Friday, February 6, 2026

**Idols Named in the Bible: Why Catholic Christianity Is Not Pagan but Biblical**

False God or Idols are not found in the Catholic Church
The Bible names many false gods such as Baal, Molech, Zeus, and Artemis—yet condemns their worship. This biblical and historical study refutes the claim that Catholics are pagans for using sacred images.

Introduction: A Common but Flawed Accusation

One of the loudest accusations against the Catholic Church is that it is a pagan religion because Catholics use statues, images, and mention saints in prayer. Critics often quote Exodus 20 while ignoring the rest of Scripture and Church history.

Ironically, the Bible itself names many pagan gods—yet no one accuses Scripture of being pagan.

This article demonstrates that:

  • Naming or depicting something does not equal worship

  • Scripture itself names false gods

  • Catholic teaching strictly rejects idolatry

  • Sacred images are biblical and apostolic


I. The Bible Explicitly Names False Gods

The Bible does not avoid naming idols. Instead, it exposes them to show their falseness.

A. Canaanite and Semitic Gods (Old Testament)

Name of GodBible VersesDescription
BaalJudges 2:11–13; 1 Kings 18Storm/fertility god
Asherah (Astarte)Judges 3:7; 2 Kings 23:4Fertility goddess
Molech (Moloch)Lev 18:21; Jer 32:35Child sacrifice
Dagon1 Sam 5:2–7Philistine god
ChemoshNum 21:29; 1 Kings 11:7Moabite god
Milcom1 Kings 11:5Ammonite god
Rimmon2 Kings 5:18Syrian god
Nisroch2 Kings 19:37Assyrian god

πŸ“Œ Apologetic Point:
The Bible names these gods but never worships them.


B. Egyptian Gods

πŸ“– Exodus 12:12

“I will execute judgments on all the gods of Egypt.”

  • Apis (Bull deity) – implied in Exodus 32

  • Ra, Horus, Isis – implied through the plagues

πŸ“Œ The plagues were judgments against named deities, not endorsements.


C. Babylonian and Persian Gods

GodBible Reference
Bel (Marduk)Isaiah 46:1; Jeremiah 50:2
NeboIsaiah 46:1

D. Greek and Roman Gods (New Testament)

GodBible Reference
Zeus (Jupiter)Acts 14:12–13
Hermes (Mercury)Acts 14:12
Artemis (Diana)Acts 19:24–35

πŸ“Œ Even the New Testament names pagan gods explicitly.


II. Naming Is Not Worship (Biblical Principle)

πŸ“– 1 Corinthians 8:4–6

“An idol is nothing at all in the world… there is no God but one.”

πŸ“– Psalm 96:5

“All the gods of the nations are idols, but the LORD made the heavens.”

πŸ“Œ The Bible:

  • Names idols ✔

  • Explains their origin ✔

  • Condemns their worship ✔

πŸ‘‰ Therefore, naming or depicting ≠ worship.


III. God Commanded Sacred Images

If images were automatically pagan, God would contradict Himself.

Biblical Examples

ImageVerse
Cherubim on the ArkExodus 25:18–22
Bronze SerpentNumbers 21:8–9
Temple Angels1 Kings 6:23–29

πŸ“Œ The sin was never the image, but treating it as a god (2 Kings 18:4).


IV. Catholic Teaching on Images (Not Idolatry)

πŸ“˜ Catechism of the Catholic Church §2132

“The honor paid to sacred images is a respectful veneration, not the adoration due to God alone.”

Catholic Distinctions

TermMeaning
LatriaWorship (God alone)
DuliaHonor (saints)
HyperduliaSpecial honor (Mary)

Catholics do not believe statues hear prayers or possess power.


V. Early Christian Use of Images

Archaeological Evidence

  • Roman Catacombs (2nd–3rd century)

  • Images of Christ as the Good Shepherd

  • Jonah, resurrection symbols

πŸ“Œ These Christians were anti-pagan and often martyred.


