I
WHY THE IGLESIA NI CRISTO
EMERGED ONLY IN 1914
IF the true Church of Christ
was established in the first century, how can the Iglesia Ni Cristo claims that
she is the true Church established by Christ if she emerged only in 1914? The Iglesia
Ni Cristo emerged emerged only in 1914 because the first century Church of
Christ was apostatized. It was the Lord Jesus Christ Himself who attested that
apostasy will take place in the first century Church of Christ:
“Then you will be handed over to be
persecuted and put to death, and you will be hated by all nations because of
me. At that time many will turn away from the faith and will betray and
hate each other, and many false prophets will appear and deceive many
people.” (Matthew 24:9-11, NIV)
The Lord Jesus Christ Himself
warned His disciples that: (1) they will be handed over and persecuted and put
to death”; and (2) many false prophets will appear and deceive many people.” Because
of these “false prophets,” the Lord Jesus Christ also warned us that “many will
turn away from the faith.” This is also mentioned by Apostle Paul:
“Now the Holy Spirit tells us clearly that in
the last times some will turn away from the true faith; they will follow
deceptive spirits and teachings that come from demons.” (I Tim. 4:1, New Living
Translation)
Thus, both the Lord Jesus Christ
and His apostles warned us that many of the disciples will “TURN AWAY from the
faith.” These words, “turning away from the true faith,” is synonymous with the
word “apostasy”:
“But the Spirit speaks expressly, that in
latter times some shall APOSTATISE from the faith, giving their mind to
deceiving spirits and teachings of demons.” (Darby Bible, emphasis mine)
How many will be deceived? In
Weymouth translation of Matthew 24:11, this is what we could read:
“Many false prophets will rise up and lead
multitudes astray.” (Matt. 24:11 Weymouth)
The Lord Jesus Christ
Himself told us that His faithful servants will be persecuted and be put to
death, and the multitudes will be led astray by false prophets. Thus, this is
the reason why the first century Church of Christ did not remained.
APOSTASY AFETER THE DEATH OF THE APOSTLES
Regarding the apostasy that will
take place in the first century Church of Christ, Apostle Peter also wrote the
following:
“But there were also false prophets among the
people, even as THERE WILL BE FALSE TEACHERS AMONG YOU, who will secretly bring
in destructive heresies, even denying the Lord who bought them, and bring on
themselves swift destruction. And many will follow their destructive ways,
because of whom the way of truth will be blasphemed.” (II Peter 2:1-2, NKJV, emphasis mine)
Apostle Peter said. “there will be false teachers among you.”
He also said that these false teachers “will
secretly bring in destructive heresies.” Take note that these false
teachers will rise AMONG the first Christians and will secretly bring
destructive heresies INSIDE the Church. Also, Apostle Paul wrote the following:
“I know that after I leave, savage wolves will
come in among you and will not spare the flock. Even FROM YOUR OWN NUMBER
men will arise and distort the truth in order to draw away disciples after
them.” (Acts 20:29-30, NIV, emphasis mine)
According to Apostle Paul, “Even from your own number men will arise and
distort the truth.” He is referring to “bishops” of the Church (cf. Acts
20:28). Thus, both Apostle Peter and Apostle Paul talking about apostasy that will
take place in the first century Church of Christ and that the false teachers
that will lead astray the disciples will came from “among them” or “from their
own number” – among the teachers and the bishops of the Church.
According to Apostle Paul, the
apostasy will occur “after I leave,” referring to his death (Cf. Acts 20:29-30,
24-25 and 37-38; I Tim. 4:6-8). Thus, the apostasy will be manifested after the
death of the apostles or the apostolic period (after the first century AD).
Take note that the apostles
prophesied that after their death or after the apostolic period, those that will
come immediately after them were those that will led astray the first century Church.
Isn’t that the Catholic Church claim that they are the successors of the
apostles?
NOTE: Full discussion of the
facts and process of the apostasy will be tackled in the series of articles
titled “The Church in History.”
THE FULFILLMENT OF THE PROPHECY
Christ said that “you will be
handed over to be persecuted and put to death, and you will be hated by all
nations because of me.” Indeed, the first century Christians were persecuted
and put to death. There’s the Jewish persecution where Stephen was one of the
Christians who were put to death. Then came the imperial persecution of the
Church started by Roman Emperor Nero in 64 AD:
“Tacitus recorded the rumor that Nero had
ordered the fire that destroyed part of the city of Rome. This rumor was so
widely accepted by the people that Nero had to find a scapegoat. He diverted
feeling against himself to the Christians by accusing them of arson and by
engaging in a saturnalia of destruction of the Christians.” (Christianity Through
the Centuries, p. 91)
Then, another imperial
persecution broke out still in the first century AD, this time by Emperor
Domitian:
“Persecution broke out again in 95 during the
reign of the despotic Domitian. The Jews had refused to pay a poll tax that had
been levied for the support of Capitolinus Jupiter. Because the Christians
continued to be associated with the Jews, they also suffered the effects of the
emperor’s wrath. It was during this persecution that the apostle John was
exiled to the Isle of Patmos, where he wrote the Book of Revelation.”
