No, Santo Nino is not Biblical at all. Santo Nino is an image. Exodus 20:4-5 tells us not to make graven images or any likeness of anything in heaven, or earth, or the sea. Verse 5 tells us not to bow down to them or worship them. God will tolerate no one who worships other gods. We also find these commandments in Deuteronomy 5:6-8.
Now for some history. Magellan gave an image of Santo Nino to the local chief's wife when he arrived in Cebu in 1521. The chief received him well, and they baptized the chief his wife and 800 of his subjects into Catholicism. They gave the chief the new name Carlos the grandfather of King Philip 2 of Spain of who the Philippines is named after. His wife's name was changed to Juana after King Philip's grandmother.
When Magellan died, the natives went back to their old pagan ways. The Spanish successfully colonized the Philippines under Miguel López de Legazpi in 1565. The Spanish raided the villages, and they saw the image in the fire while on a raid. Legaspi then ordered a shrine to be built there for Santo Nino there in Cebu.
This is the oldest religious artifact in the Philippines.
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