While God can be known through general revelation, which is revealed in creation, His nature, character and sovereign purpose in salvation and sanctification are known only through His written Word.  

God’s Written Word is Final

The absolute authority for mankind is not to be placed in any subjective interpretation of what God Himself has purportedly said.  Rather such an appeal to and answer purportedly from God Himself as the absolute authority is an attempt, whether through ignorance or through presumption, to break the finality of God’s written Word.   The Bible is full of statements upholding the signal fact that His written Word is the final law for mankind.  It is evidenced by hundreds of references in the Old Testament as, for example, Isaiah 8:20, “To the law and to the testimony:  if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.”  Likewise in the New Testament, it is the written Word of God and it alone to which the Lord Jesus Christ and His apostles refer as final authority.  In the Temptation, Jesus three times repelled Satan saying, “It is written,” as for, example, in Mt. 4:4, “But He answered and said, “It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”  When refuting the errors of the Sadducees, the Lord said, “Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God.”[1]   The Lord’s total acceptance of the authority of the Old Testament is seen in His words in Mt. 5:17-18, “Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets:  I am not come to destroy but to fulfill.  For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.”  On the night before He was crucified, Jesus prayed to His Father with the clearest words, “Sanctify them through Thy truth.  Thy word is truth.”[2]

Christ Jesus also said that Scripture could not be broken.[3]  The Bible testifies to its own essential truth, e.g., “The sum of Thy word is truth.”[4]  “Thou art God and Thy words be truth.”[5]  The written Word of God is the “word of truth.”[6]  God says of His written word, “These words are faithful and true.”[7]  The written word of God is infallible and inerrant in all areas, earthly as well as spiritual.[8]  To deny the inherent truth and inerrancy of the Bible is to call God a liar.[9]  Thus to place human reason or any theological system higher than the authority of the Bible is tantamount to calling God a liar.  The believer is told explicitly to submit his mind to God, “bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ.”[10]

The Reformers in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries saw that Christ Himself, the Apostles, and the Scriptures all declared that God’s written Word is the absolute authority, not in place of God but rather as the Word itself declares as the expression of the very mind of God.

Evangelicals and Catholics Together Casts Doubt on Sola Scriptura

The seriousness of implicitly denying Sola Scriptura is demonstrated in the ecumenical document “Evangelicals and Catholics Together:  The Christian Mission in the Third Millennium” (ECT).  On page 10 of the original document, ten alternatives are given with the disclaimer, “This account of differences [between Catholics and Evangelicals] is by no means complete.  Nor is the disparity between positions always so sharp as to warrant the ‘or’ in the above formulations.”  Differences No. 3 and No. 4 on the ECT chart are listed as follows, “The sole authority of Scripture (Sola Scriptura) or Scripture as authoritatively interpreted in the church” and  “The soul freedom of the individual Christian or the Magisterium (teaching authority) of the community.”  

Since the document has from the outset (p.5) boldly stated, “All who accept Christ as Lord and Savior are brothers and sisters in Christ.  Evangelicals and Catholics are brothers and sisters in Christ,” the Roman Catholic position is implicitly accepted here as a valid alternative to the Biblical position in both issues.  Nevertheless, the Roman Catholic Church (RCC) officially declares her absolute authority to be as follows,

“All that is contained in the written word of God or in tradition, that is, in the one     deposit of faith entrusted to the [Roman Catholic] Church and also proposed as divinely revealed either by the solemn magisterium of the [Roman Catholic] Church or by its ordinary and universal magisterium, must be believed with divine and catholic faith….”[11]

Canon 750 is further clarified by the official commentary on it which follows, “Those matters to be believed with ‘divine and catholic faith’ are (1) contained in the word of God, written or handed down, and (2) proposed as divinely revealed by the       teaching authority of the [Roman Catholic] Church, either by solemn judgment or by the ordinary and universal Magisterium….”  

Careful reading shows that the official commentary lumps together “word of God, written or handed down,” thereby introducing the fatal syncretism condemned by the Lord Jesus Christ.  Added to that mixture is what is “propose as divinely revealed by the teaching authority of the [Roman Catholic] Church.”  Thus according to Canon 750 there are three sources of authority:  1) the Scripture, 2) tradition, and 3) what is “proposed as divinely revealed” by the Roman Catholic teaching authorities.  These sources, however, are not equal and therefore not cohesive as claimed.  When it comes to how the tradition is lived out, therefore, it is not necessarily according to old Greek and Latin fathers nor to the Council of the RCC in times past, but according to the decision and power of the present pope as he sits as so-called supreme pastor and teacher.

New Authority Base Requires New Power to Uphold

What has been stated is the official Roman Catholic authority base.  This new, syncretic authority base must now be shown in practice to be the authority that the Roman system says it is.  Since the authority base is new, what new power is required to uphold (enforce) the official statements?  The Roman Church declares again in Vatican Council II:  “infallibility is co-extensive with the deposit of revelation [i.e., Scripture and tradition],”

“This infallibility, however, with which the divine redeemer wished to endow his Church in defining doctrine pertaining to faith and morals, is co-extensive with the deposit of revelation, which must be religiously guarded and loyally and courageously expounded.  The Roman Pontiff, head of the college of bishops, enjoys this infallibility in virtue of his office, when as supreme pastor and teacher of all the faithful--who confirms his brethren in the faith (cf. Lk. 22:32)–he proclaims in an absolute decision a doctrine pertaining to faith or morals.  For that reason his definitions are rightly said to be irreformable by their very nature and not by reason of the Church . . .”[12]

The Roman Magisterium does not stop here, however, in laying out the nature of papal authority.  Canon 333, Sect. 1  “The Roman Pontiff, by virtue of his office, not only has power in the universal [Roman Catholic] Church but also possesses a primacy of ordinary power over all particular churches and groupings of churches....”  Canon Sect. 3  “There is neither appeal nor recourse against a decision or decree of the Roman Pontiff.”  

Thus tradition as it is lived out in the Roman Church is the living voice of one man who is the Roman Catholic’s absolute authority.  The Pope claims supreme legislative, executive, and judicial power.  For the Roman Catholic, he is the ultimate authority.  Nor does the Roman decree stop there, for Canon 1404 states,  “The First See [Rome] is judged by no one.”  Unequivocally, by their declaration, the Pope is the absolute authority in the RCC system.  According to Roman Catholic dictates, no one, not even the Lord, or His word, judges the Pope.  Rome claims for her pope what is in fact a divine attribute, applicable only to God and His written Word.

By claiming infallibility in its teaching authority, the Roman Church seeks to insert herself between the written Word of God and the people by means of controlling the individual’s knowledge of the truth about God and about himself.  Such domination seeks to keep people dependent on the Roman Church and not on God through Jesus Christ.

Evangelicals and Catholics Together Sets up False Antithesis

A careful reading of Differences No. 3 and No. 4 in ECT (p. 10 above) shows that the ECT authors have set up a false antithesis.  The false antithesis is that the issue of absolute authority can be resolved either in favor of a group, here designated as the Magisterium of the RCC, or in favor of an individual, here designated as “the soul freedom of the individual.”  Rather had the Evangelicals who helped to write ECT insisted on being Biblical, the alternative should have combined Differences No. 3 and No. 4 to read

“The sole authority of Scripture (Sola Scriptura) or the Magisterium (teaching authority) of the Roman Catholic Church.”  

Such a straightforward expression would have stated truthfully the actual antithesis between God’s written Word and man’s subjective word, but to do so would not have advanced the cause of ecumenicity, which Colson, Neuhaus, and others so greatly desire.

Dispensationalism and Sola Scriptura

A most serious assault on Sola Scriptura comes also from a system that quite often boasts about holding to that principle.  The assault here spoken of comes from those who hold to the presuppositions of dispensationalism.  Dispensationalism in general holds for seven dispensations, the fifth of which is the dispensation of the law, from Mt. Sinai to the cross of Christ and the sixth of which is the dispensation of grace, from the cross of Christ to the Second Advent.  Numerous charts print these dispensations.  

A first major presupposition in dispensationalism is, therefore, the antithesis between law and grace.  The dispensationalist interpretation of the Bible sets up an antithesis, which says that the dispensation of grace, in which we live, is antithetical to the dispensation of law.  The underlying implication is that we are not now under God’s law but rather under His grace.  

Old Testament Saints Saved by Grace Alone (Sola Gratia)

Salvation by grace alone is evidenced right through the Old Testament.  Genesis 6:8 states, 

“Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.”  The same grace is now greatly magnified in the New Testament, “Know ye therefore that those who are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham.  And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the heathen through faith, preached beforehand the Gospel unto Abraham, saying, In thee shall all nations be blessed.  So then, those who are of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham.[13]  Paul writes in Romans, “For what saith the Scripture?  Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness.  Now to him that worketh, his reward is reckoned not according to grace, but according to debt.  But to him that worketh not, but believeth in Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.”[14]

This same righteousness in God only was that on which the Old Testament saints trusted as, for example, Isaiah writes, “In the Lord, have I righteousness and strength”[15] and as the psalmist declares, “I will go in the strength of the Lord God; I will make mention of Thy righteousness even of Thine only,”[16] or as Jeremiah writes, “the Lord, our righteousness.”[17]  Unequivocally, these passages and many others show that these OT saints were counting on Who God is in His righteousness rather than on anything that they themselves did in their sacrificial system or in keeping the law.  Their writing shows that it was because of God’s grace and in God’s grace that they could cry out “my God,” “my rock,” “my salvation,” “my high tower,” “the One in Whom I trust,” as the Psalms continually say.  A result of wrongheaded understanding of the Bible re law and grace is seen in numerous tracts and sermons, which declare loudly, “God loves you and has a plan for your life.”  Seen from the perspective of the dispensational presupposition with its seriously flawed understanding of law and grace, the basis for Christ’s death on the cross quite easily becomes God’s love for all of humanity.  But the stated reason in the Bible is in Romans 3:26, “that He [God] might be just and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.”  This is often missing in the tracts and sermons of those who follow the dispensational theological system.   

The presuppositions of the system itself are rarely measured according to God’s Word.  Thus to those who espouse it, the theological system itself and its presuppositions easily becomes the absolute authority.  It must be noted, however, that not all dispensationalists live out dispensationalism as the system itself is written and there is a wide variety among dispensationalists.  Nevertheless, what is said here generally applies. 

To correct the presupposition that the present time is the dispensation of grace over and against the time from Mt. Sinai to the cross, it must be stated Biblically that the Law of God always stands as normative and absolute in the Bible from Genesis through Revelation.  In fact, the Law is a synonym for the whole written word of God in many places (e.g., Ps. 1 and 119).  Sin, in the Bible, from cover to cover, “is the transgression of the Law” (I Jn. 3:4).  Every departure from God’s written word, whether great or small, known or unknown, intended or accidental, is sin.  “I had not known sin, but by the Law:  for I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet” (Rom. 7:7).  For “Christians” to declare the death of Christ solely as an exhibition of God’s love to mankind is to hold a theological system as normative rather than God’s law which is His written Word, as normative.

Before God’s law, sin and sins must be paid for to meet the demands of God’s perfect holiness and justice.  So it was that Christ Jesus was “made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law.”  According to the perfection of His character portrayed in Scripture, God will not and cannot save one sinner outside of fulfilling the Law.  What Paul keeps proclaiming in his Biblical teaching needs to be understood:  the cross is first and foremost to declare “His righteousness for the remission of sins”  (Rom. 3:25).  “To declare, I say, at this time His righteousness that He might be just and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus” (Rom. 3:26).

