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EricFilmer
Guest
As a side note to anyone going through this thread, I hope no one is dissuaded by this enormous string of posts I have placed this morning. But I am nothing if not thorough. I tend to give point-by-point rebuttals in CAF.
(Continued in my next post…)
The Jews believed that both the written Torah and the oral Torah were revealed to Moses by God. If you claim that they believed the written Torah trumped the oral Torah then you need to back that up. Jesus was not dismissing the oral Torah in general, but only certain teachings from the Traditions of the Elders that contradicted the true meaning of the Law.This may be an accurate description of some Jews, but not all. Jews had various ways of distinguishing the relative authority of scripture to other scriptures and oral tradition to other traditions and to scripture. The books of Moses, for example were “core canon” for all Jews. The prophets likewise were considered inspired—but not quite as core as Moses. The Sadducees, for example, seem not have regarded the books of the prophets as canon, which is why Jesus makes his case for the Resurrection the basis of God being the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob—the God of the living, not the dead. (Notice too that scripture was sufficient to correct their error, even though the extent of scripture was limited here.) Then there were the writings, which were of a lesser authority. But all of these “were written,” and therefore could trump oral Torah. Jesus demonstrates this in refuting the Corban rule, which for the Pharisees was part of the word of God since they thought tradition was needed understand the Law and the Prophets correctly. Jesus makes the exact opposite point by correcting their errant tradition by appealing directly to scripture.
With the exception of the person of Jesus (the ultimate revelation of God) and the epistles, ALL revelation came through Sacred Tradition. Some of it was eventually preserved in writing, and some of it wasn’t. Moreover, the concept of Sacred Tradition is taught in Judaism, Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy, so it is most certainly considered an aspect of God’s revelation. You are the one who presumes that God’s revelation has to be confined to Scripture and then require Scripture to validate Tradition. In other words, even though Tradition can be distinguished from Scripture, you want adherents of Tradition to prove its validity within the confines of Sola Scriptura.But there was scripture. And it was sufficient to function as their rule of faith. “Not beyond what is written.” “Scripture cannot be broken.” Is there a comparable statement about “Sacred Tradition?” Is there even such a concept as “Sacred Tradition” mentioned in scripture?
(Continued in my next post…)