Introduction: Are These Just “Catholic Traditions”?
Many Protestants argue that First Communion and Confirmation are “man-made traditions” not found in the Bible. But is that true?
The reality is this: while the exact modern terms “First Communion” and “Confirmation” are not explicitly written in Scripture, the realities they represent are deeply biblical, apostolic, and practiced by the earliest Christians.
Let’s break this down carefully—with Scripture, Early Church testimony, and official Catholic teaching.
Part 1: Is First Communion Biblical?
1. The Eucharist Is Clearly Instituted by Christ
The foundation of First Communion is the Eucharist, instituted by Jesus Himself:
“This is my body… this is my blood… do this in remembrance of me.”
— Luke 22:19–20
Also:
“Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.”
— John 6:53
👉 These verses show:
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The Eucharist is not symbolic only
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It is necessary for spiritual life
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It is a command from Christ
📖 Therefore, receiving Communion is not optional—it is essential.
2. Why “First” Communion Exists
In the early Church, not everyone received Communion immediately:
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Converts underwent instruction (catechesis)
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Baptism preceded Eucharist (Acts 2:41–42)
“They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching… and the breaking of bread.”
— Acts 2:42
👉 This shows a process:
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Teaching
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Baptism
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Eucharist
So “First Communion” simply marks:
➡️ The first worthy reception of the Eucharist after proper preparation
3. St. Paul Warns About Worthy Reception
“Whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily… eats and drinks judgment upon himself.”
— 1 Corinthians 11:27–29
👉 This is critical:
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Not everyone should receive casually
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Preparation and understanding are required
📌 This is exactly why the Church requires First Communion preparation.
4. Early Church Evidence
St. Justin Martyr (c. 155 AD)
“No one may share in it except one who believes… and has been washed in Baptism.”¹
👉 This shows:
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Eucharist is restricted
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Requires faith and initiation
St. Augustine (4th century)
“You must receive worthily… recognizing the Body of Christ.”²
5. Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC)
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CCC 1324: “The Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian life.”
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CCC 1385: Worthy reception is required
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CCC 1247: Catechesis precedes sacraments
👉 Conclusion:
First Communion is fully biblical in principle and apostolic in practice.
Part 2: Is Confirmation Biblical?
1. Confirmation Is Rooted in the Apostles’ Actions
The clearest biblical evidence:
“They laid their hands on them and they received the Holy Spirit.”
— Acts 8:14–17
👉 Important:
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These believers were already baptized
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Yet they received the Holy Spirit through laying on of hands
📌 This is exactly what Confirmation is.
Another Example:
“Paul laid his hands upon them, and the Holy Spirit came on them.”
— Acts 19:5–6
👉 Again:
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Baptism first
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Then laying on of hands
2. Theological Meaning of Confirmation
Confirmation:
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Strengthens baptismal grace
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Gives fullness of the Holy Spirit
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Empowers for mission
👉 Rooted in:
“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you.”
— Acts 1:8
3. Hebrews Confirms This Practice
“The laying on of hands”
— Hebrews 6:2
👉 Listed as a foundational doctrine
4. Early Church Fathers on Confirmation
Tertullian (c. 200 AD)
“After Baptism, hands are laid upon us… inviting the Holy Spirit.”³
St. Cyril of Jerusalem (c. 350 AD)
“You were anointed… becoming partakers of Christ.”⁴
👉 This refers to Chrismation (Confirmation)
5. Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC)
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CCC 1285: Confirmation completes Baptism
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CCC 1302–1305: Effects include strength and mission
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CCC 1299: Apostolic laying on of hands continues
👉 Conclusion:
Confirmation is directly biblical and clearly practiced by the Apostles.
Part 3: Answering Common Protestant Objections
❌ Objection 1: “These terms are not in the Bible”
✅ Answer:
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The Trinity is not named explicitly either—but is biblical
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The Church uses terms to describe biblical realities
❌ Objection 2: “All believers already have the Holy Spirit”
✅ Answer:
Yes—but Scripture shows:
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A distinct strengthening or outpouring (Acts 8, Acts 19)
👉 Baptism ≠ Full empowerment in every case
❌ Objection 3: “Communion is just symbolic”
✅ Answer:
John 6 + 1 Corinthians 11 clearly reject that:
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Real presence
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Serious consequences for misuse
❌ Objection 4: “No need for preparation”
✅ Answer:
Paul strongly warns against unworthy reception
👉 Preparation is biblical obedience, not tradition.
Conclusion: Fully Biblical, Fully Apostolic
Both First Communion and Confirmation are:
✔ Rooted in the commands of Christ
✔ Practiced by the Apostles
✔ Confirmed by the Early Church
✔ Preserved in the Catholic Church
They are not human inventions—they are organic developments of biblical truths lived out in the Church founded by Christ.
Final Takeaway
If you reject these sacraments, you are not rejecting “Catholic traditions”—
👉 You are rejecting practices deeply rooted in Scripture and apostolic Christianity.
Footnotes (Chicago Style)
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Justin Martyr, First Apology, ch. 66.
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Augustine, Sermon 272.
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Tertullian, On Baptism, ch. 8.
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Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 21.


