
I finally found the "missing" pieces of the full history of the Iglesia ni Cristo and so the full Biography of Bro. Felix Manalo. Im so glad that ive found this article because it enlightened me as what really happened in the times of the beginning, and growth of the church. Here is the complete history and biography of Bro. Felix Manalo:
Contents:- Manalo  The Man
- Little  Fisherman, Shepherd
- Manila  Beckons
- Religious  Odyssey
- Rationale  for Odyssey
- The  Calling of Manalo
- Manalo's  Mission
- First  Meeting, Baptism
- Registered,  Church Reaches Out
- First  Ministry School
- Quells  Internal Revolt
- Massive  Growth and Expansion
- Years  Of War And Liberation
- Post-Liberation  Growth
- Chapels As Progress Indices
- Need  For A Successor
- Manalos  Final Days
- Manalos  Interment
- AFTERWORD
- NOTES BY THE AUTHOR
He  was a pioneer in the real sense of the term-innovative, persevering,  impelled by a vision, courageous. Moreover, his                            faith in God and Jesus Christ was pure and  unshakable. When he set out on his great mission, he was convinced it  was the will                            of God and that God would therefore make him  prevail against all odds.                            Felix Ysagun Manalo was right. His success  in preaching and leading the Iglesia ni Cristo or Church of  Christ has                            been phenomenal by any standard. The Church,  or the INC, as it is commonly known, has grown into a giant religious  organizations                            from its modest beginnings.
It covers the  entire Philippines, north to south, with new congregations and missions  in distant                            parts of the globe. It is the only church in a  third world country which has successfully "invaded" the Protestant  west and                            Catholic Europe.                             If for this shining achievement alone,  Felix Y. Manalo should be an honored name in the gallery of heroes in  the history                            of world religions. There is enough reason to  cast his name in marble and granite through perpetuity.                         
This year, 1986, is the centennial of the  birth of Felix Y. Manalo, who first preached the Church of Christ in  1914 and                            led the church through decades of ordeal and  triumph, uncertainty and hope. Before his death on April 12, 1963 at the  age                            of almost 77, Manalo has succeeded in laying  the solid foundations and sturdy underpinnings of the Church on which  his successor-son,                            Eraño has continued to build with dynamism  and firm resolve.
                            Manalo The Man 
Felix Manalo was born on May 10, 1886 in a  small nipa house in Calzada, a sito in the barrio of Tipas Taguig,  Rizal (now                            Metro Manila) province, the first child of  Mariano Ysagun, a farm worker and fisherman and Bonifaca Manalo, an  ordinary but                            determined housewife. Both parents were  devoutly Catholic. Aling Pacia, especially was a known manang or  faithful                            lay member, a devotee of the patron saint,  San Antonio. Happy with the arrival, they had him baptized and  christened Felix                            in a neighboring Catholic chapel.
Like most  other parents they must have thought their son could be their support in  their                            old age, unaware that Felix was destined for  activities less mundane, transcendent.                            To ensure that her first-born would be  steeped in her own faith, Aling Pacia always took him to service  in their                            chapel. When he was old enough, the boy was  enrolled in canton class of Macario Ocampo ("Maestro Cario") in  Tipas,                            a school during the Spanish period in which  were taught the rudiments of fundamental human skills and basic Catholic  doctrine,                            prayers and practices, as well as reading,  writing and arithmetic. The school was utilized by Spanish friars to  regiment Filipino                            children and transform them into docile and  subservient colonials.
                            Little Fisherman
Shepherd                                                        Felix consequently became devoutly  religious, to his mothers delight. Then, while not yet ten tears old, he  was initiated                            into the life of a fisherman and helped his  father fish in Laguna Bay, reminiscent of the disciples whom Christ made  "fishers                            of men". He also became a herd boy, though he  tended, with cousin Modesto Ysagun, carabaos, not a flock of sheep, a  preoccupation                            also figuratively similar to that of early  leaders of Gods chosen people. They trapped field mice whose meant was  good for                            nourishment.
Much earlier in history, David  of Israel was a shepherd who slew Goliath. Did Manalo have his own  Goliath?                            The robust, hyperactive Felix, though born  poor, early showed sign of fortitude and endurance. Once, he beat many  other                            boys in a contest to determine who could stay  longest standing barefooted atop an anthill crawling with maddened red  ants.                            Another time he prevailed in a whiplash fight  that lasted for hours and made him ill for a week. To Felix, it was not  the                            pain but the victory that mattered.                            In 1896, the year that the Philippine  Revolution against Spain broke out, Mariano Ysagun died, leaving the 10  year old                            Felix and his younger sister, Praxedes  Orphaned. Their hardships increased.
