G
Ghosty
Guest
You’ll have to explain to me what you mean by the Beatific Vision being based on “humanness”. You said that the unborn not receiving the Beatific Vision seems to make a new class of “humanity”, but I don’t see how that could be so given the nature of Grace and the Beatific Vision.Pelagianism has nothing to do with the Beatific Vision being based on ‘humanness.’
They can’t, and that is my point. They don’t “commit” Original Sin, either; it’s merely the privation of Grace.How can an unborn baby commit sins? Other than original sin?
My point was that Limbo is what Hell is for those who are not being punished for committed sins.
If they do receive Grace then they have the Beatific Vision. There’s no other answer possible that I’m aware of.What btw is the answer if they do receive Grace?
This is part of the problem, I think. Hell isn’t necessarily for those who CHOOSE to be seperated from God, it’s for those who ARE seperated from God. Grace is unity with God, lack of Grace is seperation. We don’t have to “choose” a lack of Grace; on the contrary we are all born without it. That is the limit of what we can say for certain; whether the unborn are given some kind of access to Grace is beyond our knowledge.Hell is for those who choose to be separated from God.
Again, the key is that Hell isn’t about “choice” per say, but about seperation from God. For most of us that is a result of a choice, but it’s not the “choice” that makes Hell.
We don’t know that they have such a choice. Quite simply, it’s utterly beyond the scope of our knowledge. If they choose Grace, then they could not in any sense be in Hell.If they choose to be united with God, then why would they go to the outside circle of Hell (Limbo) and not to Purgatory? Unless you are saying that Purgatory is the outside circle of Hell (Limbo)? Are you saying that Limbo is Purgatory?
Purgatory is something entirely different. It’s for those who have Grace but have unhealthy attachments to creatures. A Baptized infant, for example, wouldn’t experience Purgatory at all, and Purgatory is in no way related to Limbo; they are completely seperate and different ideas.
That’s because we can observe the choices adults make. An adult who rejects Baptism, or commits mortal sin, is clearly denying Grace on some level, so we have more information to work with. For the unborn all we have is the knowledge that they can’t enter Heaven without Grace. Period. Everything else is speculation.The trouble is that we have more specific notions for what happens to adults who die than for the unborn who die.
We do, it’s a Dogmatic point of fact. A number of Canons from the Council of Trent deal with this, here is just one:No we don’t know that.
Without Grace we quite simply can’t have eternal life. Period. Eternal life is the Beatific Vision.If anyone says that divine grace through Christ Jesus is given for this only, that man may be able more easily to live justly and to merit eternal life, as if by free will without grace he is able to do both, though with hardship and difficulty, let him be anathema.
The Church doesn’t have any such opinion; the Church says we don’t know one way or another. The Church states affirmatively that Original Sin alone, however, is enough to damn us to Hell, but with “unequal punishments”, i.e. Limbo versus the suffering of the “fires of Hell”. Whether or not the unborn are able to receive the Grace that cancels Original Sin or not is not something the Church has ruled on, nor one it holds an “opinion” on. Some Catholics have varying opinions, that’s all.But the Church has an opinion that the unborn who die will not receive the Grace to attain the Beatific Vision.
Myself I prefer to hold the opinion of non-assertion: I don’t know, and I’m quite comfortable with that.
Peace and God bless!