
There is a word the Apostle Paul uses exactly once to describe a cataclysmic event that must precede the return of Christ. The word is apostasia — and for centuries, the Church has read it the same way: a great falling away of believers, a mass defection from Christianity that signals the end is near. But what if that reading is wrong? What if it misses something that Paul himself, by his own deliberate vocabulary, was trying to show us?
This is not a minor adjustment to end-times theology. If the conventional reading is too small, it affects how we understand the coming of Christ, the nature of grace, the dignity of the human soul, and the tragic reality of lives exposed to life itself yet unable to enter it. The thread, once pulled, unravels a great deal — and then reweaves into something far more coherent, and far more sobering.
I. The Word Paul Refused to Use
To understand 2 Thessalonians 2:3, you first have to notice what Paul does everywhere else. Throughout his letters, when Paul speaks about believers who stumble, drift, or fail, he reaches for relational language: “fallen from grace” (Galatians 5:4), “shipwrecked faith” (1 Timothy 1:19), “turned aside” (2 Timothy 1:15). He writes of weakness of the flesh, struggling with sin, immaturity, and deception. What he never does — not once — is call a believer an apostate.
This matters because apostasia is available to him. He uses it in 2 Thessalonians 2:3. But when he speaks of Christian failure, he refuses it, and the refusal is not accidental. For Paul, a believer is not primarily a member of a religious system who can defect from it. A believer is in Christ — crucified with Him, hidden in Him, sealed by His Spirit. To describe such a person as an apostate would flatten union into ideology, reduce sonship into membership, and turn grace into mere adherence. Paul will not do it.
So when he writes, “That day shall not come unless the apostasia comes first,” he is not reaching for his ordinary language about Christian failure. He is using a word that in Greek carries the weight of rebellion, political defection, and the visible abandonment of a prior allegiance — often at great cost. The question we have rarely thought to ask is: defection from what?
The apostasia Paul describes is not the church losing members. It is something far more dramatic — a supernatural rupture of religious order itself.
Consider the world into which the first-century gospel exploded. To embrace Christ was not a religious upgrade. It was apostasy — from Judaism, from Roman paganism, from emperor worship, from ancestral religion. It was public, costly, and often met with violence. The word apostasia could, in that world, describe exactly this: a mass, visible abandonment of established religious allegiance, not away from God, but toward the kingdom.
Paul’s three-phase sequence in 2 Thessalonians 2 may be describing this very dynamic: a great rupture from old religious orders, followed by the exposure of the man of lawlessness (whose covering the old systems had partially provided), and then the revealing of Christ. What tradition reads as collapse, Paul may be describing as convulsion — the violent realignment of human religion before the Day of the Lord.
II. Humbleness: The Lingering Mercy in Every Soul
This positive reading of apostasia raises an immediate question: what is it that makes some souls capable of such a costly rupture? What allows a person to leave behind everything familiar, to step out of the known into the unknown, to say yes to grace? The answer is not virtue. It is something older and more fragile: humbleness.
Scripture teaches that humanity is truly fallen. We are dead in trespasses and sins (Ephesians 2:1), unable to save ourselves, unable to generate the life we need. This is not a minor theological claim — it is the ground on which grace becomes necessary and glorious. But Scripture also refuses to say that the fall reduced human beings to mere debris. The image of God is marred, not erased. The soul is captive, not annihilated.
The bones in Ezekiel’s valley are very dry. But God addresses them. He does not shout into a void. He calls them, and they hear, and at the word, life enters. That hearing is not power. It is personhood. And personhood — the capacity to be addressed — survives the fall precisely because God did not create disposable things.
The Cross confirms this beyond argument. God does not crush His Son for nothing. He does not spill infinite blood for hollow clay. If the soul had no remaining dignity, no residual worth, no lingering capacity to receive what is offered — redemption would be theater, not rescue.
Even the most wounded soul carries something we might call humbleness: not the virtue of humility, which belongs to the new birth, but a creaturely openness — the honest awareness of lack.
This humbleness is embedded in creation itself. It is lingering mercy, not earned capacity. We see it in the cries Scripture records — not only from the righteous, but from the desperate and the pagan. Hagar in the wilderness. Israel in bondage. Nineveh under threat of judgment. A thief dying beside Christ. None of these are model believers exercising spiritual virtue. They are creatures acknowledging need. And God hears.
This also explains why God can command humility throughout Scripture without it being cruel. He does not demand what has been entirely removed. “Humble yourselves before the Lord” (James 4:10) assumes a capacity still present in fallen humanity — not a saving capacity, not a meritorious one, but a creaturely one. The soul can still bow. The soul can still cry. The soul can still feel its own exile.
This is not humility — the fruit of new birth, the mind of Christ, the joyful dependence of a soul regenerated by the Spirit. That is different, and it is wholly grace. But humbleness — honest poverty of spirit — this is what creation preserved. And it is enough to receive what grace alone provides.
III. Pride: The Door That Seals Itself

“Today, if you hear His voice…”
If humbleness is the creaturely openness through which grace flows, pride is its opposite — and Scripture treats it with a severity that modern Christianity rarely matches. “In his pride the wicked man does not seek Him; in all his thoughts there is no room for God” (Psalm 10:4). Not cannot find room. Does not seek. Leaves no room.
