Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Matthew 28:20 and the Indefectibility of the Church: A Biblical and Historical Challenge to Protestant Claims

And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.
Introduction: A Question Many Protestants Cannot Easily Answer

One of the most powerful yet often overlooked passages in Christian apologetics is Matthew 28:20, where Jesus concludes the Great Commission with a profound promise:

“And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

This statement raises a crucial theological and historical question:

If Christ promised to remain with His Church until the end of time, where was that Church before the Protestant Reformation?

This question becomes particularly significant when examining the claims of Protestant denominations that emerged in the sixteenth century and later. The Catholic Church argues that this promise implies the perpetual and visible continuity of the Church founded by Christ—a doctrine known as indefectibility.


1. The Context of Matthew 28:20: The Great Commission

The promise in Matthew 28:20 occurs within the Great Commission:

“Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:19–20)

Jesus gives the Apostles three specific missions:

  1. Teach all nations

  2. Administer baptism

  3. Preserve and transmit His teachings

The promise of His presence is directly connected to this mission.

This is not merely a spiritual reassurance to individual believers but a promise attached to the teaching authority of the Apostles and their successors.


2. The Apostles Could Not Personally Live Until the End of the Age

A crucial logical observation must be made.

The Apostles themselves died in the first century:

  • Saint Peter – martyred around AD 64–67

  • Saint Paul the Apostle – martyred around AD 67

  • Saint John the Apostle – died near the end of the first century

Yet Christ promised His presence “until the end of the age.”

Therefore the mission could not end with the Apostles themselves.

The only logical conclusion is that their authority and mission would continue through successors.

This doctrine is known as Apostolic Succession.


3. Apostolic Succession in the Early Church

The earliest Christian writings after the New Testament confirm that the Apostles appointed successors.

St. Clement of Rome (AD 96)

Pope Clement I, writing only decades after the Apostles, explained:

“The Apostles received the Gospel for us from the Lord Jesus Christ… They appointed their first converts… to be bishops and deacons of those who should afterwards believe.”¹

This clearly demonstrates that the Church understood apostolic authority as something that continued after the Apostles' deaths.


St. Irenaeus of Lyons (AD 180)

Another powerful testimony comes from Irenaeus of Lyons:

“We can enumerate those who were appointed bishops by the Apostles and their successors down to our own time.”²

He specifically traced the succession of bishops in Rome from Saint Peter onward, arguing that this continuity preserved the true apostolic faith.


4. The Catholic Doctrine of the Church’s Indefectibility

The Catholic Church teaches that Christ’s promise guarantees that the Church will never disappear or lose the truth of the Gospel.

The Catholic Church calls this the doctrine of indefectibility.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains:

“The Church… will receive its perfection only in the glory of heaven… until that day, the Church advances on her pilgrimage amid the persecutions of the world and the consolations of God.”³

Christ sustains the Church through the Holy Spirit, ensuring that it will remain faithful to the apostolic mission.


5. Historical Continuity from the Apostles

The Catholic Church traces its leadership continuously from the Apostles.

For example:

  1. Saint Peter – first Bishop of Rome

  2. Linus

  3. Anacletus

  4. Clement I

This succession continues through the centuries to the present pope:

Pope Francis

This historical continuity directly corresponds with Christ’s promise in Matthew 28:20.


6. The Historical Problem for Protestantism

Most Protestant denominations emerged during the Protestant Reformation, beginning in 1517.

Key figures include:

  • Martin Luther

  • John Calvin

  • Henry VIII

This raises a difficult historical question.

If Christ promised His Church would exist continuously from the first century until the end of time, where was the Protestant Church for the first 1500 years of Christian history?

Two possibilities exist:

  1. Christ’s promise failed.

  2. The Church already existed before the Reformation.

The Catholic position argues that the second option is the only historically and theologically coherent one.


7. The Early Church Did Not Teach Protestant Doctrines

Historical evidence also shows that the earliest Christians held beliefs that align more closely with Catholic teaching than with later Protestant doctrines.

For example, the early Church believed in:

  • Apostolic succession

  • The authority of bishops

  • The Eucharist as the real body and blood of Christ

  • The authority of Church tradition

These teachings appear clearly in early Christian writings such as the Didache, Ignatius of Antioch, and Irenaeus.