(Christianity Through the Centuries, p. 91)
Thus, what the Lord Jesus Christ
prophesied in Matthew 24:9 was fulfilled. The faithful, including the apostles,
were put to death during the imperial persecution. Indeed, many Christians were
put to death during these two imperial persecutions of the Church in the first
century. Apostle John was exiled in an island called Patmos. He died in c.
90-100 AD. With the death of the apostles, however, something happened to the
Church:
“For the years after the record in Acts ends,
evidence for the history of the Christian Church becomes more scanty. There
began to be passing references to it in pagan writers. These writers make it
seem likely that the Roman Emperor Nero blamed the Christians for the burning
of the city of Rome in A.D. 64. It is also very likely that Saint Peter and
Saint Paul were put to death at Rome about this time… .
“When the original Apostles died, the
leadership of the Church was taken over by local pastors known as bishops.
Under them were ministers of lower rank, known as presbyters and deacons. The
Church organized the area of the Roman Empire into provinces. The bishops at
the head of the Christian communities in the large cities such as Rome,
Antioch, Alexandria, and Carthage ranked highest.” (The New Book of Knowledge,
vol. 3, pp. 280-281)
Thus, when the Apostles died, not
much was recorded on what went on in the Church of Christ but during this
period of silence the administration of the Church fell into the hands of the
bishops. Soon after the bishops took over the administration of the Church in
the second century, the doctrines of this Church began to be infected with
poison:
“At first the history of the Roman Church is
identical with the history of the Christian truth. But unhappily there came a
time when streams of poison began to flow from the once pure fountain.” (The
World’s Great Events, vol. 2, pp 163-164)
This control of the Church
administration by the bishops who began to teach different doctrines was the
fulfillment of what Apostle Paul prophesied concerning the overseers (bishop):
“Also of YOUR OWN SELVES SHALL MEN ARISE,
SPEAKING PERVERSE THINGS, to draw away disciples after them.” (Acts 20:30, KJV,
emphasis mine)
DEPARTING FROM THE TRUE FAITH
The great apostasy did not
consist in the destruction of the first century Church of Christ and the
establishment of another one. It consisted in the deterioration of the Church
established by Christ. Immediately after the death of the Apostles, during this
period the bishops took over the administration of the Church and the Church
became very different from what Christ founded (or the first century Church):
“For fifty years after St. Paul’s life a
curtain hangs over the church, through which we strive vainly to look; and when
at last it rises about 120 A.D. with the writings of the earliest church-fathers,
we find a church in many aspects very different from that in the days of St.
Peter and St. Paul.” (The Story of the Christian Church, p. 41)
The differences between what used
to be the Church of Christ in the first century and the Church that was
revealed in the second to the fourth centuries are profound:
“It is necessary to note that we should
recall the reader’s attention to the profound differences between this fully
developed Christianity of Nicaea and the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth….What
is clearly apparent is that the teaching of Jesus of Nazareth was a prophetic
teaching of the new type that began with the Hebrew prophets. It was not
priestly, it had no consecrated temple, and no altar. It had no rites and
ceremonies. Its sacrifice was ‘a broken and contrite heart’. Its only
organization was an organization of preachers, and its chief function was the
sermon. But the fully fledge Christianity of the fourth century, though it
preserved as its nucleus the teachings of Jesus in the Gospels, was mainly a
priestly religion, of a type already familiar to the world for thousands of
years. The center of its elaborate ritual was an altar, and the essential act
or worship the sacrifice, by a consecrated priest, of the Mass.” (The Outline of
History, pp. 552-553)
These profound changes, made on
the original teachings of Christ, dealt great violence on the teachings of the
Bible for the purpose of enhancing the interests of the Catholic Church:
“Jesus too, being a Galilean, was of Aryan stock,
a remarkable man whose teachings had, in the course of centuries, been deformed
out of all recognition in the interests of the Catholic Church.” (The Vatican
in the Age of Dictators, p. 168)
Adding insult to injury, Catholic
authorities acknowledge such changes without shame and even with pride:
“We Catholics acknowledge readily, without
any shame, nay with pride, that Catholicism cannot be identified simply and
wholly with primitive Christianity, nor even with the Gospel of Christ, in the
same way that the great oak cannot be identified with the tiny acorn.” (The
Spirit of Catholicism, p. 2)
Catholic authorities even boast
that they did not derive their faith in Jesus from the Scriptures:
“ ‘Without the Scriptures’, says Mohler, ‘the
true form of the sayings of Jesus would have been withheld from us….Yet the
Catholic does not derive his faith in Jesus from Scripture’.” (Ibid. p. 50)
Hence, those responsible for this
apostasy of the first century Church of Christ were the bishops under whose administration
these profound changes took place. The first bishop identified as having
introduced changes into the Church was Ignatius, bishop of Antioch who was
martyred in Rome about 110 A.D. He was the first to use the term Catholic
Church in reference to the Church of Christ:
“The name Catholic as a name is not applied
to the Catholic Church in the Bible. ..St. Ignatius of Antioch, writing to the
Christians of Smyrna about the year 110, is the first to use the name ‘The
Catholic Church’ …” (The Question Box, p. 132)
This same Ignatius introduced the
doctrine that Christ is both God and man:
“He asserted unequivocally both the divinity
and humanity of Christ, the Savior.” (New Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 7, p.