VI. Church Fathers on Images

St. Basil the Great
“The honor given to the image passes to the prototype.”¹

St. John of Damascus
“I do not worship matter… but the Creator of matter.”²

St. Gregory the Great
“Images are the books of the unlearned.”³


VII. The Incarnation Makes Images Logical

πŸ“– John 1:14

“The Word became flesh.”

God became visible.

Denying sacred images after the Incarnation risks denying that Christ truly became man.


VIII. Historical Development (Not Pagan Corruption)

Timeline

CenturyDevelopment
1stNo public images (persecution)
2nd–3rdSymbolic art
4thPublic Christian worship
787Council of Nicaea II

πŸ“œ Nicaea II affirmed images while condemning idolatry.


IX. Final Apologetic Conclusion

The Bible itself:
✔ Names false gods
✔ Explains their emptiness
✔ Uses images commanded by God

Therefore:

Calling Catholicism “pagan” misunderstands both Scripture and history.

Catholics do not worship images—
they worship the one true God revealed in Jesus Christ.


Footnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Basil of Caesarea, On the Holy Spirit, 18.45

  2. John of Damascus, On the Divine Images, I.16

  3. Gregory the Great, Epistle to Serenus of Marseilles

  4. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §§2129–2132

  5. Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Christian Tradition, Vol. 1

  6. Hurtado, Larry. Lord Jesus Christ

 


Thursday, February 5, 2026

Tracing the True Church from Christ to Today: Why the Iglesia ni Cristo Does Not Meet the Historical and Biblical Standard

A historical and biblical examination of the Iglesia ni Cristo’s claim to be the true Church founded by Jesus Christ. This article uses scripture, early Church Fathers, apostolic succession, and historical evidence to evaluate continuity from the 1st century Church to the present.

If we trace back the leadership of the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) from the present going backward, the line does not reach the Apostles, the early Church, or the 1st century. Instead, it clearly ends in the early 20th century with its founder.

Here is the historical traceback:

Current to past INC leadership

  • Eduardo V. Manalo – Current Executive Minister

  • EraΓ±o G. Manalo – Executive Minister (1977–2009)

  • Felix Y. Manalo – Founder of Iglesia ni Cristo (1914)

When traced further back before Felix Y. Manalo, there is no prior INC leadership, no apostolic figure, no bishop, no early Christian community, and no historical church structure connected to the first-century Church founded by Christ.

Where does the trace stop?
It stops in 1914, in the Philippines, with Felix Y. Manalo.

Key historical observation

  • Felix Manalo was not ordained by any apostle or apostolic successor

  • He did not receive authority from an existing historic Church

  • INC has no documented apostolic succession

  • There is a historical gap of about 1,900 years between Christ and the founding of INC

Implication
If leadership continuity is a test of being the Church founded by Christ (cf. Matthew 16:18; Acts 1:20–26; 1 Timothy 4:14; 2 Timothy 2:2), then INC fails the historical and biblical test of continuity. A church that truly comes from Christ must be traceable through an unbroken line of teaching and authority, not suddenly appear in the 20th century.

Remarks:
When traced backward, INC leadership does not reach Christ or the Apostles.
It terminates with Felix Y. Manalo in 1914, making INC a modern restoration movement, not the original Church established by Jesus Christ.

Many religious groups claim to be the true Church founded by Jesus Christ. One of the most prominent among them in the Philippines and the Filipino diaspora is the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC). But does the INC actually trace its roots back to Jesus and the Apostles? In this article, we examine historical evidence, biblical texts, teachings from early Christians and Church Fathers, and the standard criteria for what constitutes continuity with the Church Jesus founded.


1. What Does It Mean to Be the “True Church”?

Key Criteria Based on Scripture and Tradition

  1. Apostolic Foundation
    Jesus promised that His Church would be built on the Apostles (Matt 16:18) and would continue until the end (Matt 28:20).

