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Grace_Angel
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Not in my version of it. St Paul’s Publications, 1994.Limbo is in the CCC.
Grace Angel.
Not in my version of it. St Paul’s Publications, 1994.Limbo is in the CCC.
Absoultely so do I. And I imagine all the millions upon millions of mothers who have gone to their graves thinking the child they miscarried was lost to heaven forever, and to say that Limbo is a “nice place” Hell NO…Its should have been removed from conscious memory years and centuries ago and I hope that the person who first conceived of such a place, can see the anguish of women who have believed this. My own mother lost 4 in utero (miscarried) infants and one stillbirth and I have a sister who lived only hours and died before the priest got there. I have I have 3 in utero deaths. Limbo is for those who hav e nev er lost children. they are the onse insisting on Limbo. Ask any parent who has miscarried if they believe in Limbo or in a God of Mercy who would find His own way of rescuing their child./ Pharisees those who believe such.I know my father, who is a doctor, was grieving for a long time over one baby who he was treating and had to be rushed to hospital - it died suddenly en route without him or its parents having had a chance to give an emergency baptism.
I’d qualify anything that needlessly scars a person that much as a scare campaign.
Not in my version of it. St Paul’s Publications, 1994.
Grace Angel.
The current catechism permits hope that the child was saved, whereas the way many people have been taught about the unbaptised in the past (including Dad, obviously) permitted of no such hope.So, do you seriously think that catechism is a scare campaign???
He certainly did. In E.V 99. “your children are living in the Lord”John Paul 2 certainly said as much, while he was Pope - among other places in the Catechism!
Doctrines don’t change though, otherwise they wouldn’t be the truth. Allowing hope is not the same as changing the doctrine. It’s just saying, “Go ahead and hope. We don’t know either way, so there’s no harm in hoping.” In short, it’s a pacifier for people who struggle with a difficult doctrine. At least, that’s the way I see it.The current catechism permits hope that the child was saved, whereas the way many people have been taught about the unbaptised in the past (including Dad, obviously) permitted of no such hope.
May God bless you all!“If someone does not hold fast to this unity of Peter, can he imagine that he still holds the faith? If he [should] desert the chair of Peter upon whom the Church was built, can he still be confident that he is in the Church?” (The Unity of the Catholic Church 4; 1st edition [A.D. 251]).
Woohoo! :extrahappy:I thank everyone for their contributions to this thread! In my time here on this forum, including the other threads in which I have participated, I have come to a conclusion. If I am to know what the Church really teaches, I should trust the Church, which still exists today, to tell me that. I do not possess the intellect to sift through two thousand years of teachings and then use my private intrepretation to decide for myself what Church teaching really is. The latter technique is rather Protestant, it seems to me, and has the potential to lead to all kinds of schism and heresy.
Despite the claims of many on this forum, I am increasingly convinced that the Catholic Church is the one true Church. I look forward to learning more about it, and I deeply long to enter it someday. And, rather than be led astray by various people claiming to hold the true teachings of the Church, I will stick with what St. Cyprian of Carthage said:
May God bless you all!
Well, it’s a difficult doctrine for many, no doubt about it.Doctrines don’t change though, otherwise they wouldn’t be the truth. Allowing hope is not the same as changing the doctrine. It’s just saying, “Go ahead and hope. We don’t know either way, so there’s no harm in hoping.” In short, it’s a pacifier for people who struggle with a difficult doctrine. At least, that’s the way I see it.
Ditto that.Woohoo! :extrahappy:
God bless you too IP … just glad all our to-ing and fro-ing hasn’t scared you off![]()
When the official text was published in AAS those phrases were missing. Here’s Jimmy Akin’s commentary on what happened:He certainly did. In E.V 99. “your children are living in the Lord”
that says to me clearly that they are with Lord.
Grace Angel.
“should” seems a little ambiguous. Is there an actual moral obligation to baptize a dying child against the will of the parents such that it would be a sin to not do so? Anyone have any moral theology text or other text that speaks to that? I know it’s permitted, but is it obligatory?According to An Explanation of the Baltimore Catechism by Rev. Thomas L. Kinkead, 1891-1921, you do not need the permission of the parents to baptize a dying child.
“You cannot baptize a person against his will. Neither can you baptize an infant whose parents are unwilling to have the child baptized, or when the child will not be brought up in the Catholic religion. But if the child is dying, it can and should be baptized, even without the consent of the parents.”
If you cannot establish whether the child has already been baptized or baptized properly, of course you can and should baptize him conditionally.
I’m sure you already know this stuff anyway…
Maria
Okay, I looked it up in Moral Guidance: A Textbook in Principles of Conduct for Colleges and Universities by Edwin. F. Healy, S.J., S.T.D., 1942.“should” seems a little ambiguous. Is there an actual moral obligation to baptize a dying child against the will of the parents such that it would be a sin to not do so? Anyone have any moral theology text or other text that speaks to that? I know it’s permitted, but is it obligatory?
The Latin version of Pope John Paul II’s encyclical Evangelium vitae does lack the phrase “your child, who is now living in the Lord.” Still, this phrase, which John Paul II used in the original version of the encyclical, does *not *necessarily contradict the Catholic concept of limbo, for the souls in limbo are indeed living in the Lord. As St. Thomas Aquinas teaches, they are united with God through natural knowledge and love, and this state may be correctly described as life. After all, those children are not dead.When the official text was published in AAS those phrases were missing. Here’s Jimmy Akin’s commentary on what happened:
"An even more striking departure from prior teaching came in John Paul II’s 1995 encyclical Evangelium Vitae (section 99), where he wrote:
I would now like to say a special word to women who have had an abortion. . . . The Father of mercies is ready to give you his forgiveness and his peace in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. You will come to understand that nothing is definitively lost and you will also be able to ask forgiveness from your child, who is now living in the Lord.
