John Henry Newman
Sermon I: The Times of Antichrist
"Let no man
deceive you by any means:
As long as the world lasts, this passage of Scripture
will be full of reverent interest to Christians. It is their duty ever to be watching for
the advent of their LORD, to search for the signs of it in all that happens around them;
and above all to keep in mind this great and awful sign which the text speaks of. At this
season of the year, then, when we turn our thoughts to the coming of CHRIST, it is not out
of place to review the intimations given us in Scripture concerning His precursor: this I
shall now do in several Sermons; and, in doing so, I shall follow the exclusive guidance
of the ancient Fathers of the Church. Following
the Teaching of the Fathers I follow the ancient Fathers, not as thinking that on
such a subject they have the weight they possess in the instance of doctrines or
ordinances. When they speak of doctrines, they speak of them as being universally held.
They are witnesses to the fact of those doctrines being received, not here or there, but
every where. We receive those doctrines which they thus hold, not merely because they hold
them, but because they bear witness that all Christians every where then held them. We
take them as honest informants, but not as a sufficient authority in themselves, though
they are an authority too. If they were to state these very same doctrines, but say,
"These are our opinions; we deduced them from Scripture, and they are true," we
might well doubt about receiving them at their hands. We might fairly say, that we had as
much right to deduce from Scripture as they had; that deductions of Scripture were mere
opinions; that if our deductions agreed with theirs, that would be a happy coincidence,
and increase our confidence in them; but if they did not, it could not be helped-we must
follow our own light. Doubtless no man has any right to impose his own deductions upon
another, in matters of faith. There is an obvious obligation, indeed, upon the ignorant to
submit to those who are better informed; and there is a fitness in the young submitting
implicitly for a time to the teaching of their elders; but beyond this, one man's opinion
is not better than another's. But this is not the state of the case as regards the
primitive Fathers. They do not speak of their own private opinion; they do not say,
"This is true, because we see it in Scripture" -about which there might be
differences of judgments-but, "this is true, because in matter of fact it is held,
and has ever been held, by all the Churches, down to our times, without interruption, ever
since the Apostles:"-where the question is merely one of testimony, whether they had
the means of knowing that it had been and was so held; for if it was the belief of so many
and independent Churches at once, and that as if from the Apostles, doubtless it cannot
but be true and Apostolic. This, I say, is the mode in which the Fathers speak as
regards doctrine; but it is otherwise when they interpret prophecy. In this matter there
seems to have been no Catholic, no universal, no openly declared traditions; and when they
interpret, they are for the most part giving, and profess to be giving, either their own
private opinions, or uncertain traditions. This is what might have been expected; for it
is not ordinarily the course of Divine Providence to interpret prophecy before the event.
What the Apostles disclosed concerning the future, war, for the most part disclosed by
them in private, to individuals-not committed to writing, not intended for the edifying of
the body of CHRIST,- and was soon lost. Thus, in a few verses after the text, St. Paul
says, "Remember ye not, that when I was yet with you, I told you these things?"
and he writes by hints and allusions, not speaking out. And it shows how little care was
taken to discriminate and authenticate his prophetical intimations, that the Thessalonians
had taken up an opinion, that he had said-what he had not said-that the Day of CHRIST was
immediately at hand. Yet, though the Fathers do not convey to us the
interpretation of prophecy with the same certainty as they convey doctrine, yet in
proportion to their agreement, their personal character, and the general reception at the
time, or the authority of the sources of the opinions they are stating, they are to be
read with deference; for, to say the least, they are as likely to be right as commentators
now; in some respects more so, because the interpretation of prophecy has become in these
times a matter of controversy and party. And passion and prejudice have so interfered with
soundness of judgment, that it is difficult to say who is to be trusted in it, or whether
a private Christian may not be as good an expositor as those by whom the office has been
assumed. II
Thessalonians 2:3 "That day shall not come . . ." 1. Now to turn to the passage in question, which I
shall examine by arguments drawn from Scripture, without being solicitous to agree, or to
say why I disagree, from modern commentators: "That Day shall not come, except there
come a falling away first." Here it is said that a certain frightful apostasy, and
the appearing of the Man of sin, the son of perdition, i.e. as is commonly called,
Antichrist, shall precede the coming of CHRIST. Our SAVIOUR seems to add, that it will
immediately precede Him, or that His coming will follow close upon it; for, after speaking
of "false prophets" and "false Christs," "showing signs and
wonders," "iniquity abounding," and "love waxing cold," and the
like, He adds, "When ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the
doors." Again He says, "When ye shall see the abomination of desolation . . .
stand in the holy place then let them that be in Judea flee into the mountains."