About three years later, in 1899,  his mother married                            again, this time to a widower, Clemente Mozo.  She bore him five children but only two survived: Fausta and Baldomero.  Mozo                            himself died two months before Baldomeros  birth. His death forced the twice-widowed Aling Pacia to find  work in a small                            sawali (woven bamboo strips) factory.
                         Manila Beckons                                                        
In 1898, the year General Emilio Aguinaldo  proclaimed the independence of the Philippines from Spain, Felix, then  12, and                            his cousin Modesto left for long-beckoning  Manila. There he learned photography from another cousin, Serapio  Ysagun, and apprenticed                            in a studio owned by an uncle, Manuel Manalo.  He also learned other crafts like goldsmithing, Barbering and hat  making. In                            1900, the cousin stayed in a parish house in  Samploc, Manila where the Spanish priest was an uncle, Mariano Borja.
A  lover                            of fighting cocks, the priest not only fed  and gave them quarters but told them tales of great men which doubtless  inspired                            the two young boys, especially Felix, to  weave dreams.                             It was in that parish where Felix found a  Bible, which he began to read hoping to find passages confirming  religious beliefs.                            Doubts began to rise in his mind; the Bible  was silent about his faith. Consequently, he began to reject the old  ritualistic                            Catholic practices. To find the truth, he  embarked on a religious odyssey.
                            Religious Odyssey                                                        
When Aguinaldo proclaimed the first  Philippines republic, the dominant Filipino religious grouping was the  Iglesia Filipina                            Independiente or Philippine Independent  Church headed by Fr. Gregorio Aglipay. It was popular and avowedly  nationalistic,                            but held no attraction for Felix. For he  believed that it was not really independent of the Catholic Church as  claimed by                            its founder: while opposing some Catholic  doctrines, it required its members to follow them.                            His fancy turned to an esoteric group  called Colorum, founded in 1840 by Apolonio ("Hermano Pule") dela Cruz  as Cofradia                            de San Jose. Condemned as heretical and  therefore unrecognized by the Spanish government, it nevertheless  attracted several                            adherents because it claimed direct  communication with God.
Felix gave it a try but quickly left it when he  realized the claim                            was false.                            He then moved to Parañaque, Rizal (now  Metro Manila) where he opened a mall hatshop with Eusebio Sunga. One  night he listened                            to a debate between a priest and a Protestant  minister. He thought the latter had won and again his Catholic faith  was badly                            shaken.                         
Next, he joined the Iglesia Metodista  Episcopal, and soon became a pastor in Manila. With his quick mind and  profound passion                            to learn, he became an asset to the  Methodists. Later, while engaged I missionary work, he learned that his  mother was dying                            and raced home to Tipas to be by her side. He  rejected the last sacrament for her. When she died, the parish priest  denied                            her burial in the Tipas Catholic cemetery,  and had to be buried in the Aglipayan cemetery.                            Not long afterwards, he adopted his  mothers surname, Manalo, as an expression, according to his sister  Fausta, of affection                            and great reverence for his mother.                            Sometime later, he became a pastor of a  Presbyterian Church.
Then he discovered another Protestant group, the  Christian                            Missionary alliance, known as the Disciples  of Christ in the United States, which baptized its members by immersion.  Knowing                            that this practice most closely adhered to  the Bible, he joined the Disciples and became an evangelist. At about  this time                            he met Teresa Sereneo from Paco, Manila, whom  he eventually married. They had one child who died in infancy.                         
When he was 25, Manalo joined the Church  of the Seventh-Day Adventists and became one of its most outstanding  evangelists.                            After the death of his first wife, he met a  petite young girl of 19 from Manila, Honorata de Guzman. On May 10,  1913, on his                            27 birthday, they were married. Honorata  became his lifetime companion and partner. They had seven children-three  girls and                            four boys.                            Rationale for Odyssey                                                        
Minister Teofilo C Ramos of the Iglesia  ni Cristo explains that the fiery Church Leader drifted from one  religion                            to another because he had "to saturate  himself with biblical lore as Gods way of preparing him for his divine  mission."                            Manalos love affair with the Adventists or  Sabanistas, ended after he began to question some of their  doctrines,                            particularly their Saturday (Sabbath)  observance.
The hierarchy reacted by discrediting him. When in 1913 he  resigned as a                            minister and member, his odyssey ended. But  he plunged into deep religious crisis.                            Disenchanted with organized religions,  Felix Manalo familiarized himself with atheism and agnosticism. But even  as he discussed                            and debated with atheists and agnostics, his  anguished soul cried that what he really needed was to be close to God  and to                            spread the Gospel-the problem was how. Some  church ministers say Manalo was convinced that eventually a revelation  would burst                            upon his conscience like a sun as it happened  to Paul the Apostle on his way to Damascus.
