Truth matters. Wasn’t Jesus called the Way, the Truth, and the Life? The Sabbath Commandment is one of the 10 Commandments shouldn’t that be important if someone or some church had the arrogance to change it without any basis from the Scripture itself, or direct words from God himself? Catholics and Protestants should be jumping out of their pews!
The head of the Catholic Church is Christ himself. When the Magisterium acts in an official capacity pertaining to faith and morals, the Church does so under the guaranteed guidance of the Holy Spirit and cannot err. So Sacred Tradition and the Magisterium’s interpretation of it come directly from God.
SDAs are all about the truth and nothing but the truth. Tradition is not Bible truth. What has greater authority, the words that God wrote with his own finger in stone, or the words that fallible men trumped as being truth?
As I stated above, what the Catholic Church officially teaches pertaining to faith and morals comes from God, not fallible men.
But before we move on, let us examine your statement:
“Tradition is not Bible truth.”
This is not found in the Bible, at least not in the manner that you are directing it. Jesus spoke against the Jewish teachings known as the Traditions of the Elders, but that has nothing to do with Sacred Tradition (as taught by the Catholic Church). So in making statements such as “Tradition is not Bible truth” (as a refutation of Sacred Tradition) you are presenting a teaching that does not come from the Bible, but rather from people like you, who are “fallible men.”
Basically what you have been doing throughout your posts is an attempt to refute Catholic teaching based upon the teaching of
Sola Scriptura. Although you have not actually used the term, you have set it as a standard that, in your opinion, all Christians
ought to observe. For example, statements such as “Tradition is not Bible truth” is a “Sola Scriptura-type” expression.
But Sola Scriptura is a false doctrine. Adherents of
Sola Scriptura claim that a proposed teaching concerning Christian doctrine must be found in the Bible to be valid. But Sola Scriptura itself is not found in the Bible. So it is a teaching that tells us to reject itself. Such a paraodox cannot truly come from God.
Face the fact, that there is no Sunday rest and worship commandment written by the finger of God.
Here is another example of a “Sola Scriptura-type” expression. I assume that when you say “written by the finger of God”, you mean “the Bible.” I think it is common knowlegde that Catholics do not follow
Sola Scriptura, so why do you make posts presuming that we should?
Nevertheless, Sacred Tradition is, in a manner-of-speaking, “written by the finger of God.” The Holy Spirit guided the formulation of Sacred Tradition just as the Holy Spirit guided the compilation of Sacred Scripture.
But I challenge you to give me a quote from the Bible that states that God will only teach in the form of Scripture. Until you do so, it is only your
opinion that he does so, and it is an opinion that is not “written by the finger of God.”
And yet the majority of professed Christians on planet earth ignore the Sabbath Commandment, and exalt Sunday in its place! This must be the deception of the millennium!
“Deception of the millennium”? Actually, it has been Christian practice for two millennium!
The Didache, for example, was written by 1st Century Christians, and in the 14th Chapter we read:
“On the Lord’s Day of the Lord come together, break bread and hold Eucharist, after confessing your transgressions that your offering may be pure.”
In the middle of the Second Century, St. Justin Martyr wrote (in his
First Apology) a detailed description of the Catholic Mass, and stated that it took place “On the day which is dedicated to the sun.”
So Christians have been doing this all along. SDAs are the ones who want to be different. Obviously you will interpret the Bible however you wish, but the fact is that modern Catholics are continuing the practices that were done among the first Christians.
Jesus was our example. When questioned, Jesus quoted Scripture.
Sometimes Jesus quoted Scripture, sometimes he did not. For example:
Jesus did not quote Scripture when responding to the various questions addressed to him in John 6.
When asked if it was lawful to pay the Roman tax, Jesus did not respond with Scripture (Matthew 22:15-22).
When asked about fasting, Jesus did not quote Scripture (Mark 2:18-22).
And when St. Paul was asked questions, he answered with Tradition:
“So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word or by mouth or by letter.” (2Thess 2:15, RSV)
(Something taught “by mouth” is not, by definition, Scripture)
“What you have learned and received and seen in me, do; and the God of peace will be with you.” (Philippians 4:9).
(Obviously St. Paul cannot be referring to Scripture when he says to learn from what is “seen in him”).
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