Thursday, March 19, 2026

Are First Communion and Confirmation Biblical? A Powerful Catholic Defense Rooted in Scripture and the Early Church

First Communion and Confirmation biblical foundation
Introduction: Are These Just “Catholic Traditions”?

Many Protestants argue that First Communion and Confirmation are “man-made traditions” not found in the Bible. But is that true?

The reality is this: while the exact modern terms “First Communion” and “Confirmation” are not explicitly written in Scripture, the realities they represent are deeply biblical, apostolic, and practiced by the earliest Christians.

Let’s break this down carefully—with Scripture, Early Church testimony, and official Catholic teaching.


Part 1: Is First Communion Biblical?

1. The Eucharist Is Clearly Instituted by Christ

The foundation of First Communion is the Eucharist, instituted by Jesus Himself:

“This is my body… this is my blood… do this in remembrance of me.”
— Luke 22:19–20

Also:

“Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.”
— John 6:53

👉 These verses show:

  • The Eucharist is not symbolic only

  • It is necessary for spiritual life

  • It is a command from Christ

📖 Therefore, receiving Communion is not optional—it is essential.


2. Why “First” Communion Exists

In the early Church, not everyone received Communion immediately:

  • Converts underwent instruction (catechesis)

  • Baptism preceded Eucharist (Acts 2:41–42)

“They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching… and the breaking of bread.”
— Acts 2:42

👉 This shows a process:

  1. Teaching

  2. Baptism

  3. Eucharist

So “First Communion” simply marks:
➡️ The first worthy reception of the Eucharist after proper preparation


3. St. Paul Warns About Worthy Reception

“Whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily… eats and drinks judgment upon himself.”
— 1 Corinthians 11:27–29

👉 This is critical:

  • Not everyone should receive casually

  • Preparation and understanding are required

📌 This is exactly why the Church requires First Communion preparation.


4. Early Church Evidence

St. Justin Martyr (c. 155 AD)

“No one may share in it except one who believes… and has been washed in Baptism.”¹

👉 This shows:

  • Eucharist is restricted

  • Requires faith and initiation


St. Augustine (4th century)

“You must receive worthily… recognizing the Body of Christ.”²


5. Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC)

  • CCC 1324: “The Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian life.”

  • CCC 1385: Worthy reception is required

  • CCC 1247: Catechesis precedes sacraments

👉 Conclusion:
First Communion is fully biblical in principle and apostolic in practice.


Part 2: Is Confirmation Biblical?

1. Confirmation Is Rooted in the Apostles’ Actions

The clearest biblical evidence:

“They laid their hands on them and they received the Holy Spirit.”
— Acts 8:14–17

👉 Important:

  • These believers were already baptized

  • Yet they received the Holy Spirit through laying on of hands

📌 This is exactly what Confirmation is.


Another Example:

“Paul laid his hands upon them, and the Holy Spirit came on them.”
— Acts 19:5–6

👉 Again:

  • Baptism first

  • Then laying on of hands


2. Theological Meaning of Confirmation

Confirmation:

  • Strengthens baptismal grace

  • Gives fullness of the Holy Spirit

  • Empowers for mission

👉 Rooted in:

“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you.”
— Acts 1:8


3. Hebrews Confirms This Practice

“The laying on of hands”
— Hebrews 6:2

👉 Listed as a foundational doctrine


4. Early Church Fathers on Confirmation

Tertullian (c. 200 AD)

“After Baptism, hands are laid upon us… inviting the Holy Spirit.”³


St. Cyril of Jerusalem (c. 350 AD)

“You were anointed… becoming partakers of Christ.”⁴

👉 This refers to Chrismation (Confirmation)


5. Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC)

  • CCC 1285: Confirmation completes Baptism

  • CCC 1302–1305: Effects include strength and mission

  • CCC 1299: Apostolic laying on of hands continues

👉 Conclusion:
Confirmation is directly biblical and clearly practiced by the Apostles.