                            The Calling of Manalo                                                        
One day in November, 1913, Felix Manalo  gathered all the religious literature he had accumulated and arranged  them, with                            a pile of unused notebooks, sharpened pencils  and the Bible, on a table inside a dimly-lit room in Eusebio Sungas  house in                            Pasay. He instructed everyone in the  household that he should not be disturbed, then kept himself in  seclusion.
So intense                            was his concentration that he became  oblivious of time, food and the world outside. He emerged from that  seclusion after three                            days and three nights of intensive study and  reflection, his notebooks filled with notes, certain that God had  commissioned                            him to perform a mission.                            A Church minister says that Manalos  "commission" was in accordance with biblical prophecies pertaining to  Gods calling                            a "messenger from the Far East" (Rev. 7:2-3),  who would preach to Gods sons and daughters (Isaiah 43:5-6;  46:11;41:9-11).                            His task would involve stamping the seal of  the living God on the foreheads of Gods servants and bringing the "other  sheep"                            which were not within the Church during the  time of Christ into the fold so that "there shall be one flock, one  shepherd".                         
It was a formidable mission. But, as  explained by Church ministers, Felix Manalo, like Moses and Paul was  prepared for                            it. True, he had received much of his  biblical education from American authorities and institutions, but this  was not unique.                            Moses, an Israelite, was educated and raised  in the culture of Egypt in preparation for his mission of leading his  fellow                            Israelites from Egypt back to their homeland.                         
Paul-proud, cruel, patrician- was an  inveterate persecutor before he became a messenger of God with members  of the Christian                            Church as his victims. When Christ called  Paul, He assigned him to the Gentiles, people who had no covenant with  God, in preparation                            for his mission of leading them from the  wrong path to the true faith of Jesus Christ.
                            Manalo's Mission                            
then God called men to undertake to  undertake missions, they must have experienced God, as Martin Luther  did, in such "a                            life-changing way that it led them to launch  movements which became great churches" and changed Christian history in  dramatic                            ways. In the case of Felix Manalo, his  calling occurred during his seclusion in Sungas room.
According to his  wife, Honorata,                            Manalo intimated to her one night before  starting to propagate a new faith that the mission given to him by God  was specific:                            to preach the Iglesia ni Cristo. In  pursuing this mission he would also persuade his fellow pastors from  other sects                            to unite and preach the same church.
                            First Meeting, Baptism                            
One day in July1914, Felix Manalo and  wife, Honorata, left Pasay without a centavo between them and proceeded  to Sta. Anna,                            Manila. He deliberately did not bring any  money, said his wife, for he wanted God to perform a miracle in their  life. Before                            reaching their destination- Punta St. Ana-the  had to cross the Pasig River by boat. A boatman ferried them across  without                            the two-centavo fare-Manalo promised to pay  him later.                            In Punta, he asked for his friends  Apolinario Ramos and wife, Engracia.
They were staying in the workers  quarters of the                            construction firm, Atlantic Gulf &  Pacific Company. Manalo then sent someone to pay the boat fare. That  night, with the                            permission of the Ramos couple, he conducted  his first religious meeting in their room with only a handful of people  listening.                            As he continued to hold nightly meetings  more came to listen, Drawn not only by the novelty of his biblical  teachings but                            by their eagerness to see the young  evangelist who even then was renowned as a brilliant, spell-binding  speaker.
Indeed, Felix                            Manalo, then only 27 going on 28, had a  commanding personality and exceptional eloquence. Every statement he  made was from                            the Bible.                            Not long after that first meeting the  first 14 converts to the Iglesia ni Cristo were baptized, by  immersion, by                            Felix Manalo at the Sta. Ana portion of the  Pasig River. To ensure privacy, the baptismal area was enclosed with  white cloth                            held up by bamboo poles. Manalo waited in the  baptistery for the converts. Before him, in waist deep water, he urged  each                            of them to raise their hands, state their  allegiance to God, Christ and the Bible, and reaffirm their loyalty to  their new                            faith. Then he immersed them one by one in  the clear river water "in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy  Spirit"
This  first batch of converts, according to Church records, was composed of:                         
- Barbara Cordero
- Juan de la Cruz
- Juana de la Cruz
- Maximano Diosenito
- Remigia Guevarra
- Pedro Inocencio
- Federico Inocencio
- Tomas Inocencio
- Emilia de Leon
- Felicimo de Leon
- Estanislao Mangilit
- Engracia Ramos
- Gorgonio Sta. Maria
- Eugenia Yuzon                            
They became the nucleus of the first  congregation or lokal of the Church of Christ. They first held  their worship                            services in the house of Apolinario and  Engracia Ramos, then the larger house of Atanacio Morte, where the Banal  na Hapunan                            or Holy Supper was held.                            From Manila, Manalo decided to preach the  Church in his hometown of Taguig. By this time, early 1914, their first  child,                            Pilar was born. He assigned Federico  Inocencio, whom he had trained and ordained as the first Church  minister, to administer                            the Sta. Ana congregation during his absence.
