The History of the church of
Christ – Part 2
Introduction
In recent lessons, we have traced the church of Christ from prophecy
to fulfillment. We have seen how Isaiah 2, Joel 2, and Daniel 2
foretold the coming of the church—its timing, location, and
establishment. We have also studied the warnings in the New
Testament about apostasy creeping in, beginning in the very first
century. Acts 20 records Paul warning the Ephesian elders that men
from among themselves would rise up to lead disciples astray. Today,
we continue examining history to see how these warnings were
fulfilled, how departures occurred, and why understanding this is
vital for our faith.
Early
Apostasy in Church Government
The first major departure from New Testament teaching came in church
organization. The Bible teaches that no one man is to rule a
congregation or a group of congregations. Elders (plural) were to
oversee only the local congregation (Acts 14:23; 1 Peter 5:1–3). Yet
in the first century, some began to elevate one elder above the
rest, calling him a “bishop” with authority over multiple
congregations. Over time, this single-bishop rule expanded, granting
them power the Scriptures never authorize. This began the framework
that would eventually produce denominational hierarchies.
Division
Between East and West
As centuries passed, especially into the second and third centuries,
two primary centers of influence emerged: the West (Rome) and the
East (Constantinople). Each had a bishop who claimed authority, and
rivalry developed. This was no longer the New Testament church in
its pure form—by now, it was a denomination with human structures
replacing God’s pattern. Eventually, the bishop of Rome gained the
most power and influence, becoming the pope.
Authority
Shift: Church Over Scripture
A foundational shift took place: truth was no longer viewed as being
in the Bible, but in the church itself. The Roman Catholic Church
came to teach that its authority was greater than Scripture. Thus,
when the pope speaks “ex cathedra” (as God’s spokesman), his words
are considered binding and able to override Scripture. This mindset
remains today, making it difficult to reach those steeped in that
tradition without first convincing them that the Bible alone is
God’s final authority.
Rise of
Clergy and Laity Distinction
The New Testament teaches that all Christians are priests (1 Peter
2:9). However, in the second century, a distinction arose between
“clergy” and “laity,” creating a class system within the church.
Clergy were seen as the only ones who could interpret Scripture,
further distancing God’s Word from the common believer. Over time,
additional hierarchical offices such as presbyters, deacons,
subdeacons, and sextons emerged—positions foreign to the New
Testament church.
Changes in
Worship Practices
While worship continued on Sunday, other unscriptural practices
developed. Special fast days were instituted, particularly
Wednesdays and Fridays. Easter became a formal religious observance
rather than a personal remembrance of Christ’s resurrection. The
Lord’s Supper evolved from a simple memorial into a ritual called
the Eucharist, taught to miraculously become Christ’s literal body
and blood—a doctrine known as transubstantiation. This belief became
a means of control, with leaders deciding who was “worthy” to
partake.
Corruption
of the Term “Saint”
Biblically, every Christian—everyone sanctified in Christ—is a saint
(1 Corinthians 1:2). Yet in these early centuries, “saint” came to
be reserved for an elite few who had supposedly performed
extraordinary works. This exaltation of select individuals over
ordinary Christians has no scriptural basis.
Changes in
Baptism
The Greek word “baptize” means immersion. In the New Testament, all
baptisms were by immersion of believers. By around 200 AD, infant
baptism began to be practiced, and new formulas for baptismal words
were introduced—unscriptural innovations that changed the meaning
and purpose of baptism.
Persecution
of the Church
From the first century until 313 AD, the church endured constant
persecution—first from the Jews, then from the Romans. Refusing to
acknowledge Caesar as “Lord” caused Christians to be labeled
atheists. Their evangelism, moral distinctiveness, and exclusive
claim to truth made them social outcasts. Roman persecution was
intense until Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Milan in 313,
granting religious tolerance.
The Dark
Ages
Following Constantine’s decree, a new era began, often called the
Dark Ages (about AD 500–1500). During this period, the Roman
Catholic Church became the primary persecutor of faithful
Christians. The true church survived, often in hiding, through
groups such as the Waldensians, who sought to follow the Bible. The
Catholic Church continued to place its traditions above Scripture,
making church decrees equal to or greater than the Word of God.
