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Author Topic: Baptism of Desire and Blood: The Teaching of the Church  (Read 16232 times)

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Offline Ladislaus

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Baptism of Desire and Blood: The Teaching of the Church
« Reply #55 on: January 22, 2014, 07:24:00 AM »
It's AT LEAST offensive to pious ears to keep speaking of "Three Baptisms" when the Creed speaks specifically of ONE Baptism.  Have the decency to at least speak of 3 WAYS or MODES in which the graces of Baptism can be received.

Baptism of Desire and Blood: The Teaching of the Church
« Reply #56 on: January 22, 2014, 07:37:48 AM »
Quote from: Matto
Quote from: Ambrose
Every Catholic believed in Baptism of Desire and Blood.  

Okay, if this is true, tell me, how many of the church fathers believed in BOD. If as you say, every Catholic believed in BOD and BOB then all of the Church fathers must believe in it. Did all of the Church fathers teach BOD?


Matto,

There are many who taught Baptism of Blood, which works under the same principle as Baptism of Desire.  This link will demonstrate some examples HERE

St. Ambrose and St. Augustine both professed Baptism of Desire.  I know the Feeneyites will downplay St. Augustine's teaching, but he most certainly did teach it, and Popes, Doctors and theologians all know and understand St. Augustine clearly for what he taught.

Pope Innocent III, frequently quoted for his explicit definition of EENS, also believed in BoD and cited St. Ambrose and St. Augustine as patristic sources for BoD.


Baptism of Desire and Blood: The Teaching of the Church
« Reply #57 on: January 22, 2014, 07:40:56 AM »
Quote from: Ladislaus
It's AT LEAST offensive to pious ears to keep speaking of "Three Baptisms" when the Creed speaks specifically of ONE Baptism.  Have the decency to at least speak of 3 WAYS or MODES in which the graces of Baptism can be received.


There is only one Baptism, the others are not sacraments, but substitute most of the effects.  This is an old Feeneyite trick to use the Creed against BoD and BoB.  This deception has been exposed over and over again.  

The Creed is referring to rebaptism, not types.  One can only receive on Baptism, and it cannot be repeated.

Offline Ladislaus

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Baptism of Desire and Blood: The Teaching of the Church
« Reply #58 on: January 22, 2014, 07:43:13 AM »
Quote from: Ambrose
Scripture is not for private interpretation, it is for the magisterium to explain for us.  Baptism of Desire and Blood are also based on Scripture and Tradition, and do not conflict with John 3:5, as the Feeneyites/Dimondites pretend.


Just because you keep saying this, Ambrose, doesn't make it true.  There's no evidence for BoD in Scripture or Tradition.  We've pointed out myriad times that it all traces back to a temporary/tentative exercise in speculative theology on the part of St. Augustine, an opinion which he later retracted.  BoD on the other hand is EXPLICITLY rejected by several other Church Fathers, including St. Gregory nαzιanzen, St. John Chrysostom, and St. Ambrose.  One could make a SLIGHTLY better case for BoB, but most BoD advocates are not honest enough to point out (usually omitting by way of elipses) that a couple of the small handful of BoB Fathers in upholding BoB explicitly rule out BoD by saying that "martyrdom is the ONLY exception to the law of Baptism" (St. Cyril).

You guys are NOT honest and will not engage in any honest / rational discussion of the subject.

I am open to accepting BoD / BoB for catechumens in principle; so I don't even have any axe to grind on the subject.  In fact, I USED to believe in it for catechumens, thinking that the Church taught it.  Upon actually looking at the evidence, however, or, rather, the LACK of evidence for it, it's become obvious to me that BoD and BoB are nothing but speculative theology and have NEVER been taught by the Church, and that there's ZERO evidence that it has been revealed.

If God happens to save someone by this means, obviously who am I to argue?  But there's no evidence whatsoever, i.e. He has not revealed it to us, that He does this.  In fact, all the evidence is to the contrary.

Two dogmatic definitions are extremely difficult to reconcile with BoD.

1) That outside of the Church of the "faithful" there can be no salvation.  Catechumens have always been considered EXPLICITLY by the Church NOT to be part of the faithful (cf. St. Augustine and several other Church Fathers who refer to them as Christians but not of the faithful, and the very notion that the catechumens were kicked out of church before the "Mass of the faithful".

2) That there's no salvation for anyone not subject to the Supreme Pontiff.  Trent dogmatically taught that the unbaptized (referring speficially to catechumens) were NOT subject to the Supreme Pontiff due to their not having received Sacramental Baptism, i.e. that it's the character of Baptism which makes one subject to the Supreme Pontiff.

So looking rationally at all the evidence, the case AGAINST BoD is MUCH stronger than the case for it.

And I'm not even speaking of the "extended" or "heroin" BoD which absolutely guts the dogma EENS and leads to Vatican II ecclesiology.  You cannot honestly be a Traditional Catholic and accept extended BoD, because extended BoD means that Vatican II ecclesiology and soteriology (the chief "errors" of Vatican II) are in fact perfectly Traditional.

As far as BoB, it traces back to St. Cyprian.  A couple others follow St. Cyprian due to his eminence among the Fathers.  But a couple more who are cited as supporting BoB are actually referring to it not as a substitute for Baptism but as a second Baptism (for known baptized Christians).  And BoBers are fond of quoting St. Cyprian as having some eminent authority on the subject.  Within a couple of paragraphs of floating the BoB idea, St. Cyprian teaches material heresy regarding Baptism, the rebaptism thing later rejected by the Church.  So St. Cyprian clearly had a fundamentally flawed Sacramental theology in the same docuмent in which he floats BoB.  Yet BoB/BoD advocates puff up the authority of St. Cyprian as if he were some quasi-infallible guide to Tradition.  He was NOT.  Several Church Fathers ended up becoming heretics (Tertullian, Origen, and St. Cyprian on this particular matter).



Offline Ladislaus

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Baptism of Desire and Blood: The Teaching of the Church
« Reply #59 on: January 22, 2014, 07:44:35 AM »
Quote from: Ambrose
Quote from: Ladislaus
It's AT LEAST offensive to pious ears to keep speaking of "Three Baptisms" when the Creed speaks specifically of ONE Baptism.  Have the decency to at least speak of 3 WAYS or MODES in which the graces of Baptism can be received.


There is only one Baptism, the others are not sacraments, but substitute most of the effects.  This is an old Feeneyite trick to use the Creed against BoD and BoB.  This deception has been exposed over and over again.  

The Creed is referring to rebaptism, not types.  One can only receive on Baptism, and it cannot be repeated.


That's fine, but I'm talking about the many BoD advocates who keep talking about "Three Baptisms", that the very language is offensive to pious ears because it contradicts the solemn language of a Creed.