The Fact of the True Church of Christ From the 1st Century Up to the Present
Many religious groups today claim to be the “true church” founded by Jesus Christ. Among them are restorationist movements that teach the original Church disappeared after the apostles and had to be restored centuries later. One of these groups is the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which often argues that the true believers were hidden or corrupted until modern times.
But does the Bible teach that Christ’s Church would disappear?
Did Jesus fail to preserve His Church?
Did the apostles warn Christians to expect a total apostasy destroying the visible Church?
Or does history prove that the Catholic Church is the same historical Church established by Christ in the first century?
The evidence from Scripture, history, apostolic succession, and the writings of the early Christians overwhelmingly demonstrates that the Church founded by Jesus Christ has continued visibly and historically from the apostolic age until today in the Catholic Church.
I. Jesus Christ Founded Only One Church
Jesus did not establish many competing denominations. He founded one visible Church.
Biblical Foundation
Jesus declared to Simon Peter:
“And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.” — Matthew 16:18
Christ did not say:
- “churches”
- “future denominations”
- “invisible fellowships”
He said “My Church.”
The Church belongs to Christ, not to later reformers, prophets, or founders.
The apostle Paul also taught:
“There is one body and one Spirit… one Lord, one faith, one baptism.” — Ephesians 4:4–5
The “body” of Christ is the Church (Ephesians 1:22–23).
Therefore:
- Christ founded one Church.
- That Church would endure.
- The powers of hell would never overcome it.
If the true Church vanished for centuries, then Christ’s promise failed.
II. Christ Promised His Church Would Remain Until the End of Time
One major restorationist claim is that the Church became completely corrupt after the apostles and disappeared until modern reformers restored it.
But Scripture directly contradicts this idea.
Jesus promised:
“I am with you always, to the close of the age.” — Matthew 28:20
Not:
- “until the apostles die”
- “until the second century”
- “until Constantine”
- “until the 1800s”
Christ promised perpetual presence with His Church.
The apostle Paul also called the Church:
“the pillar and bulwark of the truth.” — 1 Timothy 3:15
If the Church became totally apostate for over a thousand years, then the “pillar of truth” would have become a pillar of error — an impossible contradiction.
III. The Early Church Was Catholic in Faith and Structure
History shows that the earliest Christians believed in doctrines recognized today as Catholic:
- apostolic succession
- bishops
- the Eucharist
- baptismal regeneration
- prayers for the dead
- liturgical worship
- authority of bishops
- unity with Rome
The early Christians did not resemble modern restorationist groups.
IV. The Earliest Christians Identified the Church as “Catholic”
Around A.D. 107, Ignatius of Antioch wrote while traveling to martyrdom:
“Wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.”¹
This is historically significant because:
- it occurred only decades after the apostles,
- it demonstrates the Church already had a universal identity,
- and it proves Christians were not using modern denominational names.
The term “Catholic” means “universal.”
No evidence exists that first-century Christians identified themselves as:
- Adventists
- Baptists
- Pentecostals
- Iglesia ni Cristo
- Mormons
- Jehovah’s Witnesses
Those groups appeared many centuries later.
V. Apostolic Succession Proves Historical Continuity
The apostles appointed successors.
Paul instructed Titus:
“This is why I left you in Crete, that you might amend what was defective, and appoint elders in every town as I directed you.” — Titus 1:5
Paul also instructed Timothy:
“what you have heard from me… entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” — 2 Timothy 2:2
This reveals four generations:
- Paul
- Timothy
- faithful men
- others also
This is apostolic succession.
VI. Early Church Fathers Defended Apostolic Succession
Around A.D. 180, Irenaeus of Lyons wrote against heretics:
“We can enumerate those who were appointed bishops in the churches by the apostles, and their successors down to our own time.”²
He specifically pointed to the Church of Rome because of its apostolic authority.
This is crucial:
- true doctrine was preserved through succession,
- not through isolated Bible readers centuries later.
VII. The Canon of the Bible Came Through the Catholic Church
One of the strongest historical facts is this:
The Bible itself was collected, preserved, and canonized by the Catholic Church.