Repent and believe the Gospel is the message of the New Testament, “Repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ” (Acts 20:21).  Repentance acknowledges the final authority of God’s law and acknowledges that God’s law must be fulfilled.  No individual is saved by repentance; rather, it is by bringing the words of the Law to bear on an individual that the Holy Spirit convicts him of his sin, of the righteousness of Christ Jesus, and of the judgment of God (John 16).  A major reason why there is so little conviction of sin in the modern world of Evangelicals is that many have accepted a system of interpretation of the Bible that in fact sets up grace in antithesis to the Law in a false antithesis.  Romans 3:31 states, “Do we then make void the law through faith?  God forbid.  Yea, we establish the law.”  The whole law–all that justice requires of each individual—is fulfilled in Christ.  “Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth” (Romans 10:4).  If a system is accepted that does void the law, it must be rejected as implicitly denying Sola Scriptura.  Generally speaking, in Dispensationalism the presupposition of the antithesis between law and grace nullifies the authority of the Bible.

Identity of Israel and Church Unscriptural

A second major presupposition of Dispensationalism is that there is an absolute difference between Israel and the church.  Dispensationalism holds that the essence of the message in the Old Testament and in the Gospels is that the earthly kingdom was offered only to Israel.  According to this interpretation of Scripture, when the offer was rejected by Israel, the dispensation of grace came in as a parenthesis until the kingdom of Israel is finally to be brought in the second coming of the Lord. The presupposition on which this system is based is that God has two peoples with two separate destinies, Israel (earthly) and the church (heavenly).  Biblically, such a presupposition is groundless.  The Israel of God (Galatians 6:16) is in Christ Jesus where “neither circumcision nor uncircumcision availeth”; rather, the new creature is in Him (Galatians 6:15).  The believers allare Christ’s.  These are the heirs of the Old Testament promise.  This doctrine is clearly taught in Paul’s letter to the Galatians, 

There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female; for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.  And if ye be Christ’s, then ye are Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the promise.[18]

The Judaizers of Paul’s time claimed special recognition for those who were physically Jews by circumcision.  Paul answered them when he writes,

Beware of dogs, beware of evil workers, beware of the concision.  For we are the Circumcision who worship God in the spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh.[19]

In a similar way, he answers those boasting of being Jews when he writes, 

He is not a Jew which is one outwardly, neither is that circumcision, which is outward in the flesh.  But he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter; whose praise is not of men, but of God.[20]

In Romans Chapter Three, the same question arises.  Paul, as a Jew, asks, “Are we better than they?”  He then goes on to show that there is no difference (v. 22) between Jew and Gentile before God’s Holy law, that all have sinned, both Jew and Gentile (v. 23).  The good news of the propitiation through faith in Christ Jesus’ blood (v.24) is to Jew and to Gentile alike.  It is the same Gospel to both. 

The central message of Ephesians Chapter Two is that both Jew and Gentile are saved by grace through faith, that both are one new man in Christ (v. 15) for the partition that separated Jew and Gentile has been broken down, 

But now, in Christ Jesus, ye who sometime were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ.  For He is our peace, Who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us.[21] 

In the same way, Peter answered the Judaizers when the Apostles and elders came together to discuss circumcision and the Law of Moses at Jerusalem.  

Men and brethren, ye know how that a good while ago God made choice among us, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear the word of the Gospel, and believe.  And God, which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as He did unto us; and put no difference between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith.  Now therefore why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?  But we believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they.[22] 

Further, when Christ spoke to the Jews as recorded in John 6:29, He informed them, “This is the work of God:  that ye believe in Him Whom He has sent.”  Likewise to the Jews, Christ said, Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth My word, and believeth on Him that       sent Me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life.”[23]  Everlasting life is not an everlasting earthly kingdom but rather to be with Him as He is with the Father.

Traditions Or the Bible

Just as Rome sets up her Magisterium over and above the authority of the Bible, it appears that Dispensationalism has placed ultimate authority in its own magisterium, declaring a separation of Israel from the church and a gospel of the kingdom for one set of people with the gospel of grace for others.  To leave believers open to revival in our own day, as at the time of the Reformation, Roman Catholicism must be seen Biblically to be doing what the Pharisees did in the Lord’s own time.  It must be equally and clearly denounced as did the Lord the Pharisees and their tradition.  Likewise, Dispensationalism and its presuppositions must be strictly analyzed to the absolute measure of God’s written Word and not visa versa.  Both systems are making their traditions superior to the absolute authority of the Bible.

Salvation in Christ Jesus Alone (Solo Christo)

Biblically, the believer’s salvation is in Christ, as was stated above.  All the blessings of the believer follow on where his justification is, not in himself but rather in Christ (e.g., Ephesians 1:1ff).  The Reformers proclaimed the long lost Pauline teaching that justification is through the righteousness of Christ Jesus alone being imputed to the individual by Holy God the Judge.  It is a legal, objective, judicial act of the sovereign Holy God at Whose right hand His Son Jesus Christ sits.  As a result of the Biblical teaching by the men of the Reformation, there arose a widespread departure from religious subjectivism by which the Roman Catholic Church had held Western Europe, England, and Scotland in thrall for centuries.

Evangelicals and Catholics Together Compromises With Idolatry

The Bible is likewise abundantly clear that He in whom the believer is saved is the one Mediator,” For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus.”[24]

Nevertheless, Rome posits other mediators such as Mary and their so-called saints.  Over this egregious fact, however, many Evangelicals today seem simply to pass without comment, as if this well-known RCC practice were an alternative form of the Christian faith rather than the straight idolatry that it is.  Thus No. 9 of ECT in the list of ten differences between Evangelicals and Catholics reads, “Remembrance of Mary and the saints or devotion to Mary and the saints.”

Rome argues that the veneration [worship] of Mary and the RCC so-called saints implies their intercession in heaven to Jesus Christ on behalf of those baptized into the RCC and for the whole world. To justify worship of the deceased saints and purportedly to invoke their subsequent intercession in heaven on the worshiper’s behalf, Rome will cite such texts as Hebrews 12:1 and Matthew 25:21, as the new Catechism does,

#2683  “The witnesses who have preceded us into the kingdom (Heb. 12:1), especially those whom the [Roman Catholic] Church recognizes as saints, share in the living tradition of prayer by the example of their lives, the transmission of their writings, and their prayer today.  They contemplate God, praise him and constantly care for those whom they have left on earth.  When they entered into the joy of their Master, they were ‘put in charge of many things (Mt. 25:21).’  Their intercession is their most exalted service to God’s plan.  We can and should ask them to intercede for us and for the whole world.”

Para. 2683 of the 1994 Catholic Catechism, flatly contradicting the written Word of God,   explicitly teaches Roman Catholics to practice necromancy.  Nevertheless, regarding those who are deceased, the Bible is abundantly clear:  “Neither have they any more portion forever in anything that is done under the sun.”[25]  Calling up the dead, i.e., necromancy is strictly forbidden in the Bible.  In Deuteronomy 18:9-11 it is called an abomination before the Lord.

The clearest refutation of this abominable practice is found in Paul’s letter to the Colossians.  Judaizing Gnostics were infesting the Colossian church with the theory that the saving work of Christ must be supplemented by (1) the intercession of some super-angelic beings and (2) by the practice of asceticism.  The Apostle Paul cuts through this error by laying down again the indisputable Gospel principle.  Christ, the eternal Son of God, has made already the perfect sacrifice in His blood.  His perfect sacrifice is complete, securing for the believer full justification before the Holy God by an actual transaction in legal terms of His own righteousness being imputed irrevocably by Holy God the Judge to the believer.  

To rid the Christian community of any pretended need of heavenly intercessors, God’s written word states, 

“For it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell, and having made peace through the blood of His cross, by Him to reconcile all things unto Himself--by Him, I say, whether they be things in earth or things in heaven.  And you, who were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled in the body of His flesh through death, to present you holy and unblamable and unreprovable in His sight.”[26] 

Jesus Christ, Who is the one Mediator for believers, is “the image of the invisible God” (v. 15).  Instead of the proposed intercessors guiding Him, He governs them (v. 16).  The Divine Christ, who Himself is every believer’s Mediator, has “all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” (vv. 3-10).  Anything approachable, tender, or kind that had been in the saints was there because of Him who has all.  The believer is complete in Him who has all principality and power as Head (v. 6).  Christ so completely satisfies the demands of intercessory work that no room is left for any other intercessor—just as His righteousness so satisfies the claims of the law that there is no room for any ascetic righteousness.

Mary is Source of Holiness According to New Catholic Catechism

The importance of the principle of In Christ alone to true Reformation and revival cannot be overestimated, especially in light of the new Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994).  It states,

Para. 2030  “From the Church, he [the baptized Catholic] receives the grace of the sacraments that sustains him on the ‘way.’  From the [Roman Catholic] Church he learns the example of holiness and recognizes its model and source in the all-holy Virgin Mary.”

The believer’s salvation is as stated in the Bible in Christ only where He sits at the right hand of God.[27]  

Further, God alone is the model and source of all Holiness.  Worshipping Mary and the so-called saints is from beginning to end idolatrous, and the blessings sought through them only God can bestow.  The divine attributes of omniscience and omnipresence, which belong only to God, are assumed to belong to these so-called intercessors.  Without the principle of In Christ alone, a person can easily end up in the polytheism of Rome’s Mary and the system’s so-called saints.

To God Alone Be the Glory (Soli Dei Gloria)

The fifth principle of Reformation and revival follows logically from the first four.  Because salvation is by grace only through God’s gift of faith only and only in Christ on the written authority of His Word, to God only be the glory!  This principle, to God only be the glory, is the believer’s proper and overwhelming response.  The believer has been by God predestined “to the praise of the glory of His grace, wherein He hath made us accepted in the Beloved.”[28]

“To God Alone Be the Glory” Summarizes the Second Commandment

The Second Commandment given by God is summarized in the words “to God only be the glory.”  Nevertheless the making and use of images in the Roman Catholic Church, in the Eastern Orthodox and Greek Orthodox Churches, in Lutheranism, and in the present day Evangelical world is tolerated because of a lack of clear understanding of these five essential Biblical principles of the Reformation and revival.

In the history of the Christian Church, this principle was taken most seriously.  There were very few images in the church before the sixth century.  The debate hit center stage, so to speak, in the “Iconoclastic controversy” of the eighth century, resulting in the Second Council of Nicea which approved pictures, kissed and honored in churches (787 A.D.).  The Roman Catholic Council of Trent (1563) reaffirmed this and went further by approving statues.  All of these are again reaffirmed in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994).  Most of the Reformation leaders held firmly to the principle of disallowing the use of images.  Luther, however, wavered and allowed the use of images in certain instances.

 

What is forbidden in the Second Commandment is the making of any similitude of God.  Moses reminds the children of Israel in Deuteronomy 4:12, “And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire:  ye heard the voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only ye heard a voice.”  It is the attempt to make any similitude or likeness of what is divine that is forbidden by the Second Commandment.

Most seriously rejected because of this by the Reformers was any depiction of the Father or of the Son.  From the time of the Reformation in the Bible believing world until our own times, there were very, very few depictions of the Father or of Christ Jesus.  In the last 180 years during which the watering down of these five Reformation principles has occurred, there has arisen a general acceptance of illustrated Bibles, Sunday School materials showing Christ, with reproductions sometimes of paintings of Michelangelo, DaVinci, and Raphael, along with black Jesus pictures, Oriental Christs, etc.  Besides illustrated children’s books in which the Second Commandment is broken, the creation scene by Michelangelo from the Sistine Chapel in Rome is often reproduced in Evangelical literature.

