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Author Topic: The Absurdities of The Feeneyite Heresy  (Read 33257 times)

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Re: The Absurdities of The Feeneyite Heresy
« Reply #270 on: February 12, 2021, 10:21:29 AM »
We ALL believe this.  Only some of us believe that such an individual will also receive the Sacrament of Baptism.

Based on how you've articulated it here, I have no quarrel with you.  You are perfectly free to believe in Baptism of Desire with the conditions laid out above.  I just don't happen to believe in it, since I believe that God will also give those who persevere in the manner you describe the Sacrament of Baptism ... without fail.

Your quarrel with is me that you claim that I am obliged to believe that such a one will not necessarily receive the Sacrament, whereas I dispute that.

Now Trent taught justification by a "Confession of Desire", that's for sure, but I also hold that someone who sincerely desires Confession, that God will not let him be cut down without it.  I believe 100% in Our Lord's promise of "Ask and you shall receive." ... as did St. Ambrose.
Great, Ladislaus. So do you agree with this, for instance, from SBC: "Saint Augustine taught, as is clear from this article’s epigram, that the providence of God would see to it that a justified catechumen would be baptized before death. God alone, in any event, knows which of those, with a votum for baptism and perfect contrition, He has justified. The Church can only assume, as the arm of Christ, the Principal Agent in baptism, that all are in need of receiving the sacramentin order to not only have all sin forgiven and abolished, but to be a member of the Church, the Body of Christ. Anticipating the rejoinder that no one is lost who dies in the state of grace, let me just affirm that I agree. Not only that I agree, but that I submit to this truth as I would a dogma of Faith. The Church, however, allows the faithful the freedom to believe that the providence of God will see to it that every person dying in the state of grace will also be baptized. This preserves the literal sense of Christ’s teaching in John 3:5: “Amen, amen I say to thee, unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God” and His apostolic mandate to preach and baptize all nations in Mark 16: 15-16."

https://catholicism.org/baptism-of-desire-its-origin-and-abandonment-in-the-thought-of-saint-augustine.html

St. Benedict's Centre does not see their position as contrary to Vatican II and the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Indeed, Fr. Feeney was reconciled to Rome under Pope Paul VI. Fr. Feeney professed the Athanasian Creed upon his reconciliation.

The later Doctors do not teach it, and even seem to rule it out, but St. Augustine did apparently teach it: God can miraculously supply someone to baptize a dying catechumen, or someone who converted to the Catholic Faith at the last minute, and He can also miraculously supply a Priest to absolve a dying penitent. But I hold those two doctrines, which SBC itself confesses, are quite certain: (1) Baptism of Desire certainly confers at least justification, and thus brings a soul within (the Soul of) the Church. (2) A person dying in the State of Grace, in the New Covenant, will certainly be saved, as Trent itself says in quoting the Word of the Lord. Someone who believes and confesses both those two doctrines, is allowed, I admit, by the Church, to hold to this theological speculation.

As a final aside, I'm surprised you would say the Baltimore Catechism or the Catechism of St. Pius X is not "the Church". That seems like an almost R&R approach to the issue, except applying R&R to earlier Popes. If that's the case, why not say the same thing about the New Catechism, for e.g. when it also teaches BOD, that it also "did not come from the Church" even if Pope John Paul II was Pope? Just curious. That's all. But no problem otherwise. We agree on this subject in the manner we discussed above. Now, to get to the others in my next post.

God Bless.

Re: The Absurdities of The Feeneyite Heresy
« Reply #271 on: February 12, 2021, 10:29:59 AM »
Quote from: Last Tradhican
The writer above has no common sense, no order, no structure, now he is just lashing out, going off on a tangent of calling people by "ites".


I asked you a question, why do you studiously avoid answering it? But let me rephrase it: "Do you deny Baptism of Desire even Justifies, as e.g. the Dimonds, Fr. Wathen etc do? Or do you merely hold, with Fr. Feeney later in life, St. Benedict's Centre, etc, that "there is no one about to die in a state of justification for whom cannot supply Baptism, and indeed Baptism of Water"? The first or the second?

There's no need for you to be offended. I'm a Thomist and not offended to be called one because I follow St. Thomas. If you consider Fr. Feeney to be this great Saint, or if you consider the Dimonds as your heroes, you shouldn't be ashamed to be called after them. Otherwise, after one of the Doctors you agree with. I gave you those options above. 