Preaching in Tipas, he encountered wave upon wave of harassment and  persecution.                            Many of his own townmates swore at him,  stoned his meetings, intimidated and harmed members and their guests.  Nevertheless,                            in the summer of 1914, he was able to baptize  a few converts, including one of his most rabid persecutors, Serapio  Dionisio.
                            Registered, Church Reaches  Out                            
To avoid accusations of preaching an  unrecognized church, Felix Manalo decided to register the Iglesia ni  Cristo                            with the Philippine government. He asked a  lawyer friend, Juan Natividad, to assist him. On July 27, 1914, the Iglesia                             ni Cristo was officially registered, the  date of its registration coinciding with the outbreak of World War I.
It  was                            registered as a "corporation sole" with Felix  Manalo as Executive Minister. Among the more notable converts at this  time were                            three Protestant ministers:                         
- Justino Casanova
- Norberto Asuncion
- Victor Magsalin                            
The first two were ordained as ministers,  with Casanova becoming the Churchs first General Treasurer.                            From Taguig, Felix Manalo reached out to  Paternos, then Pasig, where he established new congregations.
He toiled  day and                            night, with hardly any rest and sleep, he  suffered from lack of proper nourishment. He personally supervised the lokals,                            attended to members problems, conducted  nightly evangelization in different places and spent long hours  preparing Bible lessons                            for the services. Soon, as a result of too  much suffering and sacrifice, he vomited blood, indicating his lungs had  been damaged.                            His once robust, proud body, forced beyond  its capacity for endurance, was utterly vitiated.
But Manalo, then only  28, did                            not give up. He prayed fervently to God for  help, exercised regularly and increased his food intake. Back on his  feet again,                            he immediately resumed his work by the summer  of 1915.                            From his home province, Manalo in late  1915, returned to Manila and inaugurated a missionary campaign in  populous Tondo.                            Small meetings evolved into big rallies and  public debates between Manalo the accomplished debater and leaders of  other religious                            groups.
These debates highlighted the logic  and validity of the Churchs teachings and served as an effective  propagation tool.                            Meanwhile, rivals vanquished by Manalo  escalated their campaign of hate and persecution against him and the  Church.                            First Ministry School                            
As the Church kept growing an expanding,  Manalos need for more assistants became pronounced. Consequently, in the  house                            of a member, Leoncio Javier and his wife, in  Tondo, which also doubled as a chapel, he organized the first batch of  ministerial                            students:                         
- Justino Casanova
- Norberto Asuncion
- Norberto Cruz
- Federico Inocencio
- Marcelo Lemen
- Sancho de Guzman
- Teodoro Santiago
- Santiago Lopez 
- Teofilo OraJ
- anuario Ponce
- Basilio Santiago 
- Quirino Santos 
- Benito Simbillo                            
Some would become Pillars of the Church;  others like Ora, Ponce and Basilio Santiago would, as we shall see,  conspire to                            wreck it.                            The lessons Manalo imparted to his  students and congregations were uniform and prepared by himself. The  ministers were                            given outlines. To facilitate reproduction of  the outlines, Manalo devised a novel copying method a crude gulaman  or                            gelatin press which Honorata operated. It was  a labor-consuming process. In 1916, Marcelo Lemen, a Tondo religious  worker                            employed in a printing house, suggested that  the lessons be reproduced in printed form.
Manalo agreed and the first  printed                            lessons or texto came out on March 26,  1916.                            Having consolidated his modest gains in  Rizal and Manila, Manalo next reached out to the region north of Manila.  In 1916,                            when he was about 30 years of age, he fielded  three ministers- Justino Casanova, Santiago Lopez and Teodoro Santiago-  to Guiguinto,                            Bulacan. Thirty new members were baptized and  a congregation was immediately organized in barrio Tabi. When the  membership                            reached 80, the members, pooling their own  efforts, built a small chapel where they conducted services.                            In 1917, Manalo visited Nueva Ecija,  accompanied by Teodoro Santiago and Januario Ponce. A congregation was  later formed                            in Gapan. The following year, he dispatched  missionary forces to Pampanga and footholds were established in the  towns of Bacolor,                            Arayat, Guagua, San Simon and Lubao. That  same year a new lokal was organized in Malabon, Rizal, with over  30 new converts,                            led by Justino Casanova.                         
