Saturday, May 9, 2026

Is the Seventh-day Adventist “Local Conference” the True Church Founded by Christ? A Historical, Biblical, and Apostolic Examination of the Claim

Introduction

Many members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church claim that they alone are the “remnant church” or the true Church established by Jesus Christ because they believe they faithfully follow the Bible, especially the Sabbath commandment and certain prophetic interpretations.

However, your question is very specific:

Is the SDA “Local Conference” itself the true Church founded by Christ — distinct from the SDA General Conference?

This distinction is important because in SDA structure, a Local Conference is merely an administrative subdivision under the authority of the General Conference. Therefore, if one claims that a “Local Conference” alone is the true Church of Christ, the burden of proof becomes even more difficult historically, biblically, and logically.

The short answer is:

No, there is no strong biblical or historical evidence that any SDA Local Conference is the original Church founded by Jesus Christ in the first century.

The reasons are profound and involve:

  • Apostolic succession
  • Historical continuity
  • Unity of doctrine
  • The witness of the early Church Fathers
  • The nature of the Church in Scripture
  • The late origin of Adventism itself

Let us examine the issue carefully.


I. What Is an SDA Local Conference?

Within Adventist organization, a “Local Conference” is not an independent church founded directly by Christ. It is a regional administrative body governed under:

  1. The Union Conference
  2. The Division
  3. Ultimately the General Conference

This means:

  • A Local Conference has no separate apostolic foundation.
  • It derives authority from SDA denominational structure.
  • It did not exist before the 19th century.

Historically, the SDA movement itself formally emerged in 1863 in the United States after the Millerite movement failed in predicting Christ’s return in 1844.

Thus, no SDA Local Conference can trace itself directly to:

  • the Apostles,
  • Jerusalem,
  • Antioch,
  • Rome,
  • or any first-century Christian community.

II. The Church Christ Founded Already Existed in the First Century

Jesus said:

“You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church.” (Matthew 16:18)

Christ established one visible Church, not thousands of disconnected groups appearing centuries later.

The Church already existed:

  • in Jerusalem (Acts 2),
  • under apostolic leadership,
  • with bishops, elders, sacraments, and doctrine.

The early Church was identifiable and historically continuous.

The problem for SDA claims is this:

If the true Church disappeared for 1,800 years and reappeared only in the 1800s, then Christ’s promise failed.

But Christ promised:

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

and

“I am with you always, to the close of the age.” (Matthew 28:20)

This means the true Church must exist continuously through history.


III. A Local Conference Cannot Be the Original Church of Christ

A Local Conference is:

  • a modern administrative region,
  • formed by denominational policy,
  • subject to organizational restructuring.

Christ never established:

  • “North American Division,”
  • “Local Conference,”
  • or “General Conference.”

The New Testament Church was built on:

  • Apostles,
  • bishops,
  • Eucharistic worship,
  • sacramental life,
  • apostolic succession.

St. Paul wrote:

“The church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of truth.” (1 Timothy 3:15)

Notice:

  • Scripture calls the Church itself the pillar of truth.
  • Not a future movement arising in the 1800s.

IV. Historical Problem: Adventism Began in the 19th Century

The SDA movement historically came from:

  • William Miller’s failed predictions,
  • the “Great Disappointment” of 1844,
  • later theological developments by Ellen G. White and other Adventist pioneers.

The denomination officially formed in 1863.

This creates a major historical problem:

Where was the “true church” before 1863?

If SDA Local Conferences are the true Church:

  • Where were they during:
    • the Apostolic Age?
    • Roman persecutions?
    • the Council of Nicaea?
    • the early martyrs?
    • the Church Fathers?

No evidence exists that:

  • Ignatius of Antioch,
  • Irenaeus,
  • Polycarp,
  • Athanasius,
  • Augustine,
  • or any early Christian community
    taught distinctive SDA doctrines such as:
  • Investigative Judgment,
  • Ellen White’s prophetic authority,
  • 1844 sanctuary doctrine,
  • or denominational remnant theology.

V. The Early Church Fathers Contradict the SDA “Restoration” Narrative

The earliest Christians believed the Church already possessed apostolic authority.

St. Ignatius of Antioch (c. AD 107)

Ignatius of Antioch wrote:

“Where the bishop appears, there let the people be; just as where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.”¹

Notice:

  • already in AD 107,
  • the Church was called “Catholic” (universal),
  • organized under bishops.

No SDA structure existed.


