Feb 10 Tue
What is the Tradition of the Church?
Jesus scolded the Pharisees: “And why do you break the commandment of God for the sake of your tradition? Matthew (15:3). These were their human traditions.
Our family traditions change; they are not like heirlooms, which can be handed down in a preserved state from one generation to another. But neither are our traditions like the game of telephone, where the transmission from one to another invariably and irretrievably degrades and jumbles the message as it passes to the next player.
Tradition is less about transmitting certain facts than it is about reverence and veneration of something precious – an inheritance that is precious both in itself and precious because of the one who bestowed it. In the end, the guarantor of tradition is always love.
There is also Tradition (big “T”), which, with Sacred Scripture, constitutes the deposit and source of what we believe: our Faith. The Holy Spirit is the decisive agent and guarantor of this Church’s Tradition.
Our grasp of that Tradition is never static or stale – it grows deeper and richer as it is shared – but it never ceases to be what it always is. Evolving, but always in itself; not in an anarchic manner but within the body of the Church and under her pastors. Its content becomes clearer and finds its application in new circumstances. Love himself guarantees the faithful transmission of that Tradition. Otherwise, it is not The Tradition of the Church, but merely “human traditions.”
Pope Leo recently said that “Ecclesial Tradition branches out throughout history through the Church, which preserves, interprets, and expresses. The Word of God, then, is not fossilized, but rather is a living and organic reality that develops and grows in Tradition.
Thanks to the Holy Spirit, Tradition understands the Word of God in the richness of its truth and expresses it in the shifting coordinates of history.”
Christianity, both as a communal experience and as a doctrine, is a dynamic reality, in the manner indicated by Jesus himself in the parables of the seed: a living reality that develops thanks to an inner vital force.
Thus, the importance of safeguarding the deposit of faith:
Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture form one sacred deposit of the Word of God, committed to the Church, interpreted by the living teaching office of the Church [the Magisterium], whose authority is exercised in the name of Jesus Christ.
Any “deposit” imposes on the depositary the duty to preserve its content, which in this case is the Faith, and to transmit it intact.
The “deposit” of the Word of God is still in the hands of the Church today, and all of us. In our various ecclesial circumstances, we must continue to preserve it in its integrity, as a lodestar for our journey through the complexity of history and existence.
Sacred Scripture and Tradition are so linked and joined together that they cannot stand independently, and together, each in its own way, under the action of the one Holy Spirit, they contribute effectively to the salvation of souls.











