I like my iPad and Biblegateway better, and never liked that hymn.
The point is that there's nothing wrong with Tradition or traditions, unless they go against the clear word of God.
Scripture, for example, never enumerates a number of books for a fixed Canon of Scripture. So how do we even have this rather neat, organized list of writings which we have come to receive as the inspired and authoritative written word of God? Well, if have a basic understanding of history and are honest, it's a received tradition. On that I certainly have no intention of doing away with; it's a pretty important one for me.
How one administers the Sacrament of the Table, on the other hand, is a bit less important. I grew up doing the small plastic cup of grape juice and miniature wafer squares, today I'm a bit more partial of going up to the altar rail, kneeling, and receiving the bread and drinking wine from the common cup. That's preference though, and both are perfectly valid. Intinction is another method. Roman Catholics say it has to be unleavened bread, Orthodox say it should be leavened; personally I think that's a moot issue.
Where I do draw the line is when you are able to use bread and fruit of the vine but instead do something to be "cool" like Doritos and Sprite (this happened a couple times at youth events when I was younger). While I'm sure that under certain extreme circumstances,
sure; but otherwise it comes across as at best irreverent and at worst it sets a horrid example to others concerning the sanctity of the Sacrament. That's not religious snootery, it's not making a mountain of a "man made tradition" molehill: it's taking seriously that when our Lord said "This is My Body" and "This is My Blood" and "Do this in remembrance of Me" it wasn't just Him speaking worthless bosh, but was actually establishing something for His Church that is to be done, and done with the greatest degree of sanctity possible.
There is a difference between differences in form, and total disrespect of the Blessed Sacrament.
-CryptoLutheran