Part 3: Answering Common Protestant Objections

❌ Objection 1: “These terms are not in the Bible”

✅ Answer:

  • The Trinity is not named explicitly either—but is biblical

  • The Church uses terms to describe biblical realities


❌ Objection 2: “All believers already have the Holy Spirit”

✅ Answer:
Yes—but Scripture shows:

  • A distinct strengthening or outpouring (Acts 8, Acts 19)

👉 Baptism ≠ Full empowerment in every case


❌ Objection 3: “Communion is just symbolic”

✅ Answer:
John 6 + 1 Corinthians 11 clearly reject that:

  • Real presence

  • Serious consequences for misuse


❌ Objection 4: “No need for preparation”

✅ Answer:
Paul strongly warns against unworthy reception

👉 Preparation is biblical obedience, not tradition.


Conclusion: Fully Biblical, Fully Apostolic

Both First Communion and Confirmation are:

✔ Rooted in the commands of Christ
✔ Practiced by the Apostles
✔ Confirmed by the Early Church
✔ Preserved in the Catholic Church

They are not human inventions—they are organic developments of biblical truths lived out in the Church founded by Christ.


Final Takeaway

If you reject these sacraments, you are not rejecting “Catholic traditions”—
👉 You are rejecting practices deeply rooted in Scripture and apostolic Christianity.


Footnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Justin Martyr, First Apology, ch. 66.

  2. Augustine, Sermon 272.

  3. Tertullian, On Baptism, ch. 8.

  4. Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 21.

 

🔥 TOP 20 SABBATH-KEEPING DENOMINATIONS — AND WHICH ONE IS THE TRUE CHURCH OF CHRIST?

🧭 INTRODUCTION

Many groups today claim to be the “true Church” because they keep the Sabbath (Saturday). Among them, the most prominent is the Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA), which often asserts that it uniquely preserves God’s commandments.

But a crucial question must be asked:

Did Christ found a Sabbath-keeping denomination in the 1st century that still exists today in these groups?

To answer this, we must examine:

  1. The top Sabbath-keeping denominations today

  2. Their historical origins

  3. The Bible

  4. The Early Church Fathers

  5. The teaching of the Catholic Church


📊 TOP 20 SABBATH-KEEPING DENOMINATIONS TODAY

Here are 20 of the largest and most known Sabbath-observing groups:

🟢 Major Global Movements

  1. Seventh-day Adventist Church

  2. Seventh Day Baptist General Conference

  3. Church of God (Seventh Day)

  4. United Church of God

  5. Living Church of God

  6. Philadelphia Church of God


🟡 Adventist Offshoots

  1. Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement

  2. Davidian Seventh-day Adventists

  3. Branch Davidians

  4. Shepherd’s Rod Movement


🔵 Church of God Splinters

  1. General Conference of the Church of God (Seventh Day)

  2. Church of God International

  3. House of Yahweh


🟣 Sacred Name / Hebrew Roots

  1. Yahweh's Assembly in Messiah

  2. Assemblies of Yahweh

  3. Messianic Jewish Movement


🟠 Other Sabbatarian Groups

  1. True Jesus Church

  2. Church of God General Conference

  3. World Mission Society Church of God

  4. United Seventh-Day Brethren


⚠️ CRUCIAL OBSERVATION

👉 These groups:

  • Disagree with each other doctrinally

  • Split repeatedly

  • Started mostly in the 18th–20th centuries

Example:

  • SDA → founded 1863

  • Branch Davidians → 20th century

  • Armstrong groups → 1930s+

❗ This alone raises a serious question:
How can the “true Church” start 1800+ years after Christ?


📖 WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY ABOUT THE TRUE CHURCH?

1. Christ Founded ONE Church

“You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church.” — Matthew 16:18

👉 Not “churches”—but one visible Church


2. The Church Will NEVER DISAPPEAR

“The gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” — Matthew 16:18

👉 The true Church:

  • Cannot vanish

  • Cannot be lost for 1800 years

  • Cannot be “restored” later


3. The Church is the Pillar of Truth

“The Church… pillar and foundation of truth.” — 1 Timothy 3:15

👉 Truth is preserved in the Church—not rediscovered in 1863


⛪ EARLY CHRISTIAN PRACTICE (1st–3rd CENTURY)

❗ Did Early Christians Keep Saturday Sabbath?

