No I am not wrong, as you so rudely put it. But since you ask, let's look at the evidence:
- Paul introduced himself to the Ephesians as an apostle (Eph 1:1).
- His visit started out well, but after three months there was a huge uproar and they threw him out. Moreover he lost his new converts (Acts 19:8-9).
- He said he had to fight for his life (1 Cor 15:32).
- He said that that everyone turned away from him, even his friends (2 Tim 1:15; 4:10; 4:16).
- He caused such a furore that the Ephesian Jews were still horrified about it over two years later (Acts 21:27-29).
- The Son of Man referred to a character who told the Ephesians he was an apostle, and when they tested him further, they discovered that he was not an apostle and had lied to them (Rev 2:2).
- Paul met none of the four apostolic criteria (Acts 1:21-22).
The evidence is easy to put together, for anyone with eyes to see. But if you still refuse to accept it, then please tell me who the false apostle was. Paul himself said that "All Scripture is complete", so the answer HAS to be in the Bible.
If the Son of Man thought this was important enough to mention in His final address to the church, not just once but twice, don't you think we owe Him the respect of at least considering what He said? Or was He just blowing hot air, sending us on a wild goose chase after some mystery 'false apostle', who cannot be discovered by any means? If that's the case, why would He have mentioned it at all?
TorahMan