On December 25, 1918, ministers of the  Christian Mission honored Felix Manalo as an outstanding evangelist. The  certificate                            was signed by Ministers Leslie Wolfe and  Higinio Mayor, attested by attorney V. Dimagiba. The affair, held at the  Gloria Theater                            in Tondo, Manila was attended by Church  members and several Protestant pastors.                             In may 1919, Manalo presided at the first  ordination of Church ministers, laying his hands on Justino, Casanova,  Teodoro                            Santiago and Federico Inocencio.
                            Quells Internal Revolt 
In August 1919 Manalo visited all local  congregations before departing for the United States to advance his  Bible studies.                            He advised the brethren to keep united and  protect one another in his absence. One day in September that year he  sailed for                            the U.S. and stayed at Berkeley, California,  burying himself in Bible research and studies, and attending classes in a  school                            of religion.
When he returned in 1921, he  found the Church rocked by an incipient revolt led by Teofilo Ora and  Januario Ponce,                            Church workers who had been left out in the  1919 ordination.                            Assisted by Basilio Santiago, another  church worker, Ora and Ponce attacked Manalo for alleged extravagance  and immorality.                            Knowing the existence of the Church itself  was in danger, Manalo acted decisively and called an emergency meeting  of all ministers                            in the Central office in Gagalandgin, Tondo,  with Justino Casanova presiding. Manalo defended himself by belying the  charges                            and presenting supporting documents.
Then in a  division of the house, he won decisively.                             Defeated, Ora and Company founded their  own Church, the Church of God in Jesus Christ, inviting recruits from  the Iglesia                            ni Cristo. Their recruitment efforts were  initially effective and for a while the Iglesia was dangerously  decimated.                            Manalo then took to the field to gather the  member back to the flock, and once more, peace reigned in the Church. On  the other                            hand, the new church of Ora and Ponce  withered away.                            Massive Growth and  Expansion                            
Soon the Locale congregations, each  congregation roughly equivalent to a Catholic parish, grew into  Divisions, each Division                            equivalent to a diocese. Pampanga became the  first Division in 1924 with Teodoro Santiago as the first Division  Minister or                            Administrator. Next came Tarlac (1925) under  Reymundo Mansilungan; Laguna (1928) with Andres Tucker as first Division  Minister;                            Nueva Ecija (1930) administered by Prudencio  Vasquez; Zambales (1931) under Benito Simbillo; Bulacan (1932) under  Jacinto                            Torres; Cavite followed (1932) administered  by Feliciano Gonzales.
Eventually, other Division were rapidly  established; then                            Pangasinan (1934) under Placido Pascua.                             Other provinces in Southern Luzon  followed; Batangas (1936) with Eugenio Cortes as first Division  Minister; Tayabas (now                            Quezon), became a division in 1913 under  Glicerio Santos Sr.                            Manalo then fielded some evangelical  workers in Northern Luzon, specifically La Union, though that province  became a district                            only in 1943, with Felimon Sanidad as first  Division Minister.                         
Next, the Churchs missionary forces  entered the Visayas. Cebu became a Division in 1937, with Alipio  Apolonio as first                            Division Minister. Bohol, reached in 1938,  became a Division in 1955 under Antonio Jerusalem. The Ilocos Norte  Division was                            formed in 1938, administered by Placido  Pascua. Manalos home province of Rizal became a Division in 1939, with  Telesforo S.                            Cruz as its first Division Minister. Isabela  in the North became a Division in 1947, under Felix Suratos. Mindoro  Oriental                            became a Division in 1940 under Mariano  Castro.                             From Luzon and the Visayas, the Church  reached out to distant Mindanao in 1941 with about 30 families belonging  to the                            Church in Paco, Manila as a vanguard.
They  first settled in Cotabato like pilgrims and immediately Began  evangelization. The                            campaign was productive but Cotabato did not  become a Division then because World War II intervened. In 1946,  however, the                            work resumed, and Manalo made Cotabato a  Division under Mariano Suarez.
                         Years Of War And Liberation                                                        
The Japanese occupation of the Philippines  (1941-1945) cost the Church many ministers and Church workers who were  maimed                            or killed. Manalo himself was threatened with  death by the Japanese. Once, Japanese soldiers disrupted a service in  Tayuman,                            Sta. Cruz, Manila, and tried to stop Manalo  from officiating. They failed. Manalo later actively helped the  resistance movement                            serving as an information officer and  extending them money, food and clothing. Unable to find direct evidence  against his                            underground activities, the Japanese instead  confiscated Manalos properties.                         
