Tuesday, May 5, 2026

APOLOGETICS BIBLE STUDY Q&A: Polycarp: The Last Disciple of the Apostles!



Alam mo, if we’re talking about "receipts" sa Church history, si
Polycarp of Smyrna ang ultimate witness. He wasn't just some guy who read the Bible; he was the guy who talked to the people who wrote it. Siya yung "living bridge" between the time of the Apostles and the early Church fathers.

Heto ang breakdown kung bakit siya "big deal" and why his story matters even today:

1. The Last Disciple (The Apostolic Connection)

Si Polycarp ang huling direct link sa mga Apostles. Specifically, he was a disciple of John the Apostle. Imagine sitting at the feet of the guy who actually leaned on Jesus during the Last Supper!

Sabi ni Irenaeus (na student naman ni Polycarp), Polycarp was appointed as Bishop of Smyrna by the Apostles themselves. Hindi ito basta-basta "promotion" this was about Apostolic Succession. Siya yung taga-bantay ng "pure gospel" bago pa ito nahaluan ng kung anu-anong weird philosophies.

2. The Great Protector of Truth (Anti-Marcion & The Law)

Noon pa lang, may mga "heretics" na. One of them was Marcion, who tried to say na the God of the Old Testament is different from the God of the New Testament. Gusto ni Marcion i-delete ang Old Testament at i-retain lang ang edited versions ni Luke and Paul.

When Polycarp met Marcion sa Rome, tinanong siya ni Marcion, "Do you recognize me?" Ang sagot ni Polycarp? "I recognize the firstborn of Satan." Savage, 'di ba?

Para kay Polycarp, the Old and New Covenants are part of one big story. He understood that while we are no longer under the Law as a covenant of works (New Covenant perspective), the Old Testament is still essential because it points to Christ. He protected the Church from "Law vs. Grace" extremes by keeping the Gospel grounded in history.

3. The Roman Road Trip (Quartodeciman Controversy)

Pumunta si Polycarp sa Rome para kausapin si Pope Anicetus. Medyo nag-clash sila about Easter.

  • Polycarp: Gusto niya sumunod sa tradition ni John celebrating on the 14th of Nisan (Quartodeciman), regardless kung anong day of the week.

  • Anicetus: Gusto niya Sunday palagi.

Kahit hindi sila nag-agree on the date, they stayed in communion. This shows na even in the early church, people had different "traditions" but they were united in the same Gospel. No legalism, just mutual respect for Apostolic roots.

4. Architect of the Canon

Wala pa tayong "Official Bible" compilation noon, pero si Polycarp was already using the New Testament as Scripture. Sa kanyang Letter to the Philippians, he quoted almost the entire New Testament Gospels, Acts, and especially the letters of Paul.

He was instrumental in validating Paul’s writings. If Polycarp (the disciple of John) trusted Paul’s letters, then the whole Church could trust them. He helped us see that the Gospel isn't just a "feeling" it's a specific set of documented teachings.

5. Testimonies from the "Fans"

Ang ganda ng testimonies about him:

  • Irenaeus: Naaalala pa niya yung upuan kung saan naupo si Polycarp and how he described his conversations with John.

  • Ignatius of Antioch: On his way to be executed, Ignatius wrote a letter to Polycarp, telling him to "stand firm like an anvil under the hammer."

6. The Final Mic Drop (Martyrdom at Smyrna)

The Martyrium Polycarpi is one of the most famous accounts in history. Noong huhulihin na siya, hindi siya tumakbo. He even served food to the soldiers who arrested him!

Nung nasa arena na siya, the proconsul told him, "Curse Christ and I’ll set you free."

Ang iconic na sagot ni Polycarp:

"Eighty and six years have I served Him, and He has done me no wrong. How then can I blaspheme my King and Savior?"

Sabi sa accounts, when they tried to burn him, the fire formed an arch around him but didn't touch him (some see this as a sign of God’s presence, similar to Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego). Eventually, they had to stab him. His death didn't discourage the church; it fueled it.

Why this matters for us:

We believe the Kingdom of God is expanding. Polycarp was a seed planted in that expansion. He didn't just die for a "religion"; he died for a Person he knew through the people who actually saw Him.

