What a pathetic display!
-Archbishop Lefebvre is a liberal
-Fr. Feeney was right, and the whole rest of the Church was wrong
-It matters not that St. Thomas, Alphonsus, and various catechisms teach implicit baptism of desire
-It matters not that Ott and all the rest teach it is de fide
-Neal made a valuable contribution to the restoration on quotation marks (and Neal Jr. found a missing "S").
-Trent only allowed explicit desire; anything more is anonymous Christianity
-Lefebvre was not traditional
Pygmie minds cannot distinguish between implicit baptism of desire and anonymous Christianity (and that ABL opposed anonymous Christianity and Lumen Gentium -which to a healthy mind would have given pause to consider they must be misunderstanding something- doesn't slow them down).
I posted this, and none could make a single response (plenty of thumb-downs, but not a single attempted response):
Here is how implicit baptism of desire is distinguished from Rahner’s “anonymous Christianity:”
In describing his theory of "anonymous Christianity," Rahner stated that non-Catholics could have "in [their] basic orientation and fundamental decision, accepted the salvific grace of God, through Christ, although [they] may never have heard of the Christian revelation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_Christian#cite_ref-FOOTNOTERahner1986207_6-0This means that such "anonymous Christians" were ignorant not merely of the obligation to receive the sacrament of baptism,
but of the entire Christian revelation.
Consequently, an explicit act of supernatural faith in any particular part of it is not possible...yet salvation is allegedly attained anyway.
The necessary conclusion of Rahner's theory is that a merely natural knowledge and/or act of faith in God (e.g., such as that which is attainable by mere reason alone) suffices to unite one to the Church, and save.
Contrast this with implicit baptism of desire, which requires an
explicit act of supernatural faith in
someaspect of the true religion:
"
Thus, there is need of explicit faith in some article of faith.
In the implicit desire of baptism, the act of Faith and hope must be explicit, while it suffices for the desire of baptism itself to be implicit, since he who desires the whole desires necessarily every part of that whole...In any case, there is no Baptism of desire without the supernatural virtue of faith and a certain explicit knowledge of the essential points of faith.
Since the nature of faith means that is impossible, that it be completely implicit, since faith is a supernatural light to the intelligence."
http://www.catholicapologetics.info/modernproblems/currenterrors/bapdesire.htmWe can see, therefore, that the difference between Rahner's "anonymous Christianity" and implicit baptism of desire is huge:
Rahner posited one could be saved by a faith
completelyimplicit, with no explicit act of supernatural faith in even one single aspect of the true religion.
That position is fatal to the missionary apostolate of the Church, and therefore a rejection of Scripture ("Go forth into all nations..."), whereas the Church's teaching of implicit baptism of desire, insofar as it requires the
explicit act of supernatural faith in at least one aspect of the true religion, consequently implies the necessity of the missionary apostolate to make such doctrines known (at least in part).
I believe if Feeneyites understood this, they would not (or at least, should not) oppose the doctrine of implicit baptism of desire, which they routinely confuse with "anonymous Christianity," despite the very large difference between the two.