Many Catholic beliefs and practices are not found in scripture so to justify these they put tradition before the scriptures
Catholics follow Church tradition and the scripture, although they do not interpret the scripture literally, and attempt to live as Jesus did. They accept the Pope as leader of the Church and believe him to be infallible. Catholics worship an all powerful God in the form of the Holy Trinity--God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit--and go to church every Sunday and on holy days.
Anglicans and Catholics have key differences in beliefs regarding the authority of the Pope, the nature of the Eucharist, and the role of tradition in interpreting scripture. Anglicans do not recognize the Pope as the supreme authority in matters of faith and instead have their own hierarchy. Additionally, Anglicans have a more symbolic interpretation of the Eucharist compared to the Catholic belief in transubstantiation. Anglicans also place a greater emphasis on individual interpretation of scripture, while Catholics rely more on tradition and the teachings of the Church.
The Scripture in Catholic faith is interpreted within the framework of Biblical Tradition and Church teaching (33 Doctors of the Church). The interpretation of Scripture's parables, poetry, and other literary forms require Tradition and Church teaching in addition to knowledge of the people and times when the Bible was written.
Anglican Catholics and Roman Catholics share many beliefs and practices, such as the belief in the Trinity and the sacraments. However, key differences include the role of the Pope, the understanding of the Eucharist, and the view on the authority of tradition. Anglican Catholics do not recognize the Pope as the head of the Church, have a more symbolic view of the Eucharist, and place a greater emphasis on scripture over tradition.
There is no canoninical scripture that refers to Anne. What we know about her is through tradition.
In answering this question, I can only presume that the questioner has some familiarity with the Protestant vs. Catholic polemics over the role, nature and purpose of Scripture vs. Tradition. Prior to going further, lets get some definitions down. Scriptura Sola: Scriptura Sola is one of the twin pillars of the "Reformation." The other pillar was "Fide Sola." Scriptura Sola is a Latin phrase. Translated into English it means "Scripture Alone" or loosely "Bible Only." Scriptura Sola can be difficult to precisely define because Protestants are not in agreement as to what the definition is. All Protestants would agree with the following definition: Scriptura Sola means that the Bible is the sole infallible rule of faith for the Church, and the Christian. All other authorities are by definition in a lesser capacity then that of Scripture and therefore submit to Scripture. This is because of Scirpture's uniqueness as that which is "God Breathed" or "Breathed out by God." (Second Timothy 3:16.) Scripture is the Supreme Authority in the Church, there is no authority higher then Scripture or equal to Scripture. Protestants after this point will tend to differ on the nature and role of Tradition. Some Protestants would claim that Tradition is useful, it has a role in the Church, but it is not on a par with the Scripture. Tradition is normed by Scripture, not visa-versa. Other Protestants would deny the role of Tradition in any sense. Some Protestants will grant authority to the Church, but like in the case of Tradition will claim the authority of the Church is not on a par with Scripture. Other Protestants will not grant authority to the Church. Catholics by contrast believe that the revelation of God which culminated most perfectly with the Incarnation is transmitted to the Church by Scripture and Tradition. Catholics point out that there was a Church before there was Scripture. The Faith existed before there was Scripture. This is true both for the ancient Jewish people and the early Christians. In fact the Church can only receive and recognize Scripture because the Faith came first. Scripture is a product of the Faith of the Church, an artifact of the Faith of the Church. Scripture did not beget Faith, rather Faith begot Scripture. The Church knew who she was, and what she believed before ever a word was penned. In recognizing and receiving Scripture the Church was recognizing Scripture as a Mirror of the Faith. What does this have to do with Scriptura Sola? Very simply, if the the Scriptures are a product of the Faith the Church professes, this means that Faith is preserved in the Church through Tradition, not simply writings alone. It means that the Church's testimony is just as reliable as the testimony of Scripture. If this is true, then quite obviously it is not only Scripture which is infallible. Catholics can grant Scripture alone possesses the charism of Inspiration, but Catholics would not grant that only Scripture is infallible. The pattern works like