What it is
The Claims Archive is the central apologetic database of Fideograph. Each claim is a historically-grounded assertion about Catholic belief or practice — for example, “The early Church taught the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist” or “Peter held a unique leadership role among the Apostles.”
Every claim is sourced, dated, and assigned a verdict based on the historical evidence.
Claim structure
Each claim page contains:
- The claim — stated precisely
- Verdict — Verified, Contested, or Refuted, based on the weight of the historical record
- Date range — the period the evidence covers
- Primary sources — the number of independent witnesses cited
- Evidence — the actual patristic, conciliar, and historical sources supporting the claim
- Objections and responses — where relevant, common objections and the historical answer to each
What the verdicts mean
Verified: The historical evidence is substantial, consistent, and spans multiple independent witnesses across multiple centuries. The claim represents the mainstream of the early Christian tradition.
Contested: There is genuine historical debate — either because the evidence is mixed, the interpretation is disputed, or the tradition develops significantly over the period in question.
Refuted: The historical record does not support the claim as stated. The entry explains why and what the evidence actually shows.
How to use it for apologetics
Filter by doctrine to find all claims related to a topic you are preparing to discuss. Use the primary source count as a quick indicator of how well-attested a claim is — a claim with 12 independent witnesses is easier to defend than one with 2.
Link directly to a claim page in online discussions rather than summarising the evidence yourself. The claim pages are designed to be shareable.