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Five Opinions on the Penalty of Original Sin [St. Robert Bellarmine, Doctor of the Church]
’ . . Let us begin with those who die unbaptized in infancy, and bring with them no other guilt than that of original sin. There are five several opinions concerning the punishment [supplicio] of such infants, ranging gradually from the utmost mildness to the utmost severity.
1.- The first opinion was that of those who dared to promise the Kingdom of Heaven to unbaptized children, even though they admitted them to be conceived and born in original sin. So held a certain Vincentius, whom St. Augustine refutes. . . Zwingli, in our age, fell into the same error . . . and this error, so far as concerneth the children of the faithful, is followed by many sectaries, as Bucer, Peter Martyr, and Calvin, whom I have refuted in my book on Baptism, chapter IV.
Of these aforesaid opinions, the first and second must be judged not only false but even heretical; as against them we must hold, by the Catholic faith, that infants dying unbaptized are absolutely condemned, and shall for ever lack not only heavenly but even natural happiness. And here it seems that we should note, by way of preface, that our own pity for dead infants doth avail them nought; nor, again, do we in any way harm them by the severity of our opinion; on the other hand, it is great harm to ourselves if, through a useless pity for the dead, we defend pertinaciously any opinion which is against Scripture or the Church; wherefore we must not here follow a certain human affection whereby many are commonly moved; but rather we should consult and follow the verdict of Scripture, the Councils, and the Fathers.’
St. Robert Bellarmine, Doctor of the Church
’ . . Let us begin with those who die unbaptized in infancy, and bring with them no other guilt than that of original sin. There are five several opinions concerning the punishment [supplicio] of such infants, ranging gradually from the utmost mildness to the utmost severity.
1.- The first opinion was that of those who dared to promise the Kingdom of Heaven to unbaptized children, even though they admitted them to be conceived and born in original sin. So held a certain Vincentius, whom St. Augustine refutes. . . Zwingli, in our age, fell into the same error . . . and this error, so far as concerneth the children of the faithful, is followed by many sectaries, as Bucer, Peter Martyr, and Calvin, whom I have refuted in my book on Baptism, chapter IV.
- The next is indeed rather less liberal, yet very mild. It is that of those who, though excluding unbaptized infants from the Kingdom of Heaven, and from the blessed life promised to the saints, yet did grant them eternal life, and a natural happiness without any uneasiness or pain outside the Kingdom of Heaven, and far away from the prison of the damned; that is, midway between hell and heaven; which place can scarcely be imagined elsewhere than this terrestrial globe. St. Augustine, in chapter 85 of his book Of Heresies, teacheth that the Pelagians of old held this opinion: “For,” saith Augustine, “even to the unbaptized they promise a sort of life of their own, outside the Kingdom of God yet happy and everlasting.” . . . Thus the Pelagians promised to unbaptized infants not everlasting life in its simple sense [of Heaven] but, as Augustine saith, “a sort of everlasting life of their own.” The nearest approach to **this error **seems to have been made [among Catholics] by Ambrosius Catharinus in his book Of the State of Children that die unbaptized, by Albertus Pighius in his first Controversy, and by Jerome Savonarola in his Triumph of the Cross. For these teach that unbaptized infants, after the Last Judgment, shall be happy with a natural happiness [beatos natiirali beatitudine], and that they will live in perpetual felicity in a sort of Earthly Paradise.
- **The fourth, yet more severe, doth indeed free the children from the torment of fire, and from that worm **of Mark ix, 44, “their worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched,” which is properly called the penalty of sense, but it doth not free them from that inward pain which followeth from the loss of the blessedness of eternal felicity. This is the teaching of Peter Lombard {Sentences, Bk. II, dist. 33) and he is followed by some others, as enumerated by St. Thomas, St. Bonaventura, Gregory of Rimini, and others in their commentaries on that passage.
- -** The fifth and extremest is the opinion of those who hold that infants, by reason of original sin, are tormented for ever in hell** both by poena damni and by poena sensus; that is the opinion to which Gregory of Rimini openly inclines in his comment on Sentences, II, 33, and John Driedo in his Grace and Free Will, Bk. I, tr. iii, c. 2.’
Of these aforesaid opinions, the first and second must be judged not only false but even heretical; as against them we must hold, by the Catholic faith, that infants dying unbaptized are absolutely condemned, and shall for ever lack not only heavenly but even natural happiness. And here it seems that we should note, by way of preface, that our own pity for dead infants doth avail them nought; nor, again, do we in any way harm them by the severity of our opinion; on the other hand, it is great harm to ourselves if, through a useless pity for the dead, we defend pertinaciously any opinion which is against Scripture or the Church; wherefore we must not here follow a certain human affection whereby many are commonly moved; but rather we should consult and follow the verdict of Scripture, the Councils, and the Fathers.’
St. Robert Bellarmine, Doctor of the Church