His life reminds us that the Gospel isn't a game of "broken telephone." It’s a solid chain of truth passed down from Christ to the Apostles, to Polycarp, and finally, to us.

How does knowing that our faith is "historically anchored" through people like Polycarp change how you handle doubts today?

Real Talk Reflection: The Living Bridge

"And the things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable people who will also be qualified to teach others." 2 Timothy 2:2

Call to Action: Trace the roots of your faith. Don't just settle for "what people say" today; look back at the faithful witnesses who stood their ground when the fire was literal.

APOLOGETICS BIBLE STUDY Q&A: Bakit 66 Books Lang ang Bible Natin? Is It Really Complete?



Have you ever wondered bakit 'yung Bible natin has exactly 66 books? Hindi ba kulang? Or maybe sumobra? In a world full of "fake news" and "budol" finds, it’s only natural to ask: "Paano tayo nakakasiguro na itong hawak natin is the legit Word of God?"

Let’s get real. The Bible isn't just a random collection of religious writings na pinagsama-sama ng isang committee because they felt like it. It’s about divine authority.

It’s about Discovery, Not Decision

Dito tayo madalas maguluhan. We think the early Church "voted" on which books to include. But the truth is, the Church didn’t bestow authority on these books; they simply discovered the authority that God already put there.

God is the ultimate Author. He "breathed out" (theopneustos) the Scriptures (2 Timothy 3:16). Ang mga human authors, they were moved by the Holy Spirit (2 Peter 1:20-21). Think of it like a brand's authenticity tag. God put His "fingerprints" on these 66 books, and the people of God simply recognized the tatak ng Panginoon.

The "Fingerprints" of God

How did they verify if a book was legit? Para ring pag-check ng identity sa NBI or DFA, may mga criteria:

  1. Prophetic/Apostolic Origin: Was it written by a prophet or an apostle? (e.g., Moses, Paul, Peter).

  2. Confirmed by Acts of God: May "resibo" ba from God, like miracles or fulfilled prophecies?

  3. The Truth Test: Does it align with what God has already revealed? God does not contradict Himself.

  4. Power to Edify: Does it actually change lives and build up the faith of the believers? (Hebrews 4:12).

Ano’ng ganap sa "Apocrypha"?

Dito sa Pilipinas, common ang tanong about the "missing books" or the Apocrypha. But here’s the thing: they were never "missing." They were just never part of the original "collection."

  • Judaism never accepted them: Ang mga Jewish people, who were the original keepers of the OT, never saw these as inspired.

  • Jesus and the Apostles ignored them: Over 250 times ang OT na-quote sa NT, but not once did Jesus or the Apostles quote the Apocrypha as "Scripture."

  • Historical Timeline: The "spirit of prophecy" stopped around 400 B.C. and only returned during the time of John the Baptist. Most Apocryphal books were written during that "silent period."

Even Jerome, the famous scholar who translated the Latin Vulgate, said these books weren't on the same level as the 39 books of the OT. The decision to officially include them in the 16th century was more about reacting to the Reformation rather than following historical evidence.

The New Testament: The New Covenant Standard

For us who hold to a New Covenant perspective, we see that the NT books were accepted almost immediately. Why? Because the Apostles were the official "spokespersons" of Christ.

Peter himself called Paul’s letters "Scripture" (2 Peter 3:16). Meaning, even during the first century, they already knew which writings had the weight of God's Word. By the time the early Church fathers were writing, they had quoted the NT over 36,000 times! High definition ang evidence natin, 'di ba?

Real Talk Reflection

"All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness." 2 Timothy 3:16

Call to Action: Don't just let your Bible sit on the shelf like a display piece or a "lucky charm." If God went through the trouble of inspiring, collecting, and preserving these 66 books through centuries of history, it’s because He has something to say to you.

Open it. Read it with a New Covenant lens seeing how everything points to the finished work of Christ. It’s the only book where the Author is always present when you read it.

Is there a specific book in the Bible that you’ve been struggling to understand or find "useful" lately?

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APOLOGETICS BIBLE STUDY Q&A: Polycarp: The Last Disciple of the Apostles!

Alam mo, if we’re talking about "receipts" sa Church history, si Polycarp of Smyrna ang ultimate witness. He wasn't just some...

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