A theological argument FOR abortion

  • Thread starter Thread starter R_Daneel
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Pardon, what is embarrasing about not being able to answer the question as to whether or not unbaptised childeren go to heaven.
You used very mild and gentle words. Why not use the correct phrases? Unbaptized zygotes, fetuses or children either go to heaven for eternal bliss or burn in hell forever? Don’t be shy, and call a spade a spade. All of a sudden it is not a “minor” question any more.
There’s nothing embarrasing about it, it’s a genuinly open question as there is some tension in the data we have. The fact is, God didn’t make this one entirely clear, there for what we have is opinion not fact.
If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information…
 
You used very mild and gentle words. Why not use the correct phrases? Unbaptized zygotes, fetuses or children either go to heaven for eternal bliss or burn in hell forever? Don’t be shy, and call a spade a spade. All of a sudden it is not a “minor” question any more.

If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information…
Again, the fact that you really don’t understand theology is wreaking havok with your arguments. The correct answer is, we don’t know what happens to an aborted child. All we do know is that whatever the solution is, it’s the perfect and only solution. For our part, we hope in and place these childeren upon God’s mercy.

Any answer other than this is theologically untenable, the question simply can not be answered.
 
Can you provide a practical reason why we should know what happens to unbaptized babies, given that we can do nothing about it whatsoever?
 
You used very mild and gentle words. Why not use the correct phrases? Unbaptized zygotes, fetuses or children either go to heaven for eternal bliss or burn in hell forever? Don’t be shy, and call a spade a spade. All of a sudden it is not a “minor” question any more.

If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information…
Nice try.
 
R Daneel: why do you selectively choose what to respond to, and ignore other responses?
 
You used very mild and gentle words. Why not use the correct phrases? Unbaptized zygotes, fetuses or children either go to heaven for eternal bliss or burn in hell forever? Don’t be shy, and call a spade a spade. All of a sudden it is not a “minor” question any more.
If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information…
Perhaps they spend a brief moment in purgatory to expiate the stain of original sin. Perhaps He, as the Ultimate Judge, discerns their inherent qualities and if so desired, they are granted the baptism of blood. Perhaps aborted children are considered martyrs of the faith.

The Church DOES have an answer-but you don’t like it, and so declare it “no answer”. :rolleyes: (Surely you aren’t trying to make Him conform to your rules…are you?)

The answer is found in the catechism, which, if you have read it as much as you say, surely you’ve seen it.
1261 As regards children who have died without Baptism, the Church can only entrust them to the mercy of God, as she does in her funeral rites for them. Indeed, the great mercy of God who desires that all men should be saved, and Jesus’ tenderness toward children which caused him to say: “Let the children come to me, do not hinder them,”( Mk 10 14; cf. 1 Tim 2:4.) allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who have died without Baptism. All the more urgent is the Church’s call not to prevent little children coming to Christ through the gift of holy Baptism.
1283 With respect to children who have died without Baptism, the liturgy of the Church invites us to trust in God’s mercy and to pray for their salvation.
Trust God to do His job as far as unbaptized children of ANY age. He made the rules; I’m sure He knows how to abide by them. Spend the energy you’d otherwise use pondering their judgment to affect your own. Obviously, it’s of great concern to you.
 
If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information…
There are around 7 billion people on the planet, and I can’t definitely tell you whether any of them are going to heaven or hell. Somehow I manage to survive.

A physicist can’t tell you the exact position and momentum of any object in the universe. Link: Uncertainty principle I suppose you could write “If physicists cannot answer a question of such importance then they are not much of a source of information…”.

Total knowledge is not required to get on with life.

Are you made of straw? It is hard to believe you genuinely believe what you type.
 
I don’t see how that tracks. It’s a sin to wish someone to go to Hell, and imperfect contrition is adequate for the sacrament of reconciliation as far as I know.
Well, we need to remember that Shakespeare was in Anglican England, so even though he was probably Catholic he was presenting the play to Anglicans, and I don’t know Anglican theology. Beyond that, as I said, Hamlet wasn’t exactly a bastion of morality.
 
Are you made of straw? It is hard to believe you genuinely believe what you type.
R Daneel’s question is completely legitimate and intelligent, although Catholicism does not actually uphold the premises that he uses in his theological argument.
 
