R Siscoe,
The explanation Ven.Mary of Agreda gives for the salvation of the Holy Innocents is interesting in a couple of ways. First of all, it shows that neither she nor her spiritual advisors saw them as an example of baptism of blood. It’s always been my understanding that they are to be grouped with the Old Testament righteous, like the Holy Maccabees, and that their situation doesn’t address the question of baptism’s necessity since its promulgation by the Savior and the inception of the New Covenant in his Blood. Second, it seems remarkably like Luther’s proposed explanation of how baptized children who die before the age of reason are able to make the (to him) necessary explicit act of faith in Christ as Savior.
I apologize for dissecting your posts in this way, but what you’ve written in posts # 54 and #55 raises a few points that are best answered in this piecemeal fashion.
Ordinarily no one receives the grace of baptism proleptically.
What do you mean by the “grace of baptism” here? There is no question that God grants graces prior to any desire on our part – it’s only by virtue of his grace that we are capable of any good action at all, including the desire for grace. In this sense, then, any desire for baptism or any action of our wills ordered toward the reception of the sacrament is evidence of actual graces given proleptically. Whether the grace of justification differs from sanctifying grace, and if so how, is not relevant at this point, but it appears to be common teaching that these are also given proleptically at least sometimes. And I do mean
proleptically, in anticipation of the actual reception of the sacrament, not simply at some point after which baptism is supposed to occur but may not for some reason or other.
These, however, are not what I meant by the grace of baptism. Although it’s true that baptism imparts sanctifying grace, so do all the other sacraments when received worthily; baptism justifies, but so do the sacraments of Penance and Extreme Unction. The unique grace of Baptism is that it opens the gates of the kingdom of heaven by rebirth as a member of the Mystical Body of the one Man who is able to ascend to heaven (John 3:13). And it’s this unique grace that is available only through baptism with water. So you have misunderstood me when you thought that I …
have admitted that desire for the sacrament can give the grace of the sacrament proleptically.
*1. We both admit that no one can receive the grace of the sacrament without actually receiving the sacrament. *[Yes, although, it appears we mean different things by this, as I’ve explained above. And it surprises me to see you state this; above you said that “ordinarily” no one receives the grace of baptism proleptically. Are you now saying that everyone who is granted sanctifying grace and justification actually does receive baptism before death? ]
- *We also know that no one falls from grace without committing a mortal sin. *
- Therefore, since a person who dies in a state of grace is saved, why not admit the possibility that a person can be saved without baptism … ?*
Huh? Instead of concluding that your first premiss is wrong, why don’t you see this as an argument for what I’ve been saying all along: that no one dies in a state of grace who has not received the sacrament of baptism?
Then if we accept this theoretical possibility, we will not have to reject all of the Catechisms that explicitly teach Baptism of desire.
No, we won’t, but we will have to reject the Gospel of St. John, the dogmatic definitions on the necessity of baptism with water for salvation, and any catechisms that have taught rightly on this doctrine.
You have suggested a parallel between the necessity of baptism and the necessity of the Eucharist. You’re right that the Church has never interpreted “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man …” to mean that Communion is absolutely necessary for salvation. But the requirement to receive the Body and Blood presupposes membership in the Church; what one member lacks can be supplied by the other members in union with the Head, so that the desire to obey, or even the will to obey implicit in continuing membership, is sufficient when actual fulfillment is impossible to an individual. The same can’t be said in the case of baptism, since membership in the Mystical Body is precisely what the unbaptized person lacks
I was quoting the Gospel from memory, but as you say, St. John does speak of being born “again” [or “from above”]. He also says however, in response to Nicodemus’s asking how this could be possible: “Amen, amen I say to you, no one can enter the kingdom of God without being born of water and Spirit.”
[to be continued]