REVELATION OF THE
MAN OF SIN
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Thessalonians
2:1-10
5-04-58 7:30 p.m.
Now we turn to the second Thessalonian letter and the second
chapter. Second Thessalonians, second chapter, and we shall read together the
first ten verses; 2 Thessalonians, chapter number 2, and we have it, 2
Thessalonians, second chapter, the first ten verses. The sermon tonight will
be an exposition of those verses, the Revelation Of The Man Of Sin, the
son of perdition, that wicked one; in other places called the final Antichrist.
Second Thessalonians 2:1-10, now let us read it together:
Now we beseech you,
brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together
unto Him,
That ye be not
soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by
letter as from us, as that the Day of Christ is at hand.
Let no man deceive
you by any means; for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away
first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition;
Who opposeth and
exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that
he as God sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.
Remember ye not,
that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?
And now ye know
what withholdeth, that he may be revealed in his time.
For the mystery of
iniquity doth already work; only He who now letteth will let, until He be taken
out of the way.
And 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:
Even him, whose
coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying
wonders,
And with all
deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they receive not
the love of the truth, that they might be saved.
[2 Thessalonians 2:1-10]
Now this morning I sought in any best way I could to present
a general summarization of the thing, the idea, the conception that you have in
the Bible of revealed history, of the destiny of our race, of the flow of it,
the direction of it, what ultimately it shall find in consummation, in finality.
Now this evening we shall take this passage and expound it. That is, what does
Paul say? Now I do not invent these things. I never heard of these things
until I began preaching through the Bible. You say, “Is that not a strange
thing for a man who has a Doctor of Philosophy degree in the Scriptures?” I
repeat it, I never heard of these things, I never heard them referred to, I
never heard them discussed. I knew they were in the Bible. I never read them,
nor did anybody else that I know, least of all any at whose feet I sat. So I
repeat, I do not invent these things. They are here in the Bible, and as I
have preached through the Bible, I have come to them. I have looked at them,
and by God’s grace I have sought to repeat but what I find in the Book.
Now in an exposition like this that I do tonight, why is it
that the people could not see just like I see, could not read like I read,
could not understand it like I understand it? Why is it that you need to
expound it? Well, the reason for it is this. When you read a thing in English
in a translation, it is many times not evident, not apparent as it is reading
it in Greek. Then another thing, you are busy out there teaching school,
pounding a typewriter, selling at a counter, working in an office, executing a
great program in a corporation, and you have not time to compare this Scripture
and this Scripture and this Scripture. It takes hours and days to do that. To
have any assurance that the thing you say and the thing you understand is in
keeping with the whole revelation of God takes infinite patience and infinite,
infinite time. That is what your pastor does every morning of the world,
unless there is an exigency that takes him away. Six days out of every week,
many times late at night, many times Sunday afternoon, your pastor is poring
over these things in the Word of God. And by an exposition I mean your pastor
is taking a passage and he is just trying to say what that passage means. Now
we shall do that tonight.
“Now we beseech you, brethren.” There are three Greek words
translated “beseech.” Aiteo means “to be a suppliant, an appeal,” like
in prayer you would appeal to God, aiteo. There is another word, parakaleo,
which means “to summon help, I beseech you.” It means “to come alongside and
help.” This word, erotao, “I beseech you, we beseech you” uses an
editorial “we, we beseech you.” This is affectionate solicitude. He is
talking out of great love and concern in his heart for his beloved people there
at Thessalonica, “We beseech you, brethren.”
Now your Greek word is huper, not “by,” huper,
that is, “concerning, touching this matter of the coming of our Lord Jesus and
our gathering together unto Him,” concerning that, in affectionate solicitude
he says, “that ye be not soon shaken in mind or troubled.”
Now look at it, “by spirit, by word, or by letter—epistle—as
from us, as that the day.” Now the Day of Christ is one thing, the Day of the
Lord is something altogether different. This King James, Textus Receptus, made
a great deal of trouble. That is not the Day of Christ, it is the Day of the
Lord. The Day of the Lord is that thing you find so constantly in the Old
Testament and much in the New Testament. It is the day of the final judgment
of God. In this day God deals with us in grace and in patience. You can curse
God to His face now and live. You can blaspheme the name of God now, and
nothing happens. You can say no to every invitation of the Holy Spirit, and
things go on just as usual: sun rise in the morning and set tomorrow night. But
the day is coming when the man that blasphemes God and that says no to Christ
and spurns these overtures of grace shall be damned. God shall deal with him.
