Here is the Constant teaching of the church in brief:
Augustine:"Likewise, whoever says that those children who depart out of this life without partaking of that Sacrament (Baptism)*** are alive in Christ, certainly contradicts the apostolic declaration and condemns the universal Church***, in which it is the practice to loose no time and run in haste to administer Baptism to infant children, because it is believed as an indubitable truth, that
otherwise they cannot be made alive in Christ."-Saint Augustine, Father and Doctor of the Church, Epistle 167, AD 415
“***If you want to be a Catholic ***do no believe, do no say, and do not teach that infants carried off by death before they are baptized can attain the remission of original sin.”-Saint Augustine, Father, Doctor, and Bishop of the Church, On the Soul and its Origin Book II
- Popes of the patristic era accepted as their own the doctrine of Augustine that unbaptized infants have the eternal torments of the damned in the fires of hell, yet suffer the lightest of these torments. We cite Pope Gregory the Great, Pope Zosimus and Pope Innocent I amongst others who taught this.
The teaching of Carthage was approved as a rule of the Faith by Pope St. Zosimus and Pope St. Innocent I and by the ecumenical councils, Specifically Ephesus which were approved by other popes:
“The idea that infants can be granted the rewards of eternal life*** without even the grace of baptism is utterly foolish***.”
-Pope Saint Innocent I,
Letter to the Bishops of the Church, 417 AD
If Pope St. Innocent were writing to instruct all the Bishops of the church in this matter, what kind of response do you think the church should give? Hmmm…
“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].”
Pope St. Gregory the Great (-604) taught the eternal torment of infants in his Moralia on the Book of Job.
Gregory the Great: “For there be some that are withdrawn from the present light, before they attain to shew forth the good or evil deserts of an active life. **And whereas the Sacraments of salvation do not free them from the sin of their birth, at the same time that here they never did aright by their own act; there they are brought to torment. **And these have one wound, viz. to be born in corruption, and another, to die in the flesh. But forasmuch as after death there also follows, death eternal, by a secret and righteous judgment ‘wounds are multiplied to them without cause.’ ***For they even receive everlasting torments, who never sinned by their own will. And hence it is written, Even the infant of a single day is not pure in His sight upon earth. ***Hence ‘Truth’ says by His own lips, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. Hence Paul says, We were by nature the children of wrath even as others."
- Pope Innocent III adopted the position of Abelard in the twelfth century that unbaptized infants will have the pain of loss but not the pain of fire.
Pope Innocent III (-1216) adopted the position of Abelard in the twelfth century. Abelard was** the first **theologian to dissent from the defined doctrine of hell fire for unbaptized infants. (Get this; for over 750 years the Roman Catholic Church believed and taught infant damnation. Stop and think. All the doctors of the church who defend it, believe they are defending something de fide. Tell Augustine it didn’t matter. HA!)
According to Pope Innocent III, infants suffer the pain of knowing that they have lost the vision of God but they do not have the pain of fire.
“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)
“[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.”
-Pope Innocent III (1160-1216), Corp. Juris, Decret. l. III, tit. xlii, c. iii – Majores
- Pope Pius X was the first pope to teach that unbaptized infants have no sufferings in his 1905 Catechism.
Remember, a Catechism that is promulagted ny the Pope carries the teaching authority of the Ordinary Magisterium:
“Q. #100 - Where do infants go who die without Baptism?
A. - Infants who die without Baptism go to Limbo
where they do not enjoy the sight of God, but also do no suffer. This is because having original sin, and it alone, they do not merit heaven, but neither do they merit purgatory or hell.”
-Catechism of Pope Saint Pius X, first published in 1910 AD