St. Irenaeus (c. AD 180)

Irenaeus argued against heresies by appealing to apostolic succession:

“We can enumerate those who were appointed bishops by the apostles.”²

This is devastating to restorationist claims because:

  • truth was preserved through succession,
  • not lost for 1,800 years.

St. Cyprian of Carthage (3rd century)

Cyprian of Carthage wrote:

“He can no longer have God for his Father, who has not the Church for his mother.”³

The Fathers consistently taught:

  • visible unity,
  • sacramental continuity,
  • apostolic authority.

Not an invisible remnant rediscovered in modern America.


VI. The SDA Claim About “Keeping the Commandments”

SDA arguments often focus on Revelation 12:17:

“Those who keep the commandments of God.”

They argue this refers uniquely to Sabbath-keeping Adventists.

But this interpretation is problematic.

A. Christians Always Kept God’s Commandments

Catholics also keep:

  • the Ten Commandments,
  • moral law,
  • worship of God,
  • holiness.

The issue is not whether commandments matter.

The issue is:

Who has apostolic authority and historical continuity?


B. The Early Christians Worshiped on Sunday

The earliest Christians gathered on:

  • “the first day of the week” (Acts 20:7),
  • “the Lord’s Day” (Revelation 1:10).

The Church Fathers confirm this.

The Didache (1st century)

Didache states:

“On the Lord’s Day gather together and break bread.”⁴


St. Justin Martyr (c. AD 155)

Justin Martyr wrote:

“On the day called Sunday, all gather together.”⁵

Thus:

  • Sunday worship predates Catholic councils,
  • predates Constantine,
  • predates medieval Catholicism.

This destroys the SDA claim that Sunday worship was a later pagan corruption.


VII. Catholic Teaching on the True Church

The Catholic Church teaches:

“The sole Church of Christ… subsists in the Catholic Church.”⁶

The Church claims continuity through:

  • apostolic succession,
  • sacraments,
  • bishops,
  • preserved doctrine,
  • historical continuity from the Apostles.

Unlike SDA Local Conferences, the Catholic Church can historically trace:

  • bishops,
  • councils,
  • worship,
  • doctrine,
  • and sacramental life
    back to the Apostolic Age.

VIII. Problems Specific to the “Local Conference” Claim

Even within Adventism, a Local Conference:

  • is not supreme authority,
  • can be reorganized,
  • can split,
  • depends on the General Conference.

Therefore:

  • if the General Conference changes doctrine,
  • the Local Conference follows.

So a Local Conference cannot independently claim:

“We alone are the original Church of Christ.”

It lacks:

  • independent apostolic lineage,
  • universal authority,
  • ancient historical continuity.

IX. The Biblical Marks of the True Church

Historically, Christians identified the true Church by four marks:

1. One

Christ founded one unified Church.

2. Holy

Sanctified by Christ.

3. Catholic

Universal across nations and centuries.

4. Apostolic

Built on the Apostles through succession.

These marks appear in the ancient Nicene Creed (AD 325/381).

A modern Local Conference established in recent centuries does not fit these historic marks.


X. Did Christ Promise a Complete Apostasy?

SDA theology often implies that:

  • the Church became corrupted,
  • truth disappeared,
  • and was restored later.

But Scripture says otherwise.

Christ promised preservation

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

Paul taught continuity

“To him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations.” (Ephesians 3:21)

Not:

  • “through a future restoration movement.”

XI. Final Conclusion

The claim that an SDA Local Conference is the true Church founded by Christ is not supported by:

  • Scripture,
  • history,
  • apostolic succession,
  • or the witness of early Christianity.

A Local Conference:

  • is a modern administrative unit,
  • originating from a denomination founded in the 19th century,
  • without continuous historical existence from the Apostles.

The earliest Christians recognized the true Church through:

  • apostolic bishops,
  • Eucharistic worship,
  • doctrinal continuity,
  • and visible unity.

The historical evidence overwhelmingly shows continuity in the ancient apostolic Church rather than in modern restorationist movements.

The question is not merely:

“Who uses the Bible?”

Many groups do.

The deeper question is:

“Which Church can historically and doctrinally trace itself continuously to the Apostles established by Christ?”

That is the central challenge SDA Local Conference claims cannot successfully answer.


Footnotes

  1. Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Smyrnaeans 8.
  2. Irenaeus, Against Heresies 3.3.1.
  3. Cyprian of Carthage, On the Unity of the Catholic Church 6.
  4. Didache 14.1.
  5. Justin Martyr, First Apology 67.
  6. Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 816.

