"TRADITION IS A GOD-GIVEN GIFT"

Teaching Delivered Through

Frances Marie Klug

September 21, 1993

“Christianity began with Moses in a Formal Way. God’s Commandments, as ‘The Constitution for Christianity’, were issued as a Mandate from God, not just suggesting but commanding that such Rules would be the order of morality in which, and for which, mankind was to follow. As is always the case, when man is directed to uphold certain laws, it did not happen overnight.

Christ’s Presence in the world put the final stamp on the responsibility that Christianity was to uphold for all time.

It is understood that Moses was of the Jewish heritage, and through him God handed to the world His Commandments for all mankind, of every denomination, to follow, to live by, and to pass on to all generations to come.

Our Lord came to the world in the background of the Jewish heritage. He was The One that carried out the Mandate from God through Moses, on the importance of purity of mind, body and Soul. It was a ‘Formal Institution of Christianity’, even though Christianity began with Moses.

It is important for mankind to understand that when God sent to the world a Trinity of human life — Father, Mother, Son — to live with Christian thinking, actions, Teaching Models of Christian family life, this heritage was to be seen as the Deliverers of how family life should be lived.

Was it just circumstance that both Moses and Christ were Jewish? No, the Jewish Faith is a formal, dignified, strong religious belief in tradition. This tradition has a tremendous amount of strength in it, purpose in it, and is important for what it stands for and how it is practiced.

Christianity is based on tradition, combining all formats and formulas instituted by Moses and Our Lord. In some areas the tradition was directed, emphasizing additional scrutiny, security and safety, regarding the Spiritual practices of mankind for the benefit of each one’s Soul.

Justification of wrongdoings, wrong judgments on Spiritual information and/or changes that supposedly are adopted, encouraged and organized by the clergy today, should be questioned in detail, and not allowed to be practiced until all areas are scrutinized in consultation with strong, sound Roman Catholics, because tradition is important and should not be tampered with by experimentation that waters it down to only humanism in delivery and importance.”

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