The Scripture so many times describes that, “It is an awful thing to fall into
the hands of the living God” [Hebrews 10:31].
Now that is the Day of the Lord. This thing is not continuing always as it is
now; someday God shall deal directly with sin.
Now they were in tribulation there; they were in trouble;
they were in persecution and distress; they were losing their property, their
lives. You know the persecution of that early church, that through pain of
death did they avow faith in the Lord. And so now look, there were some people
who said, “The day of that judgment of God, the Great Tribulation and the
appearing of the Lord, that day is already here; it has come.” And they said
it “by spirit.” That is, some of the people stood up in the congregation and
said, “I have a special revelation by the Holy Spirit of God. We are in the
Tribulation now.” And others said “by word; the apostle Paul said it himself;
we are reporting to you what Paul said orally.” Others say it, “We have got a
letter here from the apostle Paul.” It was a forged letter, but they read a
letter of the apostle Paul saying that the day of the judgment and the
Tribulation of the great Day of the Lord is right now, “We are in it now.” All
right, that is what caused him to write. Paul says to them,
Now listen, do not
let any man deceive you by spirit as though ye had a special revelation, or by
word quoting us, or by epistle as from us, as if that Day of the Lord is right
now, enesteken, has come. Let no man deceive you by any means.
[2 Thessalonians 2:3]
Then he is going to make this apocalyptic revelation, how
you will know that Day of the Lord is at hand. There—that day shall not
come—there will not be any visitation from God, any final judgment, until
first, “except there come first, he, he, the, he, the apostasia”
[2 Thessalonians 2:3]. And you have
taken that Greek word and put it in the English language, “apostasy”—translated
here, “a falling away.” Now there are some few scholars who translate that apostasia,
“departure”: the gathering of the children of the Lord out of this world into
heaven, that comes first. Well, that does come first, but that is not what he
is talking about here. When Paul wrote to that church at Thessalonica, they
were familiar with the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament Scriptures.
And that word apostasia is all through the Old Testament Scriptures. In
the Old Testament Septuagint translation it referred to “rebellion against God,
a falling away from God” of the people of the Lord. Now that is what it means
here: he apostasia, “the apostasy.” There will come a time, says
Paul, when there will be a great turning away from the true faith of the Lord
Jesus Christ.
That is not an unusual thing for Paul to say. Here in the
second letter to Timothy, the third chapter and the eleventh verse—no, the
thirteenth verse—he says, “evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse,
deceiving and being deceived.” And in the next chapter of 2 Timothy he says,
“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after
their own lust shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; and
they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto
fables” [2 Timothy 4:3, 4]. I have told
you before of one of these that made appeal to. His wife belongs to our
church, and she had been praying for him. And so I asked him to come to
church; his wife wanted me to plead with him. Well, he would not do it. Well,
I pressed him.
“Well,” he said, “I will tell you why I do not go to church.
I do not like to hear you preach.”
“Well,” I said, “that is all right, it is all right.” Then
I just got curious. I said, “Why do not you like to hear me preach?”
He says, “All you do is preach the Bible.”
Well I said, “My soul, man, what do you want a man to preach
when you go to church? What do you want hear?”
He says, “When I go to church, I like to hear a man talk
about current events. And I like to have sermons on—on problems of personality
and psychiatry, examine the knots on your head.” And I am—he did not say that;
I am just saying he meant that.
That is a—that is a new religion. I cannot conceive of the
apostle Paul turning aside from the great revelation of God in Christ Jesus to
discuss knots on your head, lines in the palm of your hand, the psychiatric
interpretation of personality traits. And after you have listened to that
five-hundred-thousand years, you are still the same, knots on your head. And
brother, when you introvert your life, it gets worse and worse and worse. The
more of those psychiatrists you see, the more you have got to see. And the
more of those problems of personality you start wrestling with, the more
problems you are going to have. That is the trouble with us. You know what we
need in our life is a great taking out of ourselves. War will do it. You do
not have many suicides in war. You do not have many personality problems in
war. Brother, we are not thinking about ourselves, we are fighting for our
lives. That is what you need. The great revelation of Christ is objective,
and do not forget it. Now and always, the religion of Jesus is an objective
faith, and salvation is an objective thing. It is looking to God, not
yourself.
