Study The Word of God about the meaning of apostasy and spiritual adultery! The flesh hates truth and righteousnes.
ἀποστασία, ας, ἡ. as a condition resulting from changing loyalties revolt, desertion; as a religious technical term; (1) apostasy, rebellion (2TH 2.3); (2) defection, abandonment (AC 21.21) ALGNT
646. ἀποστασία apostasía; gen. apostasías, fem. noun from aphístēmi (G0868), to depart. Departure, apostasy. Occurs in Acts 21:21 translated "forsake" and in 2 Thess. 2:3, "a falling away"; Sept.: 2 Chr. 29:19; Jer. 29:32. In Acts 21:21 the new Christian believers among the Jews, having departed from Moses and coming to Jesus Christ, decided that they should stay apart from Moses, i.e., their Judaistic practices, for they were in a new dispensation. They were not Judaizing Christians, but Christians standing apart from Moses. In 2 Thess. 2:3 the word apostasía does not refer to genuine Christians who depart from the faith, but mere professors who, without divine grace, succumb to the Satanic deception of the Antichrist. If those who are truly Christ's and through the Holy Spirit have become members of His body (1 Cor. 12:13) could be detached, then the assurances Jesus gave that His own will not perish would be made null and void (John 10:28, 29). See Sept.: 2 Chr. 29:19. CWSB
ἀποστασία In the NT this sense occurs in Acts 5:37; 15:38; 19:9. Decline from God is the meaning in Heb. 3:12. In 1 Tim. 4:1 apostasy involves capitulation to heretical beliefs as an eschatological phenomenon. An absolute use is found in Lk. 8:13 and cf. Rev. 3:8. TDNT
[686] ἀποστασία apostasia 2x a falling away, a rebellion, apostasy, Acts 21:21; 2 Thess. 2:3* Mounce
3. apostasia (ἀποστασία, 646), “a defection, revolt, apostasy,” is used in the NT of religious apostasy; in Acts 21:21, it is translated “to forsake,” lit., “thou teachest apostasy from Moses.” In 2 Thess. 2:3“the falling away” signifies apostasy from the faith. In papyri documents it is used politically of rebels. Note: For “mighty fall,” Rev. 18:21, RV, see violence. Vines.
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