Indeed, St. Paul implies this also, when he says that Antichrist shall be destroyed by the
brightness of CHRIST'S coming. Antichrist
is YET to come If, then, Antichrist is to come immediately before CHRIST, and to be the sign of His coming, it is manifest that he is not come yet, but is still to be expected.
Now it may be objected to this conclusion, that St.
Paul says, in the passage before us, that "the mystery of iniquity doth already
work," i.e. even in his day, as if Antichrist had in fact come even then. But he
would seem to mean merely this, that in his day there were shadows and forebodings,
earnests and operating elements of that which was one day to come in its fullness. Just as
the types of CHRIST went before CHRIST, so the shadows of Antichrist precede him. In
truth, every event in this world is a type of those that follow, history proceeding
forward as a circle ever enlarging. The days of the Apostles typified the last days: there
were false Christs, and troubles, and the true CHRIST came in judgment to destroy the
Jewish Church. Roman
empire is still with us In like manner every age presents its own picture of
those future events, which alone are the real fulfillment of the prophecy which stands at
the head of all of them. Hence St. John says, "Little children, it is the last time;
and as ye have heard that the Antichrist shall come, even now are there many Antichrists;
whereby we know that it is the last time." Antichrist was come, and was not come; it
was, and it was not the last time. In the sense in which the Apostle's lay was the end of
the world, it was also the time of Antichrist.-However, a second objection may be made, as
follows: St. Paul says, "Now ye know what withholdeth, that he (Antichrist) might be
revealed in his time." Here a something is mentioned as keeping back the
manifestation of the enemy of truth. The Apostle proceeds: "He that now withholdeth,
will, until he be taken out of the way." Now this restraining power being generally
admitted to be the Roman empire, and the Roman empire (it is argued) having long been
taken out of the way, therefore Antichrist has long since come. I grant that "he that
withholdeth," or "letteth," means the power of Rome, for all the ancient
writers so speak of it. I grant that as Rome, according to the prophet Daniel's vision,
succeeded Greece, so Antichrist succeeds Rome, and our SAVIOUR CHRIST succeeds Antichrist.
But it does not hence follow that Antichrist is come; for I do not grant that the Roman
empire is gone. Far from it: the Roman empire remains even to this day. It had a very
different fate from the other three monsters mentioned by the Prophet; as will be seen by
his description of it. "Behold a fourth beast, dreadful and terrible, and strong
exceedingly; and it had great iron teeth: it devoured and brake in pieces, and stamped the
residue with the feet of it: and it was diverse from all the beasts that were before it,
and it had ten horns." These ten horns, an Angel informed him, "are ten kings
that shall arise out of this kingdom" of Rome. As, then, the ten horns belonged to
the beast, and were not separate from it, so are the kingdoms into which the Roman empire
has been divided, part of that empire itself,-a continuation of that empire in the view of
prophecy, however we decide the historical question. And as the horns, or kingdoms, still
exist, as a matter of fact, consequently we have not yet seen the end of the Roman empire.
"That which withholdeth" still exists, though in its ten horns; till it is
removed, Antichrist will not come. And out of them he will arise, as the same Prophet
informs us: "I considered the horns, and behold, there came up among them another
little horn ...... and behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of a man, and a mouth
speaking great things." Malignant
principle of Antichrist is always at work 2. Now, in the next place, what is told us about
Antichrist by the sacred writers? This first of all, as has been already noticed, that he
embodies a certain spirit, which existed even in the days of the Apostles. "The
mystery of iniquity doth already work." "Even now there are many
Antichrists." And what that spirit is, St. John declares in a subsequent chapter.
