Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture

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Presentation transcript:

Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture RCIA September 24, 2015

Tradition and Scripture As Catholics we believe in two sources of Divine Revelation: Tradition Scripture This two-fold form of revelation was largely uncontested for the first 1500 years of the Church

Tradition Tradition is information or beliefs that are handed down or passed along from one generation to another Oral Our Christian Tradition dates back to the Apostles and Evangelists who spread the Good News of Jesus Judeo-Christian Tradition Oral: The information that is now considered our Gospels was passed along as oral stories for several decades before they were compiled into a written form Mark Matthew Luke John

Martin Luther Roman Catholic Augustinian monk Scrupulous Opposed to selling of indulgences Justification by faith Not his intention to reject authority of Church The Protestant revolution did not occur overnight. In fact there had been attempts for reformation within the Catholic Church for many years. The discontent had many roots, but it had become a powder keg just waiting to explode. Luther’s act was not out of the ordinary for his time yet it occurred at a time of tension and instability and was like the small spark that resulted in an all-consuming blaze.  With Luther, a line was drawn in the sand, and neither the Catholic Church nor Luther would give an inch.  Luther had theological differences with the Church. He believed that justification was by faith alone. He felt so strongly about this position he actually amended certain key verses to underscore his theology.  He was greatly offended by the selling of indulgences. This was the content of his 95 theses and according to Hilaire Belloc none of the theses would be considered in conflict with Church orthodoxy.  As his conflict with the Church evolved he rejected the papacy and all Church authority.  This left as his only authority the Bible alone. Thus was born the doctrine of Sola Scriptura,

Martin Luther Eve of All Saints Day 1517 University town Wittenberg, Germany Rejected papacy and all Church authority The Protestant revolution did not occur overnight. In fact there had been attempts for reformation within the Catholic Church for many years. The discontent had many roots, but it had become a powder keg just waiting to explode. Luther’s act was not out of the ordinary for his time yet it occurred at a time of tension and instability and was like the small spark that resulted in an all-consuming blaze.  With Luther, a line was drawn in the sand, and neither the Catholic Church nor Luther would give an inch.  Luther had theological differences with the Church. He believed that justification was by faith alone. He felt so strongly about this position he actually amended certain key verses to underscore his theology.  He was greatly offended by the selling of indulgences. This was the content of his 95 theses and according to Hilaire Belloc none of the theses would be considered in conflict with Church orthodoxy.  As his conflict with the Church evolved he rejected the papacy and all Church authority.  This left as his only authority the Bible alone. Thus was born the doctrine of Sola Scriptura,

Sola Scriptura The Bible: The sole rule of faith Contained within the Bible is everything that one needs to be saved and nothing needs to be added The whole Christian truth is found in its pages

Catholic Tradition The true rule of faith is Scripture and Tradition, as manifested in the living, teaching authority of the Catholic Church, to which were entrusted the oral teachings of Jesus and the Apostles plus the authority to interpret Scripture rightly. (CCC)

Catholic Tradition From this Sacred Tradition flows the Sacred Scriptures and the teaching authority of the Church that protects the Church from error and protects us from the misinterpretation of the Holy Scriptures. This has been a source of divisiveness since the 16th century. In recent years many have longed for a central authority but what should it look like…splintering Apostolic Succession

Catholic Bible Canon Not Cannon The word canon means a rule or standard. When we speak of the Canon of Scripture we are referring to a body of writings which as scripture constitute the rule or standard by which our lives ought to be governed and measured

Canon The Canon of the books of the Bible Authoritative, infallible list Divinely revealed or inspired A canon distinguishes the revealed and divine from the not revealed and human There was no canon of scripture in the early Church; there was no Bible. The Bible is the book of the Church; she is not the Church of the Bible. It was the Church--her leadership, faithful people--guided by the authority of the Spirit of Truth which discovered the books inspired by God in their writing. The Church did not create the canon; she discerned the canon. It is important to remember that the Scriptures are fully human even though they are fully divine. Not a transcription. Did not descend from heaven in their full form. They were written by men in the language of their society and were influenced by their culture

The Bible No Canon of Scripture in the Early Church The Bible is the book of the Church The Church did not create the canon Scriptures are fully human and fully divine There was no canon of scripture in the early Church; there was no Bible. The Bible is the book of the Church; she is not the Church of the Bible. It was the Church--her leadership, faithful people--guided by the authority of the Spirit of Truth which discovered the books inspired by God in their writing. The Church did not create the canon; she discerned the canon. It is important to remember that the Scriptures are fully human even though they are fully divine. Not a transcription. Did not descend from heaven in their full form. They were written by men in the language of their society and were influenced by their culture

Catholic Bible First accepted as an official canon in the 4th Century (393 AD Council of Hippo) This was clarified/supported by the Council of Carthage in 397 AD Old Testament (Hebrew Scriptures) New Testament (Christian Scriptures) The Council of Hippo (A.D. 393) and the Council of Carthage (A.D. 397) also affirmed the same 27 books as authoritative.

