Can you quote st Augustine when he says that I do bit believe in baptism of desire anymore? Because centuries before Feeney's birth other theologians still state that Augustine taught it and say it is a catholic teaching.
This article is well worth the read:
http://catholicism.org/baptism-of-desire-its-origin-and-abandonment-in-the-thought-of-saint-augustine.htmlBe patient, since sometimes the website has issues loading this page and you get an error. Just try again.
You have to realize that access to texts was much more limited before the Printing Press. Some of St. Augustine's texts would disappear for all intents and purposes for centuries from certain parts of the world.
Even Karl "Anonymous Christian" Rahner had the honesty to admit that St. Augustine eventually rejected the idea ... despite the fact that he would want to find evidence there. What's funny is that we reject "Anonymous Christian" by Rahner because Rahner was a "modernist" and yet 99% of all Traditional Catholics believe in Rahner's "Anonymous Christian" theology.
I do not think the valentinian address is ambiguous because no one seemed confused by it. Every theologian I have ever read on it interprets it the same way. When did all this confusion enter into this question?
I believe that the above link also addresses Valentinian. St. Ambrose elsewhere can be quoted as unambiguously rejecting Baptism of Desire even for catechumens. He did, however, believe in Baptism of Blood. One speculation was that St. Ambrosed hoped that Valentinian's death would qualify under BoB because he may have been killed by Arians for opposing Arianism. Why would the Christians in St. Ambrose's church have been weeping bitterly at the news if they solidly believed in BoD? Answer: they wouldn't have.
But another thing you have to remember is that those were before the days of the internet and twitter. It probably took weeks and months before all the information could reliably make it around. Details would not have been available or would have been very sketchy. Was there a servant of Valentinian's near him at the time who could have administered Baptism as Valentinian lay dying? Who knows?