Now wait a minute. I was saying, I was saying that Paul
says, “There shall come a falling away” [2
Thessalonians 2:3], not just a development that you might see now, but
there is coming the time of a great apostasy, a falling away. That comes
first; that is first. Then says Paul, after that, after the apostasy of the
church, then there shall be revealed—and he names him by three names here—he
calls him “the man of sin”; he calls him “the son of perdition”; he calls him
“the lawless one,” translated here, “the Wicked one.”
Now Paul says the reason that that denouement has not
already come is that there is a restrainer in this world. And he calls him a
thing—to katechon [2 Thessalonians 2:6].
Then in the next verse calls him a person—ho katechon [2 Thessalonians 2:7].
Now there have been in every generation through the
centuries, there has been identifications of this Antichrist, this man of sin,
that lawless one. May I name some of those identifications to you? I do it so
you can see how in every generation, unconsciously almost, expositors have
turned to trying to pick out that man, that final tyrant, that great final
dictator. All right, in the beginning there were expositors who said the
Antichrist, this man of sin, is Nero, and the restrainer is Seneca. And when
Seneca, who was his teacher, when Seneca died, Nero gave himself to every kind
of bloodthirsty persecution and destroyed the Christians by the thousands. Then
again, there were those who identified the man of sin as Satan himself. And
they said the restrainer is the expediency of covering up his true character,
but at the end time the mask shall be taken away, and Satan shall be revealed
as he is: the horrible antagonist of all humanity. All right, here was another
one. There were those who said that the man of sin is a figure of the chaos
that results if the imperial power of the law-keeping Roman government were to
be destroyed. They found in the imperial government the restrainer, and when
he is taken away—that is, law and order—the whole world is plunged into chaos
and anarchy.
Then in the generations that followed, in the Eastern Church
when the hordes of Mohammedans began to overrun the eastern part of the empire,
they found in Mohammed the man of sin. I can see why: Mohammed destroyed the
Eastern Church, destroyed the Eastern Empire. Then in the days of the Great
Reformation, Protestant Christianity, under Luther especially, found the man of
sin in the papacy. Then in comparing to recent history, they identified the
man of sin as Napoleon Bonaparte. And then, in my generation, I could not tell
you the number of times that I have read where they identified the man of sin
as being one of those fascist leaders, and especially Mussolini.
Now I have done that just to say that every generation
apparently identifies that man of sin. We have a tendency to do that. Now I
do not suppose there is anything wrong with that. If I were over in that
Eastern Church and the hordes of Mohammed were cutting down the people and
destroying the testimony of Christ, I might suppose that Mohammed was that man
of sin myself.
But let us look at what Paul says about him now. Paul
describes him; he calls him a man, he calls him a son, he calls him somebody
who exalts himself. God is so ruled out of the world—and you have got to
follow somebody and give your life to something—that he takes unto himself all
of those loves and adorations that belong to God, and he himself is the great soter,
the savior. Now he says that this man of sin, look at him, “even him whose
coming is after the working of Satan” [2
Thessalonians 2:9]. Now the Greek word there is energeia, the
“energizing” of Satan. What Paul describes in there is, he is a somebody, and
he is Satan’s somebody. He is coming after the working, the energizing of
Satan. That is, the power and the glory and the honor that Christ refused when
Satan offered it to him, this man accepts. He is Satan’s man. God has a man:
Christ Jesus, “the man of sorrows.” Satan has a man: “the man of sin.” Satan
is an imitator from the beginning and he usurps, if he could, the very throne
of God. This is Satan’s great exponent. This is Satan’s great hero and great
leader. You will find him described at length in the thirteenth chapter of the
Book of the Revelation.
People shall wonder at him, “Who is like unto to therio?