8. A Powerful Debate Question from Matthew 28:20

The argument can be summarized in a single debate challenge:

If Jesus promised to remain with His Church until the end of time (Matthew 28:20), and your church began in the 1500s, where was your church during the first 1500 years of Christianity?

This question forces a historical examination of Christian continuity.


Conclusion

Christ’s promise in Matthew 28:20 is not merely a comforting statement. It is a historical and theological claim.

It implies that:

  • Christ’s Church would continue through history

  • Its teaching authority would persist beyond the Apostles

  • The Gospel would be preserved through apostolic succession

The Catholic Church uniquely fulfills these criteria through its continuous historical lineage, doctrinal preservation, and global mission.

Thus, the promise of Christ—“I am with you always, to the end of the age”—finds its most compelling historical fulfillment in the enduring life of the Catholic Church.


Footnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Clement of Rome, First Epistle to the Corinthians, 42–44.

  2. Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies, Book III, Chapter 3.

  3. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §769.


The Meaning of 1 Timothy 3:16: “The Mystery of Our Religion” — A Catholic Biblical Defense of True Religion

Mystery of our religion
Introduction

One of the most overlooked verses in modern Christian debates is First Epistle to Timothy 3:16, where St. Paul writes:

“Great indeed, we confess, is the mystery of our religion:
He was manifested in the flesh, vindicated by the Spirit,
seen by angels, preached among the nations,
believed on in the world, taken up in glory.”

In some translations, the phrase “mystery of our religion” appears as “mystery of godliness.” Yet the meaning remains the same: the Christian faith is not merely a personal feeling but a revealed divine religion centered on Jesus Christ.

This verse directly challenges the modern claim often repeated in evangelical circles:

“Religion cannot save you.”
“Christianity is not a religion.”

Ironically, the Bible itself speaks of the Christian faith as a religion.

Let us examine the Catholic understanding of this verse.


The Context of 1 Timothy 3:16

The Paul the Apostle wrote First Epistle to Timothy to guide Timothy, a bishop responsible for leading the Church.

Immediately before verse 16, St. Paul explains the structure and authority of the Church:

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

Here we see two important truths:

  1. Christianity has a visible Church

  2. The Church safeguards true doctrine

Then Paul declares the core truth of Christianity:

“Great indeed is the mystery of our religion.”

In other words, the Church proclaims a revealed mystery centered on Christ.


What Does “Mystery of Our Religion” Mean?

The Greek phrase used by Paul is:

“τὸ τῆς εὐσεβείας μυστήριον” (to tes eusebeias mysterion)

Meaning:

“The mystery of godliness / religion / true worship.”

The word eusebeia refers to:

  • reverence toward God

  • piety

  • true religion or worship

Therefore Paul is saying:

The Christian religion itself is founded on a divine mystery: the incarnation and saving work of Christ.


The Sixfold Creed of the Early Church

Many biblical scholars believe 1 Timothy 3:16 preserves an early Christian hymn or creed summarizing the Gospel.

It contains six statements about Christ:

1. Manifested in the flesh

Refers to the Incarnation.

“The Word became flesh.”
Gospel of John 1:14

Jesus is true God who became true man.


2. Vindicated by the Spirit

Christ was justified through:

  • His miracles

  • His resurrection

The Holy Spirit confirmed that Jesus is righteous.


3. Seen by angels

Even the heavenly realm witnessed the salvation of Christ.

Angels appeared:

  • at His birth

  • in the desert

  • at the resurrection

  • at the ascension


4. Preached among the nations

The Gospel was proclaimed throughout the world through the apostles.

This fulfilled Christ's command:

“Go therefore and make disciples of all nations.”
Gospel of Matthew 28:19


5. Believed on in the world

The Church spread rapidly throughout the Roman Empire.

Millions accepted the faith proclaimed by the apostles.


6. Taken up in glory

Christ ascended into heaven.

This refers to the Ascension of Jesus described in **Acts of the Apostles 1:9.


Catholic Teaching: Christianity Is the True Religion

Contrary to the slogan “religion cannot save,” the Catholic Church teaches that God established a true religion.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states:

“The Church… is the universal sacrament of salvation.”¹

And:

“Outside the Church there is no salvation.”²

This does not mean only Catholics can be saved, but it affirms:

Salvation comes through Christ and His Church.