Christian Scriptures General agreement by all Christians 27 books Gospels Acts of the Apostles Letters or Epistles Book of Revelation

Hebrew Scriptures Early Christians and Catholics accept 46 books as canonical The Jewish scriptures accept 39 books Since Martin Luther in the 16th century most Protestants accept 39 books over the inclusion of the books of the

Why the Difference? Protocanon – 39 books Deuterocanon - Second Canon Apocrypha (Hidden) - Not Divinely inspired

Deuterocanon Tobit Judith 1&2 Maccabees Wisdom Sirach Baruch Esther: additional 107 verses Daniel: stories of Susanna, Bel, and the Dragon Where did these books originate and why are they included in the Catholic Bible

Where did these books originate and why are they included in the Catholic Bible? Written between 400-150 BC, After book of Malachi; Hebrew language

History of the Septuagint LXX Following the Babylonian exile (597 BC) the Jewish people were dispersed throughout the regions of the Mediterranean Diaspora In the 3rd century BC, more Jews were living in Alexandria than Palestine. These Jews were Greek speaking and there was a concern that the Hebrew language with its scriptures would be lost.

Septuagint LXX Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures (250 – 150 BC) History of the Septuagint Ptolemy 70/72 Jewish scholars…cloistered locations…70/72 days Identical translations…true to original Hebrew Scriptures Scholars feel this is a myth

Septuagint Translation of Septuagint probably took several decades Concern that the Hebrew language would be lost and with it the cultic/religious practices Greek was the language of the Mediterranean at that time. It was the language of commerce and the language of the early Church. By translating the scriptures into Greek the Law would be preserved as would the cultic/temple services

Deuterocanon and Septuagint The Septuagint included the 7 books that we Catholics now refer to as the Deuterocanon During the time of Jesus the Septuagint was widely used in Palestine as was the Palestinian canon written in Hebrew and Aramaic

Old Testament Canon The early Christians chose the Septuagint as their translation of the Hebrew scriptures because it was the translation they were most accustomed to using and it was the version used by most Greek-speaking Jews at that time

Development of the Old Testament Canon 1000-50 BC: The Old Testament (hereafter "OT") books are written. * C. 200 BC: Rabbis translate the OT from Hebrew to Greek, a translation called the "Septuagint" (abbreviation: "LXX"). The LXX ultimately includes 46 books. AD 30-100: Christians use the LXX as their scriptures. This upsets the Jews. ** C. AD 100: So Jewish rabbis meet at the Council of Jamniah and decide to include in their canon only 39 books, since only these can be found in Hebrew. *** C. AD 400: Jerome translates the Bible from Hebrew and Greek into Latin (called the "Vulgate"). He knows that the Jews have only 39 books, and he wants to limit the OT to these; the 7 he would leave out (Tobit, Judith, 1 Maccabees, 2 Maccabees, Wisdom of Solomon, Sirach [or "Ecclesiasticus"], and Baruch--he calls "apocrypha," that is, "hidden books." But Pope Damasus wants all 46 traditionally-used books included in the OT, so the Vulgate has 46. AD 1536: Luther translates the Bible from Hebrew and Greek to German. He assumes that, since Jews wrote the Old Testament, theirs is the correct canon; he puts the extra 7 books in an appendix that he calls the "Apocrypha." **** AD 1546: The Catholic Council of Trent reaffirms the canonicity of all 46 books.

Hebrew Scriptures Law – Torah or Pentateuch Genesis Exodus Numbers Leviticus Deuteronomy Prophets – Nebi’im Isaiah Hosea Nahum Jeremiah Joel Habakkuk Lamentations Amos Zephaniah Baruch Obadiah Haggai Ezekiel Jonah Zechariah Daniel Micah Malachi

Hebrew Scriptures Writings – Ketub’im Historical Books Joshua, Judges Kings and Chronicles Ezra, Nehemiah, Judith, Esther Maccabees Wisdom Books Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes, Sirach, Wisdom

Scripture and Tradition Our belief in the Sacred Tradition does not diminish our reverence and veneration of the scriptures. Because the Old and New Testament Scriptures are the Divinely-revealed written Word of God, Catholics venerate the Scriptures as they venerate the Lord's body.