Catholic Catechism (1994) Teaches Idolatry

To rationalize as do the Roman Catholics in their new Catechism that the incarnation of Christ brought in “a new economy of images” (Para. 2131), or that now it is permissible to have drawings, statues, and images of Christ is to put human rationalization on a higher plane than God’s written Word.  The reason given by Rome in Para 2132 is that “the honor rendered to the image passes on to the prototype.”  Such oiled terminology is crassly humanistic in its darkened understanding, for what is presupposed here is that all being is the same--as in the philosophy of Plato.  The very point in the Bible is that Holy God’s being is utterly different than His creatures; therefore, no similitude is to be made or used.

Evangelicals Breaking Second Commandment

Few Evangelicals defend crucifixes; yet, in fact, the crucifixes are not different than the images of Jesus in Bibles or Sunday School books.  If one can rationalize that Christ Jesus can be depicted in Bibles and books without breaking the Second Commandment, one must agree also that, logically, depiction of His time on the cross does not break the Commandment.  Nevertheless, Exodus 20:23 states, “Ye shall not make with Me gods of silver, neither shall ye make unto you gods of gold.” 

In Exodus 20:5, God calls those who break this commandment “those who hate Me” and those who keep it (v. 6) “those who love Me.”  Punishment for iniquity is promised to those who break the Commandment while promises of blessing are for those who keep it.  (Check world maps at different stages of history to see how this has in fact been fulfilled.)

Both Evangelicals and Catholics advertise and use the video, “Jesus of Nazareth” and the Jesus video produced by Campus Crusade.  The Jesus video so widely used by Evangelicals is as forbidden by God’s written Word as the Roman Catholic crucifix is, yet it seems that few dare to call it the idolatry that it is.  Videos, statues, and pictures are the books of the illiterate.  To present Christ in image form is deceive millions.  God’s written Word calls such an image “a teacher of lies.” Paul was stirred to righteous anger against the use of images (Acts 17:16).  Many of the major men of revival in the Bible: Moses, Elijah, Josiah, and Hezekiah were image breakers.  Isaiah[29] and Elijah sarcastically mock images and those who make and use them.  Continually in the written Word, God commanded the Jews to destroy graven images.  It is the Lord’s final commandment in I John 5:21, “Little children, keep yourselves from idols.”

Summary

In summary, the five Biblical principles of the Reformation are what the Lord has always used to bring in revival.  If believers genuinely pray for revival, they ought to stand firm on each principle and to God alone be the glory.  Amen.

 

[1]  Matthew 22:29

[2]  John 17:17

[3]  John 10:35

[4]  Psalm 119: 160

[5]  II Samuel 7:28

[6]  Psalms 119:43; II Corinthians 6:7

[7]  Revelation 21:5

[8]  John 3:12

[9]  I John 5:12

[10]  II Corinthians 10:5; Proverbs 3:5

[11] Canon 750, The Code of Canon Law:  A Text and Commentary (Paulist Press, 1985).  All canons are taken from this volume unless otherwise stated.  Bolding within any quotation indicates emphasis added by this author.

[12]  No. 28, “Lumen Gentium”, 21 Nov. 1964, Vatican Council II:  The Conciliar and Post Conciliar Documents (Wm. b. Eerdmans Publ. Co., 1975) Vol. I, Sect. 25, p. 380.

[13]  Galatians 3:8

[14]  Romans 4:3-4

[15]  Isaiah 45:24

[16]  Psalm 71:16

[17]  Jeremiah 23:6

[18]  Galatians 3:28-29

[19]  Philippians 3:3

[20]  Romans 2:28-29

[21]  Ephesians 2:13-14

[22]  Acts 15:7-11

[23]  John 5:24

[24]  I Timothy 2:5

[25]  Job 3:17

[26]  Colossians 1:19-22

[27]  Colossians. 2:6-3:3; Ephesians 1:6 and other places

[28]  Ephesians 1:6

[29]  Isaiah Chapters 40, 42, 46, 48

The Heritage of the Reformation for the Present Time

 

The Reformation period was full with historical figures and an enormous amount of theological debate.  However, in the midst of all the doctrinal issues and Events, there were five biblical principles accepted among the Reformers.  In all matters of faith and morals, the final authority is the Bible alone.  Before the All Holy God, an individual is saved by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.  Following on this, all glory and praise is to God alone.  

The Reformation possessed definite characteristics, many of which set it apart from any other revival in history.  One of the distinguishing features was its territorial scope.  It began simultaneously and independently in various European countries.  About the time that Martin Luther posted his ninety-five theses on the church door in Wittenberg in 1517, John Colet, Dean of St. Paul’s in England, was reproving the abuses of the Catholic Church and upholding the supremacy of the Bible as the basis of faith as early as 1512.  Lefevre in France and Zwingli in Switzerland were at the same time preaching against the evils of the Roman church and pointing to Christ for salvation.  Although Luther is called the originator of the Reformation, the other Reformers discovered and preached the same message that he did, without having received knowledge of it from him.

There was a power, however, that brought the Reformation into existence and made its progress possible—and that was the Scriptures.  The Greek New Testament prepared by Erasmus was a help to scholars all over Europe in learning the way of truth and life.  After the Reformation once got under way, there existed a great friendship and fraternization among the Reformers.  There was frequent interchange of ideas, and hospitality was freely extended.  One of the surprising features of the Reformation was this extent of contact and cooperation among the Reformers as they encouraged each other in their efforts.  The Reformation spread with great rapidity.  Of course, consolidations, refinements, and extensions needed to be made; but that so tremendous a revival, on such a vast scale, could be executed in so short a time, bringing with it a complete change in thought and peoples lives still remains one of the amazing events of history.

The Reformation actually began in Europe’s citadels of learning:  her universities.  There were scholars, such as Luther and Melanchthon at Wittenberg; Erasmus, Colet at Oxford; Bilney, Latimer, and Cartwright at Cambridge; and Lefevre and Farel at Paris.  Almost without exception, the leaders of the Reformation were highly trained men of that generation.  In some instances, as Beza and Tyndale, they ranked high as men of letters.  Others, like Cranmer and Valdes, carried responsibilities at court.

Why was this so necessary at that time, when in other ages men of lesser abilities and education have been used effectively to preach the gospel with such power?  At least three answers can be given.  First, only the educated knew the Hebrew, Latin, and Greek necessary to read the Bible, as it then existed.  Second, it was essential that the Bible be translated into the vernacular of each country so that the common people could have the privilege of reading the Scriptures in their own tongue.  This task demanded scholarship.  All the preaching of many Luthers, Latimers, Zwinglis, Knoxes, and Wisharts would have failed to accomplish the Reformation if, at the same time, the Bible in the vernacular had not been provided for the common people.  If at the moment Latimer was preaching at Cambridge it had not happened that Tyndale, who had fled to the Continent, was smuggling back thousands of copies of the English New Testament so that every Englishman could read the way of salvation for himself, there would have been no Reformation in England.  A similar situation occurred in Germany, France, and other countries. 

The third and indispensable reason why the scholars were needed at the time of the Reformation was the fact scholarship and erudition was needed to translate the Bible into the languages of Europe.  Thus, it was with the invention of printing such scholars within a ten-year period many of the nations of Europe had received translations of the Bible in their own tongue.  Luther had translated it for Germany in 1522, Lefevre for France in 1523, Tyndale for England in 1525, Bruccioli for Italy in 1532.  Within the next ten years Francisco Enzinas had translated the Bible into Spanish, and Petri had translated it into Swedish.  Another noteworthy characteristic of the Reformers was the basic agreement on important doctrines.  

Most important as we already noted was the fact that all Reformers agreed on the Gospel of grace.  They all believed that works, fasting, money, or penance does not obtain salvation, but that salvation is God’s free gift.  This doctrine formed the cornerstone of the Reformation.  Agreement also existed on the supreme and sufficient authority of the Scriptures, Communion in both kinds, and the disavowal of saint worship, images, relics, purgatory, Mass, celibacy, and the Pope as head of the church.

The Reformation proper, the break with Roman Catholic authority, was accomplished in a relatively short time.  The Reformation was a constant, all-encompassing moving of the Holy Spirit.  It was truly a glorious spiritual awakening when multitudes were freed from bondage to the superstition and ritualism of an apostate Papacy and converted by the Gospel of Grace.  The rediscovery of the sole authority of Scripture led to obedience to God and His Word, just as the rediscovery of the doctrine of justification by grace through faith alone led every true believer into direct and personal contact with the God of revival.

The Heritage of the Reformation

What then is the heritage of the Reformation, how are we to learn from it for our time?  The Reformation itself was a revival, grounded not only in the Word of God, but also in prayer as each previous and each subsequent revival has been.  As Spurgeon so graphically described the prayer that was the buttress from which arose the Reformation.  Spurgeon said, “There were hundreds who sighed and cried in secret, ‘O God, how long?’  In the cottages of the Black Forest, in the homes of Germany, on the hills of Switzerland, in the palaces of Spain, in the dungeons of the Inquisition and the green lanes of England.”  Thus prayer was the underpinning of this great movement there as the dedicated prayers of numberless hearts across Europe pleaded the Lord to send a mighty moving of His Spirit.  Iain Murray in his book on Revival and Revivalism quotes Jesse Lee as he described the year 1787,  

“There was a remarkable revival of religion in the town of Petersburgh, and many of the inhabitants were savingly converted; and the Christians greatly revived.  That town never witnessed before or since such wonderful displays of the presence and love of God in salvation of immortal souls.  Prayer meetings were frequently held both in the town and in the country, and souls were frequently converted at those meetings, even when there was no preacher present; for the prayers and exhortations of the members were greatly owned of the Lord.”  

Iain Murray also described the great revival in 1776, which spread extensively through the south part of Virginia.  He remarked that, the work was not confined to meetings for preaching.  Murray writes, “At prayer meetings the work prospered and many souls were born again. It was common to hear of souls being brought to God while at work in their work in their houses or in their fields. It was often the case that the people in their corn-fields, white people, or black, and sometimes both together, would begin to sing, and being affected would begin to pray, and others would join with them, and they would continue their cries till some of them would find peace to their souls.”  In that book on Revival and in his second book, called “Pentecost Today?” showed that the great heritage of the post-Reformation revivals was that of prayer was the underpinning every single awakening. 

The first great awakening after the Reformation occurred in the eighteenth century in both America and Britain is associated with Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.  Prior to the outpouring of the Lord’s grace we find prayer in the lives of these men, in the lives of their associates.  Also in 1859 revival in Ulster Northern Ireland and in Wales at the end of the nineteen century and in the beginning of the twentieth century prayer was the prelude to revival.  Thus we have the account Peggy and Christine Smith as they prayed for the promise of revival on the Isle of Lewis in Scotland in 1949.  They lived in a small cottage by the roadside in the village of Barvas.  They were eighty-four and eighty-two years old.  Peggy was blind and her sister almost bent double with arthritis.  Unable to attend public worship, their humble cottage became a sanctuary where they met with God.  What followed was that from 1949 to 1952 a wide spread revival swept throughout the Isle of Lewis.  Instrumental in this awakening was the evangelist Duncan Campbell.  Behind the scenes however it was later known that the revival was a result of the faithful prayers of Peggy and Christine Smith. 

We must ask the question where are the equivalents to day Peggy and Christine Smith?  Are we willing in the quiet of our own homes and in small groups together in our churches, to do business with the God of revival?  Then let us seek for God’s enabling to pray and go on praying as He has always used prayer to pave the way for His revival.  Let us make the psalmist’s prayer our own, “I am afflicted very much; quicken me, O Lord, according to thy word.”  “Hear my voice according to thy loving-kindness: O Lord, quicken me, according to thy judgment.  Then may the Lord God, in His sovereign grace give revival mercy on us in our own times.  May our prayers for revival plead the promises of God, guide our desires by such promises, and ground our hopes on the faithfulness of our loving, heavenly Father to hear us.

