Posted on 11/29/2005 3:42:52 PM PST by Claud
Vatican considers dropping 'limbo'
Theologians meet to look again at fate of unbaptised tots
(ANSA) - Vatican City, November 29 - The Catholic Church appears set to definitively drop the concept of limbo, the place where it has traditionally said children's souls go if they die before being baptised .
Limbo has been part of Catholic teaching since the 13th century and is depicted in paintings by artists such as Giotto and in important works of literature such as Dante's Divine Comedy .
But an international commission of Catholic theologians is meeting in the Vatican this week to draw up a new report for Pope Benedict XVI on the question. The report is widely expected to advise dropping it from Catholic teaching .
The pope made known his doubts about limbo in an interview published in 1984, when he was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, head of the Vatican's doctrinal department .
"Limbo has never been a defined truth of faith," he said. "Personally, speaking as a theologian and not as head of the Congregation, I would drop something that has always been only a theological hypothesis." According to Italian Vatican watchers, the reluctance of theologians to even use the word limbo was clear in the way the Vatican referred in its official statement to the question up for discussion .
The statement referred merely to "the Fate of Children who Die Without Baptism" .
Benedict's predecessor, John Paul II, gave the commission the task of looking at the issue again in 2004. He asked experts to come up with a "theological synthesis" able to make the Church's approach "more coherent and illuminated" .
In fact, when John Paul II promulgated the updated version of the Catholic Church's catechism in 1992 there was no mention of the word limbo .
That document gave no clear answer to the question of what happened to children who died before being baptised .
It said: "The Church can only entrust them to the mercy of God...In fact the great mercy of God, who wants all men to be saved, and the tenderness of Jesus towards children... allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who die without baptism." This view is in stark contrast to what Pope Pius X said in an important document in 1905: "Children who die without baptism go into limbo, where they do not enjoy God, but they do not suffer either, because having original sin, and only that, they do not deserve paradise, but neither hell or purgatory." According to teaching from the 13th century on, limbo was also populated by the prophets and patriarchs of Israel who lived in the time before Jesus Christ .
The problem is that "no one" may refer only to those who have committed actual sin or may refer to original-sin-saddled infants. The entire Eastern Fathers surely understood "no one" to refer here to those who commit actual sins; Cyprian and Augustine took the other path, assuming it includes infants (based on a misleading translation of Romans). The Western Church rapped Cyprian and Augustine and their followers on their knuckles on this point (and this point alone). So you can read this prooftext the way you do, with Augustine and Cyprian, but if you do so, you are in direct conflict with the dogmatic tradition of the Western Church which, since Innnocent III, has openly taught that infants are not condemned to hell by original sin; only actual sin, freely chosen after the age of reason, condemns to hell. Even your hero Aquinas would not agree with you. Statements about "all" or "everyone" can be meant absolutely, without exception or they can be meant with exceptions; qualifiers may be understood but not stated. In the case of Jn 3, the context certainly shows that Nicodemus thought Jesus was referring to adults, not to infants, hence Jesus was assuming that no one who has truly sinned can be saved except by rebirth. Moreover, all the Fathers allowed for baptism of desire and the virtuous pagans etc. Take the Jansenist-Calvinist route if you prefer, but you set yourself at odds with the Catholic tradition. Is the doctrine of Limbo really worth all that?
Good point. Although martyrdom is an additional factor here, I think.
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Nonsense. Part of the anti-Augustine slander industry. Read Margaret Miles, _Augustine on the Body_--and she's a feminist--but she was honest as a young scholar, and the evidence of Augustine's positive view of the body was so overwhelming that she couldn't deny it. The more she read of Augustine the more she realized that he fully realized that anyone who believed in the Incarnation could not hate the body. So enough already with the Augustine bashing.
Wow. What was done to you or someone else that you blame on God??? Such anger as yours is often frustration at Someone you know to be Just, but yet you cannot figure out why He allows things to happen.
"In your dreams. Schismatics like this gambit--you schismatics, Protestants originated as johnny-come-latelys, teaching doctrines unheard of for a millennium and, when challenged about your recent innovations, you respond by telling your challengers that they are just as new (did not exist until you came into being) as you are.
Nice try, it works only if one already starts from your premises. So it will work if you are talking to yourself. As an argument toward someone who disagrees with you, it's useless. You're going to have to make a case for the validity of your premises, not merely assert them."