Who is like unto that Antichrist?” Brother, this world is in for some
marvelous things. He has a coming—this tyrant, this dictator, this man of sin,
this Antichrist—“coming after the working of Satan with all power and signs and
lying wonders, with [all] deceivableness and unrighteousness” [2 Thessalonians 2:9]. This world is going to
see a tremendous personality, and he is going to be Satan’s man. I could see
how Satan could make a man glitter and glow. Think of the power in oratory
alone of Hitler. That tremendous German nation rising and rising in culture
and in power and in technology sat spellbound under the oratory of Adolph
Hitler. Did you ever hear him on the radio? I could not understand a word
that he said, but it was hard for me to leave the place or to turn it off when
he would begin to speak. That is a gift of the devil. Think of the majesty
that Satan is able to place at the disposal of a man that he would choose:
magnificent in appearance, stentorian voice, a genius in mind. And when the
whole world is in chaos, this is the man that is going to lead us out; this is
the man that can bring peace to us. And that is exactly what is going to
happen. He is the white horseman of the Apocalypse, and he rides and he
promises every glorious thing to the world. But the next rider is a red
rider—war; and the next rider is a black rider—famine; and the next rider is the
pale horseman—death. He is a substitute; he comes for a moment. And in
temporary, and in temporalities he has great power, great program; but he does
not last, he never does. And this one will not.
I have no idea when that was, and Paul did not either. You
cannot make this program conform to any calendar or mathematical table. The
appearance of that tremendous leader is known but to God. All that I could do,
I did this morning. I can just point out to you that the things that you see
develop in this world, the flowing of humanity and the upward convulsions of
history, they all follow these revealed patterns that you find in the Word of
God. And Paul says the outreach of those great movements in religion and in
history, in politics and in religion, and in state, in politics, in religion,
in economics, in militarism—all of those things, they reach out toward that
great final consummation, that federation, that conflict which heads up in this
man that he describes here.
All right, what keeps the consummation from now? Why does
not Satan bring forth his man now? Why do we not see it now? Satan would like
to, he would like to plow up the earth and damn every soul and dethrone God. Why
does not he do it now? Why is not he appearing, this man, now? Well, that is
what Paul is saying to us. First, he says there is going to be the apostasy.
Then he says, second, there has to be taken out of this
world that hinderer. And he calls him first a thing, to katechon.
In the sixth verse, “And now ye know what withholdeth that he might revealed in
his, that he might be revealed in his time. Now ye know the thing that
restrains that he might be revealed in his time.” Now in the seventh verse he
calls Him a person, “For the mystery of iniquity doth already work.” Brother,
Satan is in it now. It is not something Satan is going to do; he is at it now.
Only now, here he calls him a person, ho katechon, “only He”—and you
have it, “He who now letteth.” To let in 1611 meant to prevent, to hinder, to
restrain. “Only He who now letteth will restrain, until He be taken out of the
way” [2 Thessalonians 2:7]. But when
that to katechon, that thing, when that ho katechon, that
somebody is taken out of the way, then Satan has his day. Oh, that is the
Tribulation! That is judgment. That is the, the damnation of this world. That
is the awful time, time of Jacob’s trouble, the time of the Revelation; oh,
when Satan has it.
All right, what is that restrainer? Now I do not need to go
through again. A moment ago, a little while ago, I mentioned what they said in
times past. The restrainer—now here is a persuasion on my part. Paul does not
name that restrainer, he does not say who He is. Now I am going to tell who I
think He is. Now heretofore I have just told you what Paul said; now I am
going to tell you what I think Paul was referring to. And there is a lot of
difference, because I am not the apostle Paul and I have no apocalyptic
revelation from God. I am just reading the Word like you can read it. What is
that restrainer? All right, this is what I think Paul is talking about. He
calls Him first a thing; then he calls Him a somebody, “the one that
restrains”; that is, to keep Satan back, keep him down, keeping us in the way
of opportunity and grace. I think he uses the word “thing” to refer to the
instrument that the somebody uses. They are the same thing. One of them, when
you use it in the neuter gender, to katechon refers to the
instrument, and the other, ho katechon, that is somebody who restrains,
the restrainer; that refers to somebody.
All right, who is that somebody, and what is the instrument
that He uses to restrain? I think the restrainer is the Holy Spirit of God. I
think the instrument is the people of the Lord, His church. And when the Holy
Spirit of God and God’s people are taken out of this world, then you have the
whole creation in the hands of the Wicked one, Satan, and the awful days of the
Tribulation are upon us.
Now why do you think that Paul is referring to the Holy
Spirit of God as being the restrainer? Well, this is why. God is presented in
the Bible as that; He is the restrainer of Satan. Were it not for the
restraining power of God, we all would be damned, but God holds Satan in leash.
It is God that restrains men, wicked men, sinful men. For example, in the Book
of Genesis the Lord said, “My Spirit shall not always strive with man…some
time, a hundred-twenty years from now, I am going to take him away” [Genesis 6:3]. And when God withdrew His
pleading Spirit, the judgment came, the flood came.
