By Catholic Apologist Dave Armstrong (2-12-14)
[this article is written specifically for young people and beginners in theology: maybe of middle school age or a little younger]
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Catholic tradition is
the group of teachings and beliefs that were given by our Lord Jesus
to His disciples, then passed on to the great Church fathers of the
early Church, and down through history to our own time.
The Catholic Church,
protected by the Holy Spirit, Who is God, watches over these
teachings, so that Catholics can be sure (in faith) that they are
true.
Sometimes people say
that the Bible and tradition are against each other (with tradition
being the “bad” thing). But the Bible itself teaches that
tradition was already around before the Bible was put together. In
fact, the Bible itself is part of the Christian tradition, just as
the Catholic Church also is.
The Bible at the same
time teaches that there is also such a thing as a false “tradition
of men”: things that people come up with that go against the Bible
and the truths of Christianity. So there is a true and good
tradition, or what is called “apostolic tradition” and also false
teachings.
Some people think that
no tradition has authority like the Bible does. They believe that
only the Bible is infallible, or unable to fail in teaching, and they
don't believe that the Catholic Church is infallible, either. Those
who believe these things think that whenever the Bible talks about
tradition, it is in a bad sense, as if tradition is always “bad”
or even “evil.”
Sometimes things are made more clear by picturing some sort of image for them. For Catholics, authority is like a stool with three legs. The three “legs” are Bible, Church, and tradition. These all agree with each other. The Bible teaches a lot about true, apostolic tradition. Here are some of the main passages where we see this:
1
Corinthians 11:2 (RSV) . . . maintain the traditions even as I
have delivered them to you.
2
Thessalonians 2:15 . . . stand firm and hold to the traditions
which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter.
2
Timothy 1:13-14 Follow
the pattern of the sound words which you have heard from me, in the
faith and love which are in Christ Jesus; [14]
guard the truth that has been entrusted to
you by the Holy Spirit who dwells within us.
2
Timothy 2:2 and what you have heard from me
before many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to
teach others also.
Jude
3 . . . contend for the
faith which was once for all delivered to the saints.
When the Bible talks
about bad tradition, it reads differently. Jesus often scolded the
Pharisees, a religious group of His time, for being too into laws
without also teaching them in terms of love. They believed in some
false traditions.
So Jesus would say
things to them like, “why
do you transgress the commandment of God for the sake of your
tradition?” (Matthew
15:3). Here, the true tradition is called “commandment of God”
and the false one is
called “your
tradition” (that is, against God's
tradition).
In
the Gospel of Mark, Jesus gives
the same thought: “You
leave the commandment of God, and hold fast the tradition of
men. . . . You
have a fine way of rejecting the commandment
of God, in order
to keep your
tradition!
. . . thus making void the word
of God through
your
tradition . . .”
(Mark 7:8-9, 13)
St. Paul, the great apostle, writes in a similar way in Colossians 2:8: “. . . according to human tradition, . . . and not according to Christ.” The good, true tradition was the one “according to Christ.”
Paul
also wrote:
“If you put these
instructions before the brethren, you will be a good minister of
Christ Jesus, nourished on the words of the faith and of the
good doctrine
which you have followed. [7] Have nothing to do with godless
and silly myths.
. . . (1 Timothy
4:6-7)
The spoken gospel and
the writings of the apostles that eventually
became the Bible were part
of the totally good,
authentic Christian tradition.
When the first Christians went out and preached the Good News (the gospel) of Jesus Christ after Pentecost, this was a tradition of preaching, or the spoken word. Some of this preaching made it into the Bible (for example, in Acts 2) but most did not (see John 20:30; 21:25).
This is what
“turned the world upside down,” not so
much the words of the New
Testament (most people couldn't read in those
early days of the Church, anyway).
We
must conclude, then, that the
word “tradition” is not
always a “bad
word” in the Bible. It's a “good word” more
often than it is a bad one. There is a famous saying: “don't throw
the baby out with the bathwater.” When we find some bad things
about something that is mostly good, if we act sensibly, we get rid
of the bad parts of it but not all of
it. It would be like finding some fat on a chicken leg and throwing
away the whole leg.
Tradition works the
same way. Because some people distort it and start false traditions,
doesn't mean there are no good traditions. Both the Bible and the
Church teach us this, and we can and should always rely on them.
In Catholicism, Scripture and tradition (along with Church authority) are bound up together, just as smaller cords can combine to make a very strong rope. They have been described by the Church as “twin fonts of the one divine well-spring” (revelation, or God's inspired message to us), and cannot be separated, any more than two wings of a bird or two sides of a coin can be separated.
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