Everything about Anti-christ totally explained
» For the Friedrich Nietzsche book, see The Antichrist. For the Gorgoroth album, see Antichrist (album).In Christian eschatology, the Antichrist or anti-Christ means a person, office, or group recognized as fulfilling the Biblical prophecies about one who will oppose Christ and substitute himself in Christ's place.
'Antichrist' is translated from the combination of two ancient
Greek words αντί + χριστος. In Greek, χριστος means “anointed one” and refers to Jesus Christ. αντί means not only anti in the sense of “against” and “opposite of”, but also “in place of". Therefore, an antichrist opposes Christ by substituting himself for Christ.
The term itself appears 5 times in
1 John and
2 John of the New Testament — once in plural form and four times in the singular - and is popularly associated with the belief of a competing and assumed evil entity opposed to Jesus of Nazareth.
Biblical references
The
antichrist and
antichrists appear in the
First and
Second Epistle of John.
1 John chapter 2 refers to many antichrists present at the time while warning of one Antichrist that's coming. The "many antichrists" belong to the same spirit as that of the one Antichrist. Paul uses the term
man of sin to describe what John identifies as the Antichrist. Paul writes that this Man of Sin (sometimes translated son of perdition) will possess a number of characteristics. These include "sitting in the temple", opposing himself against anything that's worshiped, claiming divine authority, working all kinds of counterfeit miracles and signs, and doing all kinds of evil. Paul notes that "the mystery of lawlessness" (though not the Man of Sin himself) was working in secret already during his day and will continue to function until being destroyed on the Last Day. His identity is to be revealed after that which is restraining him is removed.. Daniel 9:27 mentions an "abomination that causes desolations" setting itself up in a "wing" or a "pinnacle" of the temple.. Some scholars interpret this as referring to the Antichrist. Some commentators also view the verses prior to this as referring to the Antichrist. Jesus refers to the references about abomination from Daniel 9:27, 11:31, and 12:11 in Matthew 24:15 and Mark 13:14 when he warns about the destruction of Jerusalem. Daniel 11:36-37 speaks of a self exalting king, considered by some to be the Antichrist.
Antiochus Epiphanes, is also recognized as an Antichrist, because he attempted to replace worship of Christ with veneration of himself. However, some view Daniel 8 as a double-fulfillment prophecy, that it's also worded to portray a future end-time Antichrist. A main reason for this position is that the subject of Daniel 8 is called a "little horn," the very phrase used in Daniel 7 to characterize the AntiChrist.
Some identify him as being in league with (or the same as) several figures in the
Book of Revelation including the
Dragon, the
Beast, the
False Prophet, and the
Whore of Babylon.
Views through history
Polycarp warned the Philippians that everyone that preached false doctrine was an antichrist.
Irenaeus speculated that it was “very probable” the Antichrist might be called Lateinos, which is Greek for “Latin Man”.
Chrysostom warned against speculations and old wive's tales about the Antichrist, saying, “Let us not therefore enquire into these things”. He preached that by knowing Paul's description of the Antichrist in 2 Thessalonians Christians would avoid deception.
Augustine wrote “it is uncertain in what temple [theAntichrist] shall sit, whether in that ruin of the temple which was built by Solomon, or in the Church.”
Hippolytus of Rome held that the Antichrist would come from the tribe of Dan and would rebuild the Jewish temple in order to reign from it. He identified the Antichrist with the Beast out of the Earth from the book of Revelation.
By the beast, then, coming up out of the earth, he means the kingdom of Antichrist; and by the two horns he means him and the false prophet after him. And in speaking of “the horns being like a lamb,” he means that he'll make himself like the Son of God, and set himself forward as king. And the terms, “he spake like a dragon,” mean that he's a deceiver, and not truthful.
Pope Gregory I wrote in A.D. 597, “I say with confidence that whoever
calls or desires to call himself ‘universal priest’ in self-exaltation of himself is a precursor of the Antichrist.”
