Limbo to be Cast into the Outer Darkness?
by John Vennari
Author's note: On April 20, 2007, the Vatican announced that it is discounting the doctrine of Limbo, saying that it is a too "restrictive view of salvation". The modernist falsehood now propounded about Limbo defies traditional Catholic doctrine, as is explained in the following article written on the subject last year.
On
November 30. 2005 the world’s press announced that the Vatican seems poised to abolish
Limbo.1 A thirty-member theological Commission, under the auspices of
Archbishop William Levada, newly-appointed Prefect of the Sacred Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, is now studying the matter.
Word in
knowledgeable circles holds that the ancient Catholic doctrine of Limbo will be
substantially altered or abandoned altogether. At least that is what will be
attempted, since no one, not even the highest Church authority, has the power to
change or discard objective religious truth.
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In his papal constitution Auctorem fidei, Pope Pius VI condemned the rejection of Limbo as "false, rash, scandalous to Catholic Schools". |
The
reports from both the secular and religious press have been permeated with
falsehoods, half-truths and omissions regarding the Catholic belief of Limbo, as
well as with pathetic statements from progressivists. Yet the event itself is
about more than Limbo. It is another indication of the triumph of liberal
Catholicism in the highest echelons of today’s Church, a liberal Catholicism
that every concerned Catholic must resist.
“More than just a theory”
The
traditional Catholic doctrine of Limbo is in a higher category than that of a
dismissible theological hypothesis. It is part of Catholic teaching since
ancient times and is enshrined in magisterial pronouncements.
Pope Pius
VI’s famous Apostolic Constitution Auctorem fidei, which condemned the
Errors of the Synod of Pistoia, denounced the rejection of Limbo as “false,
rash, slanderous to Catholic schools.”2
The
theologian Father Joseph Le Blanc, in his 1947 article “Children’s Limbo, Theory
or Doctrine?”, summarized two central points taught in this Papal
constitution:
“(1) There exists a Children’s Limbo, where the souls of children dying with original sin are detained; (2) the doctrine of Limbo as commonly accepted by the faithful, and taught by the schoolmen, is not a Pelagian fable, but an orthodox teaching.”3
It is
de fide — an unchangeable article of Faith — that souls who depart this
life in the state of original sin are excluded from the Beatific
vision.4 The Second Council of Lyons (1274) and the Council of
Florence (1438-45) taught infallibly:
“The souls of those who die in original sin as well as those who die in actual mortal sin go immediately into hell, but their punishment is very different.”5
The
teaching of Limbo flows logically from this infallible truth. Unbaptized babies,
as cute as they are, possess souls stained by original sin, the sin inherited
from Adam. Since “nothing defiled can enter Heaven” (Apoc. 21:27),
these innocent souls who die before baptism, deprived of sanctifying grace,
cannot gain Paradise. Now the good God, being just, will only punish a soul for
sins he has personally committed. Since the unbaptized baby is guilty of no
personal sin, he will not suffer pain of punishment. Rather, his soul will go to
Limbo (which theologians hold is the outer circle of hell6), an
eternal place of natural happiness in which he is deprived of the Beatific
Vision.
The
Church taught this simple truth throughout the ages. A 1588 Constitution on
abortion, for example, signed personally by Pope Sixtus V, declares that the
victims of abortion, being deprived of baptism, are “excluded from the Beatific
Vision.” This is one of the reasons Pope Sixtus V denounced abortion as a
heinous crime.7
The 1960
theology text, Christ and His Sacraments, speaks of Limbo as
follows:
“Under the name of ‘Abraham’s bosom’ (Luke 16:24), mention is made of a dwelling place of the just who died before the coming of Christ. But the only scriptural justification for a limbo of unbaptized infants and others must be sought in the general teaching of God’s eternal justice. On the other hand, the traditions of the Church, expressed in the writings of the Fathers, pontiffs and great theologians, asserts that there is a place in the next world for the unbaptized wherein they neither see God nor suffer any pain.
“While there has never been an authoritative declaration positively teaching the existence of limbo, the denial of its existence has been censured, and its existence is held as theologically certain.”8
The Necessity of Baptism
In this
entire discussion, we must remember that God is not bound to give His Beatific
Vision to anyone. No man in his natural state can declare he has a right to
Heaven, so there is no injustice on God’s part. And in the economy of salvation
established by God and wrought by Christ’s Passion and Death on the Cross, no
one can enter Heaven without sanctifying grace, which is a created participation
of the Divine Nature which makes the just man an adopted child of God, an heir
to Heaven, and a Temple of the Holy Ghost.
Our Lord
died on the Cross to make this grace available to us, which comes to us through
His Seven Sacraments and through prayer. The one and only way Our Divine Lord
established to cleanse original sin from our souls and to initially give
sanctifying grace is Baptism.9 Mortal sin, which destroys grace in
the soul, may be recovered by a worthy confession. The other sacraments,
particularly the Holy Eucharist, are established to preserve and increase grace
in our souls.
