A Catholic apologetics & formation system.

Support

Help & Documentation

Everything on Fideograph — what each engine does, how to use it, and what the outputs mean.

← All Help Articles

Christian Belief Map — Full Guide

The seven visualisation modes, how to read each one, and how to use the Belief Map for apologetics.

What it is

The Christian Belief Map is a visual database of doctrinal positions held by significant figures in the first 500 years of Christian history — Church Fathers, bishops, theologians, council participants, and notable heretics. It covers nine core doctrines: Eucharist, Papal Primacy, Baptism, Scripture and Tradition, Trinity, Christology, Mariology, Soteriology, and Ecclesiology.

The seven visualisation modes

Network Graph: Shows figures as nodes connected by influence, time period, and shared positions. Clusters indicate traditions. Isolated nodes indicate figures whose positions were unusual for their era.

Century Timeline: Plots figures chronologically. Use this to trace how a doctrine develops (or remains stable) from the 1st to the 5th century.

Tradition Heat Map: Shows the density of a position across traditions — how strongly held was Real Presence across the Eastern tradition versus the Western? The heat map answers this at a glance.

Heresy Map: Shows which positions were condemned as heretical, by whom, and when. Essential context for understanding why certain doctrinal boundaries are drawn where they are.

Figure Comparison: Select two figures and compare their positions side by side across all nine doctrines.

Doctrine Consensus: For a selected doctrine, shows the percentage of tracked figures who held each position — Orthodox, Contested, or Heterodox — by century.

Figure Belief Profile: Select one figure and see their full doctrinal profile across all nine doctrines.

How to use it for apologetics

The Doctrine Consensus view is the most powerful apologetic tool. Filter to a contested doctrine — say, Real Presence — and the consensus view shows that unanimous agreement in the first three centuries, with divergence only appearing later. This is difficult to argue against.

Use the Figure Comparison to show that Fathers who disagreed on secondary matters agreed on primary ones. This undermines the argument that early Christianity was doctrinally chaotic.

History has always been on her side.

Explore verified claims across seven centuries of Church history.

Enter the Archive