B
BrunoMaria
Guest
Many think, Purgatory and Limbo are two different things.
They are not. It’s same thing, but the world has very much different views to Purgatory, because such thing is not mentioned in the Gospel.
So, some have this - others that view towards the whole question, and consequently some call it this and some that. All believers though, have the same idea and mean same “thing” whilst all have and use different sights and names.
Now; to the name Limbo:
It originates from the Latin word Limbus, which means enclosure. “Enclosed” - cast away somewhere else, instead of in His Kingdom, in beatific view of God. Not allowed - not worthy yet to be in heaven, since nothing unclean, is in heaven.
The great thing though that makes the difference to hell is:
We then, being in Limbo, know, that we will be with God once!
Whilst those in hell never will; as we know of very many verses in the Bible.
Limbo is meant to be an “outer Hell” connected to the actual hell but not hell itself - called Limbo. Hell, because we confess in the Credo, that Jesus went to hell. See Catechism number 633.
As to the word Purgatory:
From the year 200 on, it was rather called Refrigerium = “refresh” (refreshing, cleansing the soul). So called after the Church-Father Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus (Tertullian). In the 6th century Pope Gregor the Great formed the perception of a cleaning fire - in other languages, a place where we are cleansed. E.g. in German: “Fegfeuer” or “Fegefeuer” which would literally translated be a fire that sweeps - scavenges clean.
Fegen = to sweep away
Feuer = Fire
After 1200, the Church’s teaching about a “third place” besides Heaven and Hell led to the highly sinful side effect of the “system of indulgences”; spending money and values to the Church for absolution and acquittance from getting into purgatory; which finally in the 15th century led to Luther’s schism.
Purgatory=Limbo results originally of Mt 12,32: ……but whoever speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, neither in this age nor in the age to come.
Now, this “neither in this age nor in the age to come” is in non-English Bibles translated as: “neither in this WORLD” nor in the WORLD to come".
The Limbo or Purgatory was at all times connected with the thought of fire just as in hell. This fire, though it was understood literally and in religious art shown as actual FIRE
3 Bilder # 731 Fegfeuer
Well; Dante was right with his: “Those who enter Hell’s Gates can truly abandon all hope!”
As Hell’s gates are concerned; yes, that’s what Jesus Himself said, that there is no hope if we are condemned for hell; for it will be eternal. For instance in Mark 9,43 when Jesus spoke of “the unquenchable fire”.
But with Limbo the big problem we have with those who went before us: We never know, if those who died before us, now are with God or still in Purgatory-Limbo.
The only “hope” for hell and those in hell is (and all in it), that some verses of the bible, point at an extinction of hell after doomsday.
But let’s not think of hell, as hardly any of us will end up there. Most of us though, will see purgatory. At least I will.
Yours
Bruno
They are not. It’s same thing, but the world has very much different views to Purgatory, because such thing is not mentioned in the Gospel.
So, some have this - others that view towards the whole question, and consequently some call it this and some that. All believers though, have the same idea and mean same “thing” whilst all have and use different sights and names.
Now; to the name Limbo:
It originates from the Latin word Limbus, which means enclosure. “Enclosed” - cast away somewhere else, instead of in His Kingdom, in beatific view of God. Not allowed - not worthy yet to be in heaven, since nothing unclean, is in heaven.
The great thing though that makes the difference to hell is:
We then, being in Limbo, know, that we will be with God once!
Whilst those in hell never will; as we know of very many verses in the Bible.
Limbo is meant to be an “outer Hell” connected to the actual hell but not hell itself - called Limbo. Hell, because we confess in the Credo, that Jesus went to hell. See Catechism number 633.
As to the word Purgatory:
From the year 200 on, it was rather called Refrigerium = “refresh” (refreshing, cleansing the soul). So called after the Church-Father Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus (Tertullian). In the 6th century Pope Gregor the Great formed the perception of a cleaning fire - in other languages, a place where we are cleansed. E.g. in German: “Fegfeuer” or “Fegefeuer” which would literally translated be a fire that sweeps - scavenges clean.
Fegen = to sweep away
Feuer = Fire
After 1200, the Church’s teaching about a “third place” besides Heaven and Hell led to the highly sinful side effect of the “system of indulgences”; spending money and values to the Church for absolution and acquittance from getting into purgatory; which finally in the 15th century led to Luther’s schism.
Purgatory=Limbo results originally of Mt 12,32: ……but whoever speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, neither in this age nor in the age to come.
Now, this “neither in this age nor in the age to come” is in non-English Bibles translated as: “neither in this WORLD” nor in the WORLD to come".
The Limbo or Purgatory was at all times connected with the thought of fire just as in hell. This fire, though it was understood literally and in religious art shown as actual FIRE
3 Bilder # 731 Fegfeuer
Well; Dante was right with his: “Those who enter Hell’s Gates can truly abandon all hope!”
As Hell’s gates are concerned; yes, that’s what Jesus Himself said, that there is no hope if we are condemned for hell; for it will be eternal. For instance in Mark 9,43 when Jesus spoke of “the unquenchable fire”.
But with Limbo the big problem we have with those who went before us: We never know, if those who died before us, now are with God or still in Purgatory-Limbo.
The only “hope” for hell and those in hell is (and all in it), that some verses of the bible, point at an extinction of hell after doomsday.
But let’s not think of hell, as hardly any of us will end up there. Most of us though, will see purgatory. At least I will.
Yours
Bruno