The distinction matters profoundly. The barrier is not metaphysical inability. It is settled fullness. The proud soul is not empty — it is sated. It has no hunger for what it has already replaced with itself. Grace does not fail to reach such a person because grace is weak. Grace is resisted because there is no vacancy.
This is why Jesus consistently encounters tax collectors and sinners — the broken, the hungry, the socially disgraced — and consistently clashes with Pharisees. Not because the
Pharisees were worse sinners, but because they were full. Full of law-keeping, self-assessment, spiritual accomplishment. There was, quite literally, no room. “Those who are well have no need of a physician” — and the tragedy is that they genuinely believe themselves to be well.
Paul describes this trajectory in Romans 1 with harrowing precision. Truth is suppressed. God is exchanged. The heart becomes darkened. And then — three times — “God gave them over.” This is not God creating hardness. It is God confirming a posture that the soul has persistently and deliberately chosen. Hardening is the judicial confirmation of self-chosen closure.
The most dangerous spiritual condition is not brokenness. It is contentment without God — a heart so full of its own world that the knock can no longer be heard.
And this closure can become permanent. Hebrews warns that the heart can harden progressively, that “today” — the window of responsiveness — will not remain open indefinitely. The embedded humbleness, the creaturely openness that creation preserved in us, can be buried under layer after layer of pride until it is no longer exercisable. Not because God withdrew it, but because the soul has spent a lifetime covering it over.
This is not a reason for despair. It is a reason for urgency. “Today, if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts” (Hebrews 3:7). The warning exists because the condition is reversible — until it is not.
IV. Three Portraits of Sealed Hearts
Scripture does not leave this as abstract theology. It shows us faces.
The Rich Young Man came running. He knelt before the source of life itself, addressed Jesus with reverence, and demonstrated genuine moral seriousness. He was close — closer than most people in the Gospel narratives ever get. Jesus looked at him and loved him. And then the word came: give up the thing your heart is moored to. And he went away sad, because he had great possessions.
He was not stupid. He was not malicious. He longed for life. But his heart had a prior occupant, and he would not evict it. Longing without surrender is insufficient. He went away with his sadness and his possessions, his remorse and his treasure, his sense of something lost and his inability to release what was preventing the gain. What a portrait of the human condition.
Esau is more troubling still. When he desired to inherit the blessing, “he was rejected, for he found no place for repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears” (Hebrews 12:17). The tears are real. The desire is genuine. But the Greek is merciless: he found no topon — no ground, no place, no soil in which repentance could take root. The years of contempt for the birthright, the settled preference for the immediate over the eternal, had so concreted his inner world that even his own sorrow could find nowhere to land. This is the “other side.” Not a dramatic apostasy, but a gradual, ordinary accumulation of choices that closed the door from the inside.
Judas, finally. He felt remorse. He saw the gravity of what he had done with terrifying clarity. He returned the silver. But his cry — “I have sinned by betraying innocent blood” — went to the priests, not to God. There is conscience here, and regret, and even a kind of integrity. What is absent is the one thing needful: the downward turn of the soul toward its Creator, the humbleness that makes room for mercy. Remorse without submission is not repentance. It is tragedy wearing the costume of virtue.
Three men. Three forms of sealed hearts. The rich young man moored to possession. Esau concreted through long contempt for the sacred. Judas collapsed inward rather than upward. All of them close to life. None of them able to enter it.
V. The Phase That Is Coming
Bring these threads together and a coherent picture emerges — not a system, but a witness. The great apostasia is not the Church losing members. It is a supernatural, costly, visible rupture in the religious ordering of human life, the kind that precedes and prepares for the revealing of Christ. The world is moving toward a phase unlike any it has known, and the conventional reading — Christians drifting away from Christianity — is too small and too institutional to account for what Paul was describing.
At the same time, grace has always been real, universal, and sufficient. The light shines in the darkness. Christ stands at the door of every heart and knocks. The Spirit tugs at every conscience. The soul of every person, because it is made in the image of God and because creation preserved in it a humbleness that lingering mercy maintains, is capable of being addressed, summoned, and received.
But grace is not coercive. It does not break down sealed doors. It enters where there is room — where pride has not filled the space, where humbleness still creates the vacancy that grace requires. And that vacancy, Scripture insists, can be gradually, willingly, definitively closed. The lament of Revelation 3 is not that grace ran out. It is that the door was locked from the inside: “I stand at the door and knock.”
The tragedy is not that God is absent. The tragedy is that presence is so near — and the door remains closed.
Luke 18:8 ends with a question that has haunted theology for two thousand years: “When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?” It is not a forecast of despair. It is a probing question — qualitative, not quantitative. The faith in view is the God-given, Spirit-sustained, persevering trust that cries out for justice in a world that delays it. That faith will not have disappeared. But it may be rarer, costlier, more refined, more precious. And Christ will search for it.
He will find it in the souls that knew their exile and did not make peace with it. In the ones who felt the knock and opened the door. In the ones who, when the prod of the Spirit reached the humbleness God preserved in them, did not harden — but yielded.
That is the invitation Scripture has always held out. Not to the impressive. Not to the morally accomplished. To the poor in spirit. To the empty. To the ones who, like the prodigal, came to themselves — and went home.
Today, if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts. — Hebrews 3:7

So beautiful. Thank you, BV.
Thank you, Julie! I’m glad it resonated 🙏