As
a crisis developed within the early Christian Church a defender of truth
was needed. God found His hero in Lucian (AD 250 – 312) who was born in
Antioch.
The early stories found in Acts took place in Jerusalem, but when the
Roman army destroyed Jerusalem in AD 70 many of the Christians fled to
Antioch, the capital of Syria. It was there that they were first called
“Christians.” (See Acts 11:26)
Antioch was a center of Greek life and culture. Young Lucian had to
choose between the power, wealth, elegance and impurity of life in
Antioch or the simple, quiet, and pious life found in the numerous
surrounding Christian villages. He “quickly discerned that there were
two movements taking shape in Christendom, one loose in doctrine and
affiliating itself with heathenism, the other based on the deep
foundations of the Christian faith.” Truth Triumphant 46.
Because Antioch was on the border between Rome and Persia, news and
culture steadily streamed in. Lucian soon learned that “the churches of
Rome and Alexandria had entered into an alliance. Alexandria had, for
more than two centuries before Christ, been the real capital of the Jews
who were compromising with paganism.” Truth Triumphant 47. Reviewing the
history of the Jewish nation Lucien could see the effect of accepting
the Greek education taught in Alexandria. It was because of their
acceptance of Greek culture - the sports, arts and education - that the
Jews were unprepared to accept Christ. “The church at Alexandria was in
this atmosphere. The city of Rome had been for seven hundred years, and
was still to be for some time, the world capital of paganism. This
environment greatly influenced the church at Rome. Lucian grew up in the
churches of Syria and of the Near East, which were modeled after the
churches of Judea. Lucian founded a college at Antioch which strove to
counteract the dangerous ecclesiastical alliance between Rome and
Alexandria.” Truth Triumphant 47.
There were a number of things which separated the two colleges.
(1) Those that started the college at Alexandria exalted tradition.
(2) Clement, the most famous teacher at Alexandria, boasted that he
would not teach Christianity unless it were mixed with pagan philosophy.
(3) Victor I, bishop of Rome, made an agreement with Clement, (about AD
190) for his help to make Sunday the prominent day of worship in the
church.
It was from this time that there began to be seen a real separation
between the Church of the East and the Church of Rome. The school in
Antioch trained many young people in theology, the arts, sciences, and
architecture. Those defenders of the faith followed the counsel of Jude
in his epistle: “Ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was
once delivered unto the saints.” Jude 3.
Lucian’s greatest gift to Protestant history was his editing of what we
call today the Textus Receptus, or Received Text. Lucian took all the
manuscripts that were known to the early Christians and compiled them
together into the “New Testament.”
Dr Wilkinson states that, “The Protestant denominations are built upon
that manuscript of the Greek New Testament, sometimes called the Textus
Receptus, or Received Text. It is that Greek New Testament from which
the writings of the apostles have been translated into the various
languages. During the Dark Ages, the Received Text was practically
unknown... It was restored to Christendom by the labors of that great
scholar, Erasmus. However, neither Lucian nor Erasmus, but rather the
apostles wrote the Greek New Testament.” Truth Triumphant 50.
Origen, the teacher at the Alexandrian college, also made translations
and commentaries of the Bible. These were written in such a way that
they allowed many kinds of errors to be introduced into Christianity.
David Otis Fuller in his book, Which Bible? tells us that the Textus
Receptus was the Bible of the early Eastern Christians. From this
manuscript came the Bibles for the great Syrian church, the Waldensian
Church of northern Italy, the Gallic Church in southern France, the
Celtic Church in Scotland, and Ireland, and the Greek Catholic Church.
The Textus Receptus is also called the Majority Text because it was
based on the majority (90%) of the 5000+ Greek manuscripts in existence.
It did not have material added, removed or modified as did the Minority
Text.
Today we have an explosion of new Bibles. However very few use the
Textus Receptus as the basis for their translations as the King James
Version did. Satan, doing everything that he can to lead people away
from God, has found a very clever way to give us something that looks
like Scripture but actually contains some of his lies in place of God’s
truths.
What did Lucian achieve? Dr. Wilkinson brings out the following points:
- “The Antioch system of theology
extended from England to China and from Turkestan to Ethiopia….
- “Lucian and his school produced and
edited a definite and complete Bible…
- “The text which Lucian gave to the
world was to all intents pure and correct. Even his opponents
declare that there are no Greek New Testaments older than Lucian's…
- Antioch taught salvation through the
substitutionary death of Christ on the cross, and the binding
obligation of the Ten Commandments
- “The majority of the churches of
Syria and of the East continued to observe Saturday, the Sabbath of
the fourth commandment from the days of the apostles and throughout
the centuries….
- The church organization rejected the
union of church and state. Truth Triumphant 59-61.
The two classes of Christianity that Lucian found still exist today. For
this reason, it is very important to check our beliefs against the
Bible, to be sure we are following it and not man’s traditions. ?
For more information on Bible Translations: Battle of the Bible by
H.H. Meyers; New Age Versions by Gail Riplinger; Which Bible? By David
Otis Fuller; The Authorized Bible Vindicated by B.G. Wilkinson. |