As to your quoting Ladislaus' response, I already discussed it with him, but I will just say here, it's equally and infinitely easy for God, to give also Baptism, Confirmation, and the Eucharist - in both kinds - to any person miraculously. I've heard followers of Fr. Feeney insist that because Jesus Christ said "Unless you eat My Flesh and drink My Blood, you will not have life in you", all the elect must, before death, receive Communion in both kinds. That too is "equally easy" for God to do if He wishes it.

I believe exactly what St. Alphonsus believed, and what Pope St. Pius X taught, and St. Thomas Aquinas too for that matter. And I can prove it by citations of all of them. Thomists generally, both on Predestination and on this issue, also highly revere St. Augustine's perspective. It's for that reason also that I'm open to miraculous Baptism for all those justified and within the Church by Baptism of Desire. But I find no Doctor in the last millenium to have held that opinion.

At least not so far as I'm aware of. If you can cite any, you may convince me otherwise. If not, I stand with those Doctors whom the Popes and the Church have highly praised and already authorized as qualified interpreters of Trent that BOD can justify and even save. 


Re: The Absurdities of The Feeneyite Heresy
« Reply #272 on: February 12, 2021, 10:45:34 AM »
No debate, you are supposed simply answer clear questions with clear answers. I did not ask what Catholics who do not understand a doctrine always say first.

The Church is not correcting me nor anyone who agrees with the Church's infallible definitions - you are not 1) answering my questions and 2) not making any sense.


CANON IV.-If any one saith, that the sacraments of the New Law are not necessary unto salvation, but superfluous;... let him be anathema.

I say Trent says that the sacraments are necessary unto salvation - PLEASE EXPLAIN HOW MY INTERPRETATION IS FALSE.
IN YOUR OWN WORDS, WHAT DO YOU THINK THESE WORDS OF TRENT ACTUALLY MEAN?


the canon continues:

and [if anyone saith] that, without them, or without the desire thereof, men obtain of God, through faith alone, the grace of justification;-though all (the sacraments) are not indeed necessary for every individual; let him be anathema.

I say Trent says without the sacrament there can be no justification and without the desire for the sacrament there can be no justification. Again - PLEASE EXPLAIN HOW MY INTERPRETATION IS FALSE.
IN YOUR OWN WORDS, WHAT DO YOU THINK THESE WORDS OF TRENT ACTUALLY MEAN?


If you do not have it in you to answer my clear questions, THEN SAY SO.
I already answered it. You are unable to comprehend an answer, and then insist I must answer you again and again. Go back and read.

Let me answer you again: To the first bolded, yes. Trent teaches that the Sacraments of the New Law are necessary for salvation, though all indeed are not necessary for each individual. Yes. And then in the second bolded, which is part of the same canon, it explains what it means by this necessity, that "without them, or without the desire thereof [literally: aut eurom voto, without the desire of them]", men cannot obtain of God, through faith alone, the grace of justification. Now, first of all, I already explained with a citation from St. Thomas, that BOD is not the Protestant error of faith alone, but the outcome of "faith that works by charity", which St. Paul praised as justifying, and about which St. Thomas cites St. Ambrose as proof that "faith that works by charity" justifies and even saves.

So BOD is not faith alone. It is faith that works by charity. Next, Trent explains that the Sacraments are necessary in such a way that, without them, or without the desire of them, the Grace of Justification cannot be obtained. Now, I gave you an example for this: If I say that my thirst cannot be quenched without water, or at least without some juice, then a logical inference is that the juice can substitute for the water. And this is how the authorized and qualified Doctors, unlike you, a layman not authorized by the Church, interpret Trent: The Desire can sometimes supply for the Water. And note that the desire of them is in the Plural. That means that there are Two Sacraments at least for which the Desire of the Sacraments obtains Justification. Those can only be Baptism and Penance.

The Church had already clearly explained in its section on Penance that the Desire for Penance, when contrition is perfect by charity, reconciles man to God even before the Sacrament is received. Voto is a very specific term that does not refer to a mere natural desire, but to a supernatural desire animated by charity and contrition. Trent would never have used voto with respect to Baptism, Penance and Holy Communion, unless it meant to teach and dogmatize, Baptism of Desire, Perfect Contrition, and Spiritual Communion respectively.

You can fight against this Truth as hard as you want. It won't change them one iota. Nor need anyone who loves God truly and thus desires to keep His Commandments, as the Lord said in the Gospel, fear that the preaching of Perfect Contrition, and Spiritual Communion, to take the other two relatively non-controversial examples, will decrease the desire or reverence for the Sacraments of Penance and the Eucharist. The reverse is true, someone who regularly strives, for e.g. by looking at a crucifix, to obtain perfect contrition and true sorrow for his sins when a Priest is inaccessible, will be the first in line for Confession as soon as he gets a Priest.

