Christianity: Details about 'Sacred Tradition'
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The Catholic Church bases all of its teachings on Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture (The Bible). The teaching authority of the Roman Catholic Church, called the Magisterium, teaches only from Tradition and Scripture. And both are believed to be entirely infallible in all that they teach on matters of faith and morals. The Second Vatican Council taught on Tradition, Scripture, and Magisterium in Dei Verbum, n. 10:
Thus, all of the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church come from either Tradition or Scripture, or from the Magisterium interpreting Tradition and Scripture. These two sources, Tradition and Scripture, are viewed and treated as one source of Divine Revelation, which includes both the deeds of God and the words of God:
The Transmission of TraditionThe word 'tradition' is taken from the Latin 'trado, tradere' meaning to hand over, to deliver, or to bequeth. The teachings of Scripture are written down in the Bible, and are handed on, not only in writing, but also in the lives of those who live according to its teachings. The teachings of Tradition are not written down, but are lived and are handed on by the lives of those who lived according to its teachings, according to the example of Christ and the Apostles (1 Corinthians 11:2, 2 Thessalonians 2:15). This perpetual handing on of the teachings of Tradition is called a living Tradition; it is the transmission of the teachings of Tradition from one generation to the next. The Magisterium has a role in deciding authoritatively which truths are a part of Sacred Tradition. However, the main means of transmission of the teachings of Tradition is the lives of all those who live according to the Way of life handed down from the time of Christ and the Apostles. |
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