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Great Apostasy

The Great Apostasy is a concept within Christianity to describe a perception that mainstream Christian Churches have fallen away from the original faith founded by Jesus and promulgated through his Twelve Apostles.[1]

For the book by James E. Talmage, see The Great Apostasy (book).

A belief in a Great Apostasy has been characteristic of the Restorationist tradition of Christianity, which includes unrelated Restorationist groups emerging after the Second Great Awakening, such as the Christadelphians, Swedenborgians, Latter Day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Iglesia ni Cristo.[2][3][4] These Restorationist groups hold that traditional Christianity, represented by Catholicism, Protestantism and Orthodoxy, has fallen into error and thus, the true faith needs to be restored.[1]


The term has been used to describe the perceived fallen state of traditional Christianity, especially the Catholic Church, sometimes claiming that it changed the doctrines of the early church and allowed traditional Greco-Roman culture (i.e., Greco-Roman mysteries, deities of solar monism such as Mithras and Sol Invictus, pagan festivals and Mithraic sun worship and idol worship) into the church on its own perception of authority.[5] Because it made these changes using claims of tradition and not from scripture, the church – in the opinion of those adhering to this concept – has fallen into apostasy.[6][7] A major thread of this perception is the suggestion that, to attract and convert people to Christianity, the church in Rome incorporated pagan beliefs and practices within the Christian religion, mostly Graeco-Roman rituals, mysteries, and festivals.[8]


The term is derived from the Second Epistle to the Thessalonians, in which the Apostle Paul informs the Christians of Thessalonica that a great apostasy must occur before the return of Christ, when "the man of sin is revealed, the son of destruction" (chapter 2:1–12). The Catholic Church, Lutheran Church, Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches have interpreted this chapter as referring to a future falling-away, during the reign of the Antichrist at the end of time.[9]

the difficulty of the to keep early Christians from distorting the teachings of Jesus and to prevent the followers from dividing into different ideological groups;[33]

Apostles

the and martyrdom of the church's Apostles;[34]

persecution

the loss of leaders with to administer the church and its ordinances;[35]

priesthood authority

the lack of to instruct the leaders and guide the church;[32] and

continuous revelation

the corruption of Christian doctrine by or other allegedly pagan philosophies such as Neo-Platonism, Platonic realism, Aristotelianism and Asceticism.[36]

Greek

Timothy M. Youngblood; ; Copyright 1998/2005 Timothy Malone Youngblood Library of Congress Catalog Number: (TXu 000883-964)

http://www.masters-table.org/apostasy/Great_Apostasy_PDF.pdf

Johann Lorenz Von Mosheim

; The Great Apostasy; Deseret Book; ISBN 0-87579-843-8 (1909; Softcover, February 1994)

James E. Talmage

Eric R. Dursteler (2002). . 28 (Fall). Journal of Mormon History (republished at Neal A. Maxwell Institute website): 23–59. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

"Inheriting the "Great Apostasy": The Evolution of Latter-day Saint Views on the Middle Ages and the Renaissance"

; Todd M. Compton and Stephen D. Ricks, editors; Mormonism and Early Christianity; Deseret Book; ISBN 0-87579-127-1 (Hardcover, 1987)

Hugh Nibley

; The World and the Prophets Maxwell Institute, BYU

Hugh Nibley

; Apostasy from the Divine Church; Bookcraft; ISBN 0-88494-544-8 (1952; Hardcover 1984)

James L. Barker

; Restoring the Ancient Church; Cornerstone Publishing, FAIR; ISBN 1-893036-00-6 (Paperback, 1999); Available directly from the publisher

Barry R. Bickmore

; From Apostasy to Restoration; Deseret Book; ISBN 1-57345-218-1 (Hardcover 1996)

Kent P. Jackson

Holy Bible, King James Version, Isaiah 2:2,3; 5:20,21,25–29; 24:1–5; 28:10,11; 29:4,10–14,18,22–24; 49:22–23; 52:11,12; 54:1–3; 55:5; 56:6–8; 60:1–3,16. Malachi 3:1; 4:5,6.

The (1599), annotations of "Fr. Junius" to the Book of Revelation, repr. L. L. Brown Publishing, ISBN 0-9629888-0-4 (1990)

Geneva Bible

The of the Episcopal Church in America.

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