👉 NO as a binding law.

Instead, they worshipped on Sunday (Lord’s Day):

📜 Ignatius of Antioch (c. 107 AD)

“No longer observing the Sabbath, but living according to the Lord’s Day…”


📜 Justin Martyr (c. 155 AD)

“We gather on Sunday… because Jesus rose from the dead.”


📜 Didache (1st century)

“On the Lord’s Day, gather and break bread.”


👉 This proves:

  • Apostolic Christians did not teach mandatory Sabbath keeping

  • Sunday worship is Apostolic, not later invention


❌ REFUTING THE SDA CLAIM

The Seventh-day Adventist Church claims:

  • They are the “remnant church”

  • Sabbath = mark of the true Church


🔥 Problem 1: Late Origin

  • Founded: 1863

  • Founder: Ellen G. White

👉 That is 1,800+ years after Christ


🔥 Problem 2: No Apostolic Succession

The early Church had unbroken leadership from the Apostles.

Example:

  • Peter the Apostle → Bishops of Rome → today

👉 SDA has no historical continuity


🔥 Problem 3: Doctrinal Contradictions

Sabbath groups themselves:

  • Disagree on salvation

  • Disagree on law

  • Disagree on prophecy

👉 Truth cannot be divided (John 17:21)


📘 CATHOLIC TEACHING (CCC)

The Catholic Church teaches:

“The Church… subsists in the Catholic Church governed by the successor of Peter.” (CCC 816)


Why Sunday Worship?

“Sunday… is the fulfillment of the Sabbath.” (CCC 2175)

👉 Not abolishing—but fulfilling (Matthew 5:17)


🧠 LOGICAL CONCLUSION

Let’s be honest and logical:

CriteriaSabbath GroupsCatholic Church
Founded by Christ
Continuous since 1st century
United worldwide
Apostolic succession
Confirmed by Early Fathers

🏁 FINAL ANSWER

👉 Out of the Top 20 Sabbath-keeping denominations, NONE is the true Church founded by Jesus Christ in the 1st century.


✅ The True Church is:

👉 The Catholic Church

Because it alone:

  • Was founded by Christ (Matthew 16:18)

  • Has unbroken apostolic succession

  • Is historically continuous for 2,000 years

  • Matches the faith and practice of early Christians


🔥 FINAL THOUGHT

The issue is not:

“Which group keeps Saturday?”

But:

“Which Church can trace itself back to Christ and the Apostles?”

👉 History, Scripture, and the Early Church give one consistent answer.


📚 FOOTNOTES (Chicago Style)

  1. Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Magnesians, c. 107 AD.

  2. Justin Martyr, First Apology, c. 155 AD.

  3. Didache, 1st century Christian text.

  4. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §§816, 2175.

  5. Holy Bible, Matthew 16:18; 1 Timothy 3:15; John 17:21.

 


📘 MARY IS NOT A MEDIATOR? A BIBLICAL AND HISTORICAL REBUTTAL TO ANTI-CATHOLIC CLAIMS

Mary is an Intercessor
✝️ Introduction: Answering a Viral Claim

A widely shared image claims:

“Mary is not a mediator… She cannot hear your prayers… She is dead and silent… Christ alone is our mediator.”

At first glance, this sounds biblical—especially when it cites the truth that Christ is the one Mediator. However, this claim mixes truth with serious misunderstanding, leading many into confusion about the role of Mary and the communion of saints.

This article will carefully examine:

  • What Scripture really teaches

  • What the Catholic Church actually believes

  • What early Christians practiced


📖 1. Christ Alone is the Unique Mediator of Salvation

The Bible clearly teaches:

“For there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.” (1 Timothy 2:5)

The Catholic Church fully affirms this.

📘 Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 970):

“Mary’s function as mother of men in no way obscures or diminishes this unique mediation of Christ, but rather shows its power.”¹

👉 This means:

  • Jesus Christ is the ONLY Savior

  • He alone bridges humanity and God through His sacrifice

⚠️ Therefore, any claim that Catholics “replace Christ with Mary” is false.