The History
of the church of Christ – Part 2 Sermon Outline:
-
Review of
Prophecy and Fulfillment
-
OT
prophecies foretelling the establishment of the church
(Isaiah 2:2–3; Joel 2:28–32; Daniel 2:44)
-
Fulfillment in Acts 2: Jerusalem, on Pentecost, with the
gospel preached to all nations
-
Early
New Testament warnings of apostasy (Acts 20:28–31; 1 Timothy
4:1–3; 2 Timothy 4:3–4)
-
Early
Apostasy in Church Government
-
God’s
pattern: plurality of elders in each local congregation
(Acts 14:23; Titus 1:5)
-
Elevating one elder to single-bishop role
-
Bishops
gaining oversight of multiple congregations
-
Development of denominational hierarchies
-
The Division
Between East and West
-
West –
Rome as primary seat of influence
-
East –
Constantinople and surrounding regions
-
Rivalry
between bishops leading to a power struggle
-
Bishop
of Rome becomes dominant, paving way for papacy
-
Authority
Shift: From Bible to Church
-
Biblical
view: Scripture as final authority (2 Timothy 3:16–17)
-
Roman
Catholic view: Church authority over Scripture
-
Pope’s
“ex cathedra” declarations as binding doctrine
-
Rise of the
Clergy and Laity Distinction
-
All
Christians as priests (1 Peter 2:9)
-
Creation
of a two-class system
-
Clergy
control of teaching and interpretation
-
Addition
of unscriptural offices: presbyters, deacons, subdeacons,
sextons
-
Changes in
Worship Practices
-
Addition
of special fast days (Wednesdays and Fridays)
-
Easter
as formal annual observance
-
Corruption of the Lord’s Supper: Eucharist, closed
communion, transubstantiation
-
Corruption
of “Saint”
-
Changes in
Baptism
-
Immersion of believers for remission of sins (Acts 2:38;
Romans 6:3–4)
-
New
formulas added to baptism
-
Infant
baptism begins around 200 AD
-
Persecution
of the Church (1st–4th Century)
-
Jewish
persecution (Acts 8:1–4; Acts 12:1–3)
-
Roman
persecution under Nero, Domitian, others
-
Christians viewed as atheists for rejecting Caesar as Lord
-
Moral
and social separation leading to societal rejection
-
Edict of
Milan and Temporary Relief
-
The Dark
Ages Begin
-
Approximately AD 500–1500
-
Catholic
Church becomes chief persecutor of true Christians
-
True
church survives through faithful but persecuted groups like
the Waldensians
-
Continued elevation of church tradition over Scripture
-
Key Lessons
from This Period
-
Apostasy
begins with small departures
-
Human
tradition cannot replace God’s Word
-
The
authority of Scripture must be preserved
-
Studying
history protects the church from repeating error
Call to
Action
We must know our history to guard against repeating it. Apostasy
begins when we drift from the authority of God’s Word. We must hold
fast to the pattern of sound teaching, keep the church organized as
God commands, worship in spirit and truth, and defend the gospel
against every departure. The battle for the Bible’s authority is as
real today as it was in the first century.
Key
Takeaways
-
Apostasy
began early in church history (Acts 20:28–31)
-
Church
government must remain as God designed (1 Peter 5:1–3)
-
All
Christians are priests (1 Peter 2:9)
-
The Lord’s
Supper is a memorial, not a miraculous ritual (1 Corinthians
11:23–26)
-
Baptism is
immersion for believers (Romans 6:3–4)
-
The Bible
alone is our final authority (2 Timothy 3:16–17)
Scripture
Reference List
-
Isaiah 2;
Joel 2; Daniel 2 – Prophecies of the church
-
Acts 2 –
Establishment of the church
-
Acts
20:28–31 – Warning of apostasy
-
1 Peter
5:1–3 – Elders’ role in local congregations
-
1 Peter 2:9
– Priesthood of all believers
-
1
Corinthians 1:2 – All sanctified are saints
-
1
Corinthians 11:23–26 – Institution of the Lord’s Supper
-
Romans 6:3–4
– Baptism as immersion into Christ’s death
-
2 Timothy
3:16–17 – Scripture’s sufficiency and authority
Prepared by
Bobby Stafford of the church of Christ at Granby, MO
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