"THE
MAN OF SIN"
Part I: The
Prophecy
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By David Vaughn Elliott
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WE ARE ALL SINNERS.
Yet, one man in all history is singled out as "the man of sin…the son of
perdition." Not a lovely description. Why talk about him? Yet, the Word
of God does talk about him.
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Most students of Scripture, past and present,
see a connection between "the man of sin" of 2 Thessalonians 2 and the
"little horn" of Daniel 7. They also see a connection with one or more
of the beasts in Revelation 13 and with "the great harlot" and "Babylon"
in Revelation 17 and 18. From ancient times, these outstanding prophecies
have been lumped together under the common title "antichrist."
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In spite of such agreement, views regarding
the fulfillment vary widely. Is this enemy of God someone in the past,
present or future? The most popular view today, premillennialism, says
that he is yet in the future. To the opposite extreme are a growing number
today, preterists, who believe that he is a relic of ancient history. Howbeit,
for hundreds of years, the vast majority of Bible believers unswervingly
proclaimed that "the man of sin" is a present reality.
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What
Difference Does it Make?
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Since there are so many conflicting views,
why bother to try to figure out who "the man of sin" is in 2 Thessalonians
2? To ask that question betrays an ignorance of the text. This is not just
some idle study out of vain curiosity. Eternal issues are at stake here.
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Number One: Christ versus "the man
of sin" (verses 1-3). It is our Lord Jesus Christ on the one side,
and "the man of sin" on the other. Paul assures his readers that Christ
is coming, but that "the man of sin" is also coming. The best and the worst.
The Son of God versus a son of the devil (verse 9). Nothing less is involved
than the eternal battle between the forces of good and evil. The eternal
battle between God and Satan.
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Number Two: "not shaken" versus
"falling away" (verses 2-4). Some people think the study of prophecy
has little to do with "practical" Christianity. How much more practical
can you get than holding fast or falling away? The problem is that many
believers think that "falling away" relates only to drunkenness, adultery,
forsaking the assembly and the like. However, Paul speaks of being "shaken"
by not knowing if "the day of Christ" is past or future. Paul speaks of
"the falling away" which involves "worship" in "the temple of God." We
need to investigate what this is all about.
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Number Three: "the love of the truth"
versus "not receive the love of the truth" (verse 10). Love God.
Love Jesus. Love your brother. Love your spouse. Love your neighbor. Love
your enemy. Also—love the truth. To some people, "love" means "sex." To
others, "love" means "unconditional acceptance" of whatever another person
believes or does. Enter "love of the truth." That love is not at all popular
in our relativistic-materialistic society. It is not at all popular with
the do-it-if-it-makes-you-feel-good club. If you love the truth, you will
search for it as diligently as for a hidden treasure (Proverbs 2:1-4).
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Number Four: "truth" versus "deception,"
"delusion" and a "lie" (verses 10,11). Living the Christian life is
more than morality. It has to do with what we believe. It has to do with
truth versus error. In the Garden of Eden, it was God’s truth versus Satan’s
lie. It still is. Eve wanted the "freedom" of "choice." Paul tells Timothy
that Eve was deceived. So are millions today by "the man of sin." We are
not dealing here with idle prophetic curiosity. We are dealing with nothing
less than the issue of truth versus lies. Jesus is truth. Satan is the
father of lies. That is what this prophecy is all about.
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Number Five: "saved" versus "condemned"
(verses 10,12). Eternity is involved in "the man of sin" prophecy. Saved
or lost; blessed or condemned. Many Christians sidestep various issues
by retorting: "Well, it isn’t a matter of salvation." However, the issues
of this prophecy are very much "a matter of salvation." This prophecy has
very much to do with understanding the characteristics of those who are
saved and those who are condemned. The issue is live and real.
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Number Six: holiness versus "unrighteousness"
(verse 12). Yes, morality does count. You cannot believe right and live
wrong. At issue here are those who have "pleasure in unrighteousness."
Reminds us of "lovers of pleasure" in 2 Timothy 3:4. Sin is fun; you had
better believe it. Fun now; pay later. If it were not fun, why would people
bother with it? Moses chose to suffer with the people of God rather than
"enjoy the passing pleasures of sin" (Hebrews 11:25). "The man of sin"
has to do with fun religion. Fun because you can have one foot in a church
and another foot in the world. They "worship" yet have "pleasure in unrighteousness."