Flores de Mayo: Biblical Marian Devotion or Pagan Practice? A Catholic Apologetic Response to SDA and Anti-Catholic Claims

Introduction

Every May in the Philippines, millions of Catholics celebrate Flores de Mayo (“Flowers of May”), offering flowers to the Blessed Virgin Mary, praying the Rosary, and participating in the colorful Santacruzan. Yet many critics — especially some anti-Catholic groups and certain members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church — claim that Flores de Mayo is “pagan,” “idolatrous,” or “unbiblical.”

But is that accusation historically and biblically accurate?

Did Catholics merely “Christianize” a pagan flower festival? Or is Flores de Mayo a legitimate Christian devotion rooted in biblical principles, early Christian tradition, and Catholic theology?

This article will examine:

  1. The history and origin of Flores de Mayo
  2. Whether it is pagan or biblical
  3. Biblical foundations for Marian honor and floral offerings
  4. Church Fathers’ teachings about honoring Mary
  5. Official Catholic teaching from the Catechism
  6. Responses to common Protestant and SDA objections

What Is Flores de Mayo?

Flores de Mayo is a Filipino Catholic devotion celebrated throughout May in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary. It involves:

  • Offering flowers to Mary
  • Marian hymns and prayers
  • Catechism for children
  • The Rosary
  • The Santacruzan procession

The practice became deeply rooted in Filipino Catholic culture during the Spanish era and remains one of the most beloved Catholic traditions in the Philippines.

The devotion is connected to the broader Catholic tradition of May Devotions to the Blessed Virgin Mary, practiced for centuries throughout the Catholic world.

When and How Did Flores de Mayo Start?

Historically, devotion to Mary during May developed gradually in medieval Catholic Europe.

The custom of honoring Mary with flowers can be traced to medieval monasteries and convents, where flowers symbolized purity, beauty, and spiritual fruitfulness associated with the Mother of Christ.

In the Philippines, Flores de Mayo became widespread during the Spanish colonial period. According to historical records, the practice expanded especially after the proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception in 1854 and through the publication of Marian devotional works in the 19th century. The Santacruzan portion commemorates the traditional discovery of the True Cross by Helena of Constantinople.

Thus, Flores de Mayo is not an ancient pagan fertility ritual preserved by Catholics. It is a Christian Marian devotion that developed within Catholic spirituality and Filipino culture.


Is Flores de Mayo Pagan?

The Short Answer: No.

Critics often argue:

“Flowers, processions, and honoring Mary came from paganism.”

But this argument commits the genetic fallacy — assuming something is evil merely because pagans may have used similar outward symbols.

Pagans also used:

  • candles,
  • incense,
  • music,
  • temples,
  • processions,
  • weddings,
  • altars,
  • and prayers.

Yet Scripture itself uses these things in worship of the true God.

The question is not:

“Did pagans ever use flowers?”

The real question is:

“What is the meaning and purpose of the practice in Christianity?”

In Flores de Mayo:

  • Catholics do not worship flowers,
  • do not worship Mary as a goddess,
  • and do not offer sacrifices to idols.

Instead, Catholics honor the woman whom Scripture itself calls:

  • “blessed among women” (Luke 1:42),
  • “full of grace” (Luke 1:28),
  • and “all generations shall call me blessed” (Luke 1:48).

Biblical Foundations of Flores de Mayo

Although the Bible does not explicitly mention “Flores de Mayo,” the principles behind it are deeply biblical.

1. The Bible Commands Honor for God’s Servants

Scripture repeatedly teaches honor toward holy people.

Hebrews 11–12

The heroes of faith are remembered and honored publicly.

Philippians 2:29

St. Paul says:

“Honor such men.”

1 Corinthians 11:1

“Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ.”

If Christians may honor apostles and saints, how much more the mother of Jesus?


2. Mary Is Biblically Honored

The Gospel itself contains Marian honor.

Luke 1:28

The angel Gabriel says to Mary:

“Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with you.”

Luke 1:42

Elizabeth declares:

“Blessed are you among women.”

Luke 1:48

Mary prophesies:

“All generations will call me blessed.”

Catholics fulfill this prophecy whenever they honor Mary.

Flores de Mayo is therefore not contrary to Scripture — it is an expression of Luke 1:48.


3. Flowers Are Biblical Symbols of Honor and Worship

Flowers in Scripture symbolize:

  • beauty,
  • holiness,
  • celebration,
  • and devotion to God.

Isaiah 40:8

“The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God will stand forever.”

Song of Solomon 2:1

“I am the rose of Sharon.”