R Daneel’s question is completely legitimate and intelligent, although Catholicism does not actually uphold the premises that he uses in his theological argument.
I agree that the question of what happens to the souls of the unborn who die is legitimate. I assume that is the question you are referring to?

My post was not in response to that question, but rather the claim he made and I quoted prior to my response – “If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information”. This is not legitimate or intelligent. He is just desperately searching for something to complain about rather than admitting that his original assertion in this thread has been refuted. He is trying to save face, imo.
 
My post was not in response to that question, but rather the claim he made and I quoted prior to my response – “If the Church cannot answer a question of such importance it is not much of a source of information”. This is not legitimate or intelligent. He is just desperately searching for something to complain about rather than admitting that his original assertion in this thread has been refuted. He is trying to save face, imo.
I don’t think such personal judgments can be made based on internet posts. I think the main point of contention in that statement is that the claim that limbo is “of great importance” is not really accurate.
 
I don’t think such personal judgments can be made based on internet posts.
What is the big deal? I said “imo”, or “In my opinion”. Others have accused him of trolling.
I think the main point of contention in that statement is that the claim that limbo is “of great importance” is not really accurate.
The problem I have is that the OP is making an obviously silly claim that the Church is not much of a source of information if it can’t tell him where those souls are going.

If you told physicists they aren’t a source of much information because of the uncertainty principle, do you think they would be impressed?
If you told biologists they aren’t a source of much information because they can’t cure cancer or various diseases, or can’t engineer a new species from scratch, do you think they would be impressed?
If you told historians they aren’t a source of much information because the vast majority of the details of history will never be known, do you think they would be impressed?

Obviously the Church can be a source of much information even if it doesn’t know the destiny of anyone’s soul – not just those souls in question by the OP. Everyone on this board knows that including the OP so it is hard to take him seriously at this point.

His original post had some merit, but it was refuted and he has long since delved into inanity. Why should I pretend otherwise?
 
You know, this might be a good theological arguement for abortion…so long as you ignore the clear commandment, “Thou shalt not kill”.
 
Again, the fact that you really don’t understand theology is wreaking havok with your arguments. The correct answer is, we don’t know what happens to an aborted child. All we do know is that whatever the solution is, it’s the perfect and only solution. For our part, we hope in and place these childeren upon God’s mercy.

Any answer other than this is theologically untenable, the question simply can not be answered.
Ok. My point is this. There are two possibilities, the zygote, fetus, child (all 3 are important) which “die” due to any cause (natural or volitional events) are either admitted to heaven, or are condemned to hell (there is no Biblical support for the purgatory, and it is supposed to be “way-station” anyhow). Jesus said: “no one gets to the Father, except through me”, which is a very strong indication that they will end up in hell (along with all those who never heard of Jesus, or lived before him). This presents a serious moral problem vis-a-vis God’s “justice” (and also love). Those beings do not “deserve” to go either heaven (no one ‘deserves’ to get there, allegedly) and they do not “deserve” to be tortured forever (since they, personally, did not commit anything). Of course, the Church does teach the “invincible ignorance” - offically. Which clearly indicates that those “babies” will get to heaven.

The dilemma is serious. You may say that the “original sin” condemns everyone to the fiery furnace of hell, and maybe you say that this is “God’s justice”. If so, God’s “justice” is a mockery - temporally speaking. A just judge never, under any circumstances will condemn anyone for the acts of someone else. The concept of the “original sin” destroys God’s alleged “justice” - which assertion is an official teaching of the Church (God is perfectly “just”… etc).

The Church is wishy-washy on the subject. It says that we can only “trust” God. In my opinion. this is a usual cop-out game.
 
The problem I have is that the OP is making an obviously silly claim that the Church is not much of a source of information if it can’t tell him where those souls are going.

If you told physicists they aren’t a source of much information because of the uncertainty principle, do you think they would be impressed?
If you told biologists they aren’t a source of much information because they can’t cure cancer or various diseases, or can’t engineer a new species from scratch, do you think they would be impressed?
If you told historians they aren’t a source of much information because the vast majority of the details of history will never be known, do you think they would be impressed?
None of those unanswerable questions have “moral” implcations. None of those sciences claim that they have the ultimate authority, and infallibility answering their problems. The Church “claims” to be the sole source and arbiter of “moral teachings”. It claims to be infallible on moral matters. This is why the dilemma is different.
 
Once again, you respond to the short responses that are easy to nitpick, while ignoring the annotated ones that refute exactly what you’re saying.
 