The apostles never left a completed New Testament table of contents.
The canon was discerned through Church councils such as:
- Council of Rome
- Synod of Hippo
- Councils of Carthage
Without the historic Church, no Christian could infallibly know which books belong in the Bible.
Ironically, many groups attack the Catholic Church while using the very Bible preserved by it.
VIII. The Early Church Believed in the Eucharist as the Real Body of Christ
Modern restorationist groups often deny the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist.
But the earliest Christians affirmed it clearly.
Ignatius of Antioch wrote:
“They abstain from the Eucharist because they do not confess that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ.”³
Likewise, Justin Martyr wrote around A.D. 155:
“We do not receive these as common bread and common drink.”⁴
This is unmistakably Catholic.
IX. SDA and Restorationist Claims of a “Lost Church” Contradict History
The Seventh-day Adventist Church emerged in the 19th century following the Millerite movement associated with William Miller.
Historically:
- SDA did not exist in the first century,
- had no bishops tracing succession to the apostles,
- and appeared approximately 1,800 years after Christ.
The idea that the true Church vanished for centuries creates enormous theological problems:
1. It Makes Christ’s Promise Fail
If the Church disappeared, then Matthew 16:18 failed.
2. It Makes the Holy Spirit Ineffective
Jesus promised the Spirit would guide the Church into all truth (John 16:13).
3. It Creates Historical Silence
Where was the “true church” between A.D. 100 and the 1800s?
No continuous historical body exists matching SDA doctrine.
4. It Contradicts Christian History
The writings of early Christians look overwhelmingly Catholic, not Adventist.
The early Church:
- celebrated Sunday worship,
- believed in bishops,
- honored apostolic tradition,
- practiced liturgical worship,
- and defended sacramental theology.
X. The Catholic Church Possesses Historical Continuity
The Catholic Church can historically trace:
- bishops,
- doctrine,
- sacraments,
- liturgy,
- and apostolic succession
from the apostles to the present day.
The bishop of Rome traces succession back to Peter the Apostle.
This continuity is not mythical; it is historically documented.
No other Christian body possesses:
- uninterrupted global continuity,
- apostolic succession,
- historical identity,
- and doctrinal lineage
from the first century onward in the same way.
XI. The Catechism on the Church Founded by Christ
The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches:
“The sole Church of Christ which in the Creed we profess to be one, holy, catholic and apostolic… subsists in the Catholic Church.”⁵
The marks of the true Church are:
- One
- Holy
- Catholic
- Apostolic
These marks are visible historically and doctrinally in the Catholic Church.
XII. The Historical Reality Cannot Be Ignored
The evidence is undeniable:
From Scripture
- Christ founded one Church.
- Christ promised it would endure forever.
- The apostles established succession and authority.
From History
- The early Christians were recognizably Catholic.
- The Church already existed universally before the New Testament canon was finalized.
From Apostolic Continuity
- Catholic bishops trace succession to the apostles.
- Early Fathers defended unity with apostolic bishops.
From Logic
If the true Church disappeared:
- Christianity failed,
- Christ’s promises failed,
- and the Holy Spirit failed.
But Christ cannot fail.
Conclusion
The true Church of Christ did not vanish after the apostles only to be rediscovered in modern times. The historical, biblical, and apostolic evidence demonstrates continuous existence from the first century until today.
That Church is historically identifiable in the Catholic Church — the same Church that:
- preserved the Bible,
- defended orthodox doctrine,
- preserved apostolic succession,
- celebrated the sacraments,
- and carried Christianity across centuries and nations.
The burden of proof belongs not to the ancient Church, but to modern groups claiming that Christianity disappeared for over a millennium before their founder arrived.
Jesus Christ established a Church that would endure forever.
And history shows that it did.
Footnotes
- Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Smyrnaeans 8:2 (c. A.D. 107).
- Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies 3.3.1 (c. A.D. 180).
- Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Smyrnaeans 7:1.
- Justin Martyr, First Apology 66 (c. A.D. 155).
- Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 816.