  2. Apostolic Succession
    The early Church passed authority from the Apostles to bishops and leaders through laying on of hands (e.g., Acts 6:6; 1 Tim 4:14; 2 Tim 2:2).

  3. Continuity of Teaching
    The Church must preserve the apostolic teaching (Acts 2:42; Jude 3; 2 Thess 2:15).

  4. Historical Continuity
    There must be an unbroken historical lineage from the Apostles to the present.


2. Short Timeline of Church History (1st–21st Century)

Infographic Suggested: Timeline graphic showing major periods: Apostolic Era → Patristic Era → Medieval Church → Reformation → Modern Era → INC Founding (1914)

PeriodKey EventsTransmission
33–100 ADApostles preachingDirect apostolic authority
100–313 ADEarly Church & Church FathersBishops, Apostolic Fathers
313–600 ADLegalization and growthEcumenical councils
600–1517 ADMedieval ChurchPapacy, sacraments, councils
1517–1900 ADReformation & Counter-ReformationReform movements
1914 ADINC Founded by Felix Y. ManaloNo prior apostolic lineage


3. Who Founded the Iglesia ni Cristo?

INC Founded: 1914 in the Philippines
Founder: Felix Y. Manalo

Manalo claimed that religious organizations before INC had strayed from true Christianity. However, there is no historical evidence that he was ordained by any apostolic successor, bishop, or existing Christian group with historical continuity.

INC Leadership Lineage

  • Eduardo V. Manalo (Current Executive Minister)

  • EraΓ±o G. Manalo (1977–2009)

  • Felix Y. Manalo (Founder, 1914–1963)

This lineage begins in the 20th century — not the 1st century.


4. Biblical Evidence for Continuity

Bible TextWhat It Shows
Matthew 16:18Christ builds His Church on the Apostle Peter
Acts 2:42Early Christians continued in apostolic teaching
1 Timothy 4:14Laying on of hands for leadership continuity
2 Timothy 2:2Teachings passed to faithful men
Jude 3Preservation of apostolic teaching

These texts point to a continuity of leadership and teaching from the Apostles onward — a criterion unmet by INC’s founding in the 20th century.


5. What Early Christians and Church Fathers Say

Key Quotes from Church Fathers

Clement of Rome (c. 96 AD):
“Our Apostles knew through our Lord Jesus Christ that there would be strife… and thus appointed the above-mentioned persons.”1

Ignatius of Antioch (c. 110 AD):
“Be eager to do all things in the name of Jesus Christ, who was of the race of David; be ye subject to the bishop and the presbytery and the deacons.”2

Irenaeus (c. 180 AD):
“Where the Church is, there is the Spirit of God; and where the Spirit of God is, there is the Church.”3

These writings show that:

  • Leadership succession (bishops, presbyters) mattered very early.

  • True Church authority was understood as beginning with the Apostles and continuing through recognized leaders.


6. Comparison Table: INC vs Historic Christianity

FeatureHistoric Church (e.g., Catholic)Iglesia ni Cristo
FoundedBy Christ through the Apostles1914 by Felix Manalo
Apostolic SuccessionContinuous from the ApostlesNo documented apostolic ordination
Early Church AcceptanceRecognized in early ecumenical councilsNot part of early Christian history
Teaching ContinuityRooted in apostolic teaching & councilsIndependent theological development
Historical RecordsExtensive historical documentationBegins in 20th century

7. Standard Historical References (Church History)

Church history is well documented across many reliable sources:

  • Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History (c. 325 AD)

  • Socrates Scholasticus, Church History

  • The Oxford History of Christianity

  • Jaroslav Pelikan, The Christian Tradition

These sources continuously document Christian leadership from the first century, especially in the Catholic and Orthodox traditions — not in INC.


8. What About INC’s Claim of Restoration?

INC teaches that existing churches were corrupt and that they alone restored true Christianity in 1914.

Problem with this theology:

  • There is no historical evidence of a total disappearance of the Church that apostolic succession could not be traced.

  • Historical records show continuous Christians communities throughout history.


