Firstly, wrong, the oldest liturgies we have date from the first century, and secondly, that’s an eisegesis which I debunked in another thread, the Mark 7:13 eisegesis, which requires one to ignore several other passages from elsewhere in scripture which imbue tradition with authority. So read my posts in the thread by
@Ain't Zwinglian on commonly abused verses of scripture, in Denomination Specific Theology, and respond there, if you really want to debate that with somebody - probably not me, because the traditional churches have been thoroughly vindicated by scripture, and members of the traditional churches like myself are tired of people besmirching our faith on the basis of, among other things, the eisegetical misreading of a passage of scripture that by your own admission addressed the Pharisees, one that ignores what St. Paul wrote in three other epistles.
Also, Jesus Christ is the Word of God, according to John 1:1-18, and the New Testament canon was not even finalized until the late fourth century, when St. Athanasius, the Pope of Alexandria, who defended the doctrine of the Trinity at the Council of Nicaea and was then exiled by Constantius, the heir of Emperor Constantine, who had been converted from Christianity to Arianism, and remained in exile until the 460s, in his 39th Paschal Encyclical, became the first to outline the 27 books of the New Testament we regard as canonical.
Firstly, that’s not what “High Church” means. The term “High Church” has no relationship to architecture - I know High Church Anglicans who celebrate the liturgy in their living room.
Secondly, world’s oldest surviving cathedral was built in 53 AD and thus predates most of the books of the New Testament. And the three most splendid cathedrals in existence, the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, Holy Etchmiadzin in Armenia and Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, were built in phases starting in the fourth century, with most of the current structure of Hagia Sophia and Holy Etchmiadzin dating from the sixth century..
But I am glad that we have continued to glorify God by building ever grander and more beautiful churches, both on a small scale in the form of glorious chapels, and on a large scale in the form of splendid cathedrals, and its a pity you are unable or unwilling to recognize how architecture can be used to glorify Christ our True God.