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These are six solid reasons why "the man of
sin" prophecy merits serious study on the part of every person who cares
about his relationship with the God of the universe and His precious Son.
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Must
Be Based on Sound Doctrine
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The interpretation of prophecy must always
agree with sound doctrine. Example: if Christians are no longer obligated
to keep the Sabbath, then the seal of God in Revelation 7 cannot possibly
be Sabbath keeping. The doctrinal issue must be settled before attempting
to interpret prophecy.
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The prophecy at hand has several doctrinal
issues that must be clarified in the light of New Testament Scripture.
Among the most important issues is the meaning of "the temple of God,"
since that is where "the man of sin" will sit.
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Which
"Temple of God"?
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Six centuries before Christ, Nebuchadnezzar
of Babylonia devastated the temple in Jerusalem. Howbeit, three great prophets
of God, Isaiah, Jeremiah and Daniel, foretold the rebuilding of Jerusalem
with its temple. Ezra and Nehemiah recorded the history of the fulfillment.
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Nevertheless, Daniel and Jesus prophesied the
destruction of this second temple. That was powerfully fulfilled in 70
A.D. (See several former articles for details.) There is not one
Bible prophecy foretelling a rebuilding of Jerusalem’s temple after its
destruction in 70 A.D.
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Those who claim the temple will be built again
at some future date base their views solely on inference. Their arguments
run like this: "Since the man of sin will sit in the temple of God, the
temple in Jerusalem has to be built again in order to fulfill that prophecy."
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What proof is there that "the temple of God"
in 2 Thessalonians 2 is to be a physical temple in physical Jerusalem?
Indeed, there are at least three reasons for rejecting that interpretation.
First is the fact already mentioned that no Scripture makes a direct prediction
of rebuilding after 70 A.D.
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Secondly, one must consider the nature of the
Jerusalem temple in the New Testament. Everyone understands that the temple
in Jerusalem was the temple of God when Jesus arrived on the scene. Jesus
himself said of the temple, "Do not make My Father’s house a house of merchandise!"
(John 2:16). It was in the temple that animals were sacrificed and their
blood shed for the remission of the people’s sins. However, Jesus came
into the world to offer His own body and blood as the perfect sacrifice
for sins. Thus, at the moment of His death, God acted in an unprecedented
manner: "Then, behold, the veil of the temple was torn in two from top
to bottom; and the earth quaked" (Matthew 27:51). In this graphic fashion
God declared that when Jesus died, He was finished with that physical temple.
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Following the rending of the veil, the term "house
of God" never again refers to the temple in Jerusalem. A physical temple
has not existed now for over 1900 years. Any physical temple built today
would be a slap in the face to Jesus, who shed His blood to do away with
the temple’s animal sacrifices. The second temple, which existed in Jesus’
day, was once the temple of God and then ceased to be. A third temple,
if built, would not for one second of time be a temple of God.
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This brings us to the third point. Notice how
clear 1 Timothy 3:15 states it: "that you may know how you ought to conduct
yourself in the house of God, which is the church of the living
God, the pillar and ground of the truth" (bold emphasis supplied). Scripture
could not say any more clearly what the "house of God" is today. God’s
church.
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The same is true of the expression "temple
of God." Examination shows that after Jesus’ death, "temple of God" never
again refers to the physical temple in physical Jerusalem. Rather, it refers
to the church of God. It seems that our brethren in Corinth were not quite
clear on this point. Thus Paul asked them, "Do you not know that you are
the temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you?" (1 Corinthians
3:16). Today we would ask people a similar question: "When you study prophecy
about the ‘temple of God,’ do you not know that since Jesus’ death the
people of God are the ‘temple of God’? Do you not know that the ‘house
of God’ is the church of God?"
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This is sound doctrine. Using sound doctrine
as the basis for the study of prophecy, the careful student of the New
Testament will realize that when 2 Thessalonians 2 speaks prophetically
of "the temple of God," it must be a prophecy about the church. Something
very bad is going to happen to Jesus’ church.
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What
is Apostasy?
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There are more doctrinal issues that must be
clarified in the light of Scripture before attempting to find the fulfillment
of "the man of sin" prophecy. The matter of the "temple of God" is only
the first.