Sirach 39:14

“Bloom like a rose growing by a stream of water.”

Even the Temple built by Solomon was decorated with floral imagery.

1 Kings 6:18

The Temple carvings included:

  • gourds,
  • open flowers,
  • palm trees,
  • and cherubim.

Thus, floral symbolism in sacred devotion is entirely biblical.


4. Processions Are Biblical

Critics attack Catholic processions like the Santacruzan.

But processions are common throughout Scripture.

2 Samuel 6:14

David danced before the Ark of the Covenant.

Joshua 6

Israel processed around Jericho.

Psalm 68:24

“Your procession is seen, O God.”

Christian religious processions are therefore biblical in principle.


Mary as the New Ark of the Covenant

One of the strongest biblical foundations for Marian devotion is Mary’s role as the New Ark of the Covenant.

Compare:

Old Testament ArkMary
Contained the Word of GodCarried Jesus, the Word made flesh
Overshadowed by God’s glory (Exodus 40:35)Overshadowed by the Holy Spirit (Luke 1:35)
David exclaimed before the ArkElizabeth exclaimed before Mary
Ark remained three monthsMary stayed three months

Catholics honor Mary because she bore Christ Himself.


Did Early Christians Honor Mary?

Yes.

The early Church strongly honored Mary long before medieval Catholicism.

Irenaeus of Lyons (2nd century)

He called Mary the “New Eve”:

“The knot of Eve’s disobedience was loosed by the obedience of Mary.”¹

Ephrem the Syrian (4th century)

He praised Mary in hymns and poetry, comparing her to paradise and flowers.

Augustine of Hippo

He taught that Mary is honored because she faithfully obeyed God.

These Fathers did not worship Mary as a goddess. They honored her as the Mother of Christ.


What Does the Catholic Church Actually Teach?

The Catholic Church clearly distinguishes:

  • worship due to God alone,
  • from honor given to saints.

The Catechism states:

“The honor paid to sacred images is a ‘respectful veneration,’ not the adoration due to God alone.”²

The Church condemns idolatry.

Catechism of the Catholic Church §971

Mary receives:

  • special honor (hyperdulia),
  • not divine worship (latria).

The Church explicitly teaches that worship belongs only to the Holy Trinity.


Responding to SDA and Protestant Objections

Objection #1:

“Offering flowers to Mary is idol worship.”

Response:

Flowers are symbols of love and honor, not worship.

People offer flowers:

  • at graves,
  • to mothers,
  • at weddings,
  • and during memorials.

This does not mean worship.

Catholics offer flowers to Mary as expressions of love and honor, similar to honoring holy people in Scripture.


Objection #2:

“Mary should not receive attention.”

Response:

The Bible itself gives Mary extraordinary attention.

She is:

  • chosen above all women,
  • called blessed,
  • and honored by Elizabeth and Gabriel.

Ignoring Mary entirely is actually less biblical than honoring her properly.


Objection #3:

“Flores de Mayo came from pagan festivals.”

Response:

Similarity does not equal identity.

Pagans also used:

  • candles,
  • temples,
  • music,
  • and sacrifices.

Christianity transformed many cultural elements toward worship of the true God.

The key issue is meaning and intention.

Flores de Mayo is Christ-centered because authentic Marian devotion always leads to Jesus.

As Mary herself said:

John 2:5

“Do whatever He tells you.”


The Spiritual Meaning of Flores de Mayo

Flores de Mayo is ultimately about:

  • honoring the Mother of Jesus,
  • teaching children the faith,
  • encouraging prayer,
  • and cultivating virtue.

The flowers symbolize:

  • purity,
  • love,
  • sacrifice,
  • and spiritual beauty.

In many Filipino communities, Flores de Mayo also strengthens:

  • catechesis,
  • family prayer,
  • and parish unity.

Conclusion

Flores de Mayo is not a pagan continuation disguised as Christianity.

It is a Catholic Marian devotion rooted in:

  • biblical principles,
  • Christian symbolism,
  • Church tradition,
  • and Filipino Catholic spirituality.

The Bible supports:

  • honoring holy people,
  • processions,
  • floral symbolism,
  • and Marian blessedness.

The early Church honored Mary centuries before modern Protestant objections existed.

Catholics do not worship Mary during Flores de Mayo. They honor the Mother of Christ and ultimately glorify God who worked through her.

As Scripture says:

Luke 1:48

“All generations will call me blessed.”

Flores de Mayo is one way Filipino Catholics fulfill that prophecy.