Arnulf of Rheims wrote in A.D. 991, "What do you estimate this to be, reverend fathers? When you see him sitting on a lofty throne glittering in purple and gold, what do you estimate this to be, I say? Without a doubt, if he lacks love, and is only swelled up and lifted up, must he not be the Antichrist, 'sitting in the temple of God, and also showing himself as God'?"
Some of the Spiritual
Franciscans considered the Emperor
Frederick II a positive Antichrist who would clean the Church from riches and clergy.
Many Protestant Reformers, including
Martin Luther,
John Calvin,
Thomas Cranmer,
John Knox,
Cotton Mather, and
John Wesley, identified the Roman
Papacy as the Antichrist. The Centuriators of
Magdeburg, a group of Lutheran scholars in Magdeburg headed by
Matthias Flacius, wrote the 12-volume "
Magdeburg Centuries" to discredit the papacy and identify the pope as the Antichrist. Virtually all popes have been called the Antichrist by their enemies, and many popes have applied this title of "Antichrist", "son of perdition", or "man of sin", to their enemies as well. Some Catholics expected a son of
Martin Luther to be the Antichrist, as his scion would be the son of an ex-priest and ex-nun.
The Reformation allowed for more confessions of faith to be written. Previously, this was prevented by a prohibition on creed writing in the Council of Nicea. Lutherans, Reformed, and Anabaptists all included references to the Papacy as the Antichrist in their confessions of faith:
Smalcald Articles, Article four (1537)
» [...]the Pope is the very Antichrist, who has exalted himself above, and opposed himself against Christ because he won't permit Christians to be saved without his power, which, nevertheless, is nothing, and is neither ordained nor commanded by God. This is, properly speaking to exalt himself above all that's called God as Paul says, 2 Thess. 2, 4. Even the Turks or the Tartars, great enemies of Christians as they are, don't do this, but they allow whoever wishes to believe in Christ, and take bodily tribute and obedience from Christians[...] Therefore, just as little as we can worship the devil himself as Lord and God, we can endure his apostle, the Pope, or Antichrist, in his rule as head or lord. For to lie and to kill, and to destroy body and soul eternally, that's wherein his papal government really consists[...] The Pope, however, prohibits this faith, saying that to be saved a person must obey him. This we're unwilling to do, even though on this account we must die in God's name. This all proceeds from the fact that the Pope has wished to be called the supreme head of the Christian Church by divine right. Accordingly he'd to make himself equal and superior to Christ, and had to cause himself to be proclaimed the head and then the lord of the Church, and finally of the whole world, and simply God on earth, until he's dared to issue commands even to the angels in heaven.[...]
Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope (1537)
» [...]Now, it's manifest that the Roman pontiffs, with their adherents, defend [andpractice] godless doctrines and godless services. And the marks [allthe vices] of Antichrist plainly agree with the kingdom of the Pope and his adherents. For Paul, in describing Antichrist to the Thessalonians, calls him 2 Thess. 2, 3: an adversary of Christ, who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that's called God or that's worshiped, so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God. He speaks therefore of one ruling in the Church, not of heathen kings, and he calls this one the adversary of Christ, because he'll devise doctrine conflicting with the Gospel, and will assume to himself divine authority[...]
Westminster Confession (1646)
» 25.6. There is no other head of the Church but the Lord Jesus Christ: nor can the Pope of Rome in any sense be head thereof; but is that Antichrist, that man of sin and son of perdition, that exalts himself in the Church against Christ, and all that's called God.
1689 Baptist Confession of Faith » 26.4. The Lord Jesus Christ is the Head of the church, in whom, by the appointment of the Father, all power for the calling, institution, order or government of the church, is invested in a supreme and sovereign manner; neither can the Pope of Rome in any sense be head thereof, but is that antichrist, that man of sin, and son of perdition, that exalteth himself in the church against Christ.