I am somewhat confused by your response. I don't recall saying anything about "new doctrines" in either Catholic or non-Catholic churches. What premise of mine are you talking about (this is why it helps to copy in the text of the poster that you are reponding to)??
I am not sure what you are talking about when you refer to my words as being those which are used by "schismatics". The jist of my words were I have heard that there are other non-Catholic "mainstream" Christian churches who also have concepts similar to purgatory, although they do not call it that. My point being that if what I have heard is correct, the Catholic church is not alone in it's belief of a purgatory-like place/state. In what way is that "schismatic"?? I simply said that the Catholic church does not have a corner on the purgatory market. Perhaps you misread what I wrote (or maybe I miswrote what you read!!).
A wise decision, as was the Church's decision not to choose between the Thomist and Molinist positions regarding predestination. The Church is a wise Mother.
What do you mean "no list" of infallible or dogmatically defined teachings? It's called the _Catechism of the Council of Trent_, the _Catechism of the Catholic Church_; these teachings are all collected in Denzinger-Schoenmetzer, _Enchiridion Symbolorum_, translated (I don't have the title at hand) and in countless other ways. Or get a copy of Ludwig Ott, _Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma_--he listes precisely what is defined at the highest level (_de fide_) and what is to be held at various levels below that etc.
What about purgatory?
"So what's the big deal with limbo? If God can use His extraordinary Divine Power on the Thief on the Cross, He can certainly use His Extraordinary Divine Power on the infants.
I believe He uses His Extraordinary Divine Power to send His Only Begotten Son to the Cross to take OUR SINS on Himself so we might be saved. It was His Extraordinary Divine power to turn His Face on Christ causing Christ to cry out 'My God, My God why have You forsaken Me?'"
Ok, but then why did God decide to go and have His Only Begotten Son tortured to death most horribly in order to take on "OUR SINS"? If God can use His Extraordinary Divine Power to simply save the thief on the Cross, why can't He do it to simply save people from their sins if they turn to Him and pray to Him? Why go through the horror of sending His Only Begotten Son to be murdered?
I suppose the only answer is that He DIDN'T have to send Jesus. He could have just chosen to save whoever turned to him, as many Churches believe He does with non-Christians (and unbaptized babies). Why, then, the blood and horror of the Cross for Jesus? And why all of the animal blood and burnt fat for a millennium before that?
The answer can only be: to make a theatrical impression.
Sending a boy by virgin birth, and then having him die by just about the most rigorous series of tortures over as long a period as possible: this was not necessary for salvation at all. It WAS necessary to make an impression on us of two things: One is that God is serious about us wanting to pay attention to Him, and Two is that God is utterly ruthless and horrid - willing to send his own innocent son to be horribly tortured to death for no NECESSARY reason...and therefore we'd best sit up and take notice and understand that when he says "Do this or else", there's no "saving throw" or "well, if I have the best intentions". It's DO THIS OR I'LL BURN YOU IN HELL FOREVER. Why? Because He's God and it pleases Him to do so.
That's a pretty alarming portrait, but what else can one make of it?
Not according to the Catholic Catechism:
1260 "Since Christ died for all, and since all men are in fact called to one and the same destiny, which is divine, we must hold that the Holy Spirit offers to all the possibility of being made partakers, in a way known to God, of the Paschal mystery." Every man who is ignorant of the Gospel of Christ and of his Church, but seeks the truth and does the will of God in accordance with his understanding of it, can be saved. It may be supposed that such persons would have desired Baptism explicitly if they had known its necessity.
-A8
Paul also wrote in Romans 3:23, "ALL have sinned and come short of the Glory of God."
Therefore, all are sinners (even infants) and beed the Grace of God for Salvation.
Neither you or I can say FOR SURE that the infants are in Heavenor Hell. It is SOLEY the CHOICE OF GOD, and we cannot cause Him to Chnge, for "In Him there is no Shadow or Turning.
I did not mention Augstine in any of my replies.... Wrong person, maybe?
Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma.
This is pretty comprehensive. So now you know.
"For the serious mistakes, he offered his Son to pay for all those sins that will inevitably occur."
To pay whom, precisely?
And why does this person need to be paid?
There's no easy or obvious solution to this one, which is why the Church is leaving it as an open question.
If you were unaware of this and simply assumed that the Catholic church is one denomination among many, then you unwittingly were adopting a Protestant viewpoint, one that is widespread because of the dominance of Proetestantism. So if you adopted it without realizing, now you can decide if you want to continue in it.
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