Footnotes

  1. Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies, Book III, Chapter 22.
  2. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §2132 and §971.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Was the “Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day Sabbath” Founded by Christ? A Catholic Apologetic Response to Sabbatarian Restorationist Claims

Introduction

Many Sabbatarian groups today claim to be the “true Church” established by Jesus Christ because they observe the seventh-day Sabbath. Among them is the so-called “Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day Sabbath,” a branch connected historically with the broader Church of God (Seventh Day) movement.

Some members claim:

  • They preserved the original faith of the apostles.
  • The Catholic Church allegedly “changed” the Sabbath.
  • Their movement is the continuation of the Jerusalem church founded by Christ.
  • They alone restored biblical Christianity.

But do these claims stand up historically, biblically, and doctrinally?

The evidence says no.


1. Who Founded the Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day?

Historically, the movement traces its roots not to the apostles, but to the 19th-century Sabbatarian Adventist movement in America. Scholars and Church of God historical records themselves acknowledge this.

The broader Church of God (Seventh Day) emerged in the 1850s among Adventists who separated from early Seventh-day Adventists. One of the key figures identified in their history is Gilbert Cranmer, a former Adventist minister in Michigan. Later, Andrew N. Dugger became one of the most influential leaders. According to the Jerusalem branch’s own history, Dugger established a headquarters in Jerusalem in 1931.

Thus:

  • Jesus did not found the modern Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day organization.
  • The apostles did not establish it as an institution.
  • Historically, it arose in the United States nearly 1,800 years after Christ.

Even their own historical records acknowledge this timeline.


2. The Fatal Historical Problem with Their Claim

If they claim to be the original Church founded by Christ, historians would expect:

  • continuous historical existence,
  • identifiable bishops or leaders,
  • preserved apostolic succession,
  • documented sacramental continuity,
  • historical presence across centuries.

But none of these exist for the Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day.

Instead, the movement emerged from:

  • Millerite Adventism,
  • Sabbatarian revivalism,
  • 19th-century American restorationism.

This creates a massive historical gap between the apostles and the denomination.

By contrast, the Catholic Church possesses:

  • documented episcopal succession from the apostles,
  • continuous sacramental life,
  • councils and creeds from antiquity,
  • writings of early Church Fathers,
  • uninterrupted historical continuity from the first century.

This is exactly what Christ promised:

“The gates of Hades shall not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18).

If Christ’s Church disappeared for 1,800 years and needed restoration in the 1800s, then Christ’s promise failed.

But Christ cannot fail.


3. Did the Early Christians Keep Saturday Sabbath as an Obligation?

This is one of the central arguments of Sabbatarian groups.

However, the evidence from the New Testament and early Christianity shows that Christians gathered on Sunday, the Lord’s Day, because of Christ’s resurrection.

Biblical Evidence

The Resurrection Happened on Sunday

Christ rose “on the first day of the week” (Mark 16:2).

Christians Gathered on Sunday

“On the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread…” (Acts 20:7)

This passage clearly describes Eucharistic worship on Sunday.

Collections Were Taken on Sunday

“On the first day of every week…” (1 Corinthians 16:2)

The “Lord’s Day”

“I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s Day” (Revelation 1:10)

From the earliest centuries, Christians universally understood this as Sunday.


4. What Did the Early Church Fathers Teach?

The historical evidence overwhelmingly contradicts modern Sabbatarian claims.

Ignatius of Antioch (c. AD 107)

He wrote:

“No longer observing the Sabbath, but living in observance of the Lord’s Day.”¹

This is devastating for Sabbatarian restorationist claims because Ignatius was taught by apostolic men.


Justin Martyr (c. AD 155)

Justin described Christian worship:

“On the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather together…”²

He then explains that Christians worship on Sunday because Jesus rose from the dead on that day.

This is more than 1,600 years before modern Sabbatarian sects emerged.


Irenaeus of Lyons

Irenaeus emphasized apostolic succession and continuity through bishops tracing back to the apostles.³

This is precisely what restorationist groups lack.


5. Did the Catholic Church “Change the Sabbath”?

This is a common SDA and Sabbatarian accusation.

But historically, Christians were already worshiping on Sunday long before Constantine and centuries before the medieval Church.

The Church did not “change” the Sabbath in the sense critics claim.

Rather:

  • the Mosaic ceremonial covenant reached fulfillment in Christ,
  • Christians celebrated the new creation through the Resurrection,
  • Sunday became the Lord’s Day of Christian worship.

