tradcath
English
Etymology
From trad (“traditional”) + Cath(olic).
Noun
tradcath (plural tradcaths)
- (chiefly Internet slang) A Catholic who seeks to change the religion back to the norms of before the Second Vatican Council.
- 2019, The Chapo Guide to Revolution: A Manifesto Against Logic, Facts, and Reason, page 115:
- Chesterton was Edwardian England's most eloquent advocate for distributism, a Catholic social and economic system that contemporary TradCaths embrace, more (skepticism of big-government socialism) or less (actually distributing anything to anyone).
- 2020, Mariel Hope Cooksey, "The Alt-Right and Christianity", thesis submitted to the University of Virginia, page 32:
- Overlapping with groups within the ‘Manosphere’, tradcaths use fundamentalist Christianity as a vehicle to spread and legitimize their gospel of traditional family values […]
- 2021, David Hoa Khoa Nguyen, Jeremy F. Price, & Duaa H. Alwan, "The Influence of Christian Nationalism on U.S. Public Educators' Speech: Implications from Meriwether vs. Hartop", Laws, Volume 2, Issue 4, December 2021:
- This group is comprised of networks—such as Catholic identifying Groypers and TradCaths […]
-
Adjective
tradcath (comparative more tradcath, superlative most tradcath)
- Espousing, characteristic of, or relating to traditionalist, conservative Catholicism.
- 2014 June, Fr. Martyn Neale, “Looking to the Future”, in Forward in Faith Guildford:
- But there are not enough ‘TradCath’ priests to serve all the parishes who want us, leaving churches and people vulnerable to takeover by ‘Affirming’ clergy or pastoral reorganisation into liberal teams.
- 2020, Mariel Hope Cooksey, "The Alt-Right and Christianity", thesis submitted to the University of Virginia, page 32:
- Sharing little in common with a true traditionalist stance of Catholicism, the tradcath movement within the Groyper Army is more akin to heavily meme-ified, internet-based understanding of Francoist Catholic fascism […]
-
- (loosely) Having the aforementioned qualities, but broadly applied to all Christian sects or believers deemed particularly traditional and anti-modernist.
Coordinate terms
- sedevacantism (claiming that the popes after the Second Vatican Council are not legitimate due to modernist beliefs)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.