Actually, if the children burn in hell like St. Augustine said they would, then most of the time its because their parents either were not Catholic or were indifferent in which case odds are those people will be in hell and they would be together.
I won’t touch that one with a 50 ft. pole.
For 2000 years, you will not find the Church fathers instructing people to read their Bibles. Why? Because 1) the vast majority couldn’t, 2) the ones that could could potentially not understand it, 3) the lack of understanding was used by heretics who claimed the Church was a lie and that people should just follow the Bible, which conveniently only the founders of the heresies could read.
It was the duty of the Church to teach the Word of God to the people and the early church did that.
rc.net/wcc/readings/fathers.htm
The early church Fathers on the Scriptures
“Ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ.”
Jerome, c. 347-420
Introduction: Reading Scripture with the early church fathers
The Nourishing Bread of Scripture - how the early church fathers approached scripture study
The Scriptures are one book in Christ, by Irenaeus, Hilary, Augustine, and Hugh of St. Victor
The Four Gospels, by Irenaeus
Every Page of the Bible is a Hymn to Christ, by Augustine
Guide to the Discovery of Scripture, by Origen
The Two Meanings of the Bible, by Origen
These Words are the Word of God, by Origen
Prayer is Answering the Word of God, by Isidore, Augustine, and Jerome
The Psalms: Medicine for the Heart, by Basil the Great
Beyond the literal sense to the deeper meaning of Scripture, by Maximus the Confessor
The Fighter’s Handbook for the Conquest of the Kingdom, by Maximus the Confessor
At the Garden Gate, by John Damascene
Also, if you would have read your Baltimore Catechism, you would have seen that each teaching had Scripture references beside it.
catholicity.com/baltimore-catechism/lesson01.html
Also see here:
ourladyswarriors.org/faith/bc3-12.htm
Q. 561. Must we ourselves seek in the Scriptures and traditions for what we are to believe?
A. We ourselves need not seek in the Scriptures and traditions for what we are to believe. God has appointed the Church to be our guide to salvation and we must accept its teaching us our infallible rule of faith.
The Baltimore Catechism seems to contradict “Ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ.”
Jerome, c. 347-420