Praise be to Allah alone and peace be upon the last Prophet. To proceed:
 
It is not true that any of the Prophet's  Companions apostatized after the event of the Night Journey. That was  not mentioned expressly except in a Hadith Munkar (rejected Hadith  reported by a weak narrator whose narration conflicts with an authentic  Hadith) reported by Al Hakim (62\3 and 63) and another one from the way  of Muhammad ibn Kathir Al San`any from Ma`mar ibn Rashid from Ibn Shihab  Az-Zuhry from `Urwah on the authority of `Aisha that she said: When the  Prophet (peace be upon him) was taken to Al Aqsa Mosque, people have  spoken about that and some people who believed in him have apostatized.  Al Hakim said: ( This is an authentic Hadith according to the conditions  of Al Bukhari and Muslim who did not report it. Verily, Muhammad ibn  Kathir is truthful).As it is known, Al Hakim criticized many comments on  the Hadiths in his book "Al Mustadrak" and and criticism is obvious  here. Al Bukhari and Muslim did not report any Hadith from Muhammad ibn  Kathir. However, he has a weak memory, so he is a bad memorizer and his  narrations become so weak when he narrates from Mu`ammar. `Abdullah, the  son of Imam Ahmad, said: The name of Muhammad ibn Kathir was mentioned  to my father and he said about him: a bad memorizer. He also sentenced  his narrations from Mu`ammar to be so weak. He said: His Hadiths are  Munkar (rejected Hadith reported by a weak narrator whose narration  conflicts with an authentic Hadith). My father added: Muhammad reports  strange narrations."Tahdhib Al Kamal" ( 26/331) . The correct  judge on this Hadith is: the narration of Ibn Jarir in his exegesis  (17/335) from Ibn Shihab Az-Zuhry, from Ibn Al Musayyab and Abu Salamah  ibn `Abdur-Rahman without a complete chain of narration. Al Hadith Al Mursal (incompletely transmitted Hadith) is a type of the weak Hadiths. In  spite of that, apostasy was not reported from either narrations but  `Abdullah ibn Wahb said it out of his mere opinion. Ibn Wahb is the  narrator of this Hadith from Yunus ibn Yazid from Az-Zuhry.
 
If it is said: Apostasy was also  reported in the Hadith of Ibn `Abbas which is recorded by Imam Ahmad  (1/374 No. 3546), Al Nasa'y in "As-Sunan Al Kubra" and others. Ibn Jarir At-Tabary recorded it as authentic in "Tahdhib Al Athar" (17) and Ibn Kathir in "At-Tafsir"  (5/26). The answer is: The Hadith does not denote that they were  believers and its wordings according to such people is: Some people  said: we do not believe in what Muhammad is sayinh, so they reverted as  disbelievers, thus, their heads were cut along with the head of Abu  Jahl. His saying that they reverted as disbelievers does not denote that  they were believers but it denotes that they wanted to challenge the  Prophet (peace be upon him), after they had seen that amazing sign, to  describe Baytul-Maqdis "Juresalem". The Messenger (peace be upon him)  began to describe Baytul-Maqdis precisely although they know that he did  not see it. He told them about their caravan which was on the way to  Makkah. That sign demands that the infidels of Makkah should believe in  the truthfulness of the Messenger's prophethood but they said: We do not  believe in what Muhammad is saying. So, instead of having firm belief  they reverted to their unbelief. The other narrations which have  mentioned that event from other ways indicated what I have just  mentioned. Those narrations do not have any reference to apostasy, not  to mention the declaration that some Companions have apostatized. The  Hadith chain of narration needs deep thinking which was understood from  the saying of Ibn Jarir At-Tabary in the previous position in "Tahdhib  Al Athar" : " In my opinion, it is an authentic chain of narration but  according to others, it seems to be ill-founded because of the  following: First, this narration was only reported by Ibn `Abbas from  Hilal ibn Khabbab from `Ikrimah and there is no other narrations  reported from that way, even though, the Hadith was reported from  `Ikrimah without Hilal ibn Khabbab. The most important thing is that he  refuted the narration of Hilal ibn Khabbab from `Ikrimah, from Ibn  `Abbas. The Hadiths of Isra' (the Night Journey) was reported by a group  of the Companions (may Allah be pleased with them) whom Al Hafizh Ibn  Kathir mentioned in his explanation of Surat Al Isra' including Ibn  `Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him). None of the Companions mentioned  the issue of apostasy except the Hadith which was reported from the way  of `Aishah or in this narration. The Hadith of Ibn `Abbas was narrated  from five ways, as Ibn Kathir mentioned and some of those narrations  were mentioned in the Two Sahihs, and they did not mention anything  about apostasy except in the narration of `Ikrimah. This narration was  not reported from `Ikrimah except from the way of Hilal ibn Khabbab and  the students of `Ikrimah who reported his narrations are many. No one of  them has reported the narration of Hilal ibn Khabbab although they  accompanied `Ikrimah more than Hilal and their Hadiths are recorded in  the Sahih. As for Hilal ibn Khabbab, Al Bukhari and Muslim did not  mention his Hadith in their books because his mental condition has  changed before his death due to his old age. Such a person cannot report  that narration without supporting it by another narration.
 
This is the defect of the chain of narration but as for the Text, it is rejected for the following reasons:
(1) The Hadith of Abu Sufyan with Heraclius which included the question of  Heraclius to Abu Sufyan, who was an infidel at that time, does any of  those Companions revert from Islam? Abu Sufyan said: No. So, if the  event of apostasy had been true, Abu Sufyan would not have admitted  that. He would have said: Yes, some of them reverted from belief when  such and such happened.
 
(2) There are some rejected wordings in this Hadith from this way of  narration to prove its invalidity such as: "He saw the Antichrist in  reality and not in dream and mentioned his description."
 
If the Prophet saw him that night, he  would not have confused him with Ibn Sayyad after he had migrated to  Madinah. He knew him after he had seen him in reality, especially the  clear signs which were mentioned in the Hadith. Of which, his saying: "I  saw him with nice face and one of his eyes was brightening like a star  and his hair was like the tree branches. Some of these descriptions were  not in Ibn Sayyad such as the description of the eye. His eye was sound  and healthy in the time of the Prophet (peace be upon him) and later on  it was gouged out as indicated in the Hadith of Ibn `Umar in Sahih  Muslim (2932).
 
(3) The Companions at the time of accident of Isra' were few and their  names and the names of their fathers were quite known. Moreover, they  have preserved for us all the accidents that took place at that period.  Thus, the news of their embrace to Islam, their torture, their first and  second migration to Abyssinia and those who died and whom were born.  So, it is unbelievable that the news of apostasy does not reach us and  the names of those apostates were not conveyed to us. No single name, by  either authentic or unauthentic way, was mentioned as one of those who  reverted after the event of Isra'. Such information can not be neglected  while other minor events were reported.
 
(4) Every believer in the Message of Muhammad believes that Gabriel  descends from Heaven with revelation to Muhammad (peace be upon him) in a  moment. So, how it is impossible that the Prophet was taken to Bayt Al  Maqdis (Palestine) in one night. Such meaning was reported from Abu Bakr  (may Allah be pleased with him) when he argued the polytheists. He said  to them: I believe him in major events such as receiving revelation  from heaven in a moment. From what have been mentioned earlier, we know  that the event was not true and because it became widespread, we  elaborated on the matter to explain the truth and Allah knows best.