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Isaiah45_9
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Source please.Unless I have misunderstood their theology, it appears to me that the Orthodox believe that EVERYONE is immaculately conceived. Sort of.
Source please.Unless I have misunderstood their theology, it appears to me that the Orthodox believe that EVERYONE is immaculately conceived. Sort of.
This forum. But I want to be clear on what I’m saying.Source please.
If I have misunderstood, please explain where my error lies.Unless I have misunderstood their theology, it appears to me that the Orthodox believe that EVERYONE is immaculately conceived. Sort of.
Yep.If we [all] inherited the loss of sanctifying grace, I can only conclude that all conceptions are hell bound until a means of sanctifying grace is installed. For without it, it is impossible to enter heaven. I mean, after all that’s why we baptize infants.
How do you propose we do this? There must be water, sprinkled or poured, for it to be a valid baptism. And chrism as well.If that is the case, how come we are not [then] baptizing at the moment we learn of conception?
Well, that’s why I think there ought to be an urgency to getting our infants baptized.Are we not [then] guilty of possessing a knowledge that can save a soul and install a means of sanctifying grace?
Not really. I think you are trying to create some sort of dilemma where none exists.But do you see what is being said here?
God commands us to be fruitful and multiply.
and then on the other hand we say:
This is a nonsequitur.We don’t have sanctifying grace even though we are being obedient to a command.
We couldn’t say he was merciful unless he offered us some way to be redeemed…How can we say God is merciful when what is being proposed is an eternity in hell with no culpability of the soul being condemned?
Thank you for saying that!!!And if we say that some aren’t then can we say that they all aren’t? Or if we say that some are, shouldn’t we just as easily be able to say that all are?
I think the Good Thief story does give insight to this topic, after all.Well, heaven was not available until Jesus.
CCC 1026
In light of this, when we take into consideration Christ’s statement of ““unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.”
It is then understood that all who enter the Kingdom of God have been born of water and spirit.
I don’t know of any exceptions to this statement that includes an absolute: “unless”…
I think you might be correct in this, and I was wrong in a previous post.Scripture is silent on this. So those who say, definitively, “The Good Thief went to heaven without being baptized” are adding to Scripture.
Similarly, those who say, definitively, “The Good Thief was baptized!” are adding to Scripture.
We simply do not know. Thus, it is* an option* to say “He was baptized” or “He wasn’t baptized”, as both are entirely possible, given the silence of Scripture on this.
I don’t think is a good idea to look at the OT in this matter for the simple reason that in the OT and any time before Jesus entered in heaven right after his death, Heaven was closed for everyone. No one could go into heaven so there is no point in baptism in the OT because heaven is close. It is not until Jesus himself opens the doors of heaven for human that baptism becomes relevant.I think the Good Thief story does give insight to this topic, after all.
I don’t know of any magisterial statements that contadict the absoluteness of the necessity of Sacramental Baptism, either. If so, it is forbidden to claim that someone is saved through blood or desire, after Jesus committed his disciples to go out and Baptize. That would be a contradiction.
I am not completely clear on the following and do invite corrections, but in regards to the holy men and woman of the Old Testament, they did not know of Baptism, so they also could not have a desire for it. Not all of them shed their blood for Christ. But they are saved under a totally different dispensation, that of circumcision and the Mosaic law. They have to wait in the Abode of the Dead until Christ completes His salvific sacrififice. When Jesus enters this abode, on the day of His death, it will become Paradise, and the righteous who are there will raise up with Him on the third day.
Jesus told the Good Thief that: you will be with me tonight in Paradise. Thus, the Good Thief was not Baptized, but saved under the Old Law.
Whether or not all men currently in Heaven have been Baptized depends on whether the holy men and women of the Old Testament are miraculously Baptized with real and natural water after their deaths. I don’t know.
The necessity of Baptism applies absolutely after Christ made it binding, subsequent to His Ressurection, so before that commission no “exception” was required; the Old Law was required. The Old Law now avails us nothing, because it has been fulfilled and completed in Christ.