Every
human person who ever lived, with the exception of Our Lord and Our Blessed
Mother, was conceived and born with original sin.10 Thus baptism is
necessary for everyone who wishes to attain Heaven. This is the simple
reason why the solemn magisterium of the Church taught the sad truth that the
souls of unbaptized babies — that is, those who die in original sin — cannot see
the Beatific Vision. It is also the reason why pre-Vatican II texts on Moral
Theology are unanimous that babies must be baptized as soon as possible, for if
they die before baptism, they will not attain Heaven.
Father
Dominic Prümmer’s superb Handbook of Moral Theology teaches:
“Children of Catholic parents should be baptized at the earliest possible moment. Leo XIII fiercely condemned the custom of postponing the baptism of children — Theologians are not agreed what length of delay constitutes matter for grave sin but nothing can be said for certain. In some districts salutary precepts have been promulgated on this subject.”11
Father
Thomas Slater’s Manual of Moral Theology instructs:
“Catholic parents are bound to see that their children are baptized, and that as soon as can conveniently be done. According to approved theologians, it would be a serious sin if the Baptism of a child were put off for a month without good reason.”12
Jone-Adelman’s Moral Theology likewise warns:
“Children of Catholic parents should be baptized as soon as possible (C770). Postponing Baptism without a reason is sinful. Many authors hold that the delay of one month without any reason or more than two months with a reason, is mortally sinful.”13
“False, Rash, Slanderous to Catholic Schools”
Yet none
of this seems to matter to the agents of aggiornamento now controlling
the Vatican. These men, most of whom swore to God a solemn Oath Against
Modernism to hold fast to the “doctrine of faith handed down to us from the
Apostles through the orthodox Fathers, with the same meaning and the same
explanation,” have continually — in the objective order — broken that Oath
by interpreting Catholic doctrine in a manner “different from that which the
Church first held.”14 The “new theology” that underpins modern
ecumenism is a prime example.15
These men
who now preside over a Church in ruins — ruins for which their disastrous
Vatican II reforms are responsible — further undermine Catholic Faith and
destabilize Catholic faithful, all the while claiming to be more compassionate
and enlightened than the 2000 years of holy popes, saints and theologians who
preceded them. It is easy to see why Pope Saint Pius X identified pride
as the primary cause of Modernism. “Thank God I am not like the rest of men who
came before me,” boasts the progressivist.
One such
progressivist is a theologian who, in a 2002 interview, gave a perfect
definition of the reason for Catholic belief in Limbo, but said he rejects it.
Speaking of Catholics of an earlier age [that is, from ancient times until 1962]
the theologian said:
“They said that baptism endows us, by means of sanctifying grace, with the capacity to gaze upon God. Now, certainly, the state of original sin, from which we are freed by baptism, consists in a lack of sanctifying grace. Children who die in this way are indeed without any personal sin, so they cannot be sent to hell, but, on the other hand, they lack sanctifying grace and thus the potential for beholding God that this bestows. They will simply enjoy a state of natural blessedness, in which they will be happy. This state people called limbo.”
Nonetheless, the theologian spurns this teaching, saying it “seems to me to be
rather unenlightened.” The man who made this disparaging remark was Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI.16
Eighteen
years previous, Cardinal Ratzinger, in a 1984 published interview with Vittorio
Messori, claimed that Limbo had “never been a definitive truth of the faith”.
“Personally, I would let it drop,” said Ratzinger, “since it has always been only a theological hypothesis.”17
In
healthier days of the Church, Cardinal Ratzinger’s statement would have been
denounced as at least a “rash or temerarious position.”18 As
demonstrated already, the Catholic doctrine of Limbo is more than a mere
hypothesis. Not only has Limbo been “handed down to us by the Fathers,” but “the
denial of its existence has been censured, and its existence is held as
theologically certain.” It may not be a defined article of faith, but certainly
has been taught always, everywhere and by everyone. The doctrine of Limbo should
be seen as an authentic Catholic teaching of the magisterium.
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As early as the Fourth Century, Saint Gregory Nanzianzus, Father and Doctor of the Church, taught the basic concept of Limbo. |
Medieval Invention?