The Bible Itself Says Religion Exists

Another verse destroys the claim that Christianity is not a religion.

“Religion that is pure and undefiled before God is this…”
Epistle of James 1:27

The Bible does not say “religion is useless.”

Instead it says true religion exists.

The real issue is not religion vs relationship.

The real issue is:

True religion vs false religion.


Early Church Fathers on the True Religion

The earliest Christians clearly understood Christianity as the true religion established by Christ.

St. Ignatius of Antioch (107 AD)

Ignatius of Antioch wrote:

“Where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.”³

He described Christianity as a visible community of faith.


St. Augustine

Augustine of Hippo wrote:

“The true religion is that whereby the one true God is worshiped.”⁴

For Augustine, Christianity was not merely spiritual feelings but the true religion revealed by God.


St. Justin Martyr

Justin Martyr declared:

“We are the true high-priestly race of God.”⁵

Early Christians understood themselves as practicing the true worship of God.


Why the “Religion Cannot Save” Argument Fails

Many Protestants repeat:

“Religion cannot save you, only Jesus can.”

Catholics agree Jesus alone saves.

However, the question is:

How does Jesus give that salvation?

The Bible answers:

Through

  • His Church

  • His Sacraments

  • His Gospel

Christ did not leave behind a book only.

He established a Church.


The Church as the Pillar of Truth

Just one verse earlier, Paul writes:

“The Church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth.”
— 1 Timothy 3:15

Therefore:

Truth is not protected by private interpretation.

Truth is safeguarded by the Church Christ founded.


The Real Meaning of 1 Timothy 3:16

When Paul says:

“Great is the mystery of our religion”

he is declaring that:

The Christian religion is founded upon the saving mystery of Jesus Christ.

The faith preached by the apostles is not:

  • a philosophy

  • a personal spirituality

  • a self-made relationship

It is a revealed religion centered on the Incarnation, death, resurrection, and glory of Christ.


Conclusion

The modern slogan “Christianity is not a religion” may sound appealing, but it is not biblical.

Scripture clearly teaches:

  • Christianity contains sacred mysteries

  • Christ founded a visible Church

  • True religion exists

  • Salvation comes through Christ and His body

As Paul the Apostle proclaimed:

“Great indeed is the mystery of our religion.”

That mystery is Jesus Christ Himself
God manifested in the flesh and proclaimed to the nations through His Church.


Footnotes

  1. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §774.

  2. Ibid., §846.

  3. Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Smyrnaeans 8 (c. AD 107).

  4. Augustine of Hippo, On True Religion, 55.

  5. Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, 116.


John 10:16 Explained: The Catholic Interpretation of “Other Sheep” and the Unity of Christ’s Church

There will be one flock, one shepherd.
Introduction

One of the most discussed verses about the unity of the Church is John 10:16, where Jesus says:

“And I have other sheep that are not of this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there shall be one flock, one shepherd.” (John 10:16)

Many Christians interpret this verse differently. Some claim the “other sheep” refers to future denominations, separate churches, or even specific modern religious groups.

However, the Catholic Church, supported by Scripture and the early Christian tradition, teaches that this passage refers primarily to the inclusion of the Gentiles into the one Church of Christ, resulting in one united flock under one shepherd—Jesus Christ.


1. The Immediate Context of John 10

In John 10, Jesus presents Himself as the Good Shepherd who cares for His sheep.

The “fold” mentioned in the passage refers to the people of Israel, the original covenant people of God. Jesus initially ministered primarily to the Jews, fulfilling the promises made to them.

But God's plan was never limited to Israel alone.

The Old Testament repeatedly foretold that the nations (Gentiles) would eventually be gathered into God’s people.

For example:

  • Isaiah prophesied that the Messiah would be “a light to the Gentiles” (Isaiah 49:6).

  • Ezekiel foretold one shepherd over God’s people (Ezekiel 34:23).

Therefore, when Jesus says “other sheep I have that are not of this fold,” He is referring to the Gentiles who would later enter the Church.


2. Catholic Interpretation: Jews and Gentiles United in One Church

According to Catholic teaching, John 10:16 refers to the future unity of Jews and Gentiles within one Church founded by Christ.

The Catechism teaches that Christ established one visible Church.

“The Church is one because of her source… her founder… and her soul.”¹

The mission of the Church is to gather all people into one flock under Christ.