"This would seem to affirm the salvation of children dying without baptism–or at least those who died by abortion–but there’s something very strange about this passage, because when the official, Latin version came out in Acta Apostolicae Sedes, the passage had been rephrased so that it read:
***I would now like to say a special word to women who have had an abortion. . . . The Father of mercies is ready to give you his forgiveness and his peace in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. To the same Father and his mercy you can with sure hope entrust your child. ***
"It would appear that the degree of departure from prior teaching in the original text was called to the attention of the pontiff, who then had the official Latin version altered. One would expect that the other versions of the text would be corrected in light of the Latin one and the prior text regarded as inauthentic, but I have seen individuals argue (I can’t see on what basis) that both texts enjoy official status.
“However that may be, both do continue to circulate, and in fact both are present on the Vatican’s own web site (here’s the first, here’s the second).”
jimmyakin.typepad.com/defensor_fidei/2006/10/limbo_in_limbo.html
Here are the referenced links to the diverging passages:
vatican.va/edocs/ENG0141/__P10.HTM
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp-ii_enc_25031995_evangelium-vitae_en.html
Please remember to mention this issue when citing his words, now that you know![]()
A recent example of this kind of presentation may be found in Pius XII’s Address to Italian Midwives, where he stated:
Here the pontiff affirms that a child cannot make the kind of personal act of charity needed to obtain sanctifying grace apart from baptism and thus, according to the clear implication of the text, such children cannot experience the beatific vision. The pontiff does not go into the fact that such children will not suffer (other documents do that) or affirm the idea of their natural happiness, but he does make it clear that such children will not be saved (in the proper sense of the term of receiving the beatific vision).If what We have said up to now concerns the protection and care of natural life, much more so must it concern the supernatural life, which the newly born receives with Baptism. In the present economy there is no other way to communicate that life to the child who has not attained the use of reason. Above all, the state of grace is absolutely necessary at the moment of death. Without it salvation and supernatural happiness—the beatific vision of God—are impossible. An act of love is sufficient for the adult to obtain sanctifying grace and to supply the lack of baptism; to the still unborn or newly born this way is not open. . . . so it is easy to understand the great importance of providing for the baptism of the child deprived of complete reason who finds himself in grave danger or at death’s threshold.
That was Church teaching (doctrine). It was not, however, Church dogma, and for some time (centuries, actually), theologians had been entertaining possible ways by which salvation could be achieved for such infants. These often centered on the idea that such children might experience a form of baptism of blood or baptism of desire.
Another time we can go into the mechanics of how these theories work, but as the Church’s understanding of baptism of desire progressed in the 19th and 20th centuries, related to a greater emphasis on the universality of God’s salvific will, the idea of limbo began to fall out of favor. This was clearly happening by the mid-20th century, and it may even be why Pius XII didn’t go further than he did in articulating limbo in his address to the midwives.
Mr. Akin is apparently unaware that this is certain doctrine. There is no chance that it is in error. It may not be strictly heretical to deny this doctrine as it is not yet de fide, but it is a mortal sin to knowingly deny it.That was Church teaching (doctrine). It was not, however, Church dogma, and for some time (centuries, actually), theologians had been entertaining possible ways by which salvation could be achieved for such infants.
If that were the case, then the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox would have it in their Tradition but they do not.
Limbo is NOT the unanimous consent of the Church Fathers.
Nothing could be farther from the truth.
This is somewhat related to what I personally think. My opinion is that there is a Limbo for those who die with the stain of original sin but no serious personal sin, but that we do not kow who that includes.People are confusing a couple issues. It is de fide that one must be cleansed of original sin in order to enter Heaven. It is also de fide that the pains of those who die without actual sin, but with original sin suffer lesser pains (if any). It is also de fide that Baptism cleanses one of original sin. It is also de fide that there are extra-scramental ways that this grace may be bestowed (Council of Trent said Baptism or the desire for it is necessary).
The idea that all infants who die without Baptism automatically go to Limbo because God definitely does not grant them that grace extra-sacramentally right before death falls on the theological spectrum under “common teaching” (sententia communis) which pertains still to the field of “free opinion,” and has been accepted by theologians generally. In other words, it has never been formally proposed as doctrine (sententia certa) of the Catholic Church. And it especially has never been definitively proclaimed as a dogma (de fide).
To definitively and infallibly declare the destination of any individual’s soul it would take a formal act of the solemn magisterium of the Supreme Pontiff–such as is exercised in the canonization process. This has not been done for all unbaptized infants.
What is the doctrine exactly to which you are referring. I can’t tell from the quote, and I will confess that I was too lazy to read the entire thread.Mr. Akin is apparently unaware that this is certain doctrine. There is no chance that it is in error. It may not be strictly heretical to deny this doctrine as it is not yet de fide, but it is a mortal sin to knowingly deny it.
If you could, I’d like to know what classification of doctrine this constitutes. My understanding is that the Pope teaches as a doctor of the Church when he isn’t otherwise speaking ex cathedra. Then again I don’t know where this quote came from and its context.Mr. Akin is apparently ignorant of the different classes of Church doctrine (as classified by the theologians). Because of this, Mr. Akin is completely discredited and he should not be trusted in these matters. He is not a theologian. Pius XII was a theologian and Pope.