RandyPNW
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- Jun 8, 2021
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I will agree, it generally refers to a departing...in one place it was used as a departing from Moses. The word apostasia does not specify what is being departed from. That is why in the other passage, Moses was added. In the King James, they were falling away, but did not say what they were falling away from. Here is how apostasia was translated before the KJV.
Let no ma deceave you by eny meanes for the lorde commeth not excepte ther come a departynge fyrst and that that synfnll man be opened ye sonne of perdicion.” (Tyndale Translation, 1534)
Let no man disceaue you by eny meanes. For the LORDE commeth not, excepte the departynge come first, and that Man of Synne be opened, even the sonne of perdicion. (Coverdale Bible, 1535)
Let no man deceaue you by any meanes, for the Lorde shall not come excepte there come a departinge fyrst, & that that synfull man be opened, the sonne of perdicion. (Cranmer Great Bible, 1539)
Let no man deceyue you by any meanes, for the Lord commeth not, except there come a departyng first, and that, that sinful man be opened, the sonne of perdicyon] (Matthew’s Bible 1549)
Let no man deceiue you by any meanes: for [that day shall not come,] except there come a departing first, and that man of sinne be disclosed, [euen] the son of perdition. (Beza Bible, 1565)
Let no man deceiue you by any meanes for that day shal not come, except there come a departing first, and that man of sinne be disclosed, euen the sonne of perdition. (Geneva Bible, 1575)
Since in verse 3b, the man of sin is revealed, and since verses 6-8 tell us HOW he will be revealed, then the only solution is that somewhere in 3a the restrainer has been taken out of th away.
I can find no other possibility of anything taken out of the way or having departed in 3a other than in the word apostasia.
That leaves only TWO possibilities: either enough people "fall away" (let's suppose they fall away from God) that the Holy Spirit will not have enough people left to work through to restrain or hold back the revealing, OR the sudden departing of the church will take place as in the rapture.
I can easily see people after the rapture, searching the scriptures to find out what just happened, and saying: AHA! That is what Paul was meaning by apostasia! Remember, it is THE apostasia. What Paul must have had in mind is something NO ONE COULD MISS.
If Paul really meant a falling away from God, how would anyone know when enough had fallen away to mean THE falling away? The only way I could see this fit would be if there was a massive falling away in ONE DAY or one week. Only then would it be significant. Also what I find, when people are falling away here in the US and in Europe, MORE people are coming to the Lord in Africa and China, so the church is growing, not shrinking.
In short, I see a very good reason to consider Paul's use of Apostasia as the departing of the church. We will have to ask Him when we get there!
You have a very fair way of dealing with this, and a good attitude. But I don't see the issues the way you do. I don't see the central emphasis on the removal of restraint, and I don't see the Falling Away, or apostasia, as something separate from the revelation of Antichrist.
I see the Falling Away and the revelation of Antichrist as one. The Falling Away of Christian Civilization has been happening for a long time now, and I think we need to be aware of that. But Paul's focus seems to be on how it *must* lead up to the revelation of Antichrist to present a sure sign that Christ is coming soon to destroy him.
As I said before, the removal of restraint appears to be disguised or to be of secondary importance. Paul just wants his readers to know that Christ's Coming is not imminent in the sense that he can come before Antichrist himself is revealed. Christ will come to destroy Antichrist, and not before. Anyway, that is how I read it.
In other words, Antichrist's appearance is presently being restrained so that Christ's Coming itself is not yet fully imminent. We should not expect him "any day," as many Imminency Pretribulationists claim. Instead we are to maintain vigilance every day against satanic deceptions that will keep us unprepared for the Kingdom of righteousness soon to be revealed.
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