U
una_fides
Guest
Actually it’s not an inconsistency because you are essentially comparing apples and oranges and saying that since they are both fruit then they must be the same thing. *Adults *are capable of making an act of perfect charity and are capable of having supernatural faith in God. Infants are not capable of having such a desire as has been settled by Rome and this fact is even attested to in the modern limbo commission document.Sorry that I missed the implicit answer to my Native American question. But I still think you are erecting several fences that, when connected, cause problems in other areas. For instance, you say that the Native Americans of long ago had the possibility of salvation because of an implicit desire of baptism. This was despite the insurmountable gap in that they did not have the instruments at hand to even know of the Gospel.
But suddenly, when it comes to modern-day infants, you say that this same “implicit desire of baptism” is not possible for them, even though they too have an insurmountable gap in that they do not have the instruments at hand to know of the Gospel.
I think that illustrates the inconsistency.
I do see where you are going with this… At least I think this is where you are going… Every one has the possibility of salvation, so teaches the Church today, and therefore, some conclude that would also have to apply to infants who are incapable of making an act of faith themselves. A few thoughts. First, all infants do have the possibility of salvation. They could be baptized. Nothing hinders any infant from baptism except the will of the parent. Now if the parent is invincibly ignorant concerning baptism, does that mean the child should suffer for something that the parent did not know of? That seems to be the question asked and the question with which many have difficulty. Though I do think part of the problem lies in how the question is worded. I think the question to ask is whether any child deserves to be saved or whether any child deserves baptism by his very nature as a human being? Since in Adam we all sin, and since our human nature is in a fallen condition, and since baptism is a free and undeserved gift from God, one can only conclude that no one, myself included, deserves to be filled with the sanctifying grace that his soul is lacking at conception. Yes, this grace is available to infants had their parents not sinned. Will God judge these infants, however? I do not believe so, since they have not committed any actual sins. They do not receive the special grace, the special gift, which they again do not deserve, but at the same time they do not receive any punishment either which again they do not personally deserve through any direct act of sin on their part.But to take it further, let’s cross the two situations together, and examine the case of a Native American baby of long ago who had the misfortune to fall into both camps that I’ve presented above. Now, according to your beliefs, at what age would that child go from having NO hope of salvation (because he was an unbaptized infant) to a person who had SOME hope of salvation (because he would be in your group of Native Americans who had at least a theoretical chance). Would you say the age of reason?
Sorry to get into such specifics, but can you see how this slamming of the door on unbaptized infants might paint us into a corner when that logic is pursued to its absolute ends?
Hence, limbo is such a perfect teaching. These souls live in eternal bliss, in the same unknowing state in which they left this world. They do not suffer from the punishment of loss of the beatific vision like the other souls in hell since they never had the capacity to understand such a thing. They also do not suffer the torments since they never committed any actual sins. They are at peace and are in a blissful state. Why anyone would find such a merciful teaching troublesome is beyond me.