As Japan's iron rule continued, Manalo  proceeded with his mission. For more effective coordination, he  consolidated all                            congregations in the Greater Manila Area into  one Division under the supervision of Division Minister Benjamin  Santiago. Then                            he sent Cipriano Sandoval to Baguio to start  propagation work in the summer capital. Baguio became a Division in 1956  under                            the administration of Ramon Adalla.                          
On July 14, 1945, General Douglas  MacArthur proclaimed the liberation of the Philippines from Japan.  Later, the war ended                            after the United States dropped the first  atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan upon orders of Harry S.  Truman.                            With the Japanese gone, the Iglesia ni  Cristo continued to encounter problems, this time in the hands of  the Filipinos,                            the Peoples Army against Japan known as the Hukbalahap  or Huks for short.                            Once , on a vacation in Pampanga, Manalo  got word that the Huks would ambush him in the town of Lubao. On  the way                            to the service, however, he slipped on a  stairway and suffered a fractured leg.
The ambush was thus aborted. The Huks                            were after Manalos head because they believed  he was an obstacle in their plan to seize government power since Manalo  refused                            to cooperate with them. During the 1945  presidential election, for instance, Manalo and the Church supported  Manuel Roxas                            while the Huks campaigned for Sergio  Osemeña Sr. This led the Huks kidnapping and liquidating Church  ministers,                            workers and members.
As a result, several  members fled from central Luzon to seek sanctuary in places where there  were Church                            congregations.                            In 1948, the Church began to build its  first central office and official residence of the Executive Minister at  Riverside                            street in San Juan, Rizal. Meanwhile, the Huks  tried again to assassinate Manalo but failed.                            Post-Liberation Growth                                                        
The Church of Christ remained united, firm  and progressive even during those trying years. It remained intact and  firm                            under Felix Manalos administration.  Immediately after the war, in 1945, he resumed his offensive in Northern  Luzon. He mad                            Cagayan a Division in 1947 with Jose Nisperos  as first Division Minster and Ilocos Sur (1948) a Division under  Felimon Sanidad.                                                        In 1947, he sent evangelical workers to  the Bicol region. Albay became a division in 1948 under Prudencio  Vasquez.
Camarines                            Norte came next, in 1948. Evangelization  began in Camarines Sur in 1947, though it became a Division only in 1964  under Mario                            Rejuso. Work in Sorsogon began in 1948; the  province was made a Division in 1951, again with Mario Rejuso as the  first Division                            Minister. That same year, the Church entered  Abra in the North; it became a Division in 1951, administered by  Melencio Torres.
Manalo then reopened his Visayas  offensive. He had entered some of the provinces in that region before  the war. In 1949,                            he made Marinduque a Division with Pablo de  Leon as Division Minister. Leyete became a division that year with Felix  Ortiz                            as first Division Minister. So did Mindoro  Occidental, under Pedro D. Almedina. Davao was made a Division in 1953,  administered                            by Antonio Jerusalem, as well as Lanao, with  Rufino Pangan as first Division Minister. Manalo made Catanduanes a  Division                            after the first baptism was held there in  April 1950 under Jose San Esteban.                            Manalo converted Masbate into a Division  in 1951 with Jerusaleo Vasquez as first Division Minister; Capiz in  1954, administered                            by Gregorio Earnshaw.
Negros Oriental also  became a division in 1950, under Filemon P. Bautista; and Samar in 1955  administered                            by Teofilo Bernardino. . Zamboanga del Sur  (Pagadian), where evangelization began in 1950 was made a Division in  1962 with                            Remias Reformado as first Division Minister.  Angel B. Canicosa was the first Division Minister of Romblon (1951).  Misamis                            Oriental became a Division in 1954 under the  administration of Samuel Gaña; and Surigao in 1947 under Perfecto S.  Padilla.                            At about the same time Palawan became a  Division administered by Pablo de Leon. Ipil, Zamboanga del Sur, was  also made a Division                            on 1960 administrated by Honorio Castro.                         
A Protestant author, Dr. Arthur Leonard  Tuggy, attributes the Iglesia ni Cristos fantastic growth to,  among other                            factors, Dedicate laymen eager to spread  their message and an effective deployment of ministers. "And behind all  this," he                            notes, "was the continuing charismatic  leadership of its founder-head, Felix Manalo, now firmly anchored to a  doctrinal base                            as Gods messenger for the Philippines..."
                            Chapels As Progress Indices                            
Parallel to the Churchs growth was its  massive church-building progress. The first chapel built on Gabriela  street in Tondo,                            Manila in 1918, fashioned out of sawali, nipa  and wood, typified the style and materials of the early chapels, though  they                            kept springing up like mushrooms across the  nation. After the war, Manalo began to build magnificent concrete  chapels, the                            first of these in Washington, Sampaloc,  Manila completed in 1948. Next came the chapel-and-official residence of  the Executive                            Minister in San Juan, Rizal. The grand  complex was designed by Architect Juan Nakpil.                            In 1953, three modern cathedral-size  chapels rode up in Cubao, Quezon City, Caloocan City and Syquia, Sta.  Ana, Manila.                         
