You speak of faith as though you had yours and I had mine, which is flatly false. Any man who rejects even one article of the faith has neither living faith nor lifeless faith, but simply holds to his own opinion, which is in error, as St. Thomas Aquinas demonstrates. See
here.
I am not the one advocating a presumptuous analysis, you are. As you know, our Blessed Mother is the exception to the rule, she having received a “singular” grace; and the “unbounded love” to which you refer has indeed made a gracious and loving accommodation for those who die in the state of original sin
only, which we call by the name of Limbo. Indeed, Almighty God is both merciful
and just. If there is no Limbo, then the sacrament of Baptism is entirely unnecessary, which contradicts the teaching of our Blessed Lord.
Matthew 28:19-20.
If you study the development of the doctrine of original sin, you will see that the doctrine of Limbo is in fact the milder, more loving view taught by the great theologians regarding the
punishment due to original sin, against the doctrine set forth by St. Augustine.
Again, I would like to stress the point that this subject only gives us difficulty because it happens to involve infants, even those in the womb, who have not committed any actual sins. But if you admit an exception for infants in the womb, then you must admit an exception for children living outside the womb, and even therefore any child up to the elusive age of reason. However, the fact is that we are not at all talking about some speculative “theology of infant deaths,” but rather the infallible teaching on ORIGINAL SIN, which it seems you have not accepted with the virtue of faith or simply don’t understand.
Just out of curiosity, are you in favor of admitting to Holy Communion divorced and remarried Catholics who have not had their prior marriages declared null?
If you ever want to know the truth about Limbo (with ample magisterial authority cited) then listen to this sermon:
audiosancto.org/sermon/20131110-Limbo-of-the-Infants.html
You might also read the
article on Limbo from the Catholic Encyclopedia.