The Church According to History & Scripture

St. Ignatius of Antioch stands as one of the most important figures in the early Church. A disciple of St. John the Apostle and the third bishop of Antioch—appointed by St. Peter himself—Ignatius lived and died for the truth of the Catholic faith. As he was led to martyrdom in Rome, he urged fellow Christians not to rescue him, declaring that salvation comes through freedom from the fear of death.

Ignatius was the first known Christian writer to use the word Catholic, from the Greek katholikos, meaning “according to the whole.” He described the Church as one, holy, and apostolic—united under the bishops and the Eucharist, the “medicine of immortality.” Writing over a thousand years before any other Christian denomination existed, Ignatius affirmed that the Eucharist is truly the flesh of Christ and that communion outside the authority of the bishop is invalid. He wrote, “Wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.” These words, coming from a man directly linked to the Apostles, confirm that the Church’s structure, Sacraments, and devotion to the Eucharist come from Christ Himself.

Like St. Ignatius, let us hold firm to the faith handed down from the Apostles—the fullness of truth that remains “according to the whole.”

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