Similarly, someone who often makes Acts of Spiritual Communion, when unable to go to Mass, will be the first to go to Holy Mass, as soon as he gets opportunity. This is why the Council itself, and Doctors and Theologians qualified to explain, say that the Desire for the Sacrament is implicit in the act of perfect love of God or of contrition by which the sinner is immєdιαtely reconciled to God.
Finally, Trent's Catechism clearly says, for adults, Desire and Intention to receive Baptism, when an unforeseen accident occurs, avails to Grace and Justice. Trent says the danger present for infants, of being eternally lost, is not present. From this, the Doctors and Theologians, for nearly 5 centuries, rightly understood that BOD can justify and even save. I know you'll say "nothing is unforeseen to God", but the Catechism is talking about what is unforeseen to man. The Catechism is not talking about miraculous water Baptism.

If you want to interpret the Catechism that way, you would be contradicting it where it said the same danger is not present to infants.
I don't know if these detailed and patient explanations will have any impact on your already-made-up mind. But I post them anyway, for those who read, and lest you keep thinking your questions could not be answered. Anyway, the Doctors have already answered it.
God Bless.

Offline Ladislaus

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Re: The Absurdities of The Feeneyite Heresy
« Reply #273 on: February 12, 2021, 11:12:04 AM »
(1) Baptism of Desire certainly confers at least justification, and thus brings a soul within (the Soul of) the Church. (2) A person dying in the State of Grace, in the New Covenant, will certainly be saved, as Trent itself says in quoting the Word of the Lord. Someone who believes and confesses both those two doctrines, is allowed, I admit, by the Church, to hold to this theological speculation.

I don't accept the phrase "Baptism of Desire".  I would reject not only the phrase here, but even the English translation of "Desire" as both defective and misleading, and the Catholic Encyclopedia agrees.  I believe that justification can happen before the Sacrament of Baptism, as did Father Feeney, by not by the votum (for lack of a good translation) ALONE, but with all the other dispositions required for Baptism as taught by Trent.  Catholic Encyclopedia says that votum includes these dispositions, but I disagree, holding that votum is only one piece that's required. As I've pointed out, the "cannot without" expression in Trent clearly indicates necessary cause, but not sufficient cause.  In think CE does this because of the bias that something called "Baptism of Desire" exists as an all-encompassing sufficient cause of justification.  I don't believe that this phrase Baptism of Desire exists anywhere in any authoritative sources.  I think there's a Baptism "flaminis" mentioned, which I hold to be the same a pre-Baptismal justification, and probably a better phrase, referring to the justification entered into through the activity of the Holy Spirit leading up to Baptism.  As a side note, I also strenuously object to the phrase "Three Baptisms" ... contradicting the dogmatic creed where we profess belief in ONE Baptism.

Yet I do not believe that justification alone suffices for the Beatific Vision, that the Sacramental character is required.  And I do not believe that God would allow someone in a state of justification to die without the Sacrament.  So the question of someone dying in a state of justification doesn't exist as a real possibility.  As I mentioned earlier, it's no difficulty for God to bring the Sacrament to someone who perseveres in a state of justification until death.  Why wouldn't He?  Didn't Our Lord promise, "ask and you shall receive"?  If someone desired (i.e. sought or asked for) Baptism, then why wouldn't God provide it?

If one FORCED me to address the hypothetical, asking what would happen to such a person, were it possible to die in a state of pre-Baptismal justification, I would answer as Father Feeney did, "I don't know."  I do however have a speculation.  WERE such a thing possible, I would hold that such a one would enter Limbo (or some part of Limbo).  But I don't believe God ever allows this, so as a practical matter, there are none but those who died unbaptizd before reaching the age of reason in Limbo.  We had the justified saints of the Old Testament who too could not enter heaven, because they too were missing something, that same something that is missing without the character of Baptism, namely, the supernatural faculty to see God as He is (something beyond our nature).

Re: The Absurdities of The Feeneyite Heresy
« Reply #274 on: February 12, 2021, 12:05:32 PM »
Quote
I don't accept the phrase "Baptism of Desire".  I would reject not only the phrase here, but even the English translation of "Desire" as both defective and misleading, and the Catholic Encyclopedia agrees
Can you cite it? Here it is. https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02258b.htm

I find the CE's explanation, authorized by Rome a 100 years ago, beautiful and perfect in explaining Baptism of Desire. I believe it was published in English as well, so the translation issue also shouldn't be a problem.