Various
news agencies have suggested that Limbo is an invention of Medieval scholars,
but this is not accurate.19 The concept of Limbo was taught by the
4th Century Father and Doctor of the Church, Saint Gregory Nanzianzus:
“It will happen, I believe ... that those last mentioned [infants dying without baptism] will neither be admitted by the just judge to the glory of Heaven nor condemned to suffer punishment, since, though unsealed [by baptism], they are not wicked. ... For from the fact that one does not merit punishment it does not follow that one is worthy of being honored, any more than it follows that one who is not worthy of a certain honor deserves on that account to be punished.” [Orat., xl, 23]20
Saint
Augustine taught the concept of Limbo, but with a harder edge. He held that
unbaptized infants suffer some pain of sense. The Augustinian view held sway for
centuries, but was eventually overcome by Saint Thomas Aquinas, who argued along
the lines of Saint Gregory Nanzianzus, that “the souls in Limbo do not suffer
pain, and have, in fact, full natural happiness,”21 but without the
Beatific Vision.
St.
Thomas’ reasonable teaching was prevalent to the present day. The option of
unbaptized babies going straight to Heaven was never taken seriously by the
Fathers, Saints or Doctors of the Church. In fact, as Father Brian Harrison
points out, the controversy has never been whether unbaptized babies go either
to Limbo or Heaven, but whether or not they suffer any pain of sense in
Limbo.
Yet
controversies like the present one bring out the worst in our beleaguered
post-Conciliar Church which has little wisdom to boast of anyway. A classic
piece of folly was quoted by The Scotsman from a consulter to the
Vatican Pontifical Council for Culture, no less. John Haldane, professor of
philosophy at St. Andrew’s University, said that Limbo was “something of a
medieval curiosity.” Let us marvel at the profundity of this Vatican
advisor:
“The idea of Limbo conjures up the image of God as some kind of government bureaucrat who says to people, not just babies, ‘Sorry, you don’t have your passport stamped with baptism, you’ll have to wait over here’.”22
Whether
the man is intentionally blasphemous or simply vapid is anyone’s guess.
Professor Haldane goes on to suggest that God will “overcome the issue of
original sin” in some way due to “extraordinary circumstances”. This, however,
is a sentimental approach that does violence to defined Church doctrine
regarding the fate of the unbaptized.
Yet this
maudlin supposition is not new.23 Dr. Haldane’s words have the ring
of the "Illumination Theory” that surfaced in the 1940s from progressivist
authors. This unsubstantiated hypothesis held that God will give unbaptized
babies a special illumination to somehow bring them into grace. Father Le Blanc,
who countered this novel speculation, basing himself on the consistent teaching
of the Church, noted, “The Illumination Theory certainly eliminates a number of
serious difficulties attendant on the doctrine of Limbo, but unfortunately it
creates still more serious difficulties by eliminating a great deal of
theology.”24
The Components of Liberal Catholicism
Yet
eliminating a great deal of theology is what the Conciliar reforms are all
about. The New Mass, as Cardinal Ottaviani warned, “represents a striking
departure from the Catholic theology of the Mass as it was formulated in Session
XXII of the Council of Trent.” The new ecumenism runs contrary to the defined
Catholic doctrine, “outside the Church there is no salvation”. Cardinal Suenens
jubilated that Vatican II marked the end of the Tridentine epoch and the era of
Vatican I.25 And Cardinal Ratzinger rejoiced that parts of Vatican II
are a “counter-syllabus”, that is, a rejection of many of the points of Blessed
Pope Pius IX’s magnificent Syllabus of Errors.26
All of
this demonstrates Vatican II as the triumph of Liberal Catholicism.27
The eminent theologian Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton wrote an important 1958
article on this subject called “The Components of Liberal Catholicism”,
explaining that Liberal Catholicism is contrary to Catholic truth. He lists as
three of the main components of Liberal Catholicism: religious indifferentism,
minimism, and the belief that at least some portion of the Church’s dogmatic
message can change over time (in other words, Modernism).
Vatican
II’s program and reforms display Liberal Catholicism’s basic components.
That
religious indifferentism is at the root of today’s pan-religious ecumenism is
apparent to anyone not willfully blind. Likewise with the concept of a change in
the Church’s dogmatic message, since if we take away the aspect of “change” from
Vatican II, there is practically nothing left of it but a weak and ambiguous
expression of Church doctrine. In fact, immediately after the Council in the
late 1960s, there was a saying that in the Church in Holland, everything is
changing except the bread and wine.
The
concept of minimism, however, requires a little more explanation. It is the
spurious belief that Catholics are only bound to accept those points of doctrine
that have been solemnly and explicitly decreed by the Oecumenical Councils or
the Holy See. Anything that has not been solemnly defined does not demand the
religious assent of the faithful. This falsehood was strongly denounced by Msgr.
Fenton.
Father
Joseph Le Blanc likewise countered this minimalist approach, pointing out that
there is the ordinary magisterium “by which revelation is kept free from error
and transmitted integrally to the faithful.” He explains, “although there is no
‘dogmatic definition’ on a given subject, it may actually be an article of
faith, and that, therefore, one has not full liberty to discuss
it.”28
We see the
element of minimism at work in the attempt to reject Limbo. Since it is not a
defined dogma, the impression is created that we are free to “drop it”, and let
a theological commission, comprised of men with heads brimming with Liberal
Catholicism, to construct a “more enlightened” teaching on the fate of the
unbaptized.