Now let us take another instance. In the Book of Job when
God said, “That man is the best man in all the world,” Satan said, “No wonder
he is a good man. No wonder he is a good man; look at the hedge You built
around him. Pays him to be good. Any man would be good if he could get a
reward for it like that.”
And the Lord said to Satan, “So you think he is good because
I put a hedge around him? All right, I will take down the hedge and you take
away everything that he has; only, touch not his life.” And then you know the
rest of story. Finally, the Lord pulled the hedge down more. That shows you
that Satan cannot do beyond the permissive will of God; God restrains him.
Well, that is true with us today. Were it not for the
restraining power of God in our lives, God keeping us, Satan would destroy us
all. We are no match for him. Even Michael, the archangel, dared not accuse
him face to face, but said, “The Lord rebuke thee.” Michael, the archangel, is
no match for Satan, the prince, and how much less we. We are kept by the power
of God, and were it not for that power of God, Satan would destroy us. We
would all fall into the pit, into hell, and into death, into the consuming
flames of fire.
So I say, I think that the restrainer is the Holy Spirit of
God and I think the thing, the neuter of it, I think that is His church. And
Paul says when the restrainer and when that instrument, the church, when they
are taken away, then Satan, in apparent triumph, will present the great
Antichrist, who can lead this whole world out of its misery and out of its woe.
And Satan knows that beyond it, there is the rioting of death and destruction
and blood and fire and hell. It is Satan’s program, and he deceives the people.
I must quit—should have a long time ago.
He is at that now. It is no different then, only in the
grave, from what it is now. Satan deceives “with all manner of deceivableness
in them that perish, because they receive not the love of the truth that they
might be saved.” And next Sunday night, this is the sermon for this cause,
“God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie; that they
might be damned who believe not the truth.” [2
Thessalonians 2:12]
Oh, what happens to a man, what happens to a man? He is
deceived by Satan. He thinks and he chooses and he supposes, and Satan blinds
his eyes, and he believes a lie, and God gives him up. That unpardonable sin
that these preachers preach about every once in a while, that is not a subject
that is designed to get the ears of curiosity seekers; that is an awful
reality. That is a terrible reality. I can say no, and I can say no, and I
can say no, and finally, I do not even hear the appeal. It is not in my heart
anymore, I have died to God. Oh, how Satan can blind a man, and he will choose
a lie and not the truth, and he will turn away from God and love the world! And
he will say no to Jesus, and he dies.
O Lord, Lord, Lord, that the Spirit might quicken us and
lead us to Jesus, to a faith that shall save us in Him.
Now may I make my appeal? My friend, in this day of grace
and opportunity, you may not feel now as you would have were you ten years old.
There is hardly a child that is ten years of age that a praying father or
mother can but bring and set him down by my side, and I talk to little fellow
about Jesus, and pretty soon, he will fill up and he cannot talk to me—he just
looks at me and he cries.
And you let the years pass and the years pass and the years
pass, and his heart hardens. And I can get down on my knees, as I have many
times, and cried unto God, and he is perfectly unmoved. My brother, I am
saying what faith you have, act on it. I may not be moved as I was when I was
ten, but have a day of opportunity, I have now. Come! Come! Come! What little
I do feel, I will act on that. What promise I can accept, I will accept that.
What little faith I can muster, like a grain of mustard seed, may God make it
grow. I will act on it, what little I do feel and what little I can believe.
Would you? That you might be saved, that you might not be
damned, that ye might not be condemned with the world, that you might see God
when you die, that you might have an inheritance with the children of the
Lord. Would you? Why should a man plead, when it is all of grace and
goodness, God and yours, for the having and the asking? It is everything. It
is all in all, beside which the world is dust and ashes. Would you come? Would
you make it now? As our people pray, as our people sing, as we wait for you,
into that aisle and down here to the front, would you come? “Pastor, what
faith I have, I will act on that, and here I come. I give you my hand; the
best I can, I give my heart and faith to God, and here I stand.”
Is there a family you, who ought to come or one somebody you?
Give your heart in re-consecration to the Lord. Put your life in the church. Answer
a call to special service. Take Jesus as Savior. It is God’s appeal and not
mine. As the Spirit shall open the way and bid you come, would you make it
now, while we stand and while we sing?