"Substitutes for the sacrament

The Fathers and theologians frequently divide baptism into three kinds: the baptism of water (aquæ or fluminis), the baptism of desire (flaminis), and the baptism of blood (sanguinis). However, only the first is a real sacrament. The latter two are denominated baptism only analogically, inasmuch as they supply the principal effect of baptism, namely, the grace which remits sins. It is the teaching of the Catholic Church that when the baptism of water becomes a physical or moral impossibility, eternal life may be obtained by the baptism of desire or the baptism of blood.

The baptism of desire

The baptism of desire (baptismus flaminis) is a perfect contrition of heart, and every act of perfect charity or pure love of God which contains, at least implicitly, a desire (votum) of baptism. The Latin word flamen is used because Flamen is a name for the Holy Ghost, Whose special office it is to move the heart to love God and to conceive penitence for sin. The "baptism of the Holy Ghost" is a term employed in the third century by the anonymous author of the book "De Rebaptismate". The efficacy of this baptism of desire to supply the place of the baptism of water, as to its principal effect, is proved from the words of Christ

After He had declared the necessity of baptism (John 3), He promised justifying grace for acts of charity or perfect contrition (John 14): "He that loveth Me, shall be loved of my Father: and I will love him and will manifest myself to him." And again: "If any one love me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him, and will make our abode with him." Since these texts declare that justifying grace is bestowed on account of acts of perfect charity or contrition, it is evident that these acts supply the place of baptism as to its principal effect, the remission of sins

This doctrine is set forth clearly by the Council of Trent. In the fourteenth session (cap. iv) the council teaches that contrition is sometimes perfected by charity, and reconciles man to God, before the Sacrament of Penance is received. In the fourth chapter of the sixth session, in speaking of the necessity of baptism, it says that men can not obtain original justice "except by the washing of regeneration or its desire" (voto). The same doctrine is taught by Pope Innocent III (cap. Debitum, iv, De Bapt.), and the contrary propositions are condemned by Popes Pius V and Gregory XII, in proscribing the 31st and 33rd propositions of Baius.

We have already alluded to the funeral oration pronounced by St. Ambrose over the Emperor Valentinian II, a catechumen. The doctrine of the baptism of desire is here clearly set forth. St. Ambrose asks: "Did he not obtain the grace which he desired? Did he not obtain what he asked for? Certainly he obtained it because he asked for it." St. Augustine (On Baptism, Against the Donatists, IV.22) and St. Bernard (Ep. lxxvii, ad H. de S. Victore) likewise discourse in the same sense concerning the baptism of desire. If it be said that this doctrine contradicts the universal law of baptism made by Christ (John 3), the answer is that the lawgiver has made an exception (John 14) in favor of those who have the baptism of desire. Neither would it be a consequence of this doctrine that a person justified by the baptism of desire would thereby be dispensed from seeking after the baptism of water when the latter became a possibility. For, as has already been explained the baptismus flaminis contains the votum of receiving the baptismus aquæ. It is true that some of the Fathers of the Church arraign severely those who content themselves with the desire of receiving the sacrament of regeneration, but they are speaking of catechumens who of their own accord delay the reception of baptism from unpraiseworthy motives. Finally, it is to be noted that only adults are capable of receiving the baptism of desire."

Quote
As I've pointed out, the "cannot without" expression in Trent clearly indicates necessary cause, but not sufficient cause.
What about the example I gave to Stubborn? "Next, Trent explains that the Sacraments are necessary in such a way that, without them, or without the desire of them, the Grace of Justification cannot be obtained. Now, I gave you an example for this: If I say that my thirst cannot be quenched without water, or at least without some juice, then a logical inference is that the juice can substitute for the water. And this is how the authorized and qualified Doctors, unlike you, a layman not authorized by the Church, interpret Trent: The Desire can sometimes supply for the Water. And note that the desire of them is in the Plural. That means that there are Two Sacraments at least for which the Desire of the Sacraments obtains Justification. Those can only be Baptism and Penance."

Quote
As I mentioned earlier, it's no difficulty for God to bring the Sacrament to someone who perseveres in a state of justification until death.  Why wouldn't He?
I don't know. Many reasons. Maybe because He wants the soul to suffer in Purgatory for a while? I certainly agree He will grant such a soul all the graces necessary for its salvation, according to His Divine Promise. But those could be Justification+Perseverance only.

God Bless.