After the reforms of
Patriarch Nikon to the
Russian Orthodox Church of 1652, a large number of
Old Believers held that czar
Peter the Great was the Antichrist because of his treatment of the Orthodox Church, namely separating church from state, requiring clergymen to conform to the standards of all Russian civilians (shaved beards, being fluent in French), and requiring them to pay state taxes. In 1914 a woman stabbed faith healer
Rasputin, cutting a large wound in his chest, in belief that he was the Antichrist due to his supposedly evil influences over the czar and czarina. He fully recovered.
The view of
Futurism, a product of the
Counter-Reformation, was advanced beginning in the 16th century in response to the identification of the Papacy as Antichrist.
Francisco Ribera, A
Jesuit priest, developed this theory in
In Sacrum Beati Ioannis Apostoli, & Evangelistiae Apocalypsin Commentarij, his 1585 treatise on the
Apocalypse of John.
St. Bellarmine codified this view, giving in full the Catholic theory set forth by the Greek and Latin Fathers, of a personal Antichrist to come just before the end of the world and to be accepted by the
Jews and enthroned in the temple at
Jerusalem — thus endeavoring to dispose of the exposition which saw Antichrist in the pope. Most premillennial
dispensationalists now accept Bellarmine's interpretation in modified form. Widespread
Protestant identification of the Papacy as the Antichrist persisted until the early 1900s when the
Scofield Reference Bible was published by
Cyrus Scofield. This commentary promoted Futurism, causing a decline in the Protestant identification of the Papacy as Antichrist.
Some Futurists hold that sometime prior to the expected
return of Jesus, there will be a period of "great tribulation" during which the Antichrist, indwelt and controlled by
Satan, will attempt to win supporters with false peace, supernatural signs. He will silence all that defy him by refusing to "receive his mark" on their right hands or forehead. This "mark" will be required to legally partake in the end-time economic system. Some Futurists believe that the Antichrist will be assassinated half way through the Tribulation, being revived and indwelt by Satan. The Antichrist will continue on for three and a half years following this "deadly wound".
Later texts and apocrypha
Related ideas and references appear in various
apocrypha, and a more complete portrait of the Antichrist has been built up gradually by Christian theologians and
folk-religionists.
One such apocryphal text is the apocalyptic pseudo-prophecy
falsely attributed to the
Tiburtine Sibyl. It purports to prophesy the arrival of the Christian emperor, Constantine, beginning:
» "
Then will arise a king of the Greeks whose name is Constans. He will be king of the Romans and the Greeks. He will be tall of stature, of handsome appearance with shining face, and well put together in all parts of his body…"
Millennialists and
anti-Semites focus on the document's suggestion that the Antichrist will be an Israelite: "At that time the Prince of Iniquity will arise from 'the
Tribe of Dan'." However, it's also probable that this prophecy pertains to the fact that the Tribe of Dan had historically fallen into a state of idolatry during Biblical times, thus leading members of other Jewish tribes into idolatry as well. In addition, appears to show that none of the 144,000 Jewish evangelists will come from the tribe of Dan. However, there are other Biblical examples of tribes being absent from similar lists, without any iniquity being implied.
Contemporary identification
Confessional Lutheran church bodies, such as the
Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, the
Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, the
Evangelical Lutheran Synod and the
Church of the Lutheran Confession teach that the Roman papacy or office of the pope is the Antichrist, including this article of faith as part of a
quia rather than
quatenus subscription to the
Book of Concord. In 1932 the LCMS adopted
A Brief Statement of the Doctrinal Position of the Missouri Synod. Statement 43,
Of the Antichrist:
43. As to the Antichrist we teach that the prophecies of the Holy Scriptures concerning the Antichrist, 2 Thess. 2:3-12
; 1 John 2:18
, have been fulfilled in the Pope of Rome and his dominion. All the features of the Antichrist as drawn in these prophecies, including the most abominable and horrible ones, for example, that the Antichrist "as God sitteth in the temple of God," 2 Thess. 2:4
; that he anathematizes the very heart of the Gospel of Christ, that is, the doctrine of the forgiveness of sins by grace alone, for Christ's sake alone, through faith alone, without any merit or worthiness in man (Rom. 3:20-28
; Gal. 2:16
); that he recognizes only those as members of the Christian Church who bow to his authority; and that, like a deluge, he'd inundated the whole Church with his antichristian doctrines till God revealed him through the Reformation -- these very features are the outstanding characteristics of the Papacy. (Cf. Smalcald Articles, Triglot, p. 515, Paragraphs 39-41; p. 401, Paragraph 45; M. pp. 336, 258.