this within the Church: the Church first believes by Faith, then seeks to write down what she believes. First came the Revelation, then came reception of the Revelation, then and only then did the Church seek to crystallize it in writing. What this means is that Faith is preserved in Scripture and Tradition, but because there has never been a time in the life of the Church (as a whole) when only one functioned, both are essential in the life of the Church in order to most completely and fully express the Revelation of God to all generations. Protestants deny that Tradition is essential, arguing instead that the Scriptures Alone preserve the Faith, and therefore are essential. The essence of a living being never changes. Thus, because the Apostolic Church functioned with dual authorities: the Scripture and the Tradition, the post apostolic Church functions the same way. Tradition gives birth to Scripture, Scripture ensures the Church keeps true to the essence of Tradition. There is nothing in Tradition which does not have basis in Scripture, and there is nothing in Scripture without foundation in Tradition. These dual authorities if you will seek to work in tandem to hand on the Word of God through successive generations in the Church. Often times in Catholic/Protestant polemics, when Scripture and Tradition are discussed, it is not long before the Protestant brings up the sufficiency of the Scriptures, and accuses Catholics of denying the formal sufficiency of the Scriptures. "Why do you need to 'add' your Tradition to the Word of God?" asks the Protestant. "Historically even the Fathers of the Church upheld the formal sufficiency of the Scriptures." They will then proceed to quote at length quotes from the Fathers to bolster their position. (Webster and King wrote a whole volume on the Fathers and Scripture. This is volume three of "Scripture: Ground and Pillar of Faith." In my mind to turn the debate into one of Sufficiency misses the point. The Early Church Fathers indeed affirmed the sufficiency of Scriptures, however, at the same time alien to the thought of the early church fathers was the questions which would begin to surface in the late Middle Ages, namely "Is it possible that the Church could or would teach something that is outside the Scriptures." Unlike the modern questions, the early fathers were not asking questions about the relationship between Scripture and Tradition. Therefore to read statements by the early church fathers which speak to the formal sufficiency of Scriptures, and read into such statements "Scriptura Sola" is rather anachronistic. In the second place, the real debate is not whether the Scriptures are sufficient, but rather whether or not the Scirptures are the SOLE infallible rule of Faith in the Church. The denial on the part of Catholics of Scriptura Sola does NOT hinge on the sufficiency of Scriptures. What Catholics deny, when they deny Scriptura Sola is that the Scriptures are the sole infallible rule of Faith in the Church, NOT necessarily the sufficiency of Scriptures. Tradition does not add to the Scriptures, but rather is another expression of the same Revelation which Scripture testifies. The content of Tradition is the same as Scripture. Tradition simply gives a fuller expression to the words of which Scripture testifies. Tradition is a fuller expression of Revelation because the words of Scripture find embodiment in the Faith of the Church which comes through Tradition. The words of Scripture are God's Word, but God's Word was given to the Church. Therefore the words that Scripture speaks must be embodied by a person, namely the person of the Church. The Church takes the words of Scripture and gives them life through her Tradition.
Tradition is all things having to do with a particular religion that are handed down from generation to generation. This would include written Scripture, creeds and other writings and teachings about the faith. So Scripture can be seen as part of the greater Tradition of faith.
Scripture and Tradition
Yes
Catholic AnswerThe Church needs Tradition because that is what Our Blessed Lord gave Her. She needs Scripture because She inherited the Old Testament from the Jews, ultimately from God, and Tradition gave Her the New Testament. They are both the Word of God, which means that, in a very real sense, they are Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ. But in the end, Tradition (with a captial "T") is what God gave us, all Scripture came out of Tradition and the New Testament expressly tells us that we must abide by Tradition and Scripture.
The quinceañera is not a Catholic tradition inasmuch as it is not a tradition of the Church and is not practiced everywhere that Catholics are present. The people who do celebrate the quinceañera, however, tend to be Catholic, as this is a Mexican tradition and Mexico is a mostly Catholic nation.
There is nothing in scripture or tradition that can answer that question.