Anyway, that is my basic understanding.
On Mom’s belly of courseHow do you propose we do this? There must be water, sprinkled or poured, for it to be a valid baptism. And chrism as well.
I agree.Well, that’s why I think there ought to be an urgency to getting our infants baptized.
How can you say there is no dilemma, when a couple of posts before you said that we are born without sanctifying grace.Not really. I think you are trying to create some sort of dilemma where none exists.![]()
You agreed. And still you see no dilemma in millions of souls going to hellIf we [all] inherited the loss of sanctifying grace, I can only conclude that all conceptions are hell bound until a means of sanctifying grace is installed. For without it, it is impossible to enter heaven. I mean, after all that’s why we baptize infants.
See above. By the way, non-sequitur does come from “sequitur” which is the conclusion of an inference. An inference is the process of reaching a conclusion about something from known facts.This is a nonsequitur.
For those that are baptized.We couldn’t say he was merciful unless he offered us some way to be redeemed…
and, yet! He did!
It is important to note that this is not a magisterial teaching. Quanto Conficiamur Moerore and Singulari Quadem are letters to cardinals, not addressed to all the faithful, and thus not infallible.there is also this magisterial teaching: “Because God knows, searches and clearly understands the minds, hearts, thoughts, and nature of all, his supreme kindness and clemency do not permit anyone at all who is not guilty of deliberate sin to suffer eternal punishments.” (Blessed Pope Pius IX, 1863, Quanto Conficiamur Moerore 7)
It seems that this Magisterial teaching excludes infants from suffering eternal punishments, unless I’m missing something. What do you think?
Then mom is getting baptized, not baby. (And if she’s already been baptized, all she’s getting is wet.)On Mom’s belly of course.
It would be if we believed the millions of souls go to hell.And still you see no dilemma in millions of souls going to hell![]()
Nope.However, what you are saying is that unborn babies lack sanctifying grace and therefore go to hell.
Or quite possibly will be granted mercy by Christ and serve their time in Purgatory with regret and unbelievable pain and remorse for what they did.No one can know for certainty, but I would hope so. The miscarried children and unbaptized, I can only hope, have a place in heaven and will grow older. The same for aborted children. Their mothers, hopefully, will have deeply regretted “giving them up,” while their true murderers, the abortionists, will burn in hell and hear their screaming cries for all eternity.
Do Catholics believe that a person, particularly an infant or, even more so, an unborn infant, through no fault of their own and not having committed any (knowable) sin, DESERVES to go to hell due only to having inherited original sin? IOW, the sins of the fathers (and mothers) are automatically revisited on their children? If so, does this not seem to convey the letter of the law rather than the spirit of the law?Nope.
I said we deserve hell.
Not that we’re going there if we’re unbaptized.
Yes, meltzerboy. The CC believes that not a single person (save 1) deserves heaven. Only those who are pure, with God’s sanctifying grace infused in their soul, can enter heaven.Do Catholics believe that a person, particularly an infant or, even more so, an unborn infant, through no fault of their own and not having committed any (knowable) sin, DESERVES to go to hell due only to having inherited original sin?
No. The sins of the parents are not automatically revisited on their children.IOW, the sins of the fathers (and mothers) are automatically revisited on their children? If so, does this not seem to convey the letter of the law rather than the spirit of the law?
As usual I find your posts lucid, intelligent, knowledgeable and charitable, and I am in agreement with most of what I’ve read on this thread that you’ve posted.Yes, meltzerboy. The CC believes that not a single person (save 1) deserves heaven. Only those who are pure, with God’s sanctifying grace infused in their soul, can enter heaven.
No. The sins of the parents are not automatically revisited on their children.
However, the effects of their sins are indeed revisited upon their children.
And that’s quite logical. Consequential. Natural.
We see that in other areas–if parents receive an inheritance, and then squander it…the natural effects of their sin (extravagant spending) is limned in their children’s subsequent poverty.