Sacred Tradition

by Father Paul A. Duffner, O.P.

One major difference between Catholicism and Protestantism is the different way in which they view Divine
Revelation. For most Protestant Religions the only True Source of Divine Revelation
is the Bible, and its Interpretation is left to the
Conscience of the Individual Christian. For the
Catholic Church, however, God's Revelation is found in
Sacred Tradition, understood as God's Revealed Word handed down by the Living
Teaching Authority established by Christ in the Church.
That includes both Written Tradition (Scripture) and
Unwritten Tradition received from Christ and handed
down Orally by the Apostles and their Successors. The Church founded by
Christ on Peter, and only that Church, has been
Empowered by Christ to Interpret
His Teaching Authoritatively in His Name.
What is Sacred Tradition
The word Tradition is taken from the Latin word Tradere -
to Hand down, to Pass on. In this case it refers to a
Handing Down of God's Revealed Word from
Apostolic Times to Our Own Day. If we would
take the word Tradition in the Broad Sense, we could say that the
Catholic Church derives its Doctrines from
Tradition alone, understanding thereby the Body of
Revealed Truth (Written & Unwritten) Handed Down from the Apostles. Saint Paul
seemed to understand it in this way when he wrote to Timothy to Hold to Traditions which
you have learned, whether by Word or by our Letter (2Thessalonians 2:14). Even though a Great Part of that
Tradition has been committed to Writing and is found in the Inspired Books of
the Scriptures, the Catholic Church looks upon
Tradition and Scripture, not as
Two (2) Separate Sources of Revelation,
but as Two (2) different Means-of-Transmission of
God's Revelation, forming a Single (1) Deposit
of Faith. The Bible, then, is a part of
Tradition, along with the Unwritten Instruction received from
Christ and handed-down by the Apostles and their Successors. Some Writers refer to the
Revealed Doctrines (Written & Unwritten) handed down by the Apostles and their Successors
as the Passive Aspect of Tradition, and the Living
Teaching Authority (the Magisterium) established by Christ to insure that
His Teaching would be handed down to Succeeding Ages in its Integrity and without
Error, as its Active Aspect.
To understand the Catholic Church's Teaching in
regard to Sacred Tradition, we must consider several things:
Public Revelation ceased with Christ and
the Apostles and Evangelists who recorded His Teachings;
Christ commissioned His Apostles to
Preach;
Christ established a Living Teaching Authority
to Safeguard the Integrity of the
Gospel Message, and to apply it with Divine
Authority to Succeeding Ages;
The Development of the Gospel Message is not New
Doctrine.
Public Revelation Ends with the Apostles
God in His Goodness and
Wisdom Revealed Himself gradually through the Prophets and Patriarchs of the Old Testament. But the
Fullness and Completion of that Revelation came through the
Incarnation of the only-begotten Son of the
Father Who became Man to Redeem us, and to bring-to-completion the
Revelation of the Godhead and the
Divine Plan of Salvation. The Message that
Christ brought to Mankind by His Preaching,
His Deeds, His
Death and Resurrection brings an End to Public
Revelation, as opposed to Private Revelation, such as occurred in the
Apparitions of Our Lord and the
Saints to various persons throughout the Christian Era. Referring to this,
the Second Vatican Council declared in the Dogmatic Constitution
on Revelation:
The Christian dispensation, therefore, as the new and definitive Covenant, will never pass away, and
we now await no further new Public Revelation before the Glorious Manifestation of Our Lord Jesus Christ
(Verbum
Dei, n.4).
(NOTE: It is only Public Revelation that we are bound
in Conscience to accept by virtue of the
Divine Gift of Faith)
Christ Commissioned the Apostles to Preach
Our Blessed Lord left no Written Record behind
Him, but rather ordered His Apostles to hand-down
His Teaching Orally.
He told them to Preach the Gospel to all Nations:
Go and make Disciples of all Nations . . . teaching them to observe all I have commanded you
(Matthew 28:19). Referring to this, the Second Vatican Council states:
Christ the Lord, in Whom the Full Revelation of the Supreme God is brought to completion, commissioned
the Apostles to Preach to all Men that Gospel which is the source of all Saving Truth and Moral Teaching, and thus imparts to them Divine
Gifts . . . . This commission was faithfully fulfilled by the Apostles who, by their Oral Preaching, by Example, by Ordinances, handed
down what they had received from the Lips of Christ, from living with Him, and from what He did, or what they learned through the promptings
of the Holy Spirit. The commission was fulfilled too, by those Apostles and Apostolic Men who under the Inspiration of the same Holy
Spirit committed the Message of Salvation to Writing (ibid. n.7).
The First Gospel was written, however, some
Twenty (20) Years after the Death of
Christ, and the Last
Gospel (that of John) was written at the End of the First
Century. That means that a Whole Generation of Christians knew nothing of
the Teaching of Christ, or the Duties of the
Christian Life, except through the Preaching
of the Apostles and their Fellow-Workers, - that is to say, except through Sacred Tradition. What
is more, almost Four (4) Hundred Years elapsed before the Inspired Books of the New Testament
were collected (by the Teaching Authority of the Catholic
Church) into One (1) Book. And even after that, since copies of the
Inspired Books were Transcribed Laboriously by Hand, there were extremely few copies available.
