π Introduction
Many Christians today assume that Protestantism simply “restored” original Christianity. But a crucial question must be asked:
π Can a movement that began in the 16th century be the same Church founded by Christ in the 1st century?
The answer—based on Scripture and history—is no.
In this article, we will demonstrate why Protestantism cannot be the original Church founded by Jesus Christ, and why the Catholic Church maintains the strongest claim to continuity.
π§± 1. The Original Church Was Founded in the 1st Century
Christianity did not begin in the 1500s.
π It began with:
- Christ and the Apostles
- The Church established in Jerusalem (Acts 2)
π Biblical Evidence
Matthew 16:18
“I will build my Church…”
π Jesus founded one Church, not thousands.
Ephesians 4:4–5
“One body… one faith… one baptism”
π Unity was essential to the original Church.
Key Point:
If Protestantism were the original Church:
- It must exist continuously from the Apostles
❌ But historically, it appears only in the 1500s.
π️ 2. Protestantism Began in the 16th Century
The movement known as Protestantism began during the:
π Protestant Reformation
Key Figure:
- Martin Luther (1517)
Historical Reality:
Before the 1500s:
- No “Protestant Church” existed
- No “Sola Scriptura” doctrine
- No “faith alone” teaching as defined by Reformers
π This is a historical discontinuity
⚠️ 3. The Problem of Apostolic Succession
The original Church had:
✔ Apostles → Bishops → Successors
This is called apostolic succession
π Biblical Basis
Acts 1:20
“His office let another take”
π Apostolic authority is passed on, not lost.
2 Timothy 2:2
“What you have heard… entrust to faithful men…”
π A chain of authority is clearly visible.
❌ Protestant Problem:
Most Protestant churches:
- Do not claim apostolic succession
- Began independently
π Therefore:
They cannot trace authority back to the Apostles
π§Ύ 4. The Early Church Was Not Protestant
Let’s examine the first Christians (1st–3rd century).
π§ What They Believed:
✔ Sacraments (Eucharist, Baptism)
✔ Bishops and hierarchy
✔ Tradition alongside Scripture
✔ Visible unity
π§Ύ Church Fathers’ Testimony
Ignatius of Antioch (c. 107 AD)
“Where the bishop is, there is the Church.”
Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 180 AD)
“All must agree with the Church of Rome…”
π These beliefs are:
- Catholic
- Not Protestant
π 5. Sola Scriptura Is Not Biblical
One of Protestantism’s core doctrines is “Bible alone.”
❌ Problem:
The Bible never teaches this.
2 Thessalonians 2:15
“Stand firm and hold to the traditions… by word of mouth or by letter”
π BOTH:
- Written (Scripture)
- Oral (Tradition)
1 Timothy 3:15
“The Church… pillar and foundation of truth”
π Not the Bible alone—the Church guards truth.
π₯ Conclusion:
Sola Scriptura:
- Not taught in Scripture
- Not practiced by early Christians
π§© 6. Doctrinal Division Problem
Today there are:
π Thousands of Protestant denominations
❌ Issue:
They disagree on:
- Baptism
- Salvation
- Eucharist
- Church authority
π Biblical Conflict
John 17:21
“That they may all be one…”
π Christ prayed for unity—not division.
π Division suggests:
Departure from the original Church
π 7. Catholic Teaching (CCC)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches:
- CCC 816: Christ founded one Church
- CCC 817–819: Divisions came later
- CCC 830: The Church is universal (Catholic)
π Protestant communities:
- Contain elements of truth
- But lack full unity and apostolic continuity
π₯ 8. Common Protestant Objections (Refuted)
❌ Objection 1: “The Church fell into apostasy”
π Problem:
-
Jesus promised:
“The gates of hell shall not prevail” (Matt 16:18)
π If the Church totally fell:
- Christ’s promise failed ❌
❌ Objection 2: “We follow the Bible, not tradition”
π Response:
- The Bible itself commands tradition (2 Thess 2:15)
- The Bible came from the Church historically
❌ Objection 3: “Reformation restored true Christianity”
π Response:
- No historical evidence of a hidden “true Protestant Church” before 1500s
- Early Christians looked Catholic—not Protestant
π§ 9. Historical Logic (Very Powerful)
Ask this simple question:
π Where was your church before the 1500s?
- Can it be traced continuously back to the Apostles?
- Can it show bishops, sacraments, and doctrine through history?
π Only the Catholic Church can do this fully.
π Final Conclusion
Protestantism cannot be the original Church because:
❌ It began in the 16th century
❌ It lacks apostolic succession
❌ It teaches doctrines unknown to the early Church
❌ It is divided into thousands of groups
π In contrast, the Catholic Church:
✔ Traces directly to the Apostles
✔ Preserves unity, doctrine, and sacraments
✔ Matches early Christian belief and practice
✨ Final Insight
The real issue is not:
❌ “Which church do I like?”
✅ But: “Which Church did Christ actually found—and where is it today?”


