| This information was taken from the Smith's Bible Dictionary |
| Nicola'itans (followers of
Nicolas), a sect mentioned in Rev.
2:6, 15, whose deeds were strongly condemned. They may have been
identical with those who held the doctrine of Balaam. They seem to have
held that it was lawful to eat things sacrificed to idols, and to commit
fornication, in opposition to the decree of the Church rendered in Acts
15: 20, 29. The teachers of the Church branded them with a name
which expressed their true character. The men who did and taught such
things were followers of Balaam. 2
Pet. 2 : 15; Jude
11. They, like the false prophet of Pethor, united brave words with
evil deeds. In a time of persecu¬tion, when the eating or not eating
of things sacrifieed to idols was more than ever a crucial test of faithfulness,
they persuaded men more than ever that it was a thing indifferent. Rev.
2 : 13, 14. This was bad enough, but there was a yet worse evil.
Mingling themselves in the orgies of idolatrous feasts, they brought
the impurities of those feasts into the meetings of the Christian Church.
And all this was done, it must be remembered, not simply as an indulgence
of appetite, but as a part of a system, supported by a "doctrine,"
accompanied by the boast of a prophetic illumination. 2
Pet. 2 : 1. It confirms the view which has been taken of their character
to find that stress is laid in the first instance on the" deeds"
of the Nicolaitans. To hate those deeds is a sign of life in a Church
that otherwise is weak and faithless. Rev.
2 : 6. To tolerate them is wellnigh to forfeit the glory of having
been faithful under persecution. Rev.
2 : 14, 15. |