" Every spirit that confesseth not that JESUS CHRIST is come in the flesh, is not of
GOD; and this is that spirit of the Antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should come,
and even now already is it in the world." Here we see what its doctrine is to be; but
on that I shall not here enlarge. I am speaking of its working, which had begun in the
days of the Apostles, and has doubtless continued ever since. Doubtless this malignant
principle has been at work since from time to time, though kept under by him that
"withholdeth." Nay, for what we know, at this very time there is a fierce
struggle, the spirit of Antichrist attempting to rise, and the political power in those
countries which are prophetically Roman, firm and vigorous in repressing it. What that
spirit is, it would be beside my purpose here to attempt to ascertain, any more than to
enlarge upon its doctrine; though certainly there is at this very time, as in the days of
our fathers, a fierce and lawless principle every where at work,-a spirit of rebellion
against GOD and man, which the powers of government in each country can barely keep under
with their greatest efforts. Whether this which we witness be that spirit of Antichrist,
which is one day to be let loose, this ambitious spirit, the parent of all heresy, schism,
sedition, revolution, and war,-whether this be so or not, certainly the present framework
of society and government, as far as it is the representative of Roman power, would seem
to be that which withholdeth, and Antichrist is that which will rise when this restraint
fails. Antichrist
is a man 3. It has been more or less implied in the foregoing
remarks, that Antichrist is one man, an individual, not a power or a kingdom. Such surely
is the impression left on the mind by the Scripture notices concerning him, after taking
fully into account the figurative character of prophetical language; and such was the
universal belief of the early Church. Consider these passages together, which describe
him, and see whether we must not so conclude. First, the tee and following verses:
"That day shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin
be revealed, the son of perdition, who is the adversary and rival of all that is called
GOD or worshipped; so that he sitteth as GOD in the temple of GOD, proclaiming himself to
be GOD . . . Then shall that wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the
spirit of His mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming . . . whose
coming is after the working of Satan, with all power and signs and lying wonders."
Next, the following passages in the prophet Daniel: "Another shall rise after them,
and he shall be diverse from the first, and he shall subdue three kings. And he shall
speak great words against the MOST HIGH, and shall wear out the saints of the MOST HIGH,
and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and
times and the dividing of time. But the judgment shall sit, and they shall take away his
dominion, to consume and to destroy it unto the end." Again: "In his estate
shall stand up a vile person, to whom they shall not give the honour of the kingdom; but
he shall come in peaceably, and obtain the kingdom by flatteries......And such as do
wickedly against the covenant shall he corrupt by flatteries; but the people that do know
their GOD shall be strong, and do exploits......And the king shall do according to his
will, and he shall exalt himself, and magnify himself above every god, and shall speak
marvelous things against the GOD of gods, and shall prosper till the indignation be
accomplished......Neither shall he regard the GOD of his fathers, nor the desire of women,
nor regard any god; for he shall magnify himself above all. But in his estate shall he
honour the God of forces, and a God whom his fathers knew not shall he honour with gold
and silver, and with precious stones, and pleasant things." Let it be observed, that
Daniel elsewhere describes other kings, and that the event has shown them to be
individuals, as is generally confessed. And in like manner St. John: "There was given
unto him a mouth speaking great things, and blasphemies; and power was given unto him to
continue forty and two months. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against GOD, to
blaspheme His Name, and His tabernacle, and them that dwell in heaven. And it was given
unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them; and power was given him over
all kindreds and tongues and nations. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him,
whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of
the world." Anticipations
of the antichrist: Antiochus, Further, that by Antichrist is meant some one person is
made probable by the anticipations, which have already occurred in history, of its
fulfillment in this way. Individuals have arisen actually answering in a great measure to
the above descriptions; and this circumstance creates a probability, that the absolute and
entire fulfillment, which is to come, will be in an individual also. The most remarkable
of these shadows of the coming evil appeared before the time of the Apostles, between them
and the age of Daniel, viz. the heathen king Antiochus, of whom we read in the books of
Maccabees. This instance is the more to the purpose, because he is actually described, (as
we suppose) by Daniel, in another part of his prophecy, in terms which seem also to belong
to Antichrist, and as belonging, imply that Antiochus was what he seems to be, a type of
that more fearful enemy of the Church. This Antiochus was the savage persecutor of the
Jews, in their latter times, as Antichrist will be of the Christians. A few passages from
the Maccabees will show you what he was. St. Paul in the text speaks of an apostasy, and of
Antichrist as following upon it; thus is the future typified in the Jewish history.