The Catechism explains:

“Sunday is expressly distinguished from the Sabbath.”⁴

The Church teaches that the moral principle of worship remains, but Christians celebrate the fulfillment of the Old Covenant in Christ.


6. The Problem with Restorationism

Groups like:

  • SDA,
  • Church of God (7th Day),
  • Jerusalem Church of God,
  • Armstrongite movements,

often assume that Christianity became corrupted shortly after the apostles and had to be “restored.”

But this idea creates serious theological problems.

If the Church Fell Completely:

Then:

  • Christ failed to preserve His Church.
  • The Holy Spirit failed to guide believers.
  • Christianity disappeared for centuries.
  • No true Church existed until modern America.

This contradicts Scripture.

Jesus promised:

“I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20).


7. Apostolic Succession: The Missing Link

The early Church understood authority through apostolic succession.

Clement of Rome taught:

“The apostles appointed bishops and deacons.”⁵

Irenaeus of Lyons wrote:

“We can enumerate those who were appointed bishops by the apostles.”⁶

The Catholic Church can trace this succession historically.

The Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day cannot.

Their authority depends largely on:

  • private interpretation,
  • restorationist assumptions,
  • modern doctrinal reconstruction.

8. What About the Name “Church of God”?

Some Sabbatarian groups argue that because “Church of God” appears in Scripture, their denomination must be the true Church.

But this argument fails logically.

The Bible also uses:

  • “Churches of Christ” (Romans 16:16),
  • “the Way” (Acts 9:2),
  • “body of Christ” (1 Corinthians 12:27),
  • “assembly” or “ekklesia.”

These were descriptive terms, not exclusive denominational trademarks.

Having a biblical-sounding name does not prove apostolic authenticity.


9. Catholic Response to SDA and Sabbatarian Objections

Objection: “The true church must keep Saturday Sabbath.”

Response:

The apostles themselves worshiped on Sunday in honor of the Resurrection.

The earliest Christians universally testify to Sunday worship.


Objection: “The Catholic Church corrupted Christianity.”

Response:

Historical evidence shows continuity in doctrine, sacraments, episcopal leadership, and liturgy from the apostolic age onward.

The burden of proof lies on restorationist groups to explain:

  • where their church existed before the 1800s,
  • who their bishops were,
  • where their sacraments were preserved,
  • and why no early Christian sources describe their theology.

Objection: “The Catholic Church is pagan because of Sunday worship.”

Response:

Sunday worship predates Constantine and medieval Catholicism by centuries.

The Church Fathers testify clearly to this.


10. The Biblical Pattern of the True Church

The true Church established by Christ possesses:

Unity

“One body and one Spirit” (Ephesians 4:4)

Apostolic Authority

“He who hears you hears Me” (Luke 10:16)

Sacramental Life

Acts 2:42 describes:

  • apostolic teaching,
  • fellowship,
  • breaking of bread,
  • prayers.

Historical Continuity

The Church must exist continuously through history—not disappear and later reappear in America.


Conclusion

The historical evidence does not support the claim that the Jerusalem Church of God 7th Day is the original Church founded by Jesus Christ.

Instead, the evidence shows:

  • it arose from the 19th-century Adventist movement,
  • its Jerusalem headquarters was established only in 1931,
  • it lacks apostolic succession,
  • it cannot demonstrate continuous historical existence from the apostles,
  • and its Sabbatarian theology conflicts with early Christian practice.

Meanwhile, the Catholic Church alone can historically demonstrate:

  • continuous apostolic succession,
  • sacramental continuity,
  • documented existence since the first century,
  • and fidelity to the faith handed down by the apostles.

The question is not merely who uses biblical terminology or keeps Saturday worship.

The real question is:

Which Church can historically trace itself back continuously to the apostles?

The historical evidence strongly points to the Catholic Church.


Catechism References

  • CCC 748 — The Church as sacrament of salvation.
  • CCC 811–822 — The marks of the Church.
  • CCC 857–860 — Apostolic succession.
  • CCC 2174–2176 — Sunday and fulfillment of the Sabbath.

Footnotes

  1. Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Magnesians, ch. 9.
  2. Justin Martyr, First Apology, ch. 67.
  3. Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies 3.3.1.
  4. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §2175.
  5. Clement of Rome, First Epistle to the Corinthians, ch. 42.
  6. Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies 3.3.1.

Is the Seventh-day Adventist “Local Conference” the True Church Founded by Christ? A Historical, Biblical, and Apostolic Examination of the Claim

Introduction Many members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church claim that they alone are the “remnant church” or the true Church establishe...