The Second Heritage of the Reformation is the Finality of Authority and Truth in the Bible

The Reformers in the sixteenth and saw that Christ Himself, the Apostles, and the Scriptures all declared that God’s written Word is the absolute authority, not in place of God but rather as the Word itself declares as the expression of the very mind of God.  For all of them the absolute authority for mankind was not to be placed in any subjective interpretation of what God Himself has purportedly said.  They carefully showed that Bible is full of statements upholding the signal fact that God’s written Word is the final law for mankind.  They verified this by hundreds of references in the Old Testament as, for example, Isaiah 8:20, “To the law and to the testimony:  if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.”  Likewise in the New Testament, they showed that the Lord refuted the errors of the Sadducees by saying, “Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God.”  They demonstrated that that the Lord totally accepted of the authority of the Old Testament as He proclaimed, “Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets:  I am not come to destroy but to fulfill.  For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.”  On the night before He was crucified, Jesus prayed to His Father with the clearest words, “Sanctify them through Thy truth.  Thy word is truth.”  In fact they showed that the Bible testifies to its own essential truth as it declared, “The sum of Thy word is truth and These words are faithful and true.”  The Reformers show God’s own standard that Bible is infallible and inerrant in all areas, earthly as well as spiritual.  To deny the inherent truth and inerrancy of the Bible is to call God a liar.  Thus they demonstrated that to place human reason or any theological system higher than the authority of the Bible is tantamount to calling God a liar. 

This legacy of the finality of knowing that all authority and truth is in the Bible is urgently needed at the present time.  Firstly, because the foundational mindset of Papal Rome is the acceptance of their tradition as being equivalent to Scripture.  Officially, the Vatican states, “Both Scripture and Tradition must be accepted and honored with equal sentiments of devotion and reverence” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1994, Para 82).  Secondly, many New Evangelical churches at the present time work from a similar basis.  These churches are flooded with strategies borrowed from tenets of psychology and methods of the business world to make up for what they see as an insufficiency of Scripture.  Thus, the inerrancy and sufficiency of Scripture is undermined by the presupposition that the Bible is insufficient in our postmodern culture.  In these churches, experience is treasured over the absolute truth of Scripture.  Assent is given to belief in the Scripture; however, the New Evangelical standard line that doctrine is not necessary because it is divisive negates this belief.  The traditions of New Evangelical churches are different than Rome’s.  The mindset, however, is basically the same.  

Thus this heritage of the Reformation is foundational for our times.  It is not possible to own the Lord Jesus Christ as Master but refuse basis for truth that He has given to us.  There are no halfway houses here in which the vacuous pretence of an anti-biblical piety can find a safe-haven.  It is a clear choice.  If you love God, you love His written Word alone, not His Word plus the words of men.  You cannot say you love God and despise finality of the authority of His Word.  The marks of authentic spiritual affection are patent in the Word itself, “But to this man will I look, even to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word” (Isaiah 66:2).

The Third Heritage of the Reformation—The Principle of Salvation by Grace Alone

The Reformers showed that the Scripture wonderfully declares that sinners, “dead in trespasses and sins” are “justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus” (Romans 3:24).  They proclaimed as does the Word of God itself, “for by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: It is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast” (Ephesians 2:8, 9).  This was the dynamic principle of the Reformation to magnify the fact the Lord God graciously saves sinners by the absolute perfect redemption that Jesus Christ purchased by His perfect life and sacrifice.  The Reformers proclaimed this principle as the power of God unto salvation of which the Apostle wrote as is “the righteousness of God revealed.”  For them God’s righteousness credited to the believer at Christ’s expense was truly awesome in the root meaning of that word.  The believer should be filled with awe, worship, and praise to the holy God Who Himself has provided the permanent finished work of justification for sin.  The believer is justified by the imputation of Christ’s everlasting righteousness” to him, and hence forever.  Thus the Reformers boldly proclaim, “There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.

In total contrast to this biblical principle proclaimed by the Reformers salvation for Catholics comes about by grace that is merely help and that is supposedly given through the church’s sacraments.  Thus, the Catholic Church officially states, 

“Grace is the help God gives us to respond to our vocation of becoming his adopted sons.  It introduces us into the intimacy of the Trinitarian life” (Para 2021).  

Thus, human beings are presumed to be good enough to respond to the help that God gives to them.  Grace is not a manifestation of God’s action in salvation but merely a “help” given to humans.  The Catholic teaching contradicts the very concept of grace.  As the Scripture states, “And if by grace, then is it no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace” (Romans 11:6).  Then this so-called grace requires sacraments.  The Catholic Church states, 

“The Church affirms that for believers the sacraments of the New Covenant are necessary for salvation.  ‘Sacramental grace’ is the grace of the Holy Spirit, given by Christ and proper to each sacrament” (Para 1129).  

This teaching is quite appalling.  Salvation in the Bible is by the absolute power of God’s grace and, yet, the Catholic Church defines it merely as help and, therefore, supposedly needs physical sacraments to be transmitted.     

This mindset is now common with New Evangelicals.  For them, man is free and able to obey, repent, and believe.  Billy Graham Evangelistic Association expresses it in the following words, 

“Man is in sin, rebellion, and separation from God, yet he is still able to obey, repent, believe, and invite Jesus Christ to come in and control your life.”  

How this is lived out is repeatedly seen in New Evangelical Churches.  New Evangelicals have a fascination to count and make known the number of so-called free-will decisions for Christ for which they themselves were responsible.  In contrast, the Scripture states clearly the moral condition of a person before conversion, “and you hath He quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins” (Ephesians 2:1).  Because of Adam’s sin, mankind is born spiritually dead.  Scripture unequivocally lays bare the unsaved person’s heart, “As it is written, ‘there is none righteous, no, not one:  there is none that understands, there is none that seeks after God.” This is totally opposite to the mindset of Papal Rome and of modern evangelistic associations.  If we are genuine Christians, it is because God chose us in Jesus Christ before the foundation of the world.  He freely chose us, not because He foresaw that we would believe, but because it pleased Him to choose.  Thus, all the glory and praise belong to Him alone.  We have no ground for boasting about free-will decisions because we have all “believed through grace.”  Our coming to faith in Jesus Christ is solely by grace “otherwise grace is no more grace.”

The mindset of Papal Rome, that physical sacraments are inherent means of obtaining the grace of the Holy Spirit, has begun to permeate Evangelicalism.  In the Reformed and Presbyterian world a well-known pastor, Doug Wilson, leads a movement called “Federal Vision” or sometimes “Auburn Avenue Theology.”  He is joined by other influential Presbyterian pastors, such as Steve Wilkins and Steve Schlissel, who advocate the new birth in Christ Jesus by means of the waters of baptism.  Thus, Doug Wilson states, “Baptism is our introduction to union with Him,” and “while we do not take the connection between water baptism and grace and salvation as an absolute, we do take it as the norm.”[1]

In the New Testament there is an absolute connection between the Spirit and the Word of God but not between physical water and grace.  Thus, the Lord Jesus Christ said, “the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.”  Coming to new birth in the New Testament is by the Holy Spirit through the instrument of God’s Word.  Thus, the Apostle Peter proclaimsBeing born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth for ever.”  Consistently, and absolutely, in the teaching of Christ Jesus and the Apostles, sinful people receive the Spirit simply by the hearing of faith. What we document is just the top of the iceberg of what is now a massive movement inside Presbyterian Reformed circles and beyond of what is called “The New Perspective.”  This movement requires articles, and even books, to explain its many ramifications.  This movement and the consistent position of New Evangelicalism, that of themselves, they’re free to decide, repent, and believe in Jesus Christ, demonstrates the need for the heritage of the Reformation that a sinner is saved by God’s grace alone.  It is necessary for us who are saved by God’s grace alone to plead that even in our day and generation He might yet truly glorify Himself in revival blessings by this very principle.  

 

The Fourth Heritage of the Reformation—The Principle of Salvation Through Faith Alone

For the Reformers the faith by which a sinner believes unto salvation is God-given and sustained. They showed that the object of faith is clearly seen in Scripture as the Person of Christ Jesus Himself, as the Apostle stated, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house” (Acts 16:31).  This faith they contended is God-given, as declared by the Apostle Peter:  “Simon Peter, a servant and an apostle of Jesus Christ, to them that have obtained like precious faith with us through the righteousness of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ” (2 Peter 1:1).  Also they demonstrated that the God-given faith comes by hearing the Word of God as is stated in Romans 10:17, “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.  This principle of salvation through Faith alone is so clear in scripture that one would doubt that it could be twisted by any church.  The Catholic Church, nonetheless, completely changes the concept of faith.  In her official teaching in her Catechism she focuses on the Church as the one that first believes, as she states, “It is the Church that believes first, and so bears, nourishes and sustains my faith” (Para 168).  Then she has the audacity to declare that faith comes through the Church because the Church is our Mother.  Thus, she officially teaches, “Salvation comes from God alone; but because we receive the life of faith through the Church, she is our mother” (Para. 169).  The end result of the Catholic Church is that a person believes in Mother Church and not on the Lord Jesus Christ.  Her official words are the following, 

“‘Believing’ is an ecclesial act.  The Church’s faith precedes, engenders, supports and nourishes our faith.  The Church is the mother of all believers.  ‘No one can have God as Father who does not have the Church as Mother’” (Para 181).  The position, therefore, of the Catholic faithful is that they are compelled to submit to holy Mother Church and accept her rule of faith.  If the question is ever raised as to why this is so, the only reply is that it is true because holy Mother Church says so.  

Evangelicals for the most part throughout the centuries maintained the principle of salvation through faith alone.  New Evangelicals however have departure from the principle of salvation through faith alone to accommodate mega churches and seeker friendly churches beginning in the early 1960s.  Since then, the vast majority of the Evangelical world has changed beyond recognition.  (This is fully documented in Iain Murray’s book, Evangelicalism Divided 2000)  The most drastic departure however from the principle of salvation through faith alone took place in the United States in 1994.  At the end of March of that year, a group of twenty leading Evangelicals and twenty leading Roman Catholics produced a document entitled “Evangelicals and Catholics Together: The Christian Mission in the Third Millennium” (ECT). The effects of the compromise on this essential principle have changed many churches across the USA, the UK and across the world.  It has also thwarted evangelization in third world Catholic countries of Central and South America, in Africa, as well as in Spain, Portugal, and the Philippines, are clearly seen.  If this movement to accept Catholicism and reject the principle of salvation through faith alone continues unchecked it will become ruinous to the spiritual welfare of millions of souls.  Spurgeon’s timely words apply now even more than in his own day, “Since he was cursed who rebuilt Jericho, much more the man who labors to restore Popery among us.  In our fathers’ days the gigantic walls of Popery fell by the power of their faith, the perseverance of their efforts, and the blast of their gospel trumpets.”  Yes indeed the Gospel trumpet needs to proclaim the message of eternal hope to God’s unsaved people through faith alone.  This is the heritage of the Reformation; the principle of salvation through faith alone is essential if indeed we are to see a restoration of Biblical faith in our day.

The Fifth Heritage of the Reformation—the Principle of Salvation in Christ Alone

Biblically the Reformers showed that the believer’s salvation is in Christ alone.  All the blessings of the believer follow on where his salvation is located, not in himself, but rather in Christ.  This is summarized by the Apostle with the words, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ…to the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved.”  Thus the Reformers proclaimed the long lost Pauline teaching that salvation is positioned legally objectively judicially in Christ alone, and not in any church or human heart.  As a result of the Biblical teaching by the men of the Reformation, there arose a widespread departure from religious subjectivism by which the Roman Catholic Church had held Western Europe, England, and Scotland captive for centuries.