This unity began visibly after Christ’s resurrection, especially through the missionary work of the apostles who preached to the Gentiles.

For example:

  • Peter opened the Church to the Gentiles in Acts 10 (Cornelius).

  • Paul became the apostle to the Gentiles (Romans 11:13).

Thus, John 10:16 is fulfilled when Jews and Gentiles become one people of God in the Church.


3. “One Flock, One Shepherd” – A Powerful Argument Against Denominationalism

A key phrase in the verse is:

“There will be one flock, one shepherd.”

Notice that Jesus did not say:

  • many flocks

  • many shepherds

  • many competing churches

Instead, Christ clearly teaches unity.

This verse directly challenges the idea that Christianity should be divided into thousands of denominations with different doctrines.

The Catholic Church teaches that Christ intended one visible and unified Church, not a fragmented collection of independent communities.

The Catechism states:

“Christ the Lord founded one Church and one Church only.”²

Therefore, John 10:16 supports the Catholic belief that Christ established one universal Church meant to gather all nations.


4. Interpretation of the Early Church Fathers

The interpretation that the “other sheep” refers to Gentiles being united with Jewish believers in the Church was already the consensus among early Christian writers.

St. Augustine (4th–5th century)

St. Augustine explained that the “other sheep” refers to the Gentiles who would later join the Church.

“The sheepfold was the people of Israel… the other sheep were the Gentiles, who were to believe in Christ and be joined in one flock.”³


St. Cyril of Alexandria (5th century)

Cyril also taught that the prophecy refers to the future unity of believers from all nations.

“Christ calls the Gentiles ‘other sheep,’ for they were outside the Jewish fold but destined to be gathered into one Church.”⁴


St. John Chrysostom (4th century)

Chrysostom emphasized that Christ's mission was to unite humanity.

“By saying ‘one flock,’ He shows that there will be no separation between Jew and Gentile.”⁵

These Fathers confirm that the earliest Christians did not interpret this verse as referring to separate religious groups, but rather to the universal Church composed of all nations.


5. John 10:16 and the Catholic Understanding of the Church

The Catholic Church sees this verse as a foundational statement about the universality and unity of the Church.

The word “Catholic” itself means “universal.”

Christ's Church is meant for:

  • Jews

  • Gentiles

  • every nation

  • every culture

All gathered into one flock.

The Catechism explains:

“All men are called to this catholic unity of the People of God… and to it belong or are ordered the Catholic faithful, others who believe in Christ, and indeed the whole of mankind.”⁶

Thus, John 10:16 expresses God’s plan of salvation for the entire world.


6. A Prophecy Fulfilled in the Early Church

The fulfillment of John 10:16 can be seen clearly in the Book of Acts.

Examples include:

  • Acts 10 – Gentiles receive the Holy Spirit

  • Acts 11 – the Church recognizes Gentile converts

  • Acts 15 – the Council of Jerusalem welcomes Gentiles

By the end of the apostolic age, Christianity had already spread to:

  • Asia Minor

  • Greece

  • Rome

  • North Africa

The Church was no longer limited to Israel but had become a global flock under Christ.


Conclusion

John 10:16 is a powerful declaration of Christ’s plan for one united Church composed of all nations.

According to the Catholic interpretation:

  • The “fold” refers to Israel.

  • The “other sheep” refers to the Gentiles.

  • Christ gathers both into one flock.

This teaching was consistently upheld by the Early Church Fathers, the apostolic mission, and the Catholic Church today.

Rather than supporting the idea of multiple competing churches, this verse reveals Christ’s desire for visible unity under one shepherd.

In the end, the message of John 10:16 is clear:

Christ did not establish many flocks—but one flock under one shepherd.


Footnotes

  1. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §813.

  2. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §816.

  3. Augustine of Hippo, Tractates on the Gospel of John, 45.

  4. Cyril of Alexandria, Commentary on the Gospel of John, Book 7.

  5. John Chrysostom, Homilies on the Gospel of John, Homily 59.

  6. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §836.


Matthew 28:20 and the Indefectibility of the Church: A Biblical and Historical Challenge to Protestant Claims

Introduction: A Question Many Protestants Cannot Easily Answer One of the most powerful yet often overlooked passages in Christian apologet...