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  1. The word “apostasy” is derived indirectly from a Greek word that appears in 1 Timothy 4:1. The word “aphistemi” translated “fall away” (in the NASB) is the verb form of “apostasia” from which we transliterate the English term “apostasy.”. The idea is to make a break or departure from something. The significance of a ...

  2. tion of truth. The Bible emphasizes two of its most co. on expressions. The first is the practice of false wor. ip (Jer. 3:6). The true God is rejected or worshipped in the style. a pagan god. This was a common expression of apostasy in the Old Testament and was considered a violation.

  3. Apostasy a fide, or perfidiæ: Perfidiæ is the complete and voluntary abandonment of the Christian religion, whether the apostate embraces another religion such as Paganism, Judaism, Mohammedanism, etc., or merely makes profession of Naturalism, Rationalism, etc. The heretic differs from the apostate in that he only denies one or

    • Introduction
    • Comfort: God Will Preserve Genuine Christians to The End
    • Preservation: God Preserves All Genuine Christians as Eternally Secure
    • Perseverance: All Genuine Christians Continue in The Faith

    Apostasy is decisively turning away from the faith. An apostate is a person who once claimed to be a Christian but has irreversibly abandoned and renounced orthodox Christianity. There is a tension throughout the New Testament between warning and comfort. On the one hand, God warns professing believers that he will not finally save them if they do ...

    Someone who once professed to be a Christian may become apostate. But a genuine Christian cannot become apostate. Those who apostatize demonstrate that they were never genuine Christians: “They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would have continued with us. But they went out, that it might become plain that...

    Preservation (or eternal security) is God’s sovereign work of preserving all genuine Christians through faith as eternally saved and safe (John 6:39; 17:11–12; 10:27–30; Rom 5:9–10; 8:1–4, 28–39; 11:29; 1Cor 1:4, 8–9; Eph 1:13–14; 4:30; Phil 1:6; 1Thes 5:23–24; 2Thes 3:3; Heb 6:17–20; 7:23–25; 1Pet 1:3–5; 1Jn 2:18–19; 5:18). All believers have eter...

    Perseverance means that genuine Christians can neither totally nor finally fall away from the faith but will certainly continue in the faith to the end and be eternally saved (Col 1:22–23; Heb 3:14). The areas in which believers must persevere include their personal faith (John 8:31; 1Jn 4:15; 5:1, 4; Heb 3:14; 6:11; 10:22; Jude 21), sound doctrine...

  4. According to the Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature, apostasy is "forsaking or renouncing 6 religion" or "deliberate abandonment of one religion for another."7 The word in the classical Greek means "a revolt," "a departure," or "to abandon an alliance."

    • Octavian Cureteu
  5. Jun 1, 2023 · the theological point of view. As a term in the context of religion, ap ostasy refers to a ge neral falling away from. religion or denying the faith by those who once held it. In Judaism, if a man ...

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  7. nto moral decline. Apostasy can be a general reference to the perceived materialism and societal lack of interest in religious matters, to the sinful state of society at large, or to the public ...

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