L
Lithophyte
Guest
I’m finally ready for answers to help with the internal conflicts I have, and I am coming here because I do not want to sound like a cymbal clashing in the desert dissuading people from becoming Catholic. I am not exactly the poster child of the modern loving God concept with rainbows, and butterflies. I am more the blood, suffering, and sacrifice type. Yesterday I was listening to Teresa Tameo on Ave Maria radio and she was interviewing a new full time member of Priests for Life, Fr.Stephen Imbarrato, and one comment he said aggravates me to no end. He said without any qualms that he had two children in heaven, the result of an abortion. As I priest I would expect better of him and would expect the modern version of saying “hope they are in heaven”. Yet this brings me to the core of my problem. My upbringing which was primarily informed by a more classical expression of church teachings makes me feel alien in the modern church and I want to know what is true.
This comment triggered my ingrained response - God has only revealed three forms of baptism: water, blood and desire, none of which of the requirements were fulfilled by the aborted child. Last time I checked Original sin is a real sin that needs to be removed by baptism. Those children are not innocent but guilty of sin and they have no life in them. The hope I was taught was that they went to limbo, a hell without the inflicted suffering but sadly they may be in actual full blown hell according to different Church Fathers. - This ingrained response make me want to say to this priest: “1950 years of church history has supported the idea your child is in hell and some of our greatest thinkers. How arrogant are you? This should be all them more reason why the catholic church should focus on stopping this atrocity.
Its satan’s dream come true.”
Now I know the modern church has come out with limbo was never a teaching of the church and that we can all hope they are in heaven. So this is my first question that I hope can be answered. Does anyone have any church documents before 1960 that support the idea of Hope for infants dying without baptism? Because I do not know of any and would like to see this as a continuation of teaching that I am ignorant of.
My second question is: Am I the only one that see this as a falling away of the central importance of baptism and the implication it has for original sin? Today it seems the church is like
well its important, but not really important (hand waving dismissively) because everyone who is good loves god and ultimately desires god. I feel like screaming : “BS these are reals souls we have to worry about. Wake up church, stop your stupid ecumenical lets agree that there is no difference and help people come to the true God in the true church and tell them why they are wrong. Also do you not know many of the doctrines that are declared requires there to be original sin and its effect or even Jesus was for naught.”
lf nothing else thanks for listening to my rants.
This comment triggered my ingrained response - God has only revealed three forms of baptism: water, blood and desire, none of which of the requirements were fulfilled by the aborted child. Last time I checked Original sin is a real sin that needs to be removed by baptism. Those children are not innocent but guilty of sin and they have no life in them. The hope I was taught was that they went to limbo, a hell without the inflicted suffering but sadly they may be in actual full blown hell according to different Church Fathers. - This ingrained response make me want to say to this priest: “1950 years of church history has supported the idea your child is in hell and some of our greatest thinkers. How arrogant are you? This should be all them more reason why the catholic church should focus on stopping this atrocity.
Now I know the modern church has come out with limbo was never a teaching of the church and that we can all hope they are in heaven. So this is my first question that I hope can be answered. Does anyone have any church documents before 1960 that support the idea of Hope for infants dying without baptism? Because I do not know of any and would like to see this as a continuation of teaching that I am ignorant of.
My second question is: Am I the only one that see this as a falling away of the central importance of baptism and the implication it has for original sin? Today it seems the church is like
lf nothing else thanks for listening to my rants.