You know, this might be a good theological arguement for abortion…so long as you ignore the clear commandment, “Thou shalt not kill”.
Well, this commandment is supposed to say: “thou shalt not murder”. Murder is the intentional taking of a human life. Yet, there are exceptions to this (self defense, war, etc…) - so the rule is not absolute. Maybe the intentional taking of a human life is ok, if the sole aim is “help” that being to eternal bliss. After all the Catholic Church tortured the alleged witches until they renounced the devil, and then the Church burned them while they were in the state of “grace”. So this practice was conducted by the Church.
 
Well, this commandment is supposed to say: “thou shalt not murder”. Murder is the intentional taking of a human life.
This is what abortion is, intentional taking of innocent human life.
Yet, there are exceptions to this (self defense, war, etc…) - so the rule is not absolute. Maybe the intentional taking of a human life is ok, if the sole aim is “help” that being to eternal bliss. After all the Catholic Church tortured the alleged witches until they renounced the devil, and then the Church burned them while they were in the state of “grace”. So this practice was conducted by the Church.
Nonsense. Pure, unadulterate nonsense.
 
None of those unanswerable questions have “moral” implcations. None of those sciences claim that they have the ultimate authority, and infallibility answering their problems. The Church “claims” to be the sole source and arbiter of “moral teachings”. It claims to be infallible on moral matters. This is why the dilemma is different.
There is no moral dilemma here – murder is wrong. The question of what happens to the souls of unbaptized infants is theological, not moral. The answer in no way affects your salvation. You could live your life never knowing, and it wouldn’t change whether you’d be a saint or a scoundrel.
Well, this commandment is supposed to say: “thou shalt not murder”. Murder is the intentional taking of a human life. Yet, there are exceptions to this (self defense, war, etc…) - so the rule is not absolute. Maybe the intentional taking of a human life is ok, if the sole aim is “help” that being to eternal bliss. After all the Catholic Church tortured the alleged witches until they renounced the devil, and then the Church burned them while they were in the state of “grace”. So this practice was conducted by the Church.
The Church has done no such thing. Perhaps individual Catholics. See the example about the Conquistador.
Ok. My point is this. There are two possibilities, the zygote, fetus, child (all 3 are important) which “die” due to any cause (natural or volitional events) are either admitted to heaven, or are condemned to hell (there is no Biblical support for the purgatory, and it is supposed to be “way-station” anyhow).
The known ends of man are heaven and hell. This does not mean that there are not other ends, it is just that they are unknown.
Jesus said: “no one gets to the Father, except through me”, which is a very strong indication that they will end up in hell (along with all those who never heard of Jesus, or lived before him).
Please look up “baptism of blood,” a teaching of the Church regarding those unjustly killed but are not baptized.
The dilemma is serious. You may say that the “original sin” condemns everyone to the fiery furnace of hell, and maybe you say that this is “God’s justice”. If so, God’s “justice” is a mockery - temporally speaking. A just judge never, under any circumstances will condemn anyone for the acts of someone else. The concept of the “original sin” destroys God’s alleged “justice” - which assertion is an official teaching of the Church (God is perfectly “just”… etc).
You don’t understand what the teaching of Original Sin pertains to. It is the reason why man is inherently sinful, not a pre-judgment. Perhaps you are not aware that Christ is the expiation for our sins?

God bless.
 
None of those unanswerable questions have “moral” implcations. None of those sciences claim that they have the ultimate authority, and infallibility answering their problems. The Church “claims” to be the sole source and arbiter of “moral teachings”. It claims to be infallible on moral matters. This is why the dilemma is different.
Time to go to bed, so I’ll answer quickly. I agree with the general sentiment that Catholics tend to overstate their authority/knowledge. Nevertheless, you haven’t demonstrated with any clarity that not knowing the final destination of the those souls is of any significant detriment to the Church. If God exists, then obviously he knows the answer. And I think it is pretty obvious Christians don’t need to know the answer to live a fulfilling Christian life. The answer may be as boring as God already knows those souls and whether or not they deserve heaven, even though they did not live out their lives on earth. And if that is the answer, it doesn’t affect anyone’s life in the slightest. If God felt it important for us to know, he could have spelled it out for us. But he didn’t, and I would dare say it would be disobedient of us to second guess God and act like this issue is of vital importance to us when we are perfectly capable of getting along without knowing.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top