But there was no Tradition here Matt. It wasn't even the beginning of Tradition. Paul preached unto them the Word of God, not tradition. That is the reason that they could check what he said from the Word of God. Look again:Matt Black said:Indeed, and this marks the beginning of Sacred Tradition - the oral teachings and actions of the Apostles and the Apostolic Church. The only point where we differ is that this phenomenon did not cease at the end of the 1st century; there is no Scriptural authority to suggest it did and Church history shows very plainly that it didn't.
Acts 17:11 These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.
--They received the word--the Word of God, which Paul preached unto them.
--They searched the Scriptures, and did it daily, to verify the Scripture that Paul was preaching. They were verifying a NT message from the OT. For the gospel is found in the OT.
When Philip "attached himself to the chariot" and began to expound the Scriptures to the Ethiopian eunuch, it says that "he began at the same place (Isaiah) and preached unto him Jesus."
The gospel can be found in the OT. It can be verified by the OT. And that is what the Bereans were doing. The Ethiopian saw the need to be baptized. How much Scripture was Philip able to use. He only had the book of Isaiah, and the eunuch was convicted of this.
There was no tradition here. They both preached from the Word of God. And from there early Christians took the Word of God and preached the gospel everywhere.
Acts 8:4 Therefore they that were scattered abroad went every where preaching the word.
--This was the pattern of the NT churches.