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Second, there is the question of the
meaning of the expression "the apostasy." Actually, several versions make
it clear when they render the word "the falling away." That is exactly
what apostasy means. A man can not fall from a cliff if he has never been
on the cliff. A child cannot fall from a train she never boarded. Since
this prophecy has something to do with "the temple of God," the church,
it is therefore predicting a falling away from the true church. It is a
prophecy about apostasy, a prophecy about a departure from the faith "once
for all delivered" (Jude 3). The prophecy cannot be talking about Judaism,
because it preceded the church of Christ. It cannot be talking about Islam,
because it is a wholly distinct religion unrelated to the Gospel of Christ.
We have to study church history to search for "the falling away."
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Notice also that the prophecy is not about
just any falling away. It prophesies "the" falling away, "the" apostasy.
That would seem to tell us that to find fulfillment we must look for the
most important false church in all history.
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Connected with the idea of falling away is
"the lawless one." That is to say, he would turn his back on the law of
Christ and establish his own laws. A person is a "law breaker" for breaking
just one law. However "lawless one" conveys the idea of someone who repeatedly
and in large measure opposes the commandments of the New Testament. This
prophecy, then, is not dealing with just any slight variation from the
true Gospel. It foretells a departure of major proportions.
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Paul wrote this more than 1900 years ago. Before
thinking that "the man of sin" might be future, a believer must search
1900 years of church history to see if the prophecy has already been fulfilled.
It is only when people ignore 19 centuries of Christianity that they can
be deceived into thinking that fulfillment is in the future.
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One
Man or a Group of Men?
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Third, there is the question of how
many people are involved. The text says "the man" of sin. However, in Bible
prophecy, one person often represents an entire body of people. For example,
most students agree that the four beasts in Daniel 7 represent Babylonia,
Persia, Greece and Rome. Each beast represents an entire empire. Daniel
7 clearly says as much. In verse 17, it says "Those great beasts, which
are four, are four kings." Yet, in further exposition, in verse 23 it says,
"The fourth beast shall be a fourth kingdom on earth." So, a beast represents
a man and both represent a kingdom. This Bible symbolism is not nearly
as strange as some seem to think it is. Ever hear of Uncle Sam? What about
the elephant and donkey representing the Republicans and Democrats?
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This same type of symbolism is found in Revelation
17. Who would argue that "the great harlot" is a prophecy of a red-light-district
prostitute? Indeed, the prophecy itself clears up any doubt when verse
18 says, "And the woman whom you saw is that great city which reigns over
the kings of the earth." One woman represents an entire city. She represents
especially the power of the leaders of that city to exercise control over
many nations.
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Both Daniel and Revelation thus make clear that a
prophetic individual may well represent an entire city or an entire empire,
especially the governmental powers.
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A
Matter of Religion
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Fourth, "worship" is involved in this
prophecy. Whatever political power he may have, "the man of sin" is a religious
figure. He presents himself as God. Moreover, he does this in the temple
of God, which is the church.
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God does not want just any religion. The very
first murder in the human race was for religious motives. "The Lord respected
Abel and his offering, but He did not respect Cain and his offering. And
Cain was very angry" (Genesis 4:4,5). The first sin of Cain was not murder,
not even hate for his brother. Cain’s first sin was false worship.
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The Bible is filled with accounts of religious
conflict. Jesus, for example, told the Samaritan woman, "You worship what
you do not know" (John 4:22). Jesus said of the religious leaders of his
day, "in vain they worship Me teaching as doctrines the commandments of
men" (Matthew 15:9). "The man of sin" is all about false worship.
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Miracles
by Satan
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Fifth, the apostate church here foretold
would be "the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying wonders"
(2 Thessalonians 2:9). This eliminates many apostate people and organizations
as candidates for "the man of sin." "The man of sin" works miracles. Satan
working miracles is nothing new to the Bible. As early as the time of the
Exodus, Pharaoh’s magicians were capable of duplicating Moses’ signs of
turning rods into snakes, of turning water into blood and of producing
a plague of frogs (Exodus 7:8 to 8:19). Yes, Moses by the hand of the Almighty
outdid them. However, make no mistake about it. These pagan magicians worked
real miracles.