353)
Ignatius belongs to the so-called
“Church fathers.” These Church Fathers were the source of the teachings that
the Catholic Church taught and implemented beginning the second century.
However, such persons were not immune from errors and yet, the apostatized
church approved their teachings:
“Obviously much that Christ and the apostles
preached was in time reduced to writing. Hence there grew up a library composed
of men called ‘the fathers of the Church’. They were called so because in
apostolic days the word ‘father’ also meant teacher of spiritual things, and
these were among her earliest teachers. But, unlike the apostles, all of whom
enjoyed infallibility, they were not immune from error nor inspired as the
scriptural writers had been. In so far as they dealt with questions of faith
and morals, much of what they wrote was approved by the Church, and thus,
became part of written tradition.” (Whereon to Stand: What Catholics Believe
and Why, p. 142)
As a result of the teachings of
these early Church Fathers, the Church of Christ or Christianity became Roman
Catholicism, the last and the greatest of the mystery religions:
“On that dies Domini, or Lord’s Day, the
Christians assembled for their weekly ritual. Their clergy read from the
Scriptures, led them in prayer, and preached sermons of doctrinal instruction,
moral exhortation, and sectarian controversy…
“By the close of the second century, these
weekly ceremonies had taken the form of the Christian Mass. Based partly on the
Judaic Temple service, partly on Greek mystery rituals of purification, vicarious
sacrifice, and participation through communion, in the death-overcoming powers,
of the deity, the Mass grew slowly into a rich congeries of prayers, psalms,
readings, sermon, antiphonal recitations, and, above all, that symbolic atoning
sacrifice of the ‘Lamb of God’ which replaced, in Christianity, the bloody
offerings of older faiths. The bread and wine which these cults had considered
as gifts placed upon the altar before the god were now conceived as changed by
the priestly act of consecration into the body and blood of Christ, and were
presented to God as a repetition of the self-immolation of Jesus on the cross.
Then, in an intense and moving ceremony, the worshippers partook of the very
life and substance of their Saviour. It was a conception long sanctified by
time; the pagan mind needed no schooling to receive it; by embodying it in the
‘mystery of the Mass’, Christianity became the last and the greatest of the
mystery religions.” (Ceasar and Christ, pp. 599-600)
Thus, the claim of the Catholic
Church that they succeeded the apostles is not a proof of being the true Christ
founded by Christ, but instead, a strong proof that the Catholic Church is
indeed the apostate Church, the fulfillment of what the Bible prophesied that
after the death of the apostles, among the ranks of the bishops will rise false
teachers that will distort the truth.
THE LORD JESUS CHRIST PROMISED THAT THE
CHURCH OF CHRIST WILL BE RE-ESTABLISHED
It was the Lord Jesus Christ
Himself who prophesied that multitudes of His disciples will be led astray.
However, even though the first century Church of Christ will be apostatized,
this is what the Lord Jesus promised:
“And other sheep I have which are not of this
fold; them also I must bring, and they will hear My voice; and there will be
one flock and one shepherd.” (John 10:16 NKJV)
The Lord Jesus Christ said that
“other sheep I have.” He called them His “other sheep” because they “are not
of this fold.” He will bring them also and they will hear His voice and
they will be “one flock.” The “fold” or “flock” mentioned refer to the “Church
of Christ” (Acts 20:28 Lamsa). Thus, when the Lord said that He have other sheep
“not of this fold,” He meant, He have other sheep “not of THIS Church of
Christ.” The “other sheep” are not of the Church of Christ of the first
century. Remember that the first century Church of Christ was apostatized.
Thus, even though the first
century Church of Christ was apostatized, Christ said He has “other sheep.” He
said that he will bring them also and will be “one flock.” Therefore, Christ
prophecy regarding His “other sheep” is His promised of the re-establishement
of the Church of Christ.
Thus, the gap between the first
century Church of Christ and the Church of Christ that emerged in the Philippines
was because the first century Church was apostatized. However, Christ promised
that He is going to re-establish the Church of Christ. Hence, the emergence of
the Iglesia ni Cristo in the Philippines in 1914 was the fulfillment of
Christ’s promise of re-establishing His Church.
The Iglesia ni Cristo in 1914
NEXT WEEK:
“The Emergence of God’s Messenger in these Last Days:
A Brief Biography of Brother Felix Y. Manalo”
This is a perfect topic to be contested and debated among all Christiian professing religions.
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