By Fr. David Moser...
Picture a beautiful
jeweled pendant. The centerpiece is a brilliant flawless diamond and it
is set in pure radiant gold, intricately worked and designed to set off
the diamond in its greatest beauty. Surrounding the diamond are carefully
chosen stones, lesser gems, but no less flawless and beautiful, rubies,
emeralds, sapphires, pearls, etc. These are chosen and arranged to compliment
and augment the brilliance of the diamond and in no way detract from the
diamond's beauty, but rather everything together presents a beautiful whole.
The pendant is the whole of Holy Tradition, which is the expression of
the revelation of Christ in the Church. The central diamond is the Holy
Scripture and the surrounding gems and gold are the lives of the saints,
the writings of the fathers, the services and traditions of the Church.
Now if someone were to see this pendant who did not like pearls, he might
think to himself, "if only we took off the pearls, this would be much
better" and if he did so we would still have a beautiful pendant but
somehow lessened.
Then perhaps portions of the pendant are allowed
to become tarnished so that they no longer reveal their beauty and instead
of cleaning off the tarnish and restoring the gems, those portions are
removed - perhaps even replaced by rhinestones. Then along comes someone
else who doesn't like emeralds and removes all the emeralds. And again
along comes someone else who removes the remaining sapphires etc. Finally
someone views this once beautiful pendant and not having seen its former
beauty thinks that it is an ugly thing but the diamond is beautiful and
so removes the diamond and trashes the rest.
The diamond is still beautiful, brilliant and valuable. It is set apart
and displayed by itself - a truly beautiful thing, rescued from an ugly
setting. But only those who never saw the original setting could say that
for the diamond, when removed from the pendant is somehow lessened and
there is no longer the gold work and the other gems to set it off and make
it a part of a greater whole.
I hope this little story helps to provide some understanding
of how the Holy Scripture is a part (a beautiful, brilliant, central part)
of Holy Tradition and to remove it from the context of Tradition is to
lessen it and hide its true beauty.
Fr. David Moser...
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