With all due respect to St. Alphonsus, one of my absolute favorite patron saints, him saying that BOD is de fide carries little more weight than you saying it - again, with all due respect.
Sure, but likewise with all due respect to you, Stubborn, I must disagree. St.Alphonsus is a Doctor of the Church, so his classification carries a great deal of weight. He was a diligent and learned man in such matters apart from being a Saint. Now, which Doctors of the Church can you find that even come close to suggesting, as you seem to do, that BoD is in fact on the other side, i.e. is gravely erroneous or even heretical?
Also, tell me, do you believe in perfect contrition as an extraordinary means of the sacrament of penance? If so, do you agree then, that extraordinary means do not contradict, but rather exemplify the action of divine Providence?
Now, there are a variety of theological grades of certainty (explained in the link above, for example, "de fide", "Proximate to faith", "Dogmatic fact", "Certain" on one side and proportionate censures on the other, so for example if a certain proposition is de fide, its negation or contrary proposition is heresy; if it is proximate to faith, its negation or contrary proposition is proximate to error and it is a mortal sin to insist on it, etc).
I've cited a widely regarded theological manual in proof of this. Again,
(d) Theological Note: Proximate to faith.
Explanation: A doctrine all but unanimously held as revealed by God.
Example: Christ possessed the Beatific Vision throughout his life on earth.
Censure attached to contradictory proposition: Proximate to error.
Effects of denial: Mortal sin indirectly against faith.
But all are *not* agreed because it is *not* the universal nor the constant (from the time of the Apostles) teaching of the Church.
Only the Sacrament of Baptism is. Only the Sacrament enjoys the universal and constant teaching of the Church
When it is said "only the sacrament", the Fathers and the Doctors meant "the grace of the sacrament" (which is always necessary) but you think "the matter of the sacrament" (which can be dispensed by God).
Likewise, in penance, the necessity of confessing all sins explicitly is dispensed with for those who have perfect contrition and for whom access to the sacrament is hindered.
Again, the dogmas of the Church must be understood as the Church herself understands them and as she has always understood them and explained them through her Doctors. For it was not to private judgment that Our Savior gave for explanation those things that are contained in the deposit of Faith, but to the teaching authority of the Church. He who hears her, hears Him.
By the same token, we can be 100% confident that if one were to die defending the dogma of the necessity of the sacrament, that person would die a martyr.
This is kind of amusing. If Fr.Feeney had died under excommunication, would his followers have maintained that he died outside the Church, where there is no salvation? Or would they have said that God sees what man does not, and that is sufficient? If the latter, they already refute themselves.
I want to expand on the example in Catholic life wherein something is implicit. In the confession of our sins, we are obliged to confess explicitly all sins in number and kind. This is necessary for our salvation. But sometimes it happens, through no fault of our own, after a diligent examination of conscience, being truly sorry for all our sins, we are able to remember only some of them. Still, we are restored to grace, because we have implicitly had contrition for all of them.
It is similar for souls that are firmly resolved to do all that God requires, even if they do not know His will in every detail, which includes the desire for baptism because God requires baptism, and if they love Him for His own sake with perfect charity.
Again, anyone who considers this seriously will realize how rare such souls are, and how precarious is their state. For even among Catholics, there are few who love God for His own sake, how much less in those who are in error? We have the Cross always before us to remind us of God's great love for us, which makes it easy for us to love Him. We have the examples of the Saints, frequent recourse to the sacraments, sound doctrine and other superabundant aids as Pope Pius XII says, whereas those baptized only by desire, have none of this. How great is the danger.
This is why, for a thousand years and more, those who believed most staunchly in baptism of desire, never hindered, but rather were most zealous in the missionary effort themselves.
So, let me ask in turn, again, please show me one Doctor of the Church who claims BoD is heretical, or is in any way a suspect or erroneous teaching.