9. Does INC’s Theology Match Scripture?

Some key theological differences:

  • Nature of Christ

  • Sacraments / Ordinances

  • Understanding of salvation

These doctrinal differences are debated among scholars. The more crucial issue is historical continuity, which INC cannot demonstrate from the Apostles to Felix Manalo.


Conclusion

When evaluated against biblical standards and historical evidence:
✔️ The true Church founded by Christ must have apostolic roots.
❌ The Iglesia ni Cristo does not have an unbroken line to the Apostles.
❌ Its leadership begins in 1914, not the 1st century.
❌ There is no documented apostolic succession ordained from the early Church.

Therefore, the claim that INC is the true Church founded by Jesus Christ is not supported by historical and biblical evidence.


Footnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Clement of Rome, First Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians (c. 96 AD), ch. 42.

  2. Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Smyrnaeans (c. 110 AD), ch. 8.

  3. Irenaeus, Against Heresies (c. 180 AD), Book III, ch. 3.


πŸ›‘️ Is the Seventh-day Adventist Church the True Church Founded by Jesus Christ?

A comprehensive apologetic analysis of the Seventh-day Adventist claim to be the true Church of Jesus Christ — with historical timelines, comparison tables, biblical texts, early Church Fathers, and documented evidence.



If we trace back the leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA) from the present to its origin, it ultimately does not reach the Apostles or the 1st-century Church, but stops in the 19th century United States.

Here is a clear and historical traceback:


Leadership Traceback of the Seventh-day Adventist Church

1. Present SDA Leadership

The SDA Church today is governed by the General Conference, headed by a President (currently elected by delegates, not by apostolic succession).

This structure itself already shows a modern corporate-style governance, not an apostolic episcopal lineage.


2. 19th Century Origins (1830s–1860s)

When traced backward, SDA leadership leads to the Millerite Movement:

  • William Miller (1782–1849)

    • A Baptist lay preacher

    • Predicted Christ’s return in 1843–1844

    • His failed prophecy resulted in what is known as the Great Disappointment (October 22, 1844)

After Miller’s failed prediction, his movement fragmented.


3. Formation of SDA Doctrine (Post-1844)

Out of the disappointed Millerites emerged key figures:

  • Ellen G. White (1827–1915) – claimed visionary experiences

  • James White – organizer and promoter

  • Joseph Bates – promoted Sabbath observance

These individuals:

  • Reinterpreted the failed prophecy

  • Introduced new doctrines (Investigative Judgment, Sabbath as end-time seal, remnant church theology)

➡️ The Seventh-day Adventist Church was officially organized in 1863, nearly 1,800 years after Christ.


4. Where the Traceback Ends

When fully traced back:

  • ❌ It does not reach:

    • The Apostles

    • The early Church Fathers

    • The Church councils of the 1st–4th centuries

  • ❌ It does not claim apostolic succession

  • ❌ It does not have a continuous sacramental or episcopal lineage

✅ It ends with 19th-century Protestant revivalism in America


Key Historical Conclusion

The SDA Church does not trace its leadership back to Jesus Christ and the Apostles through historical continuity.
Instead, it traces back to a failed prophetic movement (Millerism) and was reorganized after doctrinal reinterpretation.

This is not merely a theological opinion—it is a documented historical fact acknowledged even by SDA historians themselves.


Core Issue from a Historical-Christian Perspective

Early Christianity understood the true Church as one that possessed:

  • Apostolic teaching

  • Apostolic succession

  • Sacramental continuity

  • Historical continuity from the 1st century onward

By these historical standards, SDA represents a restorationist movement, not the continuation of the original Church.


In short:

Tracing SDA leadership backward leads not to Jerusalem (1st century), but to New England (19th century).

**Idols Named in the Bible: Why Catholic Christianity Is Not Pagan but Biblical**

The Bible names many false gods such as Baal, Molech, Zeus, and Artemis—yet condemns their worship. This biblical and historical study refut...