The Catholic Church understands salvation to be within the heart of the individual.  Thus, she teaches, “Justification is conferred in Baptism, the sacrament of faith.  It conforms us to the righteousness of God, who makes us inwardly just by the power of his mercy” (Para. 1992).  Thus Papal Rome’s teaching that a person is “inwardly just” is the opposite of what Scripture consistently teaches.  Scripture teaches that a believer’s justification is solely in Jesus Christ. As for example, the Apostle Paul declared, “For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.  Sadly at the present time many New Evangelicals have accepted the mindset of Papal Rome that our salvation is within ourselves.  The New Evangelicals hold this presupposition because they believe that salvation is a result of an individual’s self-initiated, personal decision and desire to invite Jesus Christ to come into his or her heart.  Thus a Billy Graham Website states, 

“Here I am!  I stand at the door and knock.  If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me (Revelation 3:20).  Jesus Christ wants to have a personal relationship with you.  Picture, if you will, Jesus Christ standing at the door of your heart (the door of your emotions, intellect and will).  Invite Him in; He is waiting for you to receive Him into your heart and life.” 

Campus Crusade International ministry claims that “New Birth” comes into a person’s life by invitation.  They state, “When We Receive Christ, We Experience a New Birth. We Receive Christ by Personal Invitation.  [Christ speaking] ‘Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if any one hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him.’”  However, new birth in Scripture is totally the work of the Holy Spirit and not by the invitation of a person.  If we are to see the Holy Spirit as work with believers at the present time it will if like the Reformers we retrun to the Scriptures that teach the principle of salvation in Christ alone. The location of the Catholics’ salvation is in their good works starting with infant baptism, balanced against their bad deeds.  The location of the New Evangelicals’ salvation is in their own good works, starting with their invitational rituals.  In contrast the location of a believer’s salvation is totally secure and totally glorious; it is in Christ, as Scripture proclaims, “And ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power.

The Sixth Heritage of the Reformation—the Principle Giving Glory to God Alone

The Reformers saw that principle of giving glory to God alone follows logically from the other principles.  Because justification is by grace alone through God’s gift of faith alone and in Christ alone on the written authority of his Word, to God alone be the glory!  They taught and lived this principle Indeed it is the believer’s proper and overwhelming response.  To God alone be the glory and not to Mary to the Pope nor to the saints.

In fact the Catholic Church addresses Mary as if she were God.  The official teaching of Rome calls “Mary” the All Holy One.  This irreverent teaching is an attempted theft on the very essence of the divine glory.  The Vatican teaching declares, 

“By asking Mary to pray for us, we acknowledge ourselves to be poor sinners and we address ourselves to the ‘Mother of Mercy,’ the All Holy One.” (Catechism Para 2677) The Pope attempts to steal the very essence of the divine glory as he assumes unto himself the titles of “Holy Father” and “Vicar of Christ.”  

In a similar way the Catholic Church attempts to steal glory from in assigning prayer to the saints.  The words given in the state the following, 

Communion with the dead.  In full consciousness of this communion of the whole Mystical Body of Jesus Christ, the Church in its pilgrim members, from the earliest days of the Christian religion, has honored with great respect the memory of the dead…  Our prayer for them is capable not only of helping “them, but also of making their intercession for us effective”  (Catechism Para 958).

The Reformers proclaimed the biblical teaching that God alone is infinite, eternal, and unchangeable in His being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness, and truth.  Thus, He alone hears prayers, He is the all Holy One, He alone is the Holy Father, in a word, to God alone be the glory.  This is of utter seriousness in the words of the Prophet Isaiah, “Holy, Holy, Holy, is the Lord of hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory.”  To attempt to call a creature as the “All Holy One” or “The Holy Father” is consummate blasphemy and high hand idolatry.  This sixth heritage of the Reformation that of giving glory to God alone like the proceeding principles is need for authentic Christian living an awakening in our times.  

Here then is the Reformation heritage and our contemporary scene in which the people have been betrayed by Catholics and New Evangelicals who refuses to acknowledge that they inevitably under God’s active wrath and condemnation and even in their desperate plight will not yet bend the knee in repentance, confession and a calling upon Lord God for Him to do for them what only He can do.  Like Israel of old, the present-day church in many ways has become wilderness and desolation!  The Western world is in a tailspin, burying itself deeper and deeper into the bottomless pit of moral decay.  We need a revival that will shake the Christian church and cause the haughty spirits and obstinate hearts of those who profess Christ as Savior repent and begin daily living for His as Lord.

Are we willing to stir ourselves to take hold of God of the heritage of the Reformation principles?  These very principles have been used of the Lord in revivals throughout church history.  Of old, men and women waited upon God and cried and cried until He came down in power.  We pray to the Lord, as they did, “Oh that thou wouldest rend the heavens, that thou wouldest come downthat the mountains might flow down at thy presence.”  In Christ Jesus, we confidently pray for the abounding, overflowing riches of grace that He has promised.  Not only are we told of the “riches of his grace and of the “exceeding riches of His grace,” but also it is proclaimed that grace has “abounded unto many,” and that we receive “abundance of grace.”  Yes, God’s grace in the glory of Christ Jesus is superabundant.  Should we not expect to be touched by it in true revival in our day even with situation of the churches as we have outlined.   This is so because the Lord Jesus remains as the “Christ,” i.e., the anointed One.  His purpose continues as the work of obedience and death, which He received in His humanity as Mediator, the perpetual fullness of the Holy Spirit.  On the day of Pentecost, He was declared to be the exalted Prince and Savior, as the abundance of the pouring out of the Holy Spirit was not for Himself, but for the Church, which is His body.  As we saw, the Apostle Peter preached, “Therefore being by the right hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, he hath shed forth this, which ye now see and hear.”  The Word of God teaches that as believers we are to pray to God and to expect an answer from Him, and to look for the Holy Spirit to bear witness to this answer by what we see and hear.  We ought to pray with such great fervor that one day we can pray in thanksgiving the words of the Psalmist, As we have heard, so have we seen in the city of the LORD of hosts.” 

The Apostle Paul speaks of the believers at Ephesus as being “sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise”; yet, they needed more of the same Spirit.  The Apostle prayed for them, “That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ,the Father of glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him.”  So we pray not only for the wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him, but with the Apostles of old we pray, “and now, Lord…grant unto thy servants, that with all boldness they may speak Thy Word.”

The Lord’s solemn promise harmonizes entirely with this word from Christ, 

If a son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone? or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent? …If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children: how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?”  

This gives us as Christians the permanent assurance that we can expect more of the Spirit.  Our permanent duty consists of faith in Christ Jesus and in His Word.  Faith in the abundance of the Spirit abides in Him.  It is for us not only to intellectually believe, “of his fullness have all we received, and grace for grace,” but in true doctrine and expectation of the Holy Spirit see this verse as a fact of our daily life.  In the Words of the Apostle, “Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound: that as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord.”  As we have seen the alignment of New Evangelicals with apostasy is astounding.  Sin indeed abounds.  The holiness of God, the fear of God, the conviction of sin, and the Gospel message seems to be entirely missing at the present day.  In face of all this abounding sin and deception, how do we live and reign with Christ Jesus daily?  The Apostle gives us the answer, “For if by one mans offence death reigned by one; much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ.”[2]  

Those who receive the abundant grace given by Christ are not only redeemed from the empire of death, they live and reign with Him as they are sanctified daily through His Word by the Holy Spirit, and by constant fellowship with Him.  With Him they shall forever live and reign, world without end.  Through Christ Jesus, grace reigns with sovereign freedom, power, and bounty!  How do we make sure that grace reigns with sovereign freedom, power, and bounty in our lives?  We do this as we take hold of His Word as the Lord’s promise that He made of His goodness to us.  Blessed be his glorious name for ever:  and let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.”[3]  

 

 

[1] Reformed is Not Enough by Douglas Wilson (Canon Press, 2003) p 168, 105

[2] Romans 5:17

[3] Psalm 72:19

Identifying the Authentic Early Church

The early Church understood apostolic doctrine as the written Word of the Apostles as it was contained in the Scriptures.  “From the very beginning of the post-apostolic age with the writings of what are known as the Apostolic Fathers (Ignatius, Polycarp, Clement, the Didache, and Barnabas) there was an exclusive appeal to the Scriptures for the positive teaching of doctrine and for its defense against heresy.  The writings of the Apostolic Fathers literally breathe with the spirit of the Old and New Testaments.  In the writings of the apologists such as Justin Martyr and Athenagoras the same thing is found.  There is no appeal in any of these writings to the authority of a verbal or extra-biblical tradition as a separate and independent body of revelation.  It is with the writings of Irenaeus and Tertullian in the mid to late second century that the concept of an apostolic tradition, which is handed down in the Church in oral form, is first encountered.  The word “tradition” simply means teaching.  Irenaeus and Tertullian state emphatically that all the teachings of the bishops that were given orally were rooted in Scripture and could be proven from the written Scriptures.  Both men give the actual doctrinal content of the apostolic tradition that was orally preached in the churches, and it can be seen clearly that all their doctrine was derived from Scripture.  There was no doctrine in what they refer to as apostolic tradition that is not found in Scripture.  In other words, the apostolic tradition defined by Irenaeus and Tertullian is simply the teaching of Scripture.  It was Irenaeus who stated that while the Apostles at first preached orally, their teaching was later committed to writing, and the Scriptures had since that day become the pillar and ground of the Church’s faith.”[i]

From the earliest times a substantial part of the New Testament was available to the believers.  The four Gospels were known and read in the churches.  The letters of the Apostles Paul and Peter were circulated and used even while the Apostles lived.  These New Testament books did not become authoritative because they were being formally accepted as Scripture by any church or group of churches; rather the believers received them as inspired because under the witness of the indwelling Holy Spirit, they recognized the very Word of God.  The life of Christ Jesus, in His role as the final and full revelation of God, culminated in the New Testament canon.  It expressed the final prophetic word of grace and truth given in Him.  The early believers accepted the Written Word of the New Testament, as the words of Christ Jesus Himself—unchangeable, final, finished and authoritative.  

God’s people in the first three centuries after Christ universally accepted what we now know as the New Testament.  They “received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God.”  There were indeed controversies over individual books, but this confirmed rather than impeded the certainty that they had God’s final Written Word “which was once delivered unto the saints.”[ii]  The Lord’s people universally knew the contents of the canon of the New Testament well before the local Council of Hippo formally accepted it in 393A.D., and before the provincial Council of Carthage in 397A.D.  

Extensive Growth and Severe Persecution

The spread of the Christian faith during the first three centuries was extensive and rapid.  In the providence of God, the main reasons for this were the fidelity and zeal of the preachers of the Gospel, the heroic deaths of the martyrs, and the translation of the Scriptures into the languages of the Roman world.  Under Emperor Septimius Severus (193-211) Christians suffered appallingly.  The most severe persecution was under the Emperor Diocletian and his co-regent, Galerius, during the years 303-311.  The historian Philip Schaff states that, “all copies of the Bible were to be burned; all Christians were to be deprived of public office and civil rights; and last, all, without exception, were to sacrifice to the gods upon pain of death.”[iii]  Yet far from exterminating the Christians and the Gospel, the persecution purified those who preached and increased their ability to give the Gospel message. 

Early Church Northern Italy and Southern France

The Vaudois withdrew from the areas in and around Rome to the valleys of the Cottian Alps during the persecutions of the early church.[iv]  These Bible believers always held to the Scripture as their only authority, which was evident in their faith and practice for centuries, from the time of their withdrawal to the valleys of the Cottian Alps.

