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To: Steelfish; ealgeone; BlueDragon

You still haven’t shown that what the Catholic Church teaches as tradition is exactly what the apostles taught as tradition. What’s up with that? Nor have you shown proof that the apostles taught the assumption of Mary.


115 posted on 01/18/2015 4:39:08 PM PST by CynicalBear (For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus)
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To: CynicalBear

Any library in the theological department of any major university will have shelves of books on this. For starters go read the Catholic Catechism.

Isn’t it enough of you that leading Protestant theologians who have extensively written, taught, preached for all their lives have converted to Catholicism including Richard Neuhaus who was America’s leading Lutheran theologian, prolific writer, preacher and professor.

This is the product of theologians from over 2000 years ago and the input from Aquinas to Augustine after whom major colleges and universities have been named. The profound works of Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica is placed right next to the Bible in Oxford’s (non-Catholic) world renowned Bordlean library


127 posted on 01/18/2015 5:26:29 PM PST by Steelfish
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To: CynicalBear

Your comment: “You still haven’t shown that what the Catholic Church teaches as tradition”

Sacred Tradition should not be confused with mere traditions of men, which are more commonly called customs or disciplines. Jesus sometimes condemned customs or disciplines, but only if they were contrary to God’s commands (Mark 7:8). He never condemned sacred Tradition, and he didn’t even condemn all human tradition.

Sacred Tradition and the Bible are not different or competing revelations. They are two ways that the Church hands on the gospel. Apostolic teachings such as the Trinity, infant baptism, the inerrancy of the Bible, purgatory, and Mary’s perpetual virginity have been most clearly taught through Tradition, although they are also implicitly present in (and not contrary to) the Bible. The Bible itself tells us to hold fast to Tradition, whether it comes to us in written or oral form (2 Thess. 2:15, 1 Cor. 11:2).

Sacred Tradition should not be confused with customs and disciplines, such as the rosary, priestly celibacy, and not eating meat on Fridays in Lent. These are good and helpful things, but they are not doctrines. Sacred Tradition preserves doctrines first taught by Jesus to the apostles and later passed down to us through the apostles’ successors, the bishops.


130 posted on 01/18/2015 5:41:48 PM PST by ADSUM
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