Hello all-
I wanted to get some dialogue going here. I have been thinking a lot lately about the Church’s historical holding to the concept of Limbo for the Unbaptized Infants. Now, if I have this right, the idea is that infants are born with the stain of original sin which would keep them from seeing the Beatific Vision should they die and be received into Heaven. So because they were not baptized, and the stain of Original Sin was not removed and babies cannot desire their own baptism, they cannot experience Heaven. Yet, because of their innocence and lack of committed sin, they experience Limbo where a natural happiness can be experienced, but not the euphoria of the Beatific Vision.
In Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s time as Prefect and Pope, he let it be known that his personal opinion is that the “theory” of Limbo needs to be thrown out due to “recent understandings of God’s Love and Salvation”. Yet, the need for a concept like Limbo is still there, otherwise you throw out the idea of Original Sin. I read the letter issued by the Theological Commission at the Vatican that Pope Benedict endorsed. Yet, the letter doesn’t throw out Limbo, it just tries to find a way to say that one can hope children are saved if they die without Baptism, yet Limbo remains a valid theory. It also says that Catholics MUST baptize their children as soon as possible (in a sort of way I interpret as either a “just in case” policy or “we may be wrong and Limbo may exist”?). So even the Theological Commission’s letter doesn’t really settle the matter.
I have tried to find any essays or books on this subject in today’s Church thinking, yet not much is out there. Ralph Martin covers it slightly in “Will Many Be Saved?”. Does anybody have any thoughts or recommendations for me to look? This is something I am really fascinated by and would like to read up a lot more on it.
The whole thing is confused. What I know is that until the 12th century, it was consensus that all unbaptized infants woulg to straight to hell, to experience fire. Augustine and many other saints knew that. It was even declared infallibly:
The XVI Council of Carthage (418) condemned the Pelagian fable that there is some place anywhere where infants who died without baptism live in happiness (Limbo).
The Council taught the Catholic doctrine that infants go into the fire to be eternally punished with the devil, being on the left hand at the judgement.
The teaching of Carthage was infallibly approved as a rule of the Faith by Pope Zosimus and Pope Innocent I and by the ecumenical councils, which were approved by other popes.
“It has been decided likewise that if anyone says that for this reason the Lord said: “In my house there are many mansions”: that it might be understood that in the kingdom of heaven there will be some middle place or some place anywhere where happy infants live who departed from this life without baptism, without which they cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven, which is life eternal, let him be anathema. For when the Lord says: “Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he shall not enter into the kingdom of God” [John 3:5], what Catholic will doubt that he will be a partner of the devil who has not deserved to be a coheir of Christ? For he who lacks the right part will without doubt run into the left [cf. Matt. 25:41,46].”
“Then he shall say to them also that shall be on his left: Depart from me, you cursed, into everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels… And these shall go away into everlasting punishment.” ( Matthew 25:41, 46)
Later the doctrine was changed.
“Pope Innocent’s teaching is to the effect that those dying with only original sin on their souls will suffer ‘no other pain, whether from material fire or from the worm of conscience, except the pain of being deprived forever of the vision of God.’ It should be noted, however, that this poena damni incurred for original sin implied, with Abelard and most of the early Scholastics, a certain degree of spiritual torment.” (Toner, Catholic Encyclopedia 1910, Limbo)
Finally, Limbo was abolished.
Remember that once a doctrine is declared infallible, all changes are invalid.
So unbaptized infants go to hell. No limbo.