Truth7t7
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I think Catholic tradition is ugly, don't you?You still can't tell the difference between good traditions that Paul commands us to keep, and the bad traditions of men. To you, all traditions are bad, there are no good traditions. This is not biblical.
One might loosely define tradition as the authoritative and authentic Christian history of theological doctrines and devotional practices. Christianity is fundamentally grounded in the earth-shattering historical events in the life of Jesus Christ (His incarnation, preaching, miracles, passion, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension). Unfortunately, history is your enemy.
Eyewitnesses (Lk 1:1-2; Acts 1:1-3; 2 Pet 1:16-18) communicated these true stories to the early Christians, who in turn passed them on to other Christians (under the guidance of the Church’s authority) down through the ages. Therefore, Christian tradition, defined as authentic Church history, is unavoidable, and is a very good thing — not a “bad” thing at all.
Many read the accounts of Jesus’ conflicts with the Pharisees and get the idea He was utterly opposed to all tradition whatsoever. This isn’t true. A close reading of passages such as Matthew 15:3-9 and Mark 7:8-13 will reveal that He only condemned corrupt traditions of men, not tradition per se. He uses qualifying phrases like “your tradition,” “precepts of men,” “tradition of men,” as opposed to “word of God” or “the commandment of God” and so forth. St. Paul makes the same contrast:
Colossians 2:8 (RSV) ”See to it that no one makes a prey of you by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the universe, and not according to Christ.”
By word of mouth or by letter
The New Testament explicitly teaches that traditions can be either good (from God) or bad (from men, when against God’s true traditions). Corrupt traditions from the Pharisees were bad; though many of their legitimate teachings were recognized by Jesus (see, e.g., Mt 23:3). The spoken gospel and the apostolic writings (some eventually formulated as Holy Scripture; some not) were altogether good — the authentic Christian tradition as revealed by the incarnate God to the apostles, and “ratified” by the Church.
The Greek word for “tradition” in the New Testament is paradosis. It occurs in Colossians 2:8, and in the following three passages:
1 Corinthians 11:2 “… 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 Thessalonians 3:6 “… the tradition that you received from us.”
St. Paul makes no distinction between written and oral tradition. He doesn’t regard oral Christian tradition as bad and undesirable. This is made even more clear in two other statements to Timothy:
2 Timothy 1:13 “Follow the pattern of the sound words which you have heard from me, …”
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.”
St. Paul is urging Timothy not only to “follow” his oral teaching which “heard from” him, but also to pass it on to others. This is a clear picture of authentic historical continuity of Christian doctrine: precisely what the Catholic Church calls sacred Tradition, or, when emphasizing the teaching authority of bishops in the Church, “apostolic succession.”
The phrase “deposit of faith” is also used when describing the original gospel teaching as handed over or delivered to the apostles (see, e.g., Acts 2:42, Jude 3). The Catholic Church considers itself merely the “custodian” or “guardian” of this public revelation or “deposit” from God, because we believe God set up His Church (Matthew 16), making St. Peter the leader, and that it has continued through history ever since. It’s all God’s doing, not ours. We participate in His plan by His grace and mercy only.
Pass it on
When the first Christians went out and preached the gospel of Jesus Christ after Pentecost, this was an oral tradition. Some of it was recorded in the Bible (e.g., in Acts 2) but most was not, and indeed could not be, for sheer volume (see John 20:30, 21:25). It was primarily this oral Christian tradition that turned the world upside down, not the text of the New Testament (many, if not most people couldn’t read then, anyway).
Accordingly, when the phrases “word of God” or “word of the Lord” occur in Acts and the epistles, they almost always refer to oral preaching, not to the written word of the Bible, as many Protestants (and probably a lot of Catholics, too) casually assume.
The New Testament itself is a record of primitive, apostolic Christianity. It is a development, so to speak, of both the Old Testament and early oral Christian preaching and teaching and tradition. The process of canonization of the New Testament took more than 300 years and involved taking into account human opinions and traditions as to which books were believed to be Scripture. It was not immediately obvious to all Christians (as some assume or argue).
Many notable Church fathers accepted books as part of Scripture which are not now so recognized (e.g., The Shepherd of Hermas, the Didache, epistle of Barnabas, 1 Clement). Many others didn’t accept certain canonical books until very late (e.g., Hebrews, James, 2 Peter, and Revelation). Thus, the Bible cannot be separated and isolated from tradition and a developmental process.
In Catholicism, Scripture and Tradition are intrinsically interwoven. They have been described as “twin fonts of the one divine well-spring” (revelation), and cannot be separated, any more than can two wings of a bird, two sides of a coin, or two blades of a pair of scissors.
The Church also has strong authority, so that the Catholic rule of faith consists of Scripture, Tradition, and the Church. This may be conceived in a word-picture as a “three-legged stool.” If you remove any one of the legs, the stool collapses; all three are equally necessary for it to stand up.
That is Catholicism: and (if anyone wonders about it) all these notions are firmly backed up by Scripture itself, without any contradiction as regards Catholic Tradition or Church dogma and doctrine.
http://www.themichigancatholic.org/2014/05/tradition-isnt-always-a-bad-word-in-scripture/
Roman Catholics in Spain and Portugal parading around the streets, in what is dress from the inquisition period.
Called the "Capirote", different colors were inquisition punishment, "Red" was death.
Of course the Popes allows this hatred to continue.
"Brotherhoods In We Kill For Catholicism""
Imagine, parading around in Catholic inquisition garb in 2018, really?
100% Hatred, Blessed By The Pope!
Wikipedia: Holy Week in Malaga (in Spanish Semana Santa en Málaga), is the annual commemoration of the Passion of Jesus Christ that takes place during the last week of Lent, the week immediately before Easter. It is one of the main cultural events, religious and tourist attraction of Málaga.
Wikipedia: Capirote
Page issues

Procession of the Reales Cofradías Fusionadas in Malaga, has more than 900 nazarenos

Brotherhood with green capirotes in Malaga
Brotherhood of Saint Rochus with velvet capirotes