Iām sure there is some Sacred Tradition that I can embrace as truth. However, I need to read and study the sources first. Sacred Tradition can be truth when it lines up with the Holy Scriptures. Heck, I posted the Apostleās Creed a few times⦠because I am catholic.
Reformed, perhaps this may help a bitā¦
Sacred Tradition is the sum of revealed doctrine which has not been committed to Sacred Scripture (though it may have appeared in uninspired writing) but which has been handed down by a series of legitimate shepherds of the church from age to age. As revelation, it must have come to the Apostles directly from the lips of Christ or been handed down by the Apostles at the dictation of the Holy Spirit. āSo then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter,ā St. Paul told the Thessalonians. (2 Thess. 2:15, RSV)
āThe word tradition is taken from the Latin word ātradereā- to hand down, to pass on. In this case it refers to a āhanding downā of Godās revealed word from apostolic times to our own day. If we would take the word tradition in the broad sense, we could say that the Catholic Church derives itās doctrines from tradition alone, understanding thereby the body of revealed truth (written & unwritten) handed down from the apostles. St. Paul seemed to understand it in this way when he wrote to Timothy to āhold to traditions which you have learned, whether by word or by our letterā (2 Thes. 2:14). Even though a great part of that tradition has been committed to writing and is found in the inspired books of the Scriptures, the Catholic Church looks upon Tradition and Scripture, not as two separate sources of revelation, but as two different means of transmission of Godās revelation, forming a single deposit of faith. The Bible, then, is a part of Tradition, along with the unwritten instruction received from Christ and handed down by the apostles and their successors. Some writers refer to the revealed doctrines (written & unwritten) handed down by the apostles and their successors as the passive aspect of Tradition, and the living teaching authority (the magisterium) established by Christ to insure that His teaching would be handed down to succeeding ages in its integrity and without error, as its active aspect.
To understand the Catholic Churchās teaching in regard to Sacred Tradition, we must consider several things:
a) Public revelation ceased with Christ and the apostles and evangelists who recorded His teachings;
b) Christ commissioned His apostles to preach;
c) Christ established a living teaching authority to safeguard the integrity of the gospel message, and to apply it with divine authority to succeeding ages;
d) The development of the gospel message is not new doctrine. ā
pacifier.com/rosary-center.org/ll47n4.htm