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In 1958, the eminent theologian Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton explained that three of the main components of Liberal Catholicism are religious indifferentism, minimism, and the belief that at least some portion of the Church's dogmatic message can change over time (in other words, Modernism). Vatican II's program and reforms display Liberal Catholicism's basic components. |
“Dare We Hope that All Unbaptized Be Saved”
Perhaps
the real reason why Limbo is being restudied is due to today’s ecumenical
climate. Since the Council, our progressivist hierarchy no longer attempts to
convert Jews, Muslims or pagans — none of whom are baptized. Limbo is the only
Catholic tenet remaining that directly decides the fate of souls based on
baptism. This does not square with the new ecumenical theology that considers
baptism as the most useful option for salvation, but not the only option. Thus,
Limbo has to go.
And if we
are allowed to “hope” that all men are saved, as that popular modernist Hans Urs
von Balthasar claims, then we should certainly be allowed to “hope” that all
unbaptized babies will gain Heaven and the Beatific Vision.
As for
the hope that all men are saved, von Balthasar argues this point as a
minimalist. Since the Church has never defined specifically that any
soul actually goes to hell, claims von Balthasar, then the Catholic is free to
“hope” that all men will attain salvation.
This is
the basic thesis of his infamous book, Dare We Hope That All Men Be
Saved? But as is obvious from his method of argumentation, von Balthasar
shows himself to be a Liberal Catholic. He displays the characteristics of a
minimalist, playing intellectual games with what the Church has or has not
solemnly defined. He also implicitly promotes religious indifferentism. If all
men will be saved, then it does not matter to what religion a man adheres.
Finally, von Balthasar’s theories end up in the category of the third aspect of
Liberal Catholicism: the belief that at least some portion of the Church’s
dogmatic message can change over time. Von Balthasar’s musings undermine the
clear but terrifying words of Our Lord: “Strive to enter by the narrow gate; for
many, I say to you, shall seek to enter, and shall not be able.” (Luke
13:24)
Agents of Aggiornamento
It is no
surprise that Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Ratzinger, both ardent fans of von
Balthasar,29 have called for the Catholic concept of Limbo to be
rethought. As the November 30 Globe and Mail reported, “Last October,
seven months before he died, Pope John Paul asked the (thirty-member) commission
to come up with ‘a more coherent and enlightened way’ of describing the fate of
such innocent babes. It was then headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who was
elected Pope in April. It is now headed by his successor at the Vatican’s
doctrinal department, Archbishop William Levada, an American from San
Francisco.”30
Archbishop Levada, as documented in Catholic Family News, was one of
the most ecumenical prelates in the United States. He was the first American
Bishop to visit a synagogue, and continued to visit synagogues afterwards.
Thoroughly a man of Vatican II, he organized and took part in numerous “Spirit
of Assisi” interreligious gatherings while in Oregon and San Francisco
(including those hosted in his own cathedral), with Jews, Buddhists, Muslims,
Native Americans, Protestants, the schismatic Orthodox, and Hindus.31
Dare we hope that Limbo be saved under Archbishop Levada? Not a chance.
Much more
can be said of this sad episode concerning Limbo, but perhaps it should wait for
release of the final Instruction.32 It seems fair, however, to expect
an apparent “change” in the doctrine of Limbo, since all reports indicate Pope
Ratzinger appears eager to bend this teaching into a new modern shape.
No matter
what the outcome, faithful Catholics will keep the truth regarding Limbo as it
has always been taught, and not take part in any activity that is “false, rash,
slanderous to Catholic schools.” We will follow no lead that takes us down the
ruinous path of Liberal Catholicism. Rather, on the reality of Limbo and the
fate of unbaptized souls, we will heed the practical advice of Saint Robert
Bellarmine:
“Our pity regarding their eternal state does nothing for them; but on the other hand, the strength of our determination to convert and baptize them profits them im-measurably. Moreover, we ourselves lose much if, because of a fruitless sentimentality towards either adults or children, we defend obstinately anything contrary to the Scriptures or the Church. In this matter [of Limbo and its inhabitants] we should not be carried away by any human consideration, by which so many are wont to be swayed; rather should we consult the teaching of the Church Councils, the Scriptures and the Fathers, and then follow it.”33
• • •
2007 Postscript: It should be noted that the new Vatican document has no magisterial authority whatsoever. It is merely a statement of opinions of a group modernist theologians published with the approval of a progresivist pope. It is yet another sad chapter in the post-Conciliar Church's destructive legacy.
Notes:
Reprinted from the January 2006 edition of
Catholic
Family News
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