"In those days went there out of Israel wicked men, who persuaded many, saying, Let
us go and make a covenant with the heathen that are round about us: for since we departed
from them, we have had much sorrow. So this device pleased them well. Then certain of the
people were so forward herein, that they went to the king, who gave them licence to do
after the ordinances of the heathen; whereupon they built a place of exercise at Jerusalem
according to the custom of the heathen; and made themselves uncircumcised, and forsook the
holy covenant, and joined themselves to the heathen, and were sold to do mischief."
After this introduction the Enemy of truth appears. "After that Antiochus had smitten
Egypt, he returned again, . . . and went up against Israel and Jerusalem with a great
multitude, and entered proudly into the sanctuary, and took away the golden altar, and the
candlestick of light and all the vessels thereof, and the table of the shewbread, and the
pouring vessels, and the vials, and the censers of gold, and the veil, and the crowns, and
the golden ornaments that were before the temple, all which he pulled off. And when he had
taken all away, he went into his own land, having made a great massacre, and spoken very
proudly." After this, he set fire to Jerusalem, "and pulled down the houses and
walls thereof on every side. . . . Then built they the city of David with a great and
strong wall, . . . and they put therein a sinful nation, wicked men, and fortified
themselves therein." Next, "King Antiochus wrote to his whole kingdom, that all
should be one people, and every one should leave his laws: so all the heathen agreed
according to the commandment of the king. Yea, many also of the Israelites consented to
his religion, and sacrificed unto idols, and profaned the sabbath." After this he
forced these impieties upon the Israelites. All were to be put to death who would not
"profane the sabbath and festival days, and pollute the sanctuary and holy people:
and set up altars, and groves, and chapels of idols, and sacrifice swine's flesh and
unclean beasts," and "leave their children uncircumcised." At length he set
up an idol, or in the words of the history, "the Abomination of Desolation upon the
altar, and builded idol altars throughout the cities of Juda on every side. . . . And when
they had rent in pieces the books of the law which they found, they burnt them with
fire." It is added, "Howbeit many in Israel were fully resolved and confirmed in
themselves not to eat any unclean thing, wherefore they chose rather to die . . . and
there was very great wrath upon Israel." Here we have presented to us some of the
lineaments of Antichrist, who will be such, and worse than such, as Antiochus. The history of the apostate emperor Julian, who lived between 300 and 400 years after Christ, furnishes another approximation to the predicted Antichrist, and an additional reason for thinking he will be one person, not a kingdom, power, or the like.
And there have been events in our childhood, and in the
generation before us, which seem to give still additional probability to the notion, that
Antichrist is one, not many men acting together. What I have said upon this subject may be summed up as
follows:-that the coming of Christ will be immediately preceded by a very awful and
unparalleled outbreak of evil, called in the text an apostasy, a falling away, in the
midst of which a certain terrible man of sin and child of perdition, the special and
singular enemy of Christ, or Antichrist, will appear; that this will be when revolutions
prevail, and the present framework of Society breaks to pieces; that at present the Spirit
which he will embody and represent, is kept under by "the powers that be," but
that on their dissolution, he will rise out of the bosom of them, and knit them together
again in his own evil way, under his own rule, to the exclusion of the Church. The
Antichrist is born of the apostasy 4. It would be out of place to say more than this at present. I will conclude by directing your attention to one particular circumstance contained in the text, which I have already in part commented on.
First, we have a comment in the instance of Antiochus
previous to the prophecy, as I have already shown. The Israelites, or at least great
numbers of them, discarded their own sacred religion, and then the enemy was allowed to
come in. Next the apostate emperor Julian, who attempted to
overthrow the Church by craft, and introduce paganism back again: he was preceded, nay he
was nurtured, in the first great heresy which disturbed the peace and purity of the
Church. About forty years before he came to the throne arose the pestilent Arian heresy
which denied that CHRIST was GOD. It ate its way among the rulers of the Church like a
canker, and what with the treachery of some and the mistakes of others, at one time it was
all but dominant throughout Christendom. The few holy and faithful men, who witnessed for
the Truth, cried out, with awe and terror at the apostasy, that Antichrist was coming.