🙏 2. The Bible Commands Intercession

Interestingly, the same chapter that says Christ is the one Mediator also commands:

“I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions be made for all men.” (1 Timothy 2:1)

👉 This reveals a key truth:

✔️ Christians are called to intercede for one another
✔️ Intercession does NOT compete with Christ’s role
✔️ It participates in Christ’s one mediation

📌 If asking others to pray for you were wrong, then all Christian prayer groups would be unbiblical.


🌿 3. Are the Saints “Dead and Silent”?

The viral claim insists:

“Mary is dead and silent.”

But Scripture says otherwise.

📖 God is the God of the Living

“He is not God of the dead, but of the living.” (Luke 20:38)

👉 Mary and the saints are alive in God’s presence.


📖 Saints Are Aware and Active in Heaven

“We are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses.” (Hebrews 12:1)

“The souls… cried out with a loud voice…” (Revelation 6:9–10)

👉 The saints:

  • Are conscious

  • Speak

  • Participate in God’s plan


📖 Saints Present Our Prayers to God

“The elders… held golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints.” (Revelation 5:8)

👉 This is powerful evidence that:
✔️ Heavenly beings offer prayers to God
✔️ Intercession exists even in heaven


👂 4. Can Mary Hear Our Prayers?

A common objection is:

“Mary cannot hear millions of prayers.”

Correct—Mary is not omniscient. But she does not need to be.

📖 Luke 15:7

Heaven rejoices over one sinner who repents

👉 This implies:

  • Awareness of earthly events

  • Participation in God’s knowledge

✔️ God can allow the saints to hear prayers
✔️ Their ability comes from Him—not themselves


🍷 5. Biblical Example: Mary’s Intercession

The clearest example appears at the Wedding at Cana (John 2:1–11).

👉 Mary tells Jesus:

“They have no wine.”

Initially, Jesus responds:

“My hour has not yet come.”

Yet, He performs His first miracle.

📌 What does this show?

✔️ Mary intercedes
✔️ Jesus responds
✔️ Her role points others to Him

👉 This is the model of Marian intercession:

“Do whatever He tells you.” (John 2:5)


🏛️ 6. The Early Church Believed in Intercession

This is not a later Catholic invention.

📜 St. Irenaeus (2nd century)

Described Mary as the New Eve, whose obedience cooperates in salvation.²

📜 St. Augustine

Affirmed that the saints in heaven are aware and pray for the Church.³

👉 From the earliest centuries:
✔️ Christians honored Mary
✔️ They believed in heavenly intercession


⚖️ 7. Proper Distinction: Mediator vs Intercessor

RoleMeaning
ChristOnly Mediator of salvation
Mary & SaintsIntercessors who pray for us

👉 This is similar to asking:

  • A pastor

  • A friend

  • A family member

✔️ It does NOT replace Christ
✔️ It reflects unity in the Body of Christ


🔥 8. Why the Propaganda Fails

The viral claim is misleading because:

❌ It isolates 1 Timothy 2:5 from its context
❌ It ignores 1 Timothy 2:1 (intercession)
❌ It falsely claims the saints are dead
❌ It denies biblical evidence of heavenly prayer
❌ It contradicts early Christian belief


🧠 Conclusion: Christ-Centered, Not Christ-Replacing

Catholic teaching on Mary is not a contradiction—but a deeper expression of Christ’s work.

👉 When Catholics ask Mary to pray:

  • They are NOT worshiping her

  • They are NOT replacing Christ

  • They are participating in the communion of saints

Ultimately, Marian devotion leads to one person:

➡️ Jesus Christ

Just as Mary said:

“Do whatever He tells you.”


📚 Footnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed. (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1997), §970.

  2. St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book III, Chapter 22.

  3. St. Augustine, City of God, Book XXII.


Are First Communion and Confirmation Biblical? A Powerful Catholic Defense Rooted in Scripture and the Early Church

Introduction: Are These Just “Catholic Traditions”? Many Protestants argue that First Communion and Confirmation are “man-made traditions...