And that Scarcity lasted for almost another Thousand years
until the coming of the Printing Press in the Fifteenth Century.
Much that Christ said and did is not recorded in the
Scriptures, as Saint John so clearly testifies: There are still many other
things that Jesus did, yet if they were written in detail, I doubt there would be room enough in the entire world to hold the books to
record them (John 21:24). Saint Paul, too, testifies that part of his
Teaching received from Christ (Galatians 1:12) was not included in
his Letters: The things which you have heard from Me through many witnesses you must hand on to trustworthy
men who will be able to teach others (2Timothy 2:2).
Consequently, while the Sacred Scriptures contain a large portion of
God's Revelation, some portion of it was passed on Orally and eventually recorded in the Writings of the Fathers of the
Church, those Spiritual and
Intellectual Giants of those Early Centuries who further Explained and
Developed it. The Second Council of Constantinople (
553) Rebuked those who do not follow the Traditions of
the Fathers. Those Traditions Hold the Faith which
our Lord Jesus Christ, True God, entrusted to the Holy Apostles, and which, after them, the Holy Fathers and Doctors of the Church entrusted to
their People. While the Writings of the Fathers were not Inspired, they were handing down
Teaching that came from Christ through the Apostles under the Guidance of the
Holy Spirit promised by Christ.
(Matthew 28:20).
Some Practices of the Catholic Church coming down from the Primitive
Church are Recorded only in Sources other than the Scriptures. One example of this
is the 'Didache', the Full Title of which is The Lords Instruction to the Gentiles through the Twelve
Apostles. That Document which dates from around the time of the Gospel of Saint John
tells us of the Celebration of the Eucharist on Sunday
(the Lord's Day) rather than on the Sabbath, and of the
Forgiveness of Sin through Confession.
The same is true of the Liturgy, an important Witness of Sacred
Tradition, for as the Second Vatican Council testifies,
the Church, in her Teaching, Life, and Worship, perpetuates and hands on to all generations all that she herself is,
all that she believes (ibid. 8). Changes in the Church's Liturgical Customs result not
only from Adaptation to the Times, but also from a Development of Doctrine that called for corresponding
expression in the Liturgy. Pope Pius XII referred to this in his Encyclical
on the Mystical Body of Christ:
As Catholic Doctrine on the Incarnate Word of God, the Eucharistic Sacrament and Sacrifice, and Mary the Mother of
God came to be determined with greater Certitude and Clarity, new Ritual Forms were introduced through which the Acts of the Liturgy proceeded to
reproduce this Brighter Light from the Decrees of the Teaching Authority of the Church, and so to reflect this Light that it might reach the Hearts and
Minds of Christs People more effectively
(
Mediator Dei, I. 52).
Christ Established a Living Teaching Authority
Our Blessed Lord not only commissioned the Apostles to
Preach to all the World the Saving Message He had given them, but
He Empowered them to Bind and to Loose in
His Name, so that Whatever you Bind on Earth will be Bound
in Heaven, and whatever you Loose on Earth will be Loosed in Heaven (Matthew 16:19). Because of this,
He assured them that He who hears you, hears Me; and he who
rejects you rejects Me; and he who rejects Me, rejects Him Who sent Me (Luke 10:16).
Immediately after Commissioning the Apostles to Preach the
Gospel to all Nations, Our Savior continued: Behold
I am with you all days, even to the End of the World (Matthew 28:20). By these words
He assured the Apostles that He would be with them (through the
Holy Spirit Whom He would send) so that they could hand-down
His Teaching without Error until the End of Time. But since the
Apostles would not live that long, Christ's Promise is valid for
His Successors, those in charge of the Church in succeeding ages. Thus until the
End of Time the Successors of the Apostles will share the Teaching Authority conferred by
Christ on the Apostles, and the Guidance of the Holy
Spirit that He Promised.
After the Ascension of Christ, the Apostles did
in-fact claim for themselves a Teaching Authority, sending Others as they themselves had been sent
by Christ, with the Power to
Teach in Christ's Name, to impose
Doctrine, as well as to Govern the Church
and to Baptize.
Christ Preached
His Message, He did not
Write it. In His Preaching He appealed to the
Scriptures, but was not satisfied merely to read them.
