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Crimson_Silence
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What does tradition mean to people here? And should traditions be preserved? Or should everything – religious or secular – continously be demolished and created new again and again?
Both something must always be kept but things like methods of evangelization always need refiningWhat does tradition mean to people here? And should traditions be preserved? Or should everything – religious or secular – continously be demolished and created new again and again?
The post asks what is tradition to people here. I think I would get diverse responses on what tradition is to people; whether religious or secular.It would depend on what tradition, religious or secular you mean, right? If it’s a nice family tradition, like opening presents on Christmas Eve, that’s a good thing to preserve. If it’s a state’s tradition to sell slaves around, that’s a tradition to get rid of. As Catholics, if it’s a Tradition that passes on a teaching of divine revelation, then, of course, it should be preserved. Here are some Church docs on What is Sacred Tradition
Well this is a post I wasn’t expecting to find. Please elaborate; with examples of previous and new.Both something must always be kept but things like methods of evangelization always need refining
tradition (n.)
late 14c., from Old French tradicion (late 13c.), from Latin traditionem (nominative traditio) “delivery, surrender, a handing down,” from traditus, past participle of tradere “deliver, hand over,” from trans- “over” (see trans-) + dare “to give” (see date (n.1)). The word is a doublet of treason (q.v.). The notion in the modern sense of the word is of things “handed down” from generation to generation.
If it was my immediately previous post which caused you worry, I can only say that I find guidance in the catechisms I quoted. If that makes me a “legalistic Latin”, so be it. Gosh, I would think that makes me a “traditonal Catholic.”The dispensable attitude certain legalistic Latins take towards “small t” tradition is worrying to me, as though it is unnecessary if it was one way or another.
Sorry if it seemed like I was picking on you. No, I wasn’t responding to your post - nor does your post particularly bother me. There are honestly just people who think that tradition is the immediate fad that can receive a complete overhaul tomorrow and it wouldn’t make a difference.If it was my immediately previous post which caused you worry, I can only say that I find guidance in the catechisms I quoted. If that makes me a “legalistic Latin”, so be it. Gosh, I would think that makes me a “traditonal Catholic.”.
And what is so sad to me is that this is that the falsity of this sort of thinking is so blindingly obvious.Sorry if it seemed like I was picking on you. No, I wasn’t responding to your post - nor does your post particularly bother me. There are honestly just people who think that tradition is the immediate fad that can receive a complete overhaul tomorrow and it wouldn’t make a difference.
Sorry if it seemed like I was picking on you. No, I wasn’t responding to your post - nor does your post particularly bother me. There are honestly just people who think that tradition is the immediate fad that can receive a complete overhaul tomorrow and it wouldn’t make a difference.
Coupled with that are those who feel that if a tradition was in place at a certain point in time (and let’s put that point in time as the start of Vatican 2), that it is from time immemorial, immutable, and by its very existence a sign that it is the only way the matter can be treated.Sorry if it seemed like I was picking on you. No, I wasn’t responding to your post - nor does your post particularly bother me. There are honestly just people who think that tradition is the immediate fad that can receive a complete overhaul tomorrow and it wouldn’t make a difference.
But doesn’t the very sense of the word tradition have a sort of organic connotation to it? And with something that it is organic, certain parts will both die and more will be produced. However, to discard and then artificially create doesn’t seem like organic tradition, does it? It’s like if someone in a family said “ok, instead of our longstanding Christmas family tradition of X, we’ll start doing Y instead; they’re equivalents but I feel Y will better.” There are very obvious issues that would pop up with those - as though one can simply just “think up” new traditions. And the result of synthetic tradition are synthetic results - like Anaphorae that are falsely based on prayers that were never used for what they were claimed to be used for.Coupled with that are those who feel that if a tradition was in place at a certain point in time (and let’s put that point in time as the start of Vatican 2), that it is from time immemorial, immutable, and by its very existence a sign that it is the only way the matter can be treated.
Every “small t” tradition started at some time since the founding of the Church. Many, if not most that were in existence at the time of Vatican 2 either replaced a prior tradition, or started one where there had been none.
It is interesting that you speak about families. When two people marry, they bring to the new family traditions from the one they grew in; what may come out of that is that one tradition continues on; that tradition carries on with modifications from the other; that tradition continues on with modifications from elsewhere; or from the agreement of the two parties to add something; it can be a blend of the two prior traditions, it can be a reverse (the other person of the couple reveals to some degree; or they can abandon both traditions and start something new; either all at once or over time.But doesn’t the very sense of the word tradition have a sort of organic connotation to it? And with something that it is organic, certain parts will both die and more will be produced. However, to discard and then artificially create doesn’t seem like organic tradition, does it? It’s like if someone in a family said “ok, instead of our longstanding Christmas family tradition of X, we’ll start doing Y instead; they’re equivalents but I feel Y will better.” There are very obvious issues that would pop up with those - as though one can simply just “think up” new traditions. And the result of synthetic tradition are synthetic results - like Anaphorae that are falsely based on prayers that were never used for what they were claimed to be used for.