![]() ![]() ![]() Theologians eventually settled on limbo as a hypothetical compromise-a state of natural, though incomplete, happiness. Augustine concluded in the fourth century that the babies must be punished in the fire of hell, but only with the “ mildest condemnation.” Eight centuries later, Thomas Aquinas thought infant souls wouldn’t go to heaven, but they wouldn’t suffer in the afterlife, either (and they wouldn’t even know what they were missing). At the same time, as innocent beings, they surely don’t deserve eternal torment. According to church catechisms, or teachings, babies that haven’t been splashed with holy water bear the original sin, which makes them ineligible for joining God in heaven. In contrast, when Dante the Pilgrim and Virgil leave Limbo, Dante the Poet remarks that The company of six is reduced by four. The fate of unbaptized babies has confounded Catholic scholars for centuries. But the carefully worded document from the Vatican’s International Theological Commission stops short of certainty in this regard, arguing only that there are “serious theological and liturgical grounds for hope,” rather than “sure knowledge.” If limbo never existed in the first place, you might assume that these souls passed straight through St. Based on EAs must-have game, the animated feature Dantes Inferno follows Dante on a stunning journey through the nine circles of Hell as he travels through limbo, lust, gluttony, greed, anger, heresy, violence, fraud and treachery in search of love. ![]()
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