If God were to allow someone from Hell to appear to you to tell you they were in Hell and to warn you about it, and you knew confidently this was a revelation from God (by discernment of spirits and a good spiritual director) would you still pray for them?
I’m not saying it is acceptable to assume someone is in Hell and to forgo praying for them. The circumstance I’m talking about is slightly different.
That is kind of my point. If God has not already told the Church about
a single person who is in Hell but did tell us quite clearly that Hell is a possibility, it stands to reason that this particular information is not to our good…for what grace has God withheld from us? I would in particular not let a scary dream warn me away from prayer.
Consider this passage:
For such people are false apostles, deceitful workers, who masquerade as apostles of Christ. And no wonder, for even Satan masquerades as an angel of light. So it is not strange that his ministers also masquerade as ministers of righteousness. Their end will correspond to their deeds. 2 Cor. 11:13-15
This is a warning to be careful about revelations that claim to be from God. No, I would not listen to any revelation that told me not to pray for the dead. The evil one has too many reasons to give us directions like that. There is no reason to believe that the torments of the damned can be increased by prayers on their behalf, either. I cannot imagine a spiritual director telling me to believe a dream telling me to despair of the soul of someone who had my particular concern.
That wouldn’t be able to explain the level of knowledge the woman had, not only in theology, but the details of a real person. This was in the 1930’s, when most women had very little education. This was very likely written by her because it was found with her belongings and would have been identified by other sisters as her handwriting.
Well, that is if religious sisters actually found this letter. They could not have allowed it to be published with identifying details, lest the family of the deceased be upset by what it implied about their dearly departed. A pious writer could have written the note and attributed it to a deceased sister, too. Who can say?
The religious sisters of the 1930s often belonged to teaching orders; according to my grandmother’s generation, such teaching sisters were not uncommonly experts on detailing the perils of Hell to their students in vivid detail.
According to the letter, the author of the piece worked in an office prior to entering the convent, and her friend found a way to attract the interest of and marry wealth. Besides, Lake Garda was not a destination of the unwashed masses. Both young women would have been from the middle class or upper middle class, and would have had enough education to have known what the letter teaches about Hell.
I don’t think the level of education of the author speaks either for or against the authenticity of the story.