We are also required to assent to the teaching of the theologians where it is morally unanimous and certain. These certain teachings are a result of speculative theology…or a blend of speculative and positive theology.
Well, we are required to believe the unanimous consensus of the Fathers (as a witness to the Apostolic Tradition), and there are certain truths that are proximate to the faith (i.e., you cannot deny them without denying a dogma); e.g., the existence of Adam and Eve. But I don’t agree that we must assent per se to the teachings of theologians; hence, the statement from JPII that there is no dual magisterium (the pope and bishops being one… the only genuine one, and theologians being the other, false claimants). Theologians have no authority whatsoever. Please provide some quote from the magisterium to back up your chaim, or at least give an example.
Limbo is not one of these…unless one wants to put unbaptised babies in the fire of hell. If one denies Limbo…and does not then put the unbaptised who lack the use of reason in the fires of hell…then he must put them in Heaven. This denies the dogma you quoted above.
This is not exactly what some modern theologians are saying. They are not denying that anyone who departs this world in original sin is deprived of the vision of God. Rather, they are hoping that God somehow cleanses them extra-sacramentally before death, e.g., by a vicarious baptism of desire (of the Church in general or by someone specific). Personally, I don’t buy it, but I cannot deny it is possible, nor can I say it is contrary to Church teaching.
Please explain this further…I don’t know what “GIFT” is…although I have some idea. I believe Pope Pius XI was quite clear in Casti Connubii in this area…
GIFT is a method whereby the sperm of the husband is placed in the filopean tube of the wife who is ovulating. They then engage in the conjugal act to muddy the waters so that it isn’t clearly replacement. At the time when it was first introduced, details were sketchy, so Rome said they would investigate it and rule at a later time. That was maybe 15 years ago. Still no word. In the mean time, since there is a doubt of law, some Catholic hospitals allow it. IMHO, it is replacement, and needs to be condemned.
I don’t see how that helps you defend the possible abandonment of Limbo. It is defending a truth…but not defining it. Do you think a condemnation like this could be wrong?
The comdemnation isn’t wrong, since we really don’t know what happens, and it is not safe to deny the existence of limbo. Even the modern theologians are not denying the possibility of its existence, only that they hope God finds another way. Personally, I think the modern trend is spurrious and based on a false notion that God somehow owes us heaven.
Great debate!