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The Last Days Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Paul is simply telling them that if they think evil is powerful now, just wait. It will be a great deal worse before history is ended. The last days have already begun, and the lawless one does have some power, but in the latter days of the last days he shall be revealed in great power.
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In the magazine called the New Yorker there was a cartoon of two
ministers conversing in a luxurious library. The older man says to
the younger: “Drawing upon my not inconsiderable experience,
Andrews, my advice to a young man ambitious of preferment in our
calling is to steer clear of two subjects-politics and religion.” There
is no doubt about it that these are the two most controversial
subjects. They are so just because they are important and vital to
both time and eternity. There is much needless controversy,
however, that can be eliminated if men will limit their debate to what
is known, and not argue over the unknown.
There are at least 3 or 4 probable ways to interpret Paul’s
remarks about the man of sin and the restraining power that was
holding him back. One is free to believe any of them if he can
maintain a consistency with the rest of Scripture. It would be easier
to shut out eyes to the matter and just stir clear of controversial
subjects, but this is foolish since we have everything to gain and
nothing to lose by struggling with the hardest passages of the Bible.
However difficult it might be to know the exact interpretation of
every detail, it is easy to get the basic ideas, and these are the values
that we really need anyway. We do not need to know who and when,
but it is important that we know what. If we admit we do not know
who the anti-Christ and the restrainer are for sure, and that we do
not know for sure when he will be revealed, we can still know and
declare what he will do when he does come, and what the
consequences will be. We want to study Paul’s difficult words so as
to know what history will be like the last days.
In verse 7 Paul says the mystery of iniquity is already at work in
the world. Being that the man of sin is a product of Satan’s power, it
is obvious why he is already at work, for Satan does not cease to do
all he can to promote evil. But notice that Paul says he is limited and
works in mystery, which means he works in the dark and in secret.
Lawlessness has no right or power to operate openly in the light, for
the restrainer is holding him back. When the restrainer is out of the
way, then Satan will be permitted by God to again operate in full
power out in the open. The man of sin will come to the light. No
longer will he be limited to underground operations.
Paul is simply telling them that if they think evil is powerful
now, just wait. It will be a great deal worse before history is ended.
The last days have already begun, and the lawless one does have
some power, but in the latter days of the last days he shall be
revealed in great power. The Apostle John said the same thing-anti-Christ
is coming, but already there are many anti-Christs in the
world. Anti-Christianity is as old as Christianity, for both began at
the same time. Herod sought to slay the Christ-child, and from that
day to this there has been a division-the followers of Christ and
opponents of Christ.
Only the presence of the restrainer prevents the final revelation
of the man of lawlessness. The restrainer I believe is the principle of
law and order that is embodied in the church by the power of the
Holy Spirit and manifested in a just government. If you believe the
restrainer to be something else or someone else, as some believe it to
be Michael the archangel, or if you say with Augustine and many
others, “I frankly confess I do not know what he means,” still we can
all agree that the restraining is still going on, and as of now Satan
does not yet have the power to freely establish his man of lawlessness.
If we agree at this point, the rest does not really matter, for then
we are in the same position as the Thessalonians. We are waiting
and looking for the signs to be fulfilled, for the day is yet ahead when
as Paul says in verse 8, the wicked one shall be revealed. Paul
implies by his following words that his rise to power is almost
immediately followed by his being destroyed in the coming of Christ.
Sometime, of course, is needed for him to deceive the people, but
centuries can hardly be read into this place between the coming of
anti-Christ and the coming of Christ. Whoever he is, Paul says Jesus
will consume him, or slay him, with the spirit of His mouth. This is
Old Testament imagery. In Isa. 11 we read of the Messiah coming in