) Hence we subscribe to the statement of our Confessions that the Pope is "the very Antichrist." (Smalcald Articles, Triglot, p. 475, Paragraph 10; M., p. 308.
)
The
Lutheran Churches of the Reformation, the
Concordia Lutheran Conference, the
Church of the Lutheran Confession, and the Illinois Lutheran Conference all hold to
Brief Statement.
In 1959 the
Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) formally issued its
Statement on the Antichrist, a
doctrinal statement that declared, "we reaffirm the statement of the Lutheran Confessions, that 'the Pope is the very Antichrist'".
Seventh-day Adventists teach that the anti-Christ is the office of the
Papacy. In
1798, the French General
Berthier exiled the Pope and took away all his authority, which was later restored in
1929. This is taken as a fulfillment of the prophecy that the Beast of Revelation would receive a deadly wound but that the wound would be healed.
Some Christians equate the Antichrist with a powerful beast with seven heads and ten horns that blasphemes against God, as described in the Bible. Some Adventists attribute the wounding and resurgence in to the papacy, referring to General
Louis Berthier's capture of
Pope Pius VI in 1798 and the pope's subsequent death in 1799. Instead of reducing the power of the
papacy, however, it grew and became the most influential political and religious power in the world.
Some Philippine Protestant Churches and groups (example of which is the Kahayag Mission Group) consider the Mary of the various apparitions (for example Our Lady of Fatima) as the Antichrist.
Jerry Falwell addressed a pastors' conference in January
1999, stating in a sermon on the
Second Coming that the Antichrist was probably alive on earth, and certainly a Jewish male. He subsequently clarified that "[t]his is simply historic and prophetic Orthodox Christian doctrine" and had no
anti-Semitic roots.
Ian Paisley,
MEP and the leader of the
Free Presbyterian Church, loudly denounced then-
Pope John Paul II as the Antichrist in 1988 while the pontiff was giving a speech at a sitting of the
European Parliament in
Strasbourg.
The German philosopher
Friedrich Nietzsche called himself the Antichrist, going so far as to write a book called
The Antichrist. In his famous first book,
The Birth of Tragedy, he wrote: "As a philologist and man of words, I baptized it, taking some liberties (for who knew the correct name for the Antichrist?), after the name of a Greek god: I called it the Dionysian."
Certain occultists have proclaimed themselves to be the Antichrist, including
John Whiteside Parsons.
Preterists look to an early antichrist, interpreting many ancient figures as the Beast of the Apocalypse. These interpretations include
Nero, sometimes together with the
four emperors who succeeded him in the year following his suicide, until the elevation of Nero's general
Vespasian to emperor. This is supported by some numerological interpretations. This tumultuous period included an increase of superstitious fear and mob violence against Christians, and intensification of the Roman wars against the Jews (AD 66–70), the destruction of the Temple in AD 70 under the command of general
Titus (later emperor), and the slaughter of the Jews who were living in Jerusalem. According to tradition,
Nero ordered the crucifixion of
St. Peter and the beheading of
Saint Paul. Both Jewish and Christian literature survive which refer to Emperor Nero as the Antichrist. A more detailed description of this
Preterist interpretation can be found in the entry on the
Book of Revelation.
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