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The Man Of Sin Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The church is restraining the power of Satan by the power of the Holy Spirit. This is why the church is the light and salt of the world. As long as the church does its task, the man of sin cannot take over.
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A six year old boy and his father once traveled down the Danube
River, and at the close of one day they stopped at a cloister. The
father took the boy into the chapel to see the organ. It was the first
large organ he had ever seen. His face lit up with delight. He asked
his father if he could play it. The father complied and went to fill
the great bellows. The boy was too small to use the stool, and so he
pushed it back and stood on the pedals. Suddenly the silent chapel
was filled with deep tones, and the monks who were just then eating
their supper dropped their knives and forks in astonishment. Their
organist was right there with them, and so they ran to the chapel,
but when they looked up into the organ loft they saw no one at the
organ, and yet its harmonious tones continued to flow forth in
thrilling power.
“It is the evil one!” cried one monk. “No, it is a miracle,” said
another. A third monk boldly climbed the stairs and found the small
boy treading from pedal to pedal while playing on the keys above
with his little hands. The boy was John Wolfgang Mozart, one of
the greatest musicians that would ever live. This story is of interest
because it illustrates the difficulty that men have in interpreting the
unusual and mysterious. Seeing no evidence of a person at the
organ, the monks came to the conclusion it was either the devil or
God. Only the man who could see the situation up close could come
to a conclusion that was certain and not just a matter of conjecture.
So it is with the passage we are studying in II Thessalonias.
Only those who were addressed by Paul could see the situation from
the vantage point that would give them perfect understanding, for,
after all, it was written to clarify their minds. They were like the
monk who climbed the stairs. They had heard Paul explain these
matters in detail in person. We are like the two monks below trying
to guess which is the most likely explanation for what we hear and
see. The result is, just as the monks came to opposite conclusions, so
men have come to opposite conclusions in interpreting what Paul
has written here. This means humility must characterize any
interpretation of this passage. We must be ever open to new light,
but meanwhile, with what we have, we must seek to understand
Paul’s message.
In verse 5 Paul reminds them that he told them these things
when he was with them. They were Gentiles with no knowledge
about God’s plan for the world. Paul had apparently gone over
these matters of the end times in detail with them. They had the key
to what he writes here in their memories, and so in verse 6 he simply
says, “And now you know what restrains.” Unfortunately, Paul’s
confidence was only in them, and not the rest of the Christians in
history. For we were not there to hear him, and so we are not
certain at all. What we do know for sure is that they knew what it
was that was restraining the lawless one in their day. This tells us a
great deal. It tells us that the man of sin is no mere historical person
or power, but is definitely supernatural, for he existed in the first
century. He is Satan incarnate in man like Jesus was God incarnate
in man. Satan’s last attempt to conquer will be by counterfeiting
God’s method.
He is under God’s control all along. He cannot even come unto
the stage of history until God says the time is ready. God has a
power in the world that is restraining Him from coming. The big
question is, what is that restrainer? There are those who say it is the
church and the Holy Spirit. Both are needed to account for the
restrainer being called by a neuter in verse 6, and a masculine in
verse 7. The church is the instrument, and the Holy Spirit is the
person in control holding back the man of sin. It makes sense, for
Paul says that we wrestle not against flesh and blood but against
principalities and powers. The church is restraining the power of
Satan by the power of the Holy Spirit. This is why the church is the
light and salt of the world. As long as the church does its task, the
man of sin cannot take over. This is the battle of the ages, and Jesus
said that the gates of hell would not prevail against His church. The
Gospel would be preached to every nation, and then would come the