2 Thessalonians 2:15-17 Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle. (King James Version.)
Why is tradition so important, whether for our family or country, or, more importantly, in what the true Catholic Church has always and everywhere taught, believed and practiced?
Because tradition is the foundation upon which we learn, observe, preserve and teach that which has been passed down to us over the centuries... It guides us through the rough waters to the safe inner harbor and affords protection from novelty and innovation -- especially when it comes to the sacred liturgy and our worship of our good God!
To investigate and better understand the faith -- and the liturgy -- is one thing, but to skew or outright reject tradition, is signing a moral and spiritual "death certificate"...
In the following article from lifesitenews.com and written by Louis Knuffke: Cardinal Sarah: Rejection of traditional liturgy, morals are forms of ‘practical atheism’ in the Church - LifeSite (lifesitenews.com, the good cardinal gives an excellent take on one of the main causes of practical atheism...
"WASHINGTON, D.C. (LifeSiteNews) – Cardinal Robert Sarah, prefect emeritus of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments in Rome, linked the attempted suppression and rejection of the Traditional Latin Mass within the Church to the rejection of traditional Catholic morals and Europe’s wider defection from Christianity in what he called “practical atheism.”
The comments on the attempt to cast off the Church’s ancient liturgy within the Latin rite came in a talk Cardinal Sarah offered at the Catholic University of America (CUA) on Thursday, June 14, at an event titled “An Evening with Robert Cardinal Sarah,” sponsored by the Napa Institute and the Catholic Information Center in Washington, D.C.
The Guinean cardinal offered Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception before giving his lecture and received a standing ovation at the start and end of his remarks.
The talk was titled “The Catholic Church’s Enduring Answer to the Practical Atheism of Our Age.” In the speech, the cardinal lamented the rejection of God that has taken hold of much of the west, especially once-Christian Europe. He said this rejection of God takes the form of not so much intellectual atheism but a practical atheism by which modern man acts as if God does not exist or does not matter.
He especially denounced the ways this practical atheism has entered even the Church, evidenced in the rejection of traditional Catholic morality, traditional Catholic doctrine, and the traditional form of the Catholic liturgy.
Among his other remarks on the state of the Church, the former prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship, who has long been a champion of the Traditional Latin Mass and a return to a more reverent manner of celebrating the liturgy, said that the widespread attempt in the Latin Church to cast off her traditional manner of worshipping God, which the Church has seen fit to use for centuries, is a form of practical atheism in which God is no longer at the center of divine worship but rather the sensibilities of modern man.
Linking this rejection of the Church’s traditional liturgy to the rejection of the Church’s traditional moral theology, Sarah identified both as a subtle form of atheism, which he said “is not an outright rejection of God, but it pushes God to the side.”
RELATED: Cardinal Sarah denounces relativism in an address to seminarians
Referencing John Paul II on the forms practical atheism can take, Sarah said, “We see this in the Church when sociology or ‘lived experience’ becomes the guiding principle that shape(s) moral judgment. It is not an outright rejection of God, but it pushes God to the side. How often do we hear from theologians, priests, religious, and even some bishops or bishop conferences that we need to adjust our moral theology for considerations that are solely human?”
There is an attempt to ignore, if not reject, the traditional approach to moral theology, as defined so well by Veritatis Splendor and the Catechism of the Catholic Church. If we do, everything becomes conditional and subjective. Welcoming everyone means ignoring Scripture, Tradition, and the Magisterium.
None of the proponents of this paradigm shift within the Church reject God outright, but they treat Revelation as secondary, or at least on equal footing with experience and modern science. This is how practical atheism works. It does not deny God but functions as if God is not central.
Sarah went on to apply a similar critique to the rejection of the Church’s ancient liturgy. Without naming Traditionis Custodes, he yet warned that portraying the Church’s centuries-old liturgical traditions as “dangerous” and focusing on the horizontal is a way of pushing God to the side.
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