August 26, 2002

traditio apostolica

Traditio Apostolica

All quotes from Schaff, Section 139, Vol. II.

Besides appealing to the Scriptures, the fathers, particularly Irenaeus and Tertullian, refer with equal confidence to the "rule of faith;" that is, the common faith of the church, as orally handed down in the unbroken succession of bishops from Christ and his apostles to their day, and above all as still living in the original apostolic churches, like those of Jerusalem, Antioch, Ephesus, and Rome. Tradition is thus intimately connected with the primitive episcopate. The latter was the vehicle of the former, and both were looked upon as bulwarks against heresy.

Irenaeus confronts the secret tradition of the Gnostics with the open and unadulterated tradition of the catholic church, and points to all churches, but particularly to Rome, as the visible centre of the unity of doctrine. All who would know the truth, says he, can see in the whole church the tradition of the apostles; and we can count the bishops ordained by the apostles, and their successors down to our time, who neither taught nor knew any such heresies. Then, by way of example, he cites the first twelve bishops of the Roman church from Linus to Eleutherus, as witnesses of the pure apostolic doctrine.

Tertullian says:
the holy scriptures arose in the church of Christ, were given to her, and only in her and by her can be rightly understood.
He calls attention also here to the tangible succession, which distinguishes the catholic church from the arbitrary and ever-changing sects of heretics, and which in all the principal congregations, especially in the original sects of the apostles, reaches back without a break from bishop to bishop, to the apostles themselves, from the apostles to Christ, and from Christ to God. "Come, now," says he, in his tract on Prescription, "if you would practise inquiry to more advantage in the matter of your salvation, go through the apostolic churches, in which the very chairs of the apostles still preside, in which their own authentic letters are publicly read, uttering the voice and representing the face of every one. If Achaia is nearest, you have Corinth. If you are not far from Macedonia, you have Philippi, you have Thessalonica. If you can go to Asia, you have Ephesus. But if you live near Italy, you have Rome, whence also we [of the African church] derive our origin. How happy is the church, to which the apostles poured out their whole doctrine with their blood," etc.
St. Paul writes:
Hold to the traditions (paradosis) which you were taught, whether by word (dia logon), or by epistle of ours.

Posted by jeremy stock at August 26, 2002 09:35 AM
Comments

Great, great post...

Posted by: Toshikazu at August 26, 2002 11:58 AM

Thanks Wayne.

You're just being nice because you don't want me to tell Ann anything bad about you. :-)

Posted by: jeremy at August 27, 2002 05:16 PM

Hey! Now what are people going to think when they read this?! That's how rumors get started! :-)

Posted by: Toshikazu at August 27, 2002 06:41 PM
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