In 1954, the Baclaran chapel in Pasay was  constructed followed in 1955 by the house of worship in Baguio City and  another                            and another similar chapels were built in  1956 in Angeles, Pampanga and Artacho. Others followed in 1957; Paco,  Manila and                            Tipas, Taguig, Rizal then in San Jose,  Mindoro; Arayat, Pampanga; Cabanatuan City; Bacoor, Cavite; Orani,  Bataan; Salinas,                            Cavite; and Balintawak, in Quezon City. Soon,  giant INC chapels were also dominating the skylines of Tarlac; Malabon,  Rizal;                            Lucena City in Quezon; Naujan, Mindoro; Bel  air, Makati; Daet, Camarines Norte. Other landmarks of Church progress  were built                            in San Francisco del Monte, Quezon City  (1962); Cavite City; Concepcion, Tarlac; Hagonoy, Bulacan; Naga City;  Mapalad, Pampanga;                            Sto. Domingo, Nueva Ecija; Grace Park,  Caloocan City; and Apalit, Pampanga.                         
Construction of these indicators of  progress and Church permanency is not only a necessity but in compliance  with Gods                            mandate saying, "And let them make me a  sanctuary; that I shall dwell among them." (Exodus 25:8); and, "The  house which I                            am to build will be great, for our God is  greater than all gods...Prepare timber for me in abundance, for the  house I am to                            build will be great and wonderful" (II Chron.  2:5, 9, RSV).                            The church builds these modern synagogues  from its own funds, without any aid from any source, foreign or  domestic.
As                            the present Executive Minister, Eraño G.  Manalo, stresses:                            "You can ask the government or any bank  and financial institution in the Philippines, if the Church of Christ  ever borrowed                            from them even a single centavo, and they  will say, No, for we never did. We have been building all our chapels  with the voluntary                            contributions of our members."                            Need For A Successor                            
Felix Manalo made his second trip to the  United States in August 1938 at the instance of the Christian Alliance  Society.                            He welcomed the opportunity to deliver  speeches abroad at their invitation for it would also enable him to  undergo treatment                            of a stomach ailment. He was able to comply  with some speaking engagements but unable to undergo treatment for when  he fell                            ill he instructed his secretary, Cirilo  Gonzales, to bring him back immediately to the Philippines.                         
Arriving in Manila after four months in  the United States, the 52-year-old leader was welcomed at Pier 7 by  thousands of                            Church members. He was pleased but his health  troubled him.                            But it was only in 1953, at 67, that he  met the idea of succession head-on. On January 23, that year, he  summoned all division                            ministers and senior officials of the Church  after their regular ministerial meeting to a special conference. He  announced                            that when his time came, there must be  someone to take his place.
The unexpected announcement stunned the  ministers because                            Manalo was then quite young and appeared very  healthy.                            At 2oclock that afternoon, the meeting  proceeded with Felix Manalo presiding. The voting was held.
The names of  Eraño G.                            Manalo, Isaias Samson and Isaias Reyes were  presented as candidates. Samson obtained two votes, while Eraño G.  Manalo obtained                            all of the remaining votes. He was  subsequently proclaimed unanimously as the future Executive Minister.  The body then elected                            his would-be assistants: Teofilo C. Ramos, as  his "right hand man" and Cipriano Sandoval as his "left hand".
                         Manalos Final Days                            
As a result of his sacrifices, Felix Manalo  again felt his health deteriorating rapidly. His ulcer relentlessly  seized him                            with severe pain that medicines procured from  drug stores could not assuage. Consequently, he decided to seek  treatment in                            the United States.                            After bidding goodbye to his brethren, he  enplaned on August 17, 1955 for the United States, accompanied by his  son Eraño                            and nursing aide Librada Enriquez. Legions  saw him off at the airport, among them President Ramon Magsaysay.
In the  United                            States, they stayed in a hotel not far from  the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, where he would seek  treatment.                            There he continued to receive reports from  Manila. President Ramon Magsaysay phoned his concern and best wishes.  Then Manalo                            changed his mind and decided to proceed to  New York instead, and entered the Presbyterian Medical Center on  September 2, 1955.                            The doctors who examined him advised surgery  of the stomach after curing his diabetes.
