Our discussion today is about two things: (1) about whether or not tradition is an inspired source, and (2) whether or not we should elevate it as such, to a place of infallibility.
From what I understand, Catholics say yes to both.
I don’t think this is the case. For us, Sacred Tradition (the teaching of the Apostles) is different than human tradition. As the Word of God preached and taught by the Apostles, humans have no place to “elevate it” to anything. The Word of God is what it is, whether by word of mouth, or in writing.
2 Thessalonians 2:15 So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter.
paradosis is the Word of God handed down.
It was oral, until it was written.
There are no oral traditions that have not been written at this point. Not all of them are contained in Scripture, Trinity, for example.
But if the oral preaching was fundamentally different than what was written down it should cause Israel to pause.
That is just the point. There has been no “fundamental difference” until the Reformation. At that time, people wanted to jettison the authority of the Church, so the doctrine of Sola Scriptura was invented for this purpose.
It’s like a checkbook. You cannot spend money without recording what you spent in the ledger. If you claim that the spent money was legitimate, but it was not reflected in the written ledger, there is a problem.
It amazes me that you would characterize the Word of God as a checkbook. Each to his own, I guess.
the two sources of divine truth (oral tradition and inspired word) must have the feature of carbon copy.
This is an invention. There is no such Apostolic teaching. It is an invention necessary to jettison the Sacred Tradition, and serves that purpose very well.
If we lean on the oral tradition without seeing it recorded by the Holy Spirit, it will be like a car without the proper alignment. It veers off in one direction. There is no balance.
From our perspective, this is exactly what has happened when the Scripture was separated from the Sacred Tradition that produced it.