He Explained them, Interpreted them. So too,
in the Centuries to come the Church would
not merely refer-to the Bible, but would
Explain and Interpret it, applying it to the Changing Conditions of the Times. Although the
Bible is the Inspired Word of God, it was
not meant to be our Sole Guide. Just as God provided Mankind with the
Guiding Light of the Scriptures, so
He provided Mankind - through the continued Guidance of the Holy Spirit -
with an Official Living Authority to Interpret those Divinely Inspired Books. One of the main
reasons for the Division of Christendom into
the Hundreds of Christian Religions we have today, is the claim that the
Interpretation of the Scriptures is left to the Individual
Christian. Just as the Constitution of the United States is not left to the
Interpretation of each Individual American, but is Interpreted Authoritatively by the Supreme Court,
so the whole Deposit of Revealed Truth (the Bible
and Tradition) is not left to the Judgment of
each Individual Christian, but is Interpreted
for us by the Living Authority that Christ
established. He who hears you, hears Me (Luke 10:16). The
Second Vatican Council states this clearly:
In order to keep the Gospel forever Whole and Alive within the Church, the Apostles left Bishops as
their Successors, handing over their own Teaching Role to them. This Sacred Tradition, therefore and the Sacred Scriptures of both the
Old and New Testament are like a mirror in which the Pilgrim looks at God (ibid. u.7). . . . The task of Authentically Interpreting the
Word of God, whether Written or Handed-on, has been entrusted exclusively to the Living Teaching Office of the Church (the Magisterium)
whose Authority is exercised in the Name of Jesus Christ (ibid. n.10).
The Development of Doctrine
As we saw above, Public Revelation ended with the Death
of John the Apostle. After him no new Revelation has been added to the
Deposit of Faith. However, that does not exclude the Development
of those Truths contained in that Revelation.
As time passed on, the Church, with the Guidance of the Holy
Spirit, came to a Greater Understanding of God's
Revealed Word. The Second Vatican Council speaks of this:
This Tradition which comes from the Apostles develops in the Church with the help of the Holy Spirit. For
there is a growth in the understanding of the realities and the words which have been handed down . . . . As centuries succeeded one
after another, the Church constantly moves forward toward the Fullness of Divine Truth until the words of God reach their complete
fulfillment in her (ibid n.8).
Development ≠ Change
Development of Doctrine, therefore, does not mean a Changing or Abandoning of a
Doctrine originally taught, but rather the Growth
of the Church's Understanding of it. Revealed Truths
are not Fixed or Static Concepts. Their Richness is Inexhaustible, so that Succeeding
Generations have discovered New Insights into God's Message to Mankind.
One thing that has occasioned the Development of Doctrine
has been the Attacks on the Revealed Truths
by those not of the Catholic Faith. They might Deny
a Truth outright, or might interpret it in a way not in keeping with its True Meaning
as handed down by the Apostles. This requires and occasions on the part of the Church a Fuller
Expression of those Truths being Challenged.
Then, too, there are Doctrines of our Catholic Faith
that were contained in Divine Revelation only Implicitly. And for that reason they became
Obligatory Dogmas only after the passing of
Centuries. Examples of this are the Immaculate Conception and the
Assumption of the Mother of God.
From the beginning, the Church believed in the Singular
Holiness of Mary, but it was not always clear whether or not
she had contracted Original Sin. Some felt
that the Universality of Christ's Redemption, and the
Doctrine that All sinned in Adam (Romans 5:12), implied that
Mary would need Cleansing from
Original Sin. However, with the Passage of Time and the Reflections of Saints and Theologians
(Enlightened by the Holy Spirit), it was
understood how Mary was Redeemed by
Christ without inheriting Original Sin,
namely, in Anticipation of Christ's Merits. Since the
Mystical Body of Christ is a Mystery
that extends beyond Space and Time, Mary's Redemption
was not Curative, but Preventative. Hence, only in the
19th and 20th Centuries after Christ were these
Two (2) Doctrines, both of which are Implicitly
contained in Divine Revelation, declared Dogmas of
the Catholic Faith. These Truths had been
Divinely Revealed from the Beginning, but
the Explication and Understanding of their Divine Revelation came only Gradually.
The Unity of Sacred Tradition and Scription
Since Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture come
from One and the Same Divine Source, there is a close connection between them, both forming
One (1) Sacred Deposit of the Word of God.
One (1) of them is not complete without the Other. As the words themselves imply,
SACRED SCRIPTURE is the Written
Word of God Divinely Inspired by the Holy Spirit; and
SACRED TRADITION is Divinely Guided
Handing Down of that Revealed Truth
entrusted to the Apostles, and passed on Written or Unwritten. Hence the Second
Vatican Council declares:
It is not from Sacred Scripture alone that the Church draws her certainty about everything that has
been Revealed. Therefore, both Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture are to be Accepted and Venerated with the same sense of Devotion
and Reverence (ibid. 9).
And since, as we have seen, Christ established a Living Teaching Authority to interpret in His Name and
hand down His Revealed Word, the same Vatican Council concludes:
It is clear, therefore, that Sacred Tradition, Sacred Scripture, and the Teaching Authority of the
Church (the Magisterium), in accord with Gods most wise designs, are so linked and joined together that one cannot stand without
the others, and that all together and each in its own way under the Action of the Holy Spirit contribute effectively to the Salvation
of Souls (ibid 10).

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