On September 9, he was  successfully                            operated on for ulcers.                            A month later he returned to manila and  was once again welcomed by a huge throng led by President Magsaysay.  Without having                            fully rested, Manalo, then 69, resumed the  killing pace of his work attending and addressing rallies.                            It was only after many years later, in  February 1963, that Manalo fell gravely ill. He was rushed to St. Lukes  hospital                            in Quezon City where doctors decided to  remove immediately "an intestinal obstruction".
Manalo rejected the  surgery, saying,                            "Doctors can cure only those who are not yet  to die, not those whose time has come." By March 21, 1963, his  incapacitation                            was total and he was transferred to Veterans  Memorial Hospital. Doctors operated on him but failed to give him relief  from                            pain.                            On April 2, the doctors worked on Manalo  again to sew back part of his intestines which had burst and  hemorrhaged. On April                            11, they performed a third surgery on him. It  proved to be the last.                         
The following day, April 12, 1963, at 2:35  oclock in the morning, the brilliant, tireless and courageous Filipino  religious                            leader who had brought the Iglesia ni  Cristo to great heights of glory and prominence, breathed his last.  He was 77                            years old. It was his 49th year as  chief steward of the Church.                            Manalos Interment                            
Hundreds of thousands of faithful mourned  the death of their "elder brother" at the San Juan chapel. Later, the  body was                            transferred to the new cathedral-chapel in  San Francisco del Monte, Quezon City where members from far-flung  provinces and                            cities continued to stream for a last glimpse  of their fallen leader.                         
On April 23, 1963, as he had wished, Felix  Manalo was interred in the pagoda housing his office and private study  below                            the Executive Ministers residence in San  Juan, Rizal, there to remain up to the second coming of Jesus Christ.                         
Before his death, Manalo revealed to his  senior ministers his vision of the Iglesia ni Cristo in this  manner:                             "The Church of Christ will continue to  grow and prosper. Much of the glory and power of other churches will be  transferred                            to this Church because it is the true Church  founded by Christ."
                            AFTERWORD                                                        
Manalo died after almost 50 years of  leading the Iglesia ni Cristo. At the time of his death he had  already secured                            its stability, having established and  nurtured a strong body of ministers and evangelical workers, a  nationwide network of                            deacons and deaconesses, internal Church  organizations for young and old, tested propagation tools like religious  debates,                            public rallies and informative publications  like the Pasugo and , above all, a body of biblical doctrines  other churches                            have not successfully disputed.
Under his  leadership he had forged a strong bond of brotherhood among the Church  members and                            kept them united and in harmony.                            It was on this strong, enduring foundation  that his successor, Eraño G. Manalo, has had to build.                            When the torch was passed to the then  38-year-old Eraño in 1963, he pledged, "I intend to carry on my fathers  mission,                            preserve according to his method, and inspire  discipline and piety among my brothers and sisters in the Church.
I  know I have                            their support and vote of confidence."                            Those who believed the Church of Christ  would deteriorate after the death of Felix Manalo were grossly  disappointed. For,                            on the contrary, the pace of its growth has  accelerated. The new steward has proved to be modern, equally effective  leader                            and administrator.
Under his leadership the  Church has spanned and transcended the oceans and stamped the indelible  imprint                            of Christianity among other Asian peoples,  Americans, Europeans, Africans and even among Muslims in the Middle  East.                            Eraño G. Manalo is quick to point out,  however, that the success of the Church should not be attributed to him.  In his                            own words:                            "All the power and the glory which the  church is enjoying result from the fact that when I assumed the  position, the Church                            already had a firm and solid foundation laid  by the late Executive Minister.
The Church is now enjoying the fruits of  his                            vision, his sufferings and sacrifices, his  love and fortitude. Above all, everything is happening according to the  will of                            God."
NOTES BY THE AUTHOR                            In preparing to write his book, the writer  was assisted by Church ministers Teofilo C. Ramos Sr., Bienvenido C.  Santiago,                            Adriel Meimban and Jerson T. Samson. He also  used for reference materials the unpublished masteral thesis of  Professor Julita                            R. Sta. Romana, the still unpublished  biography of Executive Minister Felix Y. Manalo by professor Dolores  Garcia, and the                            unpublished biography manuscripts of  Bienvenido C. Santiago and Adriel Meimban on the same subject.
Aside  from periodic conversations,                            Minister Ramos also lent the author some  printed materials about Brother Manalo, as did Minister Benjamin  Santiago, a long-time                            associate of the church leader and erstwhile  editor, and writer of the Pasugo. The latter publication is  reservoir                            of vital information about the Church and its  deceased leader.                         
For Brother Manalos temperament and  prophetic vision, much is drawn by the author from occasional talks with  the present                            leader of the Church, Ka Erdy Manalo.                         
Source: student631.tripod.comPasugo issue May-June 1986