They called it the "forerunner of Antichrist." And true, his Shadow came. Julian
was educated in the bosom of Arianism by some of its principal upholders. His tutor was
the Eusebius from whom its partisans took their name; and in due time he fell away to
paganism, became a hater and persecutor of the Church, and was cut off before he had
reigned out the brief period which will be the real Antichrist's duration. The next great heresy, and in its consequences far more
lasting and far spreading, was of twofold character,-with two heads, as I may call them,
Nestorianism and Eutychianism, apparently opposed to each other, yet acting towards a
common end: it in one way or other denied the truth of CHRIST'S gracious incarnation, and
tended to destroy he faith of Christians not less certainly though more insidiously than
the heresy of Arius. It spread through the East and through Egypt, corrupting and
poisoning those Churches which had once, alas! been the most flourishing, the early abodes
and the strong holds of revealed truth. Out of this heresy, or at least by means of it,
the impostor Mahomet sprang, and formed his creed. Here is another especial Shadow of
Antichrist. As to the third and last instance, which I might
mention in the generation immediately before ourselves, I will but observe that in like
manner, the Shadow of Antichrist arose out of an apostasy, an apostasy to infidel
doctrines, perhaps the most flagitious and blasphemous which the world has ever seen. Signs
that the apostasy may now be preparing These instances give us this warning. Is the enemy of CHRIST, and His Church, to arise out of a certain special falling away from GOD? And is there no reason to fear that some such Apostasy is gradually preparing, gathering, hastening on in this very day? For is there not at this very time a special effort made almost all over the world, that is, every here and there, more or less, in sight or out of sight, in this or that place, but most visibly or formidably in its most civilized and powerful parts, an effort to do without religion? Is there not an opinion avowed and growing, that a nation has nothing to do with religion; that it is merely a matter for each man's own conscience,-which is all one with saying that we may let the truth fail from the earth without trying to continue it? Is there not a vigorous and united movement in all countries to cast down the Church of Christ from power and place? Is there not a feverish and ever busy endeavour to get rid of the necessity of religion in public transactions? for example, an attempt to get rid of oaths, under a pretence that they are too sacred for affairs of common life, instead of providing that they be taken more reverently and more suitably? an attempt to educate without religion,-that is, by putting all forms of religion together, which comes to the same thing? an attempt to enforce temperance, and the virtues which flow from it, without religion, by means of societies which are built on mere principles of utility? an attempt to make expedience, and not truth the end and the rule of measures of state and the enactments of law an attempt to make numbers, and not truth, the ground of maintaining, or not maintaining this or that creed, as if we had any reason whatever in Scripture for thinking that the many will be in the right, and the few in the wrong? An attempt to deprive the Bible of its one meaning to the exclusion of others, to make people think that it may have a hundred meanings all equally good, or in other words, that it has no meaning at all, is a dead letter, and may be put aside? an attempt to supersede religion altogether, as far as it is external or objective, as far as it is displayed in ordinances, or can be expressed by written words,-to confine it to our inward feelings, and thus, considering how transient, how variable, how evanescent our feelings are, an attempt in fact, to destroy religion?
Shall we Christians, sons of GOD, brethren of CHRIST,
heirs of glory, shall we allow ourselves to have lot or part in this matter? Shall we even
with our little finger help on the Mystery of iniquity which is travailing for birth, and
convulsing the earth with its pangs? "Oh my soul come not thou into their secret;
unto their assembly, mine honour, be not thou united." "What fellowship hath
righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light with darkness? And what
concord hath CHRIST with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? and
what agreement hath the temple of GOD with idols? for ye are the temple of the living GOD.
Wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate . . . and touch not the unclean
thing," lest you be workers together with GOD'S enemies, and be opening the way for
the Man of sin, the son of perdition. |