The testimony of their lives over the centuries the Vaudois and others who have chosen to follow the authority of the Bible as their rule of life.  By the early tenth century the Paulicians, who later became known as the Albigenses, have a similar history of always having had the orthodox Scripture, adhering to it, and through it making many converts to true biblical faith. 

It is to be regretted that most of the information concerning the Paulicians comes through their enemies.  The entire people were called Paulicians as following the apostle Paul.  It was in the country of the Albigenses, in the Southern provinces of France, that the Paulicians were most deeply implanted.  The faith of the Paulicians lived on in Languedoc and along the Rhine as the Christianity of the Cathars, and, perhaps, also among the Waldenses.  The Popes persecuted them and all literary and other traces of them, as far its possible, were destroyed.  “The visible assemblies of the Paulicians, of Albigeois, were extirpated by fire and sword; and the bleeding remnant escaped by flight, concealment, or Catholic conformity. In the state, in the church, and even in the cloister, a latent succession was preserved of the disciples of St. Paul; who protested against the tyranny of Rome, and embraced the Bible as the rule of faith, and purified their creed from all the visions of the Gnostic theology.”[v]  The Paulicians were accused of being Manichaeans, and there has been prejudice against them because of this. It is now clearly known that the Paulicians were not Manichaeans.[vi]

 Turning to the doctrines and practices of the Paulicians we find that they made constant use of the Old and New Testaments.  They had no orders in the clergy as distinguished from laymen by their modes of living, their dress, or other things; they had no councils or similar institutions. Their teachers were of equal rank. They strove diligently for the simplicity of the apostolic life. They opposed all image worship, which was practiced in the Roman Catholic Church. The miraculous relics were a heap of bones and ashes, destitute of life and of virtue. They held to the orthodox view of the Trinity; and to the human nature and substantial sufferings of the Son of God.[vii]

The Vaudois

The Vaudois as we saw earlier were early post apostolic times.  They are sometimes called Waldenses, after the name of one of their famous leaders Peter Waldo of Lyon also known as Peter Valdes.[viii]  It was the received opinion among the Waldenses that they were of ancient origin and truly apostolic.  “They call themselves,” says David of Augsburg, “successors of the apostles, and say that they are in possession of the apostolic authority, and of the keys to bind and unbind.”[ix]  Theodore Beza, the Reformer of the sixteenth century, voices the sentiment of his times, when he said, “As for the Waldenses, I may be permitted to call them the very seed of the primitive and purer Christian church, since, they are those that have been upheld, as is abundantly manifest, by the wonderful providence of God, so that neither those endless storms and tempests by which the whole Christian world has been shaken for so many succeeding ages, and the Western part so miserably oppressed by the Bishop of Rome, falsely so called; nor those horrible persecutions which have been expressly raised against them, were able so far to prevail as to make them bend, or yield a voluntary subjection to the Roman tyranny and idolatry.”[x]

The first distinguishing principle of the Waldenses bore on daily conduct, and was summed up in the words of the apostle: “We ought to obey God rather than men.  The second distinguishing principle was the authority and popular use of the Holy Scriptures. Here again the Waldenses anticipated the Reformation. The Bible was a living book, and there were those among them who could quote the entire book from memory.

The third principle was the importance of preaching and the right of believing men to exercise that function.  Peter Waldo and his associates were preachers. To these fundamental principles the Waldenses, on the basis of the Sermon on the Mount, added the rejection of oaths, the condemnation purgatory and prayers for the dead. There are only two ways after death, the Waldenses declared, the way to heaven and the way to hell.[xi]  The Waldensian movement touched many people, through many centuries and attracted converts from many sources. Many Roman Catholics were won over and some of them doubtless brought some error with them. 

Early Asian Churches

The expansion of Christianity in ‘Asian’ Asia is a very fascinating story.  About this Moffett writes, 

“Before the end of the first century the Christian faith broke out across the borders of Rome into ‘Asian’ Asia. It’s roots may have been as far away as India or as near as Edessa …just across the Euphrates. From Edessa…. the faith spread to another small kingdom three hundred miles further east across the Tigris River…. near ancient Nineveh. By the end of the second century, missionary expansion had carried the church as far east as Bactria, what is now northern Afghanistan, and mass conversions of Huns and Turks in Central Asia were reported from the fifth century onward. By the end of the seventh century, Persian missionaries had reached the ‘end of the world’, the capital of T’ang dynasty in China.”[xii]

Early Church Ireland and Europe

The work the Gospel preacher Patrick and his associates in Ireland was extremely difficult.  He came up against the old pagan religion of the Druids.  The people believed in the Druids as pagan priests who mediated for them in the things of the spirit.  He also wrote about anxious journeys, difficulties, and disappointments.  He combated the powers of darkness in the priesthood of the Druids.  He relied on Christ Jesus and the glorious Holy Spirit given to convict people of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment.  He understood grace to be entirely from God.  Over the course of 60 years, Patrick went the length and breadth of Ireland preaching the Gospel and, like Timothy and Titus before him, he ordained elders and established churches.  It is reckoned that at the end of his days there were 365 churches across the island.  These were established, as were the churches in Biblical times, with the people served by a pastor or elder.  The authority of the pastor was one of service, rather than lording it over the people.  It was like that which was established in the pages of Scripture.  Likewise, the monasteries set up by Patrick, were totally unlike the monasteries that were established under the Church of Rome.  These monasteries were quite like those of the Vaudois and other early Christian churches of northern Italy and southern France, whereby men came aside for some years to be trained in the Scriptures and to learn how to evangelize and to bring the Gospel to others.  Later in their lives these men married and had families.  These men were not forsaking the world for some retreat of inner holiness; rather, they were men who saw light and life in Christ Jesus and wished to evangelize others with the true Gospel.  Because of these monasteries and the churches that Patrick founded in Ireland, Ireland became known as the “Isle of Saints and Scholars.”

There were more than 600 years of fruitfulness in the clarity of the Gospel message cherished by Patrick, and those who worked with him were to live on for many years after him.  There were many famous missionaries like Patrick, such as Columba and his companions who set out for Scotland in 563.  Then there was Columbanus with his companions that went to evangelize France and Germany in 612.  Kilian and the brothers that accompanied him went as missionaries to Franconia and Wurzburg in 680.  Forannan and twelve brothers with him set out to bring the Gospel to the Belgian frontier in 970.[xiii]  Irish missionaries carried the Gospel with the same truthfulness as Patrick’s to Britain, Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy, and beyond.  

Early Church in the City of Rome

The Papal Church is a magnificently rich, splendidly housed political and ecclesiastical power headquartered in Rome.  It stands in stark contrast to what started there in the first century with some pastors ministering to small congregations.  The differences are graphic.  The early home churches under their pastors looked to the authority of the Word as received in the gospel accounts of the life of the Lord and the writings of the Apostles, together with the Old Testament.  These pastors and churches had a true and living faith in God’s grace through the Gospel.  From the letter of Paul to the Romans one sees that the Gospel was faithfully treasured in those early Roman congregations.  At the beginning of his letter, the Apostle commends the believers at Rome for their faith, “First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all, that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world.  For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of his Son.[xiv]  Such approvals are infrequent with the Apostle Paul.  The faith of the churches of Rome continued to be well known and faithfully lived for two hundred fifty years more under very adverse situations, including extreme persecutions, the most famous of which took place under Emperor Nero in the 64 A.D.  Totally unimaginable for these early believers in Rome would be the present concept of “the most holy Roman Pontiff.”  Unthinkable likewise would be the belief that rituals could confer the grace of the Holy Spirit and that Mary, the mother of the Lord, could be addressed in prayer as “the All Holy One.”[xv]  In the fellowship of believers, a top heavy hierarchical system, from layperson to priest, from to priest to bishop, from bishop to cardinal and cardinal to pope would have been totally abhorrent, as from the world and not from Christ who said, One is your Master, even Christ; and all ye are brethren.[xvi]

The persecution of Christians of which we mentioned earlier ended in 313 A.D. In that year the emperors Constantine in the West and Licinius in the East proclaimed the Edict of Milan.  This decree established the policy of religious freedom for both paganism and Christianity.  Four vice-prefects governed the Roman Empire under Constantine.  Accordingly, under his authority the Christian world was to be governed from four great cities, Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Rome.  Over each city there was set a Patriarch, who governed all the elders of his domain.  (This was later to be a called a diocese.)  The mind of and purpose of Constantine was that the Christian churches were to be organized in a fashion similar to the government of the Empire.

The respect enjoyed by the various Christian elders was usually in proportion to the status of the city in which they resided.  Since Rome was the most powerful and prestigious city in the world at the time, it stood to unbiblical reason that the most prominent and influential bishop should be the Bishop of Rome.  Gradually the honor and respect given to the Bishop of Rome grew, and these bishops in turn desired this adulation from bishops of other cities.  The church was in such decline that with the passing of third and fourth centuries the bishops of Rome began to demand recognition for the exalted position they now considered their possession. 

Gradual Rise of Papal Rome

In the fourth and fifth centuries as the true Gospel was watered down, its place was taken by ritualism and ceremony.  The true worship of God and the inner conviction of the Holy Spirit gave way to formal rites and idolatry.  Pagan practices were also introduced, white washed with an external form of Christianity.  From the beginning, the Gospel produced an internal unity among the believers, but with the substitution of ritualism for the Gospel came the insistence on an external, visible unity for the church.  The clergy-laity division of the church became the accepted base.  This further devolved into a hierarchy of the ruling clergy.  By the end of the fifth century, a sacrificing priesthood in which the priest presumed to mediate between God and men had replaced the early ministers of the Gospel who had taught the Scripture.  The Church was no more the fellowship of believers under Christ Jesus, united by the Gospel, true worship, and indwelling of the Holy Spirit, but rather an institution dominated by a hierarchy of bishops and elders.[xvii]  

Simultaneously, from early to mid-fifth century, the city of Rome was beset first by Alaric the Goth, who captured it in 410 but did not stay to rule; Attila the Hun, who in 452 was persuaded by Leo, the then Bishop of Rome (440-461), to stop his advance and leave Italy altogether; and finally Genseric, leader of the Vandals, who captured the city, but was persuaded by Leo to spare the lives of Romans.[xviii]  Leo’s fame as Rome’s protector grew enormously as a result. 

The position of Imperial Roman emperor by now had become clearly vacant.  A vacuum had been established because the Imperial leadership had left Rome and none of the barbaric leaders had tried to set themselves up in that position.  Leo, as the Bishop of Rome, saw the opportunity that lay in front of him, 

“Leo began to feel that the time had come to materialize the claims of Augustine regarding the temporal millennial kingdom of Christ, and with his avowed vested powers of loosing and binding openly to declare his right to the vacant throne as the fitting seat of Christ’s universal kingdom.  In this way the Roman church pushed its way into the place of the Western empire, of which it is ‘the actual continuation.’  Thus, the empire did not perish; it only changed its form.  The Pope became Caesar’s successor.  This was a long stride forward.”[xix]

Bishop of Rome Becomes the Pope

The removal of the seat of the Empire from Rome to Constantinople in 330 A.D. marvelously enhanced the Bishop of Rome’s power.  The ecclesiastical contest which had been going on for some time between Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Rome as to which was the greatest was now for most part confined to the dioceses of Rome and the new contender, Constantinople.  

The barbarian invasions of the Western Roman Empire helped immeasurably to build the whole structure of papal Rome.  The ten barbarian kingdoms that were a serious threat were the Alamanni, Franks, Visigoths, Burgundians, Suevi, Anglo-Saxons, Lombards, Heruli, Vandals, and the Ostrogoths.[xx]  The Emperor of Rome now lived in Constantinople; yet his armies uprooted and destroyed the Vandals and the Heruli, while simultaneously contending with the Ostrogoths, who continued their siege of Rome.