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There are numerous ways God’s people can distinguish
between the miracles of God and the miracles of Satan. One way is exactly
that recorded in Exodus 8:18: "Now the magicians so worked with their enchantments
to bring forth lice, but they could not." They had worked many miracles,
but they came to the point where they tried again and they failed. Anyone
who tries to work a miracle and fails is not of God, no matter what other
miracles he has worked. Because God’s miracle workers do not fail. They
do not blame other people for their failures.
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Sixth, do not overlook the fact that
"strong delusion" (verse 11) is a part of the picture. Do not expect the
people of the world to be convinced easily that some false church is "the
man of sin." Do not expect the ecumenical movement to believe it. Do not
expect those who put unity above purity of doctrine to believe it. "The
man of sin" is very religious, he works miracles, he seems to many to be
the true church of our Lord. Multitudes will be deceived, strongly deluded.
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Started
in Paul’s Day
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Paul made it clear that in his day "the mystery
of lawlessness is already at work" (verse 7). Therefore, in searching for
the fulfillment of this prophecy, we must look for some principle, some
spirit, some activity that was already at work in the first century. It
makes no sense to start our search with the year 2000 and work backward.
It makes even less sense to theorize about some future possibility. How
can we believe that something, which was already at work in Paul’s day,
has not been able to break out into the open for over 1900 years?
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Rather, the sensible thing is to start our
search with the first century and move forward in time. We must examine
the movement of church history from its origin. We must search for something
that was already working in Paul’s day that in time became the full-blown
apostate church. When we find that, if it fulfills all the details of the
prophecy, then we have found "the man of sin."
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Destroyed
When Jesus Comes
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Verse 8 of our text is very clear: "the lawless
one will be revealed, whom the Lord will…destroy with the brightness of
His coming." Clearly "the man of sin," the antichrist, comes before Jesus
returns.
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Strange as it may seem, the popular premillennial
view says just the opposite and uses this text as a basis. "They" say that
the antichrist will be manifested in all his power after
the "rapture."
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Premillennialists accomplish their twist by
making "the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" (verse 1) as one event, "the
day of Christ" (verse 2) a second event, and "His coming" (verse 8) a third
event. They claim the text teaches four events in this order: the rapture,
the man of sin, the tribulation and the Second Coming of Jesus. Did Paul
say all that?
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"They" claim that the "coming" in verse 1 is
"the rapture" and that the "coming" in verse 8 is "the Second Coming" seven
years later. However, the Greek word for "coming" in the two verses is
identical. If they are two different comings, then verse 1 is the Second
Coming and verse 3 is the Third Coming. However, since no one accepts the
idea of a third coming, "they" avoid such an expression. Instead, they
invent the theory of "two phases" to the "second" coming. (Look for
a future article totally dedicated to the topic of the "rapture." At this
time, the discussion will be limited to 2 Thessalonians 2.)
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Their theory holds that "the day of the Lord"
(or "day of Christ") is neither the Second Coming nor the Third Coming.
Rather, they say, it is something in between. As in the case of "temple
of God," they lean heavily on Old Testament usage while sidestepping New
Testament usage.
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Without leaving 2 Thessalonians 2, let us examine
the question. In verse 1, Paul introduces the topic for discussion: "the
coming of our Lord Jesus." Now if that is "the rapture," it is the only
verse from verses 1 to 12 that speaks of the "rapture." In such a case,
"they" put Paul in the position of saying he would talk about one topic
but instead he talked about another.
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But if you take "the day of Christ" (or "the
day of the Lord") in context, then certainly "the coming" of our Lord Jesus
Christ is "the day" of our Lord Jesus Christ. In verses 1 and 2, Paul is
simply saying that in regard to Jesus’ coming, don’t think that it has
already happened. Verse 3 says why they should not believe that: because
"the man of sin" must come first. Verse 8 explains that the man of sin
will be destroyed by the "coming" of Jesus. Obviously, therefore, "the
man of sin" comes before Jesus comes. Now, if the "coming" in verse 8 is
not the same "coming" as in verse 1, then Paul said he was going to talk
about one thing but tricked us by talking about another thing.
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These then, are the things to consider about
"the man of sin" prophecy before ever going beyond the Biblical text. Once
we have learned all we can from the Bible itself, only then are we ready
to launch out into history in search of fulfillment.
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Note by author: This is the first installment
in a three-part study. Two articles follow, "The History," and "The Reality."
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(Scripture in the preceding article is taken
from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson,
Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.)
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