Sacred Tradition What do we mean by Sacred Tradition or Apostolic Tradition? With the coming of the HS at Pentecost, the apostles were empowered to proclaim the gospel to the ends of the earth.  At first, this message was not written down but was in the minds and hearts of Jesus’ disciples, especially the twelve.  The Apostles were trained to understand and teach Jesus’ message as no others were, for Jesus had personally formed them for this task

Tradition From the beginning of Christianity, the teaching of Jesus’ apostles was the most reliable source of truth about him.   At first the teaching of the Apostles was passed on by word of mouth, from believer to believer, community to community. This passing on of the Good News of Jesus Christ by word of mouth is called “oral tradition.”  So from the beginning of Christianity, the teaching of Jesus’ apostles was the most reliable source of truth about him.  At first the teaching of the Apostles was passed on from word of mouth, from believer to believer, community to community.  This passing on of the Good News of Jesus Christ by word of mouth is called “oral tradition.”

Big “T” versus Little “t” Today when we say “Tradition”, many people think we are speaking of things like holy cards, the Latin Mass, nuns in habits, and cantankerous old priests telling you what you can’t do.   But these are memories of culture, not faith; they are matters of custom and have nothing to do with Tradition We need to distinguish between Tradition and traditions. Tradition is the living and lived faith of the Church Today when we say “Tradition”, many people think we are speaking of things like holy cards, the Latin Mass, nuns in habits, and fussy old priests telling you what you can’t do.   But these are memories of culture, not faith; they are matters of custom and have nothing to do with Tradition

Big “T” versus Little “t” The term does not refer to legends or mythological accounts, nor does it encompass transitory customs or practices which may change, as circumstances warrant, such as styles of priestly dress, particular forms of devotion, or even liturgical rubrics. These are traditions with a little “t” To be Sacred Tradition it cannot be rejected or lost without an essential distortion of the Gospel. Sacred or apostolic tradition consists of the teachings that the apostles passed on orally through their preaching. These teachings largely (perhaps entirely) The process of sorting out T form t is ongoing, and involves the official teaching authority of the Church, theologians, and the lived experiences and wisdom of the Christian community itself. overlap with those contained in Scripture, but the mode of their transmission is different.

Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture The Church doesn’t hold any truth on the basis of scripture alone but she doesn’t hold any truth on the basis of Tradition without scripture either You can’t take one without the other. Sacred Tradition is the only source of information about fundamentally important ideas like the Holy Trinity or Marian Doctrine, which isn’t explicit in the Bible.

Vatican II With the death of the last apostle the revelation given by Christ and the Holy Spirit is complete.   Nothing can be added to the deposit of revelation and nothing can be taken away But even though Tradition can’t change, our knowledge of it can grow. Our understanding of it grows steadily because Tradition unfolds as the Church faces new situations. That’s why you can’t write Tradition down and be done with it. Tradition is living…dynamic

Dei Verbum Sacred tradition and Sacred Scripture form one sacred deposit of the Word of God, committed to the Church… For both of them, flowing from the same divine wellspring, in a certain way merge into a unity and tend toward the same end.   So although the Church recognizes 2 sources we see them as one directed toward one goal, the salvation of souls…

Dei Verbum: the Teaching Authority of the Church Sacred tradition takes the word of God entrusted by Christ… and the Holy Spirit to the Apostles, and hands it on to their successors in its full purity, so that led by the light of the Spirit of truth, they may in proclaiming it preserve this word of God faithfully, explain it, and make it more widely known. It is clear, therefore, that Sacred Tradition, Sacred Scripture and the teaching authority of the Church…are so linked and joined together that one cannot stand without the others, and that all together and each in its own way under the action of the one Holy Spirit contribute effectively to the salvation of souls.

Dei Verbum – Tradition and Scripture Tradition comes before, during and after the writing of Sacred Scripture   In the wider meaning of the word, Tradition refers to the whole process by which the Church “hands on” its faith to each new generation This handing on occurs through Preaching Catechesis Teaching Bible Doctrines Devotions Scripture is a product of Tradition

Summary God revealed himself to us through Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture Oral Tradition preceded the written scripture Tradition is the source of valuable information not specifically stated in scripture Divinely inspired canon does not mean God dictated His Word to the evangelists. Evangelists under divine guidance wrote the gospels nuanced by their own audience or community.

Summary Sacred Scripture is highly reverenced by Catholics. Tradition is living and ongoing through the power of the Holy Spirit. As Catholics, we believe in Tradition, Sacred Scripture, and the Magisterium, all directed toward the salvation of souls.

Additional resources New American Bible Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) www.usccb.org (US Conference of Catholic Bishops) www.vatican.va (Vatican) www.catholic.org (Catholic online) I pads; I phones: iMissal; iBreviary; Catholic NAB