Clovis, King of the Franks, was the first of the barbarian princes to accept the faith proposed by the Church of Rome.  In fulfillment of a vow that he had made on the battlefield when he defeated the Allemanni, Clovis was baptized in 496 A. D. in the Cathedral of Rheims.  The Bishop of Rome gave him the title of “the eldest son of the Church.”  In the sixth century, the Burgundians of Southern Gaul, the Visigoths of Spain, the Suevi of Portugal, and the Anglo-Saxons of Britain all followed suit in joining themselves to the religion of the Bishop of Rome.  These barbaric kings and their peoples accepted easily the faith of Rome, which because it lacked the Gospel, was not very different in form and substance from their own pagan worship.  All of these conversions advanced the power of the Roman Bishop.  Then, too, these barbaric nations more easily accepted the religion of Rome because this city had traditionally been the seat of authority of the Caesars as masters of the world.  The bishops of Rome now played their role as rightful heirs to the Caesars.  The city that had been the seat of power for the Empire became the place for the Bishop to exercise his authority.  More and more nations accepted his position.  

Emperor Justinian I (527-565) was the one, more than anyone else, to establish the supremacy of the Bishop of Rome.  He did it in a formal and legal manner by bringing purely ecclesiastical edicts and regulations under the control of civil law.  

Justinian’s decree did not create the office of the Pope but rather set the legal foundation for advancement in ruling power by the bishops of Rome.  To allay the demise of the Imperial Empire, ecclesiastical unity was to be imposed by coercion if necessary, not the first time nor yet the last that religion would be used to buttress political positions.  As proclaimed head of the Empire’s church, the job fell to the Bishop of Rome.  The title of “Pope” began to fit the one who sat as “Bishop of Rome,” who now was free to use the civil sword of coercion given him by Justinian’s decree.  Formerly, ecclesiastical unity came by the moral persuasion of the Gospel and the Scripture alone to save individuals who then would be salt and light to their civil societies.  But such unbiblical ideas and methods as the Bishops of Rome had so willingly sought after and received could hardly produce something other than worldly corruption.  It is no surprise then that soon the Bishop of Rome desired to reign like a king with worldly pomp and worldly power.  The very thing that the Lord had warned against was now transpiring.  “And he said unto them, the kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them…but ye shall not be so.[xxi]

The Empire continued to crumble.  The Emperor Phocas reigned in Constantinople from 602 to 610 A.D.  Boniface III, who became pope in 607, had known him previously, for Boniface had been a legate to the Emperor Phocas before becoming pope.  Boniface showed great skill in obtaining further official recognition from the Emperor.  

Pope Boniface III shrewdly took hold of two measures to secure papal hegemony in the ecclesiastical domain of the failing empire.  First, he made excellent use of the conjecture that Peter was the First Bishop in Rome.[xxii]  Second, his acquisition of the title of “Universal Bishop,” granted to him by Emperor Phocas, accorded him dominion and power to reign in ecclesiastical supremacy from the central city of Rome to the utmost reaches of the Empire.  This twofold stratagem has continued throughout history.  

Fraudulent Documents and the Rise of the Papacy as a Temporal Power

It was not until the middle of the eighth century that the outlandish claim was made that the Emperor Constantine had transferred his power, authority, and palace to the Bishop of Rome.  The fraudulent “Donation of Constantine” was purported to be the legal document in which the Emperor Constantine bestowed on Sylvester, the Bishop of Rome (314-335), much of his property and invested him with great spiritual power.  The enormity and grandeur of the bequest allegedly given by Constantine to Sylvester is seen in the spurious document. 

It was also in the eighth century that civil power came within the grasp of the Papacy.  The kings of Lombardy, once barbarian and now believers in the Arian heresy, were intent on the conquest of all Italy, threatening even Rome itself.  At the same time, the Muslims had overrun Africa, conquered some of Spain, and were also endangering Rome.  pope Stephen II looked to France for help.  He called on Pepin the Short.  Pepin, the son of Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer) and the father of Charlemagne, was the chief steward of the king’s lands and army.  Pepin had just usurped the throne from Childeric and needed approval for his new position.  He therefore crossed the Alps with an army and was able to defeat the Lombards.  The conquered towns he conceded to the Pope for his possession.  Thus in 755 A.D. Pepin the Short made material the temporal power of the Popes, and achieved papal approval for himself. 

Charlemagne, Pepin’s son, continued to strengthen the temporal power of the Pope.  The Lombards were again about to besiege Rome.  The Pope again looked to France for help and this time to Charlemagne, who answered the call and defeated the Lombards.  He confirmed and enlarged cities and lands given by his father, Pepin, to the Church of Rome.  Later, on Christmas Eve 800, Charlemagne, as master of nearly all the Romano-Germanic nations, knelt before pope Leo III.  The Pope placed on his head the crown of the Western Empire.  This act exhibited the Pope’s growing power.  In 538 the Emperor Justinian had given the Bishop of Rome the title of Pontifex Maximus.  Two hundred sixty-two years later, it was the Pope who was crowning an emperor. 

A Summary of the Foundations of the Early Church

The world was floundering on its foundations when the Gospel of Christ was first preached. The national religions had not changed the heart and lives of mankind.  People were destitute of spirit and of life.   Fallacies and superstitions abounded to no avail.  The Roman Empire a vast empire brought in universality and some political unity, but no light and hope.  Then the Christ Jesus came among men to save that which was lost and to give everlasting life.  This is the greatest event the history of the world. The Old Testament Scriptures predicted it, Gospel of the New Testament proclaimed it.  

The Lord’s followers starting at Jerusalem, proclaimed Him as the author of everlasting life. From the midst of a people who despised all nations, came forth a mercy that invited and embraced all men. Greeks and Romans and men and women from across the known world believed on the Lord Jesus Christ and came into new life in Him to the glory of His name. 

Peoples of Africa, Egypt, Gaul, Germany, Ireland Britain, and India had their eyes open to the Gospel by the conviction of the Holy Sprit by means of the Lord’s word.  The Gospel proclaimed that salvation comes from Him alone by his grace as Lord. God hath given to us eternal life.”  

The Church began as a community of brothers and sisters and the Lord guided by a few of the brethren.  The Gospels of the Lord Jesus Christ and the written letters of the Apostles settled the great questions of doctrine.  

There was nothing arrogant or high and mighty as the apostles addressed the churches. The unity in the Lord is seen when in the many expressions that they used for example and the Acts of the Apostles it was written, “The apostles and elders and brethren send greetings unto the brethren.”  We rejoice before the Lord God that the authentic Church had the true Gospel of God’s grace.  Right across Europe and even Asia churches were established.  Faith, consistent with the Scriptures is the means by which the believer enters into the salvation purchased the faithfulness and death of Christ Jesus. Therefore we rejoice that the Lord God is almighty and that there is good news for all who are “dead in trespasses and sins.”  In the light of His Word we know, “the gospel of Christ…is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth.[xxiii]  By nature we are all children of wrath, and by practice we are rebels against the Lord God and His Word.  The perfect and just law of God condemned us all and the Lord God is not responsible to rescue any of us from His just wrath.  Despite our sin nature and personal sin, the Lord God has given His beloved Son for all true believers.  God is the All Holy One.  His holiness is the distinguishing factor in all His essential characteristics.  This is the reason why we need to be in right standing before the one and only All Holy God on the terms He prescribes.  Turn to God in faith alone for the salvation that He alone gives, by the conviction of the Holy Spirit, based on Christ’s death and resurrection, and believe on Him alone, “to the praise of the glory of his grace.[xxiv]   The understanding of the Gospel causes us to proclaim in loving gratitude, “not unto us, o Lord, not unto us, but unto thy name give glory, for thy mercy, and for thy truth’s sake.[xxv]

 

Permission is given to copy and distribute this article.  

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[i] William Webster, “Sola Scriptura and the Early Church” 

[ii] Jude 3

[iii] Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Vol. 1, Second Period, p. 34

[iv] George Stanley Faber, The History of the Ancient Vallenses and Albigenses (Fleet Street, London:  R. B. Seeley & W. Burnside, 1838) Re-published by Church History Research & Archives, P O Box 38, Dayton, OH 45449

[v] Gibbon, Decline and Fall of The Roman Empire, V. p. 398

[vi] Modern Armenian scholars do not hesitate to correct this error (Ter Mkittsehain, Die Paulikianer im Byzantinischen in Armenien, Leipzig, 1893). 

[vii] A History of the Baptists Vol 1. Chapter  4 John T. Christian A.M D.D Ll.D. 

http://www.pbministries.org/History/John%20T.%20Christian/vol1/history_04.htm   

[viii] Also called Peter Waldo, Valdo, Valdes, or Waldes, also Pierre Vaudès or de Vaux (c. 1140 – c. 1205)

[ix] Preger, Der Tractat des David von Augsburg uber die Waldensier. Munchen, 1876

[x] Moreland, History of the Evangelical Churches, 7

[xi] Vid Schaff, History of the Christian Church. V. Pt 1.502-504

[xii] Moffett op cit., pp xiv-xv. East of the Euphrates: Early Christianity in Asia by T.V. Philip Chapter2

[xiii] For a more complete list, see Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Vol. 4, Ch. 2, “Conversion of Northern and Western Barbarians”, Sect. 15, “The Irish Church after St. Patrick.  The Missionary Period”.

[xiv] Romans 1:8-9

[xv] Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994), Para. 2677, “By asking Mary to pray for us, we acknowledge ourselves to be poor sinners and we address ourselves to the ‘Mother of Mercy,’ the All Holy One.” 

[xvi] Matthew 23:8.

[xvii] J. A. Wylie, The History of Protestantism, originally published in 1878 (Kilkeel, N. Ireland:  Mourne Missionary Trust, 1985) Vol. I, Book I, pp. 3-14.  See also D’Aubigne, Book I, pp.1-34.

[xviii] LeRoy Edwin Froom, The Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers:  The Historical Development of Prophetic Interpretation (Washington, DC:  Review and Herald Publishing Assn., 1950) Vol. I, p. 498

[xix] Ibid.

[xx] The first seven are now known as Germany, France, Spain, Switzerland, Portugal, England, and Italy respectively.

[xxi] Luke 22:25-26

[xxii] The Scripture is utterly silent about the Apostle Peter going to Rome.  The notion remains purely a conjecture.  Nevertheless, according to Froom, “Innocent I (d. 417) had maintained that Christ had (a) delegated supreme power to Peter and (b) made him bishop of Rome, and that as Peter’s successor he was entitled to exercise Peter’s power and prerogatives…”  The same was claimed by the legate of Pope Celestine at the Council of Ephesus in 431, which was allowed to stand unchallenged.  Vol. I, p. 499   

[xxiii] Romans 1:16

[xxiv] Ephesians 1:6

[xxv] Psalm 115:1

Baptism in the New Testament

The glorious history of the Reformation has been entangled in the whole question of the efficacy of the waters of baptism.  It appears that impressive Gospel message of salvation by God’s grace alone, through faith alone, and in Christ alone has been ensnared by a Reformed tradition.  In the Reformed and Presbyterian world, a huge conflict has taken place over the meaning of water baptism.  The reason for this is what is called the Auburn Avenue controversy.  From 2002 Doug Wilson, Steve Wilkins and Steve Schlissel, leading Presbyterians have advocated the new birth in Christ Jesus by means of the waters of baptism. Thus Doug Wilson states, “Baptism is our introduction to union with Him.”, and “while we do not take the connection between water baptism and grace and salvation as an absolute, we do take it as the norm.” 

In Jeremiah 31:31-34 we read that the New Covenant was not to be like the Mosaic Covenant, which the Israelites broke.  Plainly put, the New Covenant is unbreakable.  Furthermore, as the Lord reports through Jeremiah, God will write His law upon the heart of every member of the New Covenant, and every member of the New Covenant will know Him.  In stark contrast to the word of the Lord through the Prophet Jeremiah, Steve Wilkins teaches that by means of water baptism God elects His people into a conditional covenantal union.  Wilkins states, “The elect are those who are faithful in Christ Jesus.  If they later reject the Savior, they are no longer elect.”  In other words Wilkens teaches that there can be covenant breakers within the New Covenant, when the Lord clearly declared the opposite through the Prophet Jeremiah.  This is just the top of the iceberg of what is now a massive movement inside Presbyterian Reformed circles and beyond.  There is an equally strong movement that opposes these teachings by upholding the traditional teachings of the Westminster Confession of Faith and the teachings of such as Calvin and Luther.  What is necessary in the face of this monumental struggle is to go back to the clear-cut teaching of God’s Words in the New Testament. 

In the New Testament there is an absolute connection between the Spirit and the Word of God and not between physical water and grace.  Thus the Lord Christ Jesus said, “the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.”   The Apostle Paul spoke of “the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.”  The Word of God and the Spirit of God are so connected that they cannot be separated.  Coming to new birth in the New Testament is by the Holy Spirit through the instrument of God’s Word.  Thus the Apostle Peter proclaims, “being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth for ever.”  Consistently and absolutely in the teaching of Christ Jesus and the Apostles, sinful people receive the Spirit simply by the hearing of faith, “this only would I learn of you, received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?”  Conversely the absolute word of God also proclaims how salvation is not accomplished.  It is “not of works, lest any man should boast.” Similarly, when the Jews asked Jesus what they should do to work the works of God, He responded, “This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent.” (John 6:29 --- footnote it if you like it).  Salvation is not by means of the moral law or any ceremony, as the Scripture states, "and if by grace, then is it no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace”.  Thus the Lord Christ Jesus clearly stated, “that which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.”  The Apostle Paul states how this same Biblical principle is lived out, “for we are the circumcision, which worship God in the spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh.”  In this passage Paul has reference to the true circumcision, the circumcision of the heart, as opposed to that ritual which was merely outward in the flesh.  

The Scripture clearly states that, “faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God.” The parameters of salvation are the Lord and His grace, as is stated in Romans and Ephesians, "Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.” “For by grace are ye saved through faith; and not of yourselves: it is the gift of God.”  The Gospel of the Lord Christ Jesus in the Word of God is the only channel through which the Spirit of God communicates new life to a sinful human being. 

The Holy Spirit’s Baptism that brings New Life

The direct work of the Holy Spirit on the soul of man is necessary because man is spiritually dead.  In the words of the Apostle Paul, “for the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.”  In similar fashion the Apostle Paul wrote,  “the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God”.  The new birth is a change wrought by God’s sovereign Holy Spirit.  The new birth by the Holy Spirit is essential because natural man is totally deficient in and of himself.  It is not that he is weak and needs stimulation.  Spiritually he is dead.  As the Apostle writes elsewhere, “and you has He quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins.”  Because there is a direct connection between the redemption of Christ and the ministry of the Holy Spirit, it is a soul damning error to substitute ritual or ceremony for the work of the Holy Spirit.  “God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in His Son.”  The work of the Holy Spirit is absolutely necessary to bring the sinner to Christ, to overcome his innate opposition, and induce him to believe.  And it is sinful arrogance to suppose that you have had either the inclination or the capacity to affect this change in yourself by any work or ritual.

Concerning the Holy Spirit, the Lord promised that, “when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment.”  The Holy Spirit convicts of sin as He makes the sinner realize his lost condition and brings him to sense his need of Christ’s righteousness.  The Holy Spirit alone can impart spiritual life to the soul and supernatural light to the mind.  Therefore the Lord Himself proclaimed, “verily, verily, I say unto thee except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”  The Holy Spirit is the sole and only efficient cause of being “born again”.  The same principle of life is later repeated by the Lord, “it is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing…”  The wonderful work of the Holy Spirit opening the mind and heart to redemption is highlighted by the Apostle Paul, “eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.”  The Lord God saves sinners gloriously, “according to his mercy, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost.”  True believers are “born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God,” for “of his own will begat he us with the word of truth.”  This is utterly splendid, clear, and profound.  The Spirit of God’s unique work is to apply Christ’s redemption to the sinner.  In this regeneration He works as a free agent.  He dispenses His power where, when, and on whom He pleases.  In the words of the Lord, “the wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit.”  The wind is an element which man cannot control.  As the wind is not regulated by man’s desires or plans, so likewise it is with the Spirit of God.  He is absolutely sovereign in all His operations. 

Water Baptism in Contrast

In stark contrast to the written statements of leading Presbyterian Pastors, the words of the risen Christ in giving the Gospel are crystal clear.  “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved: but he that believeth not shall be damned.”  Faith is the key of saving grace, and unbelief is the chief damning sin.  Faith is what is necessary for salvation, and baptism is an ordinance that follows faith and simply testifies to it.  Proof of this is found in the fact of the omission in the second half of the verse:  it is not “he that is not baptized shall be damned,” but rather “he that believeth not.”  

The sign of the New Covenant is not baptism but regeneration.  Nevertheless, many force a parallel between circumcision, the Old Covenant sign, and baptism, far beyond anything, which the Scriptures intend.  Nevertheless, if for the sake of argument we concede such a parallel, we must consider the significance of the fact that Paul declares that Abraham was justified prior to his circumcision.  And he received circumcision as a sign of the faith, which he had previously exercised.  If we are to force a parallel between circumcision and baptism, is it not obvious that baptism should be the sign of a faith previously exercised?

Faith is so indispensable that though one is baptized yet believes not, he shall be damned.  The sinner is condemned because of his sin nature and his personal sin.  God’s divine justice is upon him; nothing can propitiate God’s justice but saving faith in Christ.  This faith, by God’s grace, brings instantly God’s act of justification.  

Doug Wilson teaches that the sacrament of baptism creates a union with Christ. He says, “Moderns who are stuck with the language of Westminster want to say that we actually have to understand this as a sacramental union, with the word sacramental being understood as some sort of diluting agent. But I want to say that it is a sacramental union, with union meaning union.”  This teaching mocks both the justice and grace of the Lord God.  The Scriptures proclaim the Holiness and Righteousness of God in the flawless life and death of the God-man the Lord Christ Jesus.  Justification in the first place has to do with God Himself, to show that He is just in justifying the sinner in Christ.  He brings about legal union with Christ only by the Gospel that deals with who God is in His Holy and Righteous nature.  The Gospel demonstrates that because of who God is, He alone justifies.  Thus Romans 3:26 states, “To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.”  The final cause of justification is the glory of the Divine Holiness, Justice, and Goodness.  Thus the one who teaches union with Christ by means of a sacrament is teaching another gospel accursed by God.  In the ministry of the Apostle Paul, the jail keeper in great agony of spirit, asked, “What must I do to be saved?”  The clear and direct answer of the Apostle Paul and Silas to the question was, “believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house.”  The jail keeper and his household heard the Word of the Lord first in order that they might believe.  “And they [Paul and Silas] spake unto him the word of the Lord, and to all that were in his house.”  Believing on Christ Jesus is life and salvation.  In the words of the Apostle, baptism is important because the Lord commanded it.  It testifies to saving faith and is a public declaration of the finished work of Christ applied to an individual soul.  Faith is what is necessary for salvation; but baptism, while important, is not of the essence of salvation.  In Christ Jesus’ own words, “he that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life.”

 

Permission is given to copy and distribute this article.  

Our MP3s are easily downloaded and our DVDs seen on Sermon Audio at: http://www.sermonaudio.com/go/212 

Our website is: http://www.bereanbeacon.org

 

 

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History of the Jesuits

Rome’s New Army—Ignatius Loyola—His Birth—His Wars—He is Wounded—Betakes Him to the Legends of the Saints—His Fanaticism Kindled—The Knight-Errant of Mary—The Cave at Manressa— His Mortifications—Comparison Between Luther and Ignatius Loyola—An Awakening of the Conscience in Both—Luther Turns to the Bible, Loyola to Visions—His Revelations

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Persecutions in France - Massacre of St. Bartholomew - Revocation of the Edict of Nantes

We have already seen, in the massacres of the Waldenses of Beziers, Menerbe, Lavaur, and other places, that the emissaries of papal vengeance did not always wait for the slow process of inquisitorial examination and torture to wreak their vengeance upon the detested heretics. It would be easy to fill a volume with the horrid details of wholesale massacres of hundreds, even thousands of heretics at the time, by which the faithful servants of the popes have merited and obtained from these self-styled successors of St. Peter, plenary indulgences, which should admit them, with their hands all reeking with blood, to the abodes of the blessed.

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Inhumane Persecutions of the Waldenses

We have already given an account of the popish crusade against the Waldenses of the south of France , and the horrible cruelties and massacres inflicted on them by the bloody Montfort and the Pope's legate, at the commencement of the thirteenth century. (Book v., chap. 7, 8.) Nothing more than a very brief sketch can now be added of the barbarities of a similar kind, which at various intervals were endured by this pious and interesting people during the five centuries which followed from the commencement of the crusade of pope Innocent.
 

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The Inquisition - Seizure of the Victims - Modes of Torture - Celebration of the Auto Da Fe

Of all the inventions of popish cruelty, the Holy Inquisition is the masterpiece. We have already referred to its establishment by Saint Dominic in the thirteenth century. For the history of this destructive engine of papal cruelty, we must refer to any, or all, of the authentic works of Llorente, Puigblanch, Limborch, Stockdale, Geddes, Dellon, and other historians of the Inquisition. All that we shall undertake will be but a brief description of the treatment, tortures, and burnings of the unfortunate beings who writhed under its iron rod of oppression.

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Sufferings of the English Protestants Under Bloody Queen Mary - The Burning of Latimer, Ridley, Cranmer and Others

It would be improper entirely to omit, and yet, it is not necessary to minutely describe the well known cruel burnings of the English protestants during the reign of the bigoted and hardhearted woman whose name has been appropriately handed down to posterity as Bloody Queen Mary. It seems proper to commerce those few sketches of persecutions of popery, with the recital of the sufferings of the Marian martyrs, as they all occurred during the interval that elapsed between the second adjournment and resumption of the Council of Trent already described.

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Persecution Proved from Decrees of General Councils and Writings of Celebrated Divines to be an Essential Doctrine of Popery

According to the Scriptural marks of the predicted Roman Apostasy, the Babylonish Harlot of the Apocalypse, is the following:- “And I saw the woman DRUNKEN WITH THE BLOOD OF THE SAINTS, and WITH THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS OF JESUS” (Rev. 17:6). The whole history of popery is a commentary upon the truthfulness of this description, that history is written on the fabric of time with lines of blood, compared with the butcheries committed against holy men and women by the papal anti- Christ, the persecutions of the pagan emperors of the first three centuries sink into comparative insignificance.

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Sola Scriptura and the Early Church

The 16th century Reformation was responsible for restoring to the church the principle of sola Scriptura, a principle that had been operative within the church from the very beginning of the post apostolic age. Initially the apostles taught orally but with the close of the apostolic age, all special revelation that God wanted preserved for man was codified in the written Scriptures. Sola Scriptura is the teaching; founded on the Scriptures themselves